http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/04/02/minister-christians-bring-discrimination-themselves.html

Minister: Christians bring discrimination on themselves
Margareth S. Aritonang, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Headlines | Tue, April 02 
2013, 10:38 AM 
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Paper Edition | Page: 1

Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali blamed Christians for the closure of 
some churches in the country, saying that they have politicized an issue that 
is purely administrative in nature.

Suryadharma said that Christians in the country are not the only ones who had 
problems getting permits to build places of worship, but they got more 
attention simply because they talked to the press more.

The controversial minister said that Muslims in several regions where they are 
members of a minority, such as in Bali, North Sulawesi, and East Nusa Tenggara, 
have met the same challenges when trying to get permits to build mosques. 

“But they don’t talk to the press. They also don’t protest or perform prayers 
in front of the Presidential Palace. The requirement to obtain such a permit is 
only administrative, there is no need to turn it into a political issue,” 
Suryadharma said.

Suryadharma was referring to members of the Indonesian Christian Church (GKI) 
Yasmin from Bogor, West Java, and the Batak Christian Protestant Church (HKBP) 
Filadelfia of Bekasi, also in West Java, who have been conducting their Sunday 
services in front of the Presidential Palace in the past two years because 
local governments have sealed off their churches due to building permit 
disputes.

HKBP Filadelfia has been involved in a building permit dispute with local 
residents at Jejalen Jaya village for years as the locals refused to allow a 
church to be built in their neighborhood.

Representatives of the HKBP church said that they had secured permits from 
local government to build their church in the village, but, in 2011, the 
Bandung State Administrative Court in West Java overturned a ruling by the 
Bekasi administration which had given the go-ahead for the construction of the 
church. 

The locals have prevented HKBP members from conducting Sunday services at the 
church since then.

The Bogor administration has denied a request for a building permit for GKI 
Yasmin, despite a ruling by the Supreme Court that upheld the rights of the 
congregation to open a place of worship in the area.

Suryadharma, also chairman of Muslim-based United Development Party (PPP), 
maintained that the 2006 joint ministerial decree, which regulates the 
construction of all places of worship of all religions in the country, 
including churches, has strict requirements simply to prevent social unrest.

The decree, which was issued by the religious affairs minister and the home 
minister, requires, among other things, that a congregation must have at least 
90 members and have support from at least 60 locals in the vicinity of the 
place of worship.

“I’m very disappointed with the minister. He really doesn’t have any idea of 
the trouble we will have to deal with because of the decree,” Rev. Palti 
Panjaitan from HKBP Filadelfia said.

Separately, Bona Sigalingging of GKI Yasmin said that Suryadharma’s statement 
indicated the government had indirectly legitimized religious discrimination by 
the majority. 

“The minister should have not applauded the action of those who have chosen 
silence after failing to get permits for their house of worship. He should have 
urged all government agencies to grant the people their rights to worship.”


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