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Most Indonesian Mosques Don't Have Building Permits: Komnas HAM
Jakarta Globe | April 09, 2013

 Indonesian Christian Pastor Torang Simanjuntak, left, delivers an Easter 
Sunday mass next to the ruins of the Taman Sari Batak Christian Protestant 
Church in Bekasi, on the outskirts of Jakarta on March 31, 2013, as minority 
Christians mark Easter amid rising cases of religious intolerance. On March 21 
the local government demolished the half constructed church in front of its 
weeping congregation. (AFP Photo/Adek Berry) 

The National Commission on Human Rights on Tuesday said that 85 percent of 
Indonesia's houses of worship do not have building permits, with most of them 
being mosques. 

“The majority [of houses of worship without building permits] are mosques,” 
Imdadun Rahmat, the deputy of chairman of the commission (Komnas HAM), said on 
Tuesday, as quoted by Tempo.co. "If you check, most religious buildings in 
villages have no building permits, even if their buildings are close to the 
urban ward chief."

Imdadun noted that most religious buildings that obtained building permits were 
located in major cities. 

Many houses of worship are built based on the needs of nearby residents, and 
the processes of obtaining a permit and conforming to building codes are often 
overlooked, he said.

Regardless, Imdadun said that rather than dismantling the buildings, the 
government should protect them given their importance to local populations.

Several churches have been shut down or destroyed by local governments over the 
past few years for not having proper building permits. The HKBP Taman Sari 
church in Setu, Bekasi district, was demolished last month by the Bekasi 
district administration. Established in 1998, the church was in the process of 
obtaining a building permit, but the district chief, Neneng Hasanah Yasin, 
decided to demolish the building amid demonstrations by the hard-line Taman 
Sari Islamic Peoples Forum (FUIT).

Earlier this month, the GKI Gembrong church, located in Bekasi, was sealed by 
the government for the same reason.

The issuance of a building permit does not guarantee a structure’s existence, 
though. GKI Yasmin, a protestant church in Bogor, obtained the correct license 
but was later stripped of it by the city’s mayor, who claimed that the church 
fabricated an agreement with local residents.

The Supreme Court ordered the local government to reopen the church, but the 
city hasn’t followed through yet.

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