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http://www.irinnews.org/Report/97773/Indonesia-s-displaced-Shias-languish

Indonesia’s displaced Shias languish

 
Photo: Brendan Brady/IRIN
Displaced Shias under a tin-roof hangar eight months after their homes were 
torched

SAMPANG/MADURA, 3 April 2013 (IRIN) - Eights months after dozens of Shia 
Muslims on Indonesia’s Madura Island were driven from their homes by mobs from 
neighbouring Sunni villages, the displaced remain in poor conditions with no 
immediate prospect of returning. 

Almost 170 Shias in Madura’s Sampang District are still confined to a 
gymnasium, unable to work or travel. They are dependent on government 
provisions for their survival. Local authorities have warned them to stay near 
the gym for their safety. 

“We have no chance to leave here. It feels like we’re in jail,” said Ustadz 
Iklil, 40. 

He said families have limited themselves to one meal a day when government food 
provisions fall short, and that basic hygiene has been difficult to maintain. 

Poor conditions 

The displaced are living on tennis courts in a tin-roofed hangar. A stench 
permeates much of the shelter’s interior, where there is only one bathroom. 

People there said they were psychologically and physically unravelling. 

“At any given time, many of the people here are sick,” said Ummi Kulsum, 37. 
She said medical personnel from the local state hospital were supposed to make 
daily trips to the shelter, but none had visited since October. 

“We’re struggling to live here, and we still have no clear decision from the 
government about our future,” she said. 

Rokiyah, 35, who goes by one name, said her two-month-old baby struggled to 
sleep in the stuffy, overcrowded compound. “The people in our district couldn’t 
accept our difference so now our children are forced to grow up in these 
conditions,” she said. 

The children attend a makeshift classroom under a tarp in a field facing the 
complex. Classes are staffed by volunteers. 

Rising intolerance 

Although Sunni is officially the dominant form of Islam in the country, many 
Indonesians identify themselves simply as Muslim. 

Madura Island, however, has a history of conservatism, and those on the island 
who publicly identify as Shia are regarded with suspicion and disapproval by 
some of the Sunni majority. The size of the Shia population in Madura - and the 
rest of Indonesia - is unknown due to underreporting and fears of reprisals. 
There are few villages on the island that openly identify as Shia. 

In August 2012, local Sunnis, some wielding traditional machete-like weapons, 
attacked two of the district’s Shia villages. One Shia man was killed and 
another, who suffered multiple deep cuts, barely survived. Dozens were 
seriously injured in the attack, which left 48 Shia homes destroyed by fire. 

Villagers said the violence erupted when Shia schoolchildren, barred from 
attending their local school, attempted to reach a neighbouring school. Sunni 
men blocked them, and the confrontation escalated into a wider attack on Shia 
homes, said witnesses. 

With few exceptions, the displaced Shias lost all their possessions. 

 
Photo: Brendan Brady/IRIN
Young Shia man returns with police protection to examine the remains of his home
Religious minorities targeted 

Among the main targets of hard-line Islamist groups from the country’s Sunni 
majority are minority Muslim sects and Christians, according to a recent Human 
Rights Watch (HRW) report. 

The Jakarta-based Setara Institute, which monitors religious freedom in 
Indonesia, identified 216 cases of violent attacks on religious minorities in 
2010, 244 cases in 2011, and 264 cases in 2012. 

According to HRW, the state is complicit in the abuse. “Harassment and 
intimidation of minority communities by militant Islamist groups has been 
facilitated by the active or passive involvement of Indonesian government 
officials and security forces,” the report said. 

In an interview with international media, a spokesman from the Ministry of 
Religious Affairs denied religious intolerance was a serious problem, calling 
Indonesia a “laboratory of religious harmony”. 

No resolution 

It is not clear which authority ultimately controls the fate of the displaced 
Shias in Sampang. 

According to Andreas Harsono, an author of the HRW report, national agencies 
with influence over such cases include the president’s office, the national 
police chief, and the coordinating minister for legal, political and security 
affairs. But, he added, decentralization measures started in 2004 have boosted 
local officials’ control over disputes within their jurisdiction. 

Jakarta should step in as local solutions are not forthcoming, he said. 

“We need time to address the issue that [led to] conflict there,” said Rudi 
Setiadi, the head of the Board of National Unity for Sampang Regency, a 
government office responsible for security, stability and other issues. 

“We have to obey our religious leaders very well, and the religious leaders say 
they [Shias] must return to Sunni Islam in order to return to the village,” 
said Setaidi, echoing the hard-line position that displaced Shias must declare 
themselves Sunnis in order to return. 

“From a [human] rights perspective, [the Shias] should of course be able to go 
back to the village and the government should be responsible for protecting 
them at any cost,” said Akhol Firhaus of the Centre for Marginalized People, a 
local NGO. 

“But the government has not given them any solution except to convert to become 
Sunnis or leave Madura Island,” he said. “The government has a responsibility 
to give a better solution.” 

bb/pt/rz 


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