Sebagusnya Indonesia harus dibubarkan secepat mungkin, biar penyakit seperti 
yang disebarkan organ pemerintah  FPI, MMI, JI etc resmi  tidak  berakar dan 
membawa penyakit abadi di daerah-daerah luar Jawa. Alternatif pembubaran adalah 
terbaik, sebelum masalahnya menjadi lebih parah lagi. Contoh apa yang terjadi 
Indonesia Timur seperti di Sulwesi Tengah dan Maluku tidak diderita oleh rakyat 
atau kaum minoritas di lain daerah.  

Patut dicatat bahwa selama ini dari segi relasi antara daerah-daerah dan 
kekuasaan NKRI yang berpusat di Jakarta seperti hubungan antara periferi dan 
pusat kekuasaan seperti zaman kolonial. Cermin sejarah dari hubungan ini bisa 
juga diobservasi pada masa kolonial di  berbagai negeri di Asia, Afrika dan 
Amerika Latin. 

Selama 60 tahun yang disebut merdeka tidak ada perubahan yang menguntungkan 
kehihidupan rakyat di daerah-daerah, angka kemiskinan meningkat,  tingkat 
pendidikan rendah, kerusakan alam berjalan terus, harta kekayaan alam makin 
hari makin menipis. Apakah sudi Anda menerima sanak saudara-saudara Anda 
diberbagai daerah di luar pulau Jawa terus ditipu dengan berbagai adegan yan 
bukan mempertahankan miskin dan kebodohan supaya terus nurut seperti kerbau?  

Bangkit untuk hak Anda atau hidup menjadi budak abadi!

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: holyuncle 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 4:37 AM
  Subject: [mediacare] We'll wage war: Indonesian Muslim hardliners


  ***Beginilah keadaan di Indonesia yang berpemerintahan takut 
  bertangan besi.

  ***Rindu Soeharto ?

  We'll wage war: Indonesian Muslim hardliners 

  Stephen Fitzpatrick, Jakarta correspondent | June 03, 2008 

  INDONESIAN Muslim hardliners last night threatened to wage war on the 
  controversial Islamic sect Ahmadiyah unless President Susilo Bambang 
  Yudhoyono bans it within three days.

  The ultimatum came a day after Islamist thugs with bamboo poles 
  attacked a peaceful inter-faith demonstration, and smashed car 
  windows in a wild melee in the capital. 

  Dr Yudhoyono weighed into the dispute yesterday, urging police 
  to "lift their workrate" after they reportedly allowed the assault, 
  in the normally calm Freedom Square, to go ahead. 

  The gathering, to mark the anniversary on Sunday of the adoption of 
  Indonesia's Pancasila ideology which, ironically enough, guarantees 
  freedom of religious worship, was set on by members of the Islamic 
  Defenders Front, a Jakarta-based association whose members include 
  street fighters and petty criminals. Four victims of the attack 
  remained in hospital yesterday, including a woman with serious head 
  injuries. 

  Islamic Defenders Front members said they attacked the gathering, 
  billed as the National Alliance for the Freedom of Faith and 
  Religion, because it supported the allegedly "deviant" Ahmadiyah. 
  Members of the secretive group Hizb ut-Tahrir, banned in much of the 
  Middle East and which advocates Islamic rule, are believed to have 
  been among the attackers. 

  Islamic Defenders Front leader Habib Rizieq justified the onslaught 
  during an emotional press conference yesterday, threatening "war" 
  unless Dr Yudhoyono banned Ahmadiyah. The President has been stalling 
  over acting on a recommendation from a government advisory body that 
  the sect, which does not hold to the central Muslim tenet of 
  recognising Mohammed as the last prophet, should be outlawed. 

  While Indonesia's Pancasila, or "five pillars", philosophy guarantees 
  freedom of worship, a separate law defines six faiths that have the 
  legal status of religion. These are Islam, Catholicism, 
  Protestantism, Buddhism, Hinduism and Confucianism. 

  An almost hysterical Mr Rizieq yesterday called on his followers "to 
  prepare for war with Ahmadiyah and its followers" unless a ban was 
  enacted. 

  "We will not accept a single of our members being arrested ... we 
  will resist until the last drop of blood," he said. 

  Ahmadiyah members in West Java and Lombok have long been the target 
  of hate attacks and mosque-burnings, and a small group recently 
  approached the Australian consulate in Bali seeking information on 
  gaining political asylum. 

  There were counter-calls yesterday for Mr Rizieq's group to be 
  banned, although Justice and Human Rights Minister Andi Mattalatta 
  speculated that such a move would be impossible since "it has no 
  legal status ... what could be barred if it has no legal status?" The 
  comments mirror recent controversy over the problem of violent 
  Islamist group Jemaah Islamiah, which also has no legal status and 
  therefore cannot be banned despite a court ruling declaring it 
  a "forbidden organisation". 

  The two organisations are closely linked with JI spiritual head Abu 
  Bakar Bashir, who leads the Islamic Defenders Front in his heartland 
  city of Surakarta in Central Java. 

  Lawyer Achmad Michdan, who is representing the three death-row Bali 
  bombers Ali Imron, Mukhlas and Imam Samudra, stood alongside Mr 
  Rizieq yesterday and warned he would lodge a civil suit against the 
  President if he failed to act on Ahmadiyah "within three days". 

  Islamic Defenders Front gangs have been responsible for attacks in 
  Jakarta on what they call kaffir (infidel) activities, including 
  nightclubs that operate during the holy month of Ramadan. 

  Indonesia's two main Muslim organisations, Muhammadiyah and Nahdlatul 
  Ulama, were quick to condemn the weekend attacks, with Muhammadiyah 
  leader Din Syamsuddin calling them "a crime that must be prosecuted".

  http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23797543-
  25837,00.html



   


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