Refelection : Vice preident alone is insufficiently strong to combat radicals, 
how about the president?  

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/indonesian-vice-president-stand-up-against-radicals/401881

Indonesian Vice President: Stand Up Against Radicals
Ulma Haryanto & Anita Rachman | October 18, 2010

 

Indonesian Vice President Boediono, left, with United States President Barack 
Obama at the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington DC in April. In the 
strongest comments by a senior politician yet against creeping radicalism, 
Boediono said the country must not abandon the basic principle that guarantees 
religious freedom for all. (EPA Photo) 



Jakarta. Vice President Boediono has received cautious praise after calling on 
the "silent majority" to take a stand against a growing radicalism that he 
describes as threatening to take the country down a path of destruction.

"Once we allow radicalism to take over our way of thinking, it will lead us 
toward destruction," the vice president said in a speech on Saturday at the 
opening of the Global Peace Leadership Conference, organized by Nahdlatul 
Ulama.  

"Freedom of expression has been used by certain groups to spread hatred," he 
added.

Though racism and interreligious conflict are fundamental issues that exist in 
most societies, Boediono said, Indonesians should protect the foundation upon 
which the country was built - the principle of unity in diversity. "Although 
Islam is the religion of the majority of people, Indonesia is not an Islamic 
state," he said. 

Boediono said the country must not abandon the basic principle that guarantees 
religious freedom for all.

To do this, he called on the silent majority to take a stand. "Radicals are 
usually vocal, though they are few in number. They drown out the silent 
majority," he said. "But there are times when the silent majority must dare to 
speak out. We must loudly reject radicalism and return to the original 
agreement of the founding fathers of the nation."

Pluralism advocates applauded him for speaking out strongly on a threat they 
have long warned of but that officials have paid little attention to. Week 
after week, stories of discrimination against minority religious groups fill 
news pages, and several surveys have pointed to a worrying increase in 
intolerance among Indonesians. 

Dhyah Madya Ruth, chairwoman of Lazuardi Birru, a group that aims to educate 
young people about the dangers of extremism, said it was important that the 
government made a clear stand. 

"We have to create a synergy between the government, the people and civil 
society organizations in solving this problem," she said. "Most important in 
this is not just the silent majority, but the silent government has to make a 
firm stand."

Burhanuddin Muhtadi, an analyst from the Indonesian Survey Institute (LSI), 
said that President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had never strongly addressed 
radicalism. 

In August Yudhoyono decried "groups that threatened the nation," but his vague 
message could not be grasped by the public, Muhtadi said. 

"He is too focused on his own image. He doesn't want to be considered 
antagonistic toward Islamic hard-liners." 

Another important government figure who needs to stand up against those who 
promote hatred is the religious affairs minister, said Ulil Abshar Abdalla, the 
founder of the Liberal Islam Network and a Democratic Party politician.

"For example, in several Islamic gatherings people openly call for the 
banishment of [minority Islamic sect] Ahmadiyah. That should not be allowed," 
he said, adding that he regretted that Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma 
Ali had adopted a conservative approach that fostered radicalism. Suryadharma 
has openly advocated banning the Ahmadiyah sect.


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



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