http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/indonesian-protection-of-religious-freedom-deteriorating-us/534033
Indonesian Protection of Religious Freedom Deteriorating: US
Jakarta Globe | July 31, 2012


 A congregation member from GKI Yasmin Church in Bogor cries while praying on 
Christmas last year, after the congregation was barred from worshipping in 
their church. Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, was 
criticized for failing to protect religious freedom in a US government report 
on Monday. (Suara Pembaruan Photo/Joanito De Saojoao) 

In Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, government protection of 
religious freedom has been deteriorating, the United States says.

While the Indonesian government generally respects the freedom of the country’s 
six officially recognized religions, it has failed to overturn local 
regulations violating religious freedom, the US State Department said in a 
report released on Monday.

And despite the country’s tradition of religious pluralism, societal abuse 
against religious minorities is on the rise, it added.

“There were several significant lapses in enforcing protections,” it said.

The International Religious Freedom Report, which examined religious freedom in 
199 countries and territories in 2011, highlighted discrimination and violence 
against religious minorities in Indonesia including Ahmadi Muslims and 
Christians, as well as atheists.

It cited a case in February 2011 when a mob of more than 1,500 people attacked 
Ahmadis in Cikeusik, Banten province, killing three and injuring five others. 
Videos of the attack posted online showed members of the mob beating the 
Ahmadis to death as the police failed to intervene.

While 12 members of the mob were brought to trial, the report said, “they were 
given disproportionately light prison sentences” of three to six months. By 
comparison, an Ahmadi injured in the attack was arrested, charged with 
provoking the attack and sentenced to seven months in prison, it said.

“Due to inaction, the government sometimes failed to prevent violence, abuse 
and discrimination against individuals based on their religious beliefs,” the 
report said. “In some cases, it failed to hold the perpetrators of violence 
accountable.”

During 2011 there were 93 government-instigated violations of religious 
freedom, up from 64 the year before, the report said, citing the Wahid 
Institute.

It criticized the closure of houses of worship, as well as restrictions on 
freedom to construct houses of worship, citing the high-profile case of the GKI 
Yasmin church in Bogor.

The Bogor city government initially approved a construction permit for GKI 
Yasmin in 2006, but construction was halted after a 2008 city government 
decision, the report said. The church challenged this city-level decision in 
the court system and the Supreme Court ruled in its favor in 2010, but the city 
government did not enforce the court’s decision.

“At times, local public order police [Satpol PP] and Bogor City police blocked 
access to the church site,” the report said. “Throughout the year the 
congregation faced intimidation from hardline organizations when attempting to 
attend Sunday services at the site of their church.”

The report also criticized the detention and imprisonment of individuals under 
the 1965 Blasphemy Law, which allows a maximum sentence of five years’ 
imprisonment for blasphemy. In February 2011, Antonius Richmond Bawengan was 
jailed for five years for blasphemy in Temanggung, Central Java, after 
distributing books deemed “offensive to Islam,” it said.

Indonesia grants official status to six religious groups, including Islam, 
Catholicism Protestantism, Buddhism, Hinduism and Confucianism.

“Members of religious groups outside of the six officially recognized religions 
continued to experience some official discrimination in the context of civil 
registration of marriages and births as well as in the issuance of identity 
cards,” the report said.

The US government, the report said, has regularly raised the issue of religious 
freedom with the Indonesian government and Indonesian civil society leaders in 
a bid to promote human rights.

“[Freedom of religion] goes hand in hand with freedom of expression, freedom of 
speech and assembly, and when religious freedom is restricted, all these rights 
are at risk,” Suzan Johnson Cook, the US ambassador for religious freedom, said 
in a press briefing about the report in Washington on Monday. “And for this 
reason, religious freedom is often the bellwether for other human right 
++++
http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/bandung-church-shuttered-amid-protests/533701
Bandung Church Shuttered Amid Protests
Jakarta Globe | July 30, 2012

Protestors forced a church in Bandung, West Java, to shut down on Sunday amid 
claims that it was operating without a permit.

The Batak Karo Protestant Church (GBKP) has been in operation since 2007. But 
protestors claimed that the congregation agreed not to use the building as a 
house of worship in a 2011 agreement. 

“On Sunday of last week, they used the building for Sunday service,” Amin 
Safari told Tempo.co. “That is why we sealed the building.”

The protestors also hung a banner on the church’s gate reading, “We the people 
of RW 06 [a neighborhood unit] hardily reject the use of this building, at 
Kawaluyan 10, to be used for religious activities.”

The church’s committee secretary said that although they did sign the 2011 
agreement, the church has since received all the necessarily permits from the 
local government to hold services. 

“Since June 20 we have held a permit [to hold services] from the Bandung city 
administration,” Davin told Tempo.co. “We have complied with the legal codes, 
so the [previous] agreement is no longer valid.”

Amin accused the congregation of manipulating the agreement. 

“The majority of the people still reject the church’s activity,” he said.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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