http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/03/28/we-have-nowhere-to-pray-indonesian-christians-locked-out-of-church/
We have nowhere to pray’ – Indonesian Christians locked out of church 
 
An Indonesian family rides on a motorbike at a slum neighborhood along a 
railway track in Jakarta, Indonesia

JAKARTA: Local officials in Indonesia have left a Christian congregation with 
nowhere to pray this Easter, a priest said yesterday, the latest such incident 
in the world’s biggest Muslim-majority nation. Authorities in the Jatibening 
Baru sub-district on the outskirts of the capital Jakarta ordered the 
congregation to halt services at its church until it obtained a building 
permit, the Reverend Martua Risman Kurniadi said.

They sent a letter to the congregation Wednesday after around 300 Muslims 
staged a protest Sunday at the Indonesian Christian Church, demanding 
worshippers stop Sunday mass. “We are all disappointed and sad, especially 
since we have no place to pray to celebrate Easter,” Kurniadi said.

He said the congregation had been praying in their semi-permanent building 
since 1994 with no problems, but the local community was reluctant to provide 
statements required to support the building permit. “They said they were afraid 
others would call them infidels if they did so.” The church lies within the 
larger district of Bekasi, where Christians and several churches have come 
under attack by Muslim hardliners in recent years. On March 17 the Bekasi 
district administration, also citing a missing permit, demolished a church in 
front of its weeping congregation following pressure from Muslim protesters.

Another congregation in the same district has been forced to pray outside its 
church for years, with hardliners blocking their entry. At times rotten eggs 
and bags of urine have been thrown at them. Rights activists have said local 
governments are using the permit issue as an excuse to kowtow to hardliners, 
with churches and Islamic minorities bearing the brunt of attacks. They say 
mosque building permits are rarely challenged.

The Jatibening Baru sub-district’s chief could not be reached for comment. 
Ninety percent of Indonesia’s 240 million people identify themselves as Muslim 
but the constitution guarantees freedom of religion. The Setara Institute of 
Peace and Democracy, however, says cases of intolerance are on the rise, with 
543 reported in 2011 compared to 491 in 2009. More than 300 incidents were 
recorded in the first half of 2012. — AFP


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