http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/attacks-on-christian-churches-in-indonesia-rising-activists/387853

July 26, 2010

 
Attacks on Indonesian churches - such as the one pictured above in this file 
photo - are increasing, activists are warning. There have been 28 this year 
alone. (Antara Photo)

Attacks on Christian Churches in Indonesia Rising: Activists
Jakarta. Indonesian human rights activists on Monday urged President Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono to investigate attacks on Christian churches, which they say 
have increased in the last two years.

>From January to July, there were 28 cases of religious freedom violations by 
>"intolerant groups targeting Christians," up from 17 for the whole of 2008 and 
>18 in 2009, the Setara Institute for Democracy and Peace said in a report.

Based on reports by churches and the media, the violations - mostly by radical 
Muslim groups - include forced closure of churches, revocation and delays in 
issuing building permits, and attacks such as torching and damaging churches, 
the institute said.

"These incidents are a breach of law and human rights. The President and the 
government have been very silent on this matter and have not provided enough 
protection to citizens," Setara's deputy chief Bonar Tigor Naipospos said.

"The attackers have become bolder as law enforcement is weak. We can't let the 
incidents continue as peace in the country will be jeopardized," he added.

The attacks, which mostly took place in Jakarta and West Java province, have 
made Christians "scared and anxious," said Parasian Hutasoit, spokesman for 
Huria Christian Protestant Batak Church Filadelfia.

His church in Bekasi, an outer suburb of Jakarta, was forced to close in 
January after Muslim residents held protests there, saying it was built 
illegally.

"More than a hundred came to the church and demanded we shut down. We felt 
intimidated and discriminated against. We just want a place to practise our 
faith in peace," he said.

Indonesian lawmakers in June demanded the government outlaw a violent Islamist 
vigilante group that has threatened "war" against Christians in Jakarta and 
urged mosques to set up militia forces.

The Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) - a private militia with a self-appointed 
mission to protect "Islamic" values in the secular country - urged Bekasi 
authorities to introduce Islamic Shariah law and warned they would attack 
Christians unless the "Christianization" ceased.

Observers have said communal tensions could erupt into violence in Indonesia, a 
constitutionally secular country of 240 million people, 90 percent of whom are 
Muslim.


Agence France-Presse


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