R a l a t

Ref: Apakah mesjid Ahmadiyah bukan rumah untuk beribadah kepada Allah dan oleh  
karena itu patut diserang?

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/islamic-hard-liners-attack-three-ahmadiyah-mosques-in-cianjur/585445


Islamic Hard-Liners Attack Three Ahmadiyah Mosques in Cianjur
Camelia Pasandaran | April 13, 2013


Three Ahmadiyah mosques in Cianjur, West Java, were shut down and damaged by a 
group of Islamic hard-liners and local residents on Friday, the latest act of 
intolerance in the province. 

Firdaus Mubarik, a spokesman from the Indonesian Ahmadiyah Congregation (JAI), 
told the Jakarta Globe on Saturday that police officers and soliders witnessed 
all three incidents but did nothing to stop members of the Islamic Defenders 
Front (FPI) from attacking the mosques that were located in three different 
subdistricts in Cianjur — Campaka, Ciparay and Neglasari.

“Three mosques, located close to each other, were sealed and damaged in less 
than three hours yesterday,” Firdaus explained. “They also shut down our mosque 
in Ciparay. Some of them threw stones at the windows, door and the roof tiles. 
The police were there, but did nothing to stop them. A police officer named 
Dedi from the Campaka Police even was the one that placed an announcement 
stating that activities of the mosque should be terminated.”

Prior to the attacks, an Ahmadiyah member, Jamal, was summoned to the Campaka 
subdistrict’s office to explain why his shop had been built without a permit. 
Jamal reportedly could not afford a permit as a local official had allegedly 
asked him to pay Rp 4 million. 

But when Jamal arrived at the office, hundreds of FPI members were waiting. 
While the issue was originally about Jamal not holding a valid permit to 
operate his shop, some 300 FPI members decided to march from the office to the 
Ahmadiyah mosque in the Campaka subdistrict to shut down the place of worship. 
The FPI members placed a plank of wood on the door to prevent people from 
entering the mosque. 

Firdaus explained that after members of the FPI shut down the mosque in 
Ciparay, they continued to Neglasari to shut down another mosque. He claimed 
that Adj. Sr. Comr. Lanjar Guntoro, the intelligent head of the Cianjur Police, 
witnessed the attack but did nothing. 

Firdaus added that when they told the hard-liners that they had no legal right 
to close down the mosques, an FPI member told the Ahmadis that they were simply 
just helping the police. 

Meanwhile, the government and police officers said that they were only on-site 
to prevent any big clashes between the Ahmadiyah and the FPI.

In 2005, all three mosques were attacked by hard-liners and more than 60 houses 
belonging to Ahmadis were destroyed. More houses owned by Ahmadis in Cianjur 
were set on fire several years later, however the perpetrators remain unknown. 

Firdaus said that in 2011, the government placed an announcement in front of 
all Ahmadiyah mosques forbidding members from spreading the Ahmadiyah 
teachings. 

“The announcement increases awareness of people that the mosques were belong to 
Ahmadiyah,” he explained, adding that he was concerned that Friday’s incident 
could pave the way for a bigger attack. 

Bonar Tigor Naipospos, the deputy director of human rights group Setara 
Institute, said on Saturday that the FPI might have taken justice into their 
own hands because of their alleged closeness with West Java Governor Ahmad 
Heryawan. 

“I believe it is related to the memorandum of understanding between the FPI and 
Ahmad Heryawan when he was campaigning as a governor candidate,” Bonar said. 
“The FPI told him that they would support Ahmad only if he agreed to stop all 
Ahmadiyah activities in West Java.”

While Ahmad once denied that he had signed such an agreement, he did not deny 
that he was in a meeting with FPI members during the campaign.

Bonar said that even if the police did shut down the mosque, it was still 
illegal as the gubernatorial regulation only banned the spread of Ahmadiyah 
teachings, not activities. 

“This is insane, why ban people from praying,” Bonar said, adding that his 
organization had not decided whether to provide legal support to the Ahmadiyah 
or not. “They tend to be passive, and they use civilized way in handling the 
pressure.”

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