Ngakunya sih ga ada paksaan di agama Islam, dan ga ada paksaan jg di
Indonesia, faktanya, hehehe...


http://www.asianews.it/news-en/East-Java:-civil-servants-forced-to-pray-to-Allah-28902.html


*09/03/2013 13:44*
INDONESIA - ISLAM
East Java: civil servants forced to pray to Allah
by Mathias Hariyadi

New rule came into effect on 26 August in Situbondo District. For District
Chief Dadang Wigiarto, praying enhances collaboration and work "thanks to
divine intervention." The rule requires officials to sign a register so
that their participation can be verified. Political and community leaders
have criticised the initiative, noting that praying is personal in nature
and that any penalty should be removed.

<http://www.asianews.it/files/img/INDONESIA_-_Shalat-Berjamaah3.jpg>

Jakarta (AsiaNews) - A new regulation in an East Java district requiring
all Muslim public servants, both men and women, to recite an Islamic prayer
together before they start their workday has raised a storm of criticism
and protest.

For Situbondo District Chief Dadang Wigiarto, it is important that
employees gather in the mosque to recite the 'Sholat berjamaah' or common
prayer in the local language, except staff on holiday or menstruating women.

In response to this, a group of district officials filed a formal complaint
against the regulation; saying that praying is "personal" in nature and
that no one can claim the power to impose it.

Syaiful Bahri, a member of the regional assembly, is leading the fight
against compulsory prayer for public officials that District Chief Dadang
Wigiarto imposed on 26 August 2013.

In his view, 'Sholat' has no connection with the government and no state
body "may legislate" on the subject.

The recitation of the prayer, he insists, "gives no guarantee" that public
officials will carry out their jobs better. It is a real "interference", as
well as an abuse of power, by higher-ranking government officials in the
lives of citizens and workers.

Across the country, the practice of *Sholat berjamaah* is not regulated by
laws or regulations. In Situbondo District, officials often meet to pray at
the Al-Abror mosque, which is located within the administrative district in
the city centre.

However, the district boss is convinced that praying can improve the
quality of work thanks "to a sort of divine intervention by Allah."

When they leave the mosque after the daily prayer, officials are required
to sign a register to show that they complied with the requirement.

Human rights activists and secularist movements are deeply critical of the
rulle. Subhi, a researcher at the Wahid Institute, is one of the many
voices opposed to the regulation, claiming that it is "a serious violation
of human rights and the free practice of religion."

Prayer, in his view, is a "strictly personal" thing that "cannot be
regulated by any rule" and should not entail any "punishment".

Indonesia is the most populous Muslim nation in the world. Although it
includes personal freedoms (including freedom of religion) among its basic
constitutional principles, it has become more and more the scene of
violence and abusive behaviour against minorities, including Christians,
Ahmadi Muslims or others.

Although Aceh is the only province in the country that enforces Islamic
law, the influence of the Muslim religion is becoming more radical and
extreme in the lives of citizens in many other parts of the archipelago.

Extremist groups like the Islamic Defenders Front and the Indonesian Ulema
Council have led this 'Islamisation' campaign. Inspired by the Sharia, they
have tried to impose their views in different domains, ranging from a ban
on alcohol to restrictions in the area of sexual morality.

Kirim email ke