http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/lawandorder/bekasi-government-targets-al-misbah-mosque-in-ahmadiyah-crackdown/571664?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=jgnewsletter

Bekasi Government Targets Al-Misbah Mosque in Ahmadiyah Crackdown
Camelia Pasandaran | February 14, 2013



Indonesia’s beleaguered Ahmadiyah sect suffered another blow on Thursday as 
Bekasi’s mayor announced plans to shutdown a Pondok Gede mosque as part of a 
city-wide crackdown on what Islamic officials have branded a “deviant” branch 
of Islam. 

“It has been banned.” Mayor Rahmat Effendi said of the sect. “We want to... 
prevent social clashes that will cause losses on all sides. The government 
needed to make a decision and stop it.”

The 70-member Al-Misbah mosque, on Jalan Pangrango Terusan, has held regular 
prayers since it opened as Bekasi’s first and only Ahmadiyah mosque in 1998. 
The small community had a good relationship with residents in Pondok Gede for 
more than a decade and continued to operate without issue after the ban was put 
in place more than a year ago, Imam Rahmat Rahmadijaya told the Jakarta Globe. 

The mosque now faces closure. 

The mayor said the decision to shutdown the Ahmadiyah mosque was made to 
prevent future bloodshed. But Ahmadiyah officials argued that the city only 
took action after Islamic hard-liners announced plans to open a branch in 
Pondok Gede. 

“The police told us that the local government wants to seal the mosque because 
the Islamic Defenders’ Front’s (FPI) Pondok Gede chapter will officially open 
on Friday,” Rahmadijaya said. “Their office is near our mosque. The FPI will 
conduct a ‘tabligh akbar’ [mass sermon] and then demonstrate against us to 
demand they close our mosque. The police told us the government wants to 
prevent a clash between the FPI and the Ahmadiyah.”

Effendi denied the allegations. He said the city was acting in accordance with 
local regulations. Bekasi banned the Ahmadiyah in 2011 after receiving numerous 
complaints from the public, he said. 

“The government asked them to stop their activities, but they ignored us,” he 
said. 

Bekasi Police were standing guard outside the mosque Thursday morning. The 
Public Order Agency (Satpol PP) has been tasked with stopping any Ahmadiyah 
prayers. The mosque will remain open, Effendi said, but the Ahmadiyah can only 
pray there if they follow the rules of mainstream Islam and abandon their 
beliefs. 

“They can pray,” he said, “but it should be done according to [Islamic] 
Shariah.”

Rahmadijaya said the community plans to ignore the government and will reopen 
the mosque once the FPI leaves. 

The Bekasi Police were standing by to secure the area on Thursday, intelligence 
division head Comr. Rully Indra said. 

The Indonesian Ahmadiyah Indonesian Congregation (JAI) said the FPI set their 
sights on the Al-Misbah mosque a long time ago. 

“After the Cikeusik attack, the Ahmadiyah mosque in Bekasi have been harassed 
by the FPI’s East Jakarta branch,” JAI spokesman Firdaus Mubarik said. “And 
now, they open new branch near to the mosque. I don’t understand why the Bekasi 
government is over-reacting to the FPI’s threats.”

FPI spokesman Munarman could not be contacted for comment. 

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