'Unchecked Extremism' Behind Attacks on Churches in Indonesia
Thu, Aug. 19, 2010 Posted: 11:06 AM EDT  
Christian Post  
____________________________________
  
 
JAKARTA, Indonesia (Compass Direct News) – The country that is home to the  
world’s largest Muslim population celebrated its 65th Independence Day 
today  amid a widespread sense of distrust in the government’s ability to check 
attacks  on churches by Islamist groups. 
Muslims and Islamic organizations, Buddhists and Hindus joined hundreds of  
Christians for an ecumenical worship service near National Monument Square 
in  Jakarta to protest “government inaction” over attacks on Christians and 
“forced  closure of churches,” reported The Jakarta Globe. They had 
planned to hold the  service outside the State Palace, but the government 
prohibited it due to  preparations for Independence Day celebrations, the daily 
reported. 
“Why did it take President [Susilo Bambang] Yudhoyono so many days to speak 
 against the attacks?” the Rev. Dr. SAE Nababan, president of the World 
Council  of Churches from Asia, told Compass. “Such carelessness can be 
dangerous for our  democracy. Officials must not forget that they are 
accountable 
to the  people.” 
Nababan was referring to President Yudhoyono’s call for religious harmony a 
 day before the month-long Islamic festival of fasting, Ramadan, began here 
last  Wednesday (Aug. 11). According to the Globe, it was the president’s “
first  public comment” addressing “a recent rash of violence against 
religious  minorities.” 
The president’s statement came after a fifth attack on the Batak Christian  
Protestant Filadelfia Church (HKBP Filadelfia) in Bekasi city, a suburb of  
Jakarta, on Aug. 8. 
More than 300 members of the extremist Islamic People’s Forum (FUI) and  
Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) broke through a police barricade and injured at  
least a dozen people during the Sunday worship in a field. The church has 
faced  attacks since November 2000, when it was constructing the church 
building. (See  www.compassdirect.org, “Hundreds Injure Church Members in 
Bekasi, 
Indonesia,”  Aug. 9) 
Rising Christian Persecution
Endy Bayuni, former editor  of The Jakarta Post, told Compass that churches 
were being attacked every week  but that media were avoiding coverage 
because it is an “emotional and  controversial issue.” 
“You also risk being accused of taking sides when you report on religious  
conflicts,” he said, adding that Christians and the Ahmadiyya, a Muslim sect 
 regarded as heretical because it does not believe that Muhammad was the 
last  prophet, bear the brunt of Islamism in Indonesia. 
A report by the Setara Institute for Peace and Democracy stated that  
violations of religious freedom of Christians had grown from previous years. It 
 
recorded at least 28 violations - mostly by Islamist groups – between 
January  and July – up from 18 in 2009 and 17 in 2008. 
The violations included forced closure of churches, revocation and delays 
in  issuing building permits, and attacks such as torching and damaging 
churches.  Political motives, economic interests involving illegal extortion, 
and 
 ideological clashes of “intolerant groups” refusing the presence of those 
of a  different religion impeded justice in most cases, noted the report. 
Powerful Minority
Most Muslims in Indonesia are moderate  and tolerant, said Nababan, former 
bishop of the HKBP Filadelfia church, but he  added that the extremist 
minority poses a “great threat” to the nation. 
“Extremism always starts in small numbers,” he said, alluding to alleged  
government inaction. 
Dr. Musda Mulia, a Muslim research professor at the Indonesian Institute of 
 Sciences, told Compass all Indonesians have a right to freedom of faith. 
“It seems the government doesn’t want to deal with the radicals,” she 
said.  “Persecution of Christians and other minorities has been my concern for 
many  years, but the government is very weak.” 
Extremism in Indonesia, now a republic with a presidential system, dates 
back  to the country’s struggle for independence, when Islamists called for an 
Islamic  state. The Dutch transferred sovereignty to Indonesia in 1949 
after an armed  struggle. 
Not heeding the Islamists’ call, the country’s leaders chose “Pancasila” 
as  the official philosophical foundation comprising five principles: belief 
in the  one and only God; just and civilized humanity; the unity of 
Indonesia; democracy  guided by the inner wisdom in the unanimity arising out 
of 
deliberations among  representatives; and social justice for all. 
In line with Pancasila, “Unity in Diversity” (Bhinneka Tunggal Ika) became 
 the official national motto of Indonesia. The Indonesian Constitution 
guarantees  freedom of religion, but the government only recognizes six 
religions: Islam,  Hinduism, Buddhism, Protestantism, Catholicism, and 
Confucianism. 
Indonesia, an archipelago of 17,508 islands – about 6,000 of which are  
inhabited – has around 300 distinct native ethnicities and 742 languages and  
dialects. Over 86 percent of the over 138 million Indonesians are Muslim.  
Christians are around 8 percent, Hindus 3 percent and Buddhist 1.8 percent. 
Islamist militant groups remain active and growing and are still fighting  
pluralism. According to the Globe, police recently unearthed a terror plot  
against President Yudhoyono, “part of a larger trend as militant groups 
widened  their targets from Westerners to include state officials” considered 
to 
be  “symbols of secularism.” One of their aims was to “accelerate the 
transformation  of the country’s democratic system into one controlled by 
Islamic law.” 
In 2002, over 200 people (including 164 foreigners) were killed in a terror 
 attack by Islamist militants in Kuta town on the island of Bali. Indonesia 
has  also fought violent Islamist insurgents, such as in Aceh Province, 
which now has  a special status and implements sharia (Islamic law). 
Mulia of the Indonesian Institute of Sciences, who is the first woman to  
obtain a doctorate degree in Islamic political thought, identified the FPI 
and  the Forum Betawi Rempung (Betawi Brotherhood Forum or FBR) as two of the  
Islamist groups chiefly responsible for Christian persecution. 
The FPI, a national-level organization infamous for vigilante violence and  
allegedly part of the al Qaeda network, was established on Aug. 17, 1998. 
The  FBR, a similar group based in Jakarta, was formed to fight for the 
interests of  the ethnic Betawi Muslims on July 29, 2001. 
Both groups exist legally in the country. 
In June, several Indonesian parliamentarians asked the government to ban 
the  FPI, which “has threatened ‘war’ against Christians in Jakarta and urged 
mosques  to set up militia forces,” reported the Globe on July 26. The 
government,  however, thinks that banning such groups will only lead to 
re-formation of the  same organizations under new names. 
The deputy chairman of Setara, Bonar Tigor Naipospos, was quoted in the  
Post’s July 29 edition as saying that local administrations, especially in  
cities in West Java Province, see these groups “as assets for local  elections.
” 
“They [local governments] bow to pressure from mass organizations that 
insist  the churches’ presence and activities have caused unrest,” he 
reportedly  said. 
As for the national government, added Nababan of the World Council of  
Churches of Asia, “it is preoccupied with its free market economy and 
apparently 
 has no time to uphold the Constitution.” 
Church Building Permits
The sealing of churches and the  refusal to grant building permits top the 
list of major violations of  Christians’ religious rights in Indonesia, 
according to Setara. The Aug. 8  attack on the HKBP Filadelfia church was also 
rooted in denial of permit for  constructing its church building. 
Setara’s deputy chairman told the Post that churches in Jakarta mainly 
faced  trouble in renovating and expanding their buildings, which require 
building  permits. 
“They have to start over again by obtaining 60 signatures from residents  
living around the church, and sometimes residents refuse to provide 
signatures,”  he said. The Setara report recommended that President Yudhoyono 
review 
a 2006  joint ministerial decree that requires signatures from congregations 
and  residents living nearby, as well as approval from the local 
administration, to  build a house of worship. 
According to Setara, at least three churches in east and south Jakarta were 
 experiencing difficulties in obtaining permits for church building at 
press  time. 
Nababan complained that some local governments would not give permits for  
churches for years without stating any reason. 
“If this current government can become courageous enough to prosecute those 
 who break the law and allow religious freedom, including the freedom to  
construct churches where we live, there is hope for Indonesia,” added  
Nababan. 
A Christian source who requested anonymity said he agreed that there was 
hope  for minorities in Indonesia. 
“Violent attacks awaken the silent majority, which then speaks up and holds 
 the government accountable,” he said.
Compass Direct News
Vishal Arora 

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