http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/lawandorder/indonesian-police-decline-to-name-suspects-in-latest-ahmadiyah-attack/530821?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=jgnewsletter


Indonesian Police Decline to Name Suspects in Latest Ahmadiyah Attack
Farouk Arnaz | July 16, 2012

 Local residents gather in the streets of Cisalada village. Bogor, after an 
angry mob attacked the homes of six members of the beleaguered Ahmadiyah 
community on Friday. Six homes were destroyed and four people were injured in 
the attack, but the National Police have declined to name any suspects. (JG 
Photo/Vento Saudale) 
No one will be charged in Friday’s mob attack on members of Bogor’s Ahmadiyah 
community, the National Police said on Monday. 

“There are no suspects,” Sr. Comr. Agus Rianto, spokesman of National Police, 
said. 

An angry mob attacked the homes of six members of the Ahmadiyah community in 
Cisalada, Bogor, on Friday as a group of foreign journalists attempted to shoot 
a documentary about the beleaguered religious minority, police said on Friday. 

Three members of the Ahmadiyah community were injured as local residents hurled 
stones at their homes. An Indonesian woman, who was not a member of the Islamic 
sect, suffered a broken leg in the attack.

But on Monday, the National Police said there was no evidence of abuse in the 
incident. Both sides, Agus claimed, were stoning each other in self-defense. 

He blamed the clash on the presence of foreign journalists. 

“[The] Ahmadiyah have apologized [for the incident] because no one told the 
[villagers] about the visit from the foreign journalists that triggered the 
conflict,” Agus said. “They don’t want to be blamed because the journalists — 
three Dutch journalists and one from Britain — came on their own will. They 
were not [invited] by the Ahmadiyah people.”

The police account of the incident has been called into question by members of 
the Ahmadiyah community. 

Mubarik Ahmad previously told the Jakarta Globe that police pressured him to 
write the apology, telling the Ahmadi man what it should say. 

“I have no experience in writing such things. The district police chief and 
military commander told me what I had to write, that it was my fault for not 
reporting the foreign journalists to the subdistrict head,” Mubarik said on 
Sunday.

Officers allegedly told Mubarik that they were “short on time” and that he 
needed to sign the document. 

“Based on their instructions I also wrote that we will never allow reporters to 
enter the village without permission from the subdistrict head,” Mubarik added.

The journalists have also disputed the official line. 

Michiel Maas, a long-time Indonesia correspondent for Dutch TV Station NOS and 
De Volkskrant, said that the two other people with him were Dutch tourists, not 
reporters. 

He also denied interviewing anyone outside Cisalada village. 

“We have not interviewed anyone outside the village,” Maas told the Jakarta 
Globe on Sunday.

Bogor Police Chief Adj. Sr. Comr. Hery Santoso on Friday that Maas incited the 
violence by interviewing people in neighboring Kebon Kopi village.

Maas, who has covered the archipelago for 11 years and speaks fluent 
Indonesian, was too far from the mob to hear what they were shouting.

“We saw people running, and then the police officer who was with us ordered to 
get into the car and said that we had to go,” Maas said.

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