http://www.smh.com.au/world/islamic-gangs-spark-violence-20130228-2f92b.html

Islamic gangs spark violence
  Date  March 1, 2013 

Michael Bachelard
INDONESIA has experienced a ''sharp uptick'' in religiously motivated violence, 
with Islamic gangs regularly attacking Christian churches and ''deviant sects'' 
of their own faith, a new report has warned.

The report by Human Rights Watch warns that the Indonesian government, police 
and military are ''passively, and sometimes actively'' condoning the new 
extremists, in contrast to the way they ''wrestled to the ground'' the 
terrorists of Jemaah Islamiah in the past decade.

The organisation accuses Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono of 
responding ''weakly'' to the threat, with ''lofty but empty rhetoric''. ''With 
JI they saw a clear and present danger,'' said Human Rights Watch's deputy Asia 
director, Phelim Kine.

''Now, the government is failing to recognise this less spectacular but equally 
corrosive and dangerous strain of religious intolerance.''

Mr Kine said there were ''worrying echoes'' of Pakistan's state of siege 
against minority Islamic sects, and if intolerance and violence continued to 
increase in Indonesia ''the confidence of investors in the country … might not 
hold''.

The report, In Religion's Name, says there were 264 violent attacks on 
religious minorities in 2012, a 20 per cent increase on 2010. It documents 
violence against the Ahmadiyya, a minority sect of Islam that Indonesia's 
Religious Affairs Ministry has declared ''heretical'', and Shiite Muslims, as 
well as atheists and moderate Muslims. Since 2005, more than 430 churches have 
been forced to close.

But Wahyu, a spokesman for Indonesia's Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma 
Ali, denied the thrust of the report, saying Indonesia was ''the example, or 
the laboratory of religious harmony''.

''It has the best religious harmony in the world. We can judge that because … 
we make all big days of the recognised religions in Indonesia holidays,'' Wahyu 
said.

Many acts of violence were committed by a number of hardline groups such as the 
aggressive Islamic Defenders Front, which emerged from the Sunni Muslim 
majority after the fall of former president Suharto in 1998, the report says.


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