Bukti NKRI bukan tempat untuk semua, hanya yang besar yang terpilih. Jadi bukan 
seperti dikatakan : “Banyak yang dipanggil tetapi sedikit yang terpilih”, 
sebaliknya banyak yang dipanggil dan banyak yang diambil, sedikit dibuang ke 
tong sampah dihargai mati” hehehehe

Kaum minoritas yang menjilat-jilat biar menyanyi Indonesia Raya sampai suara 
parau mengakibatkan sesak nafas atau menderita astma hanya melelahkan diri ke 
alam hampa. Dan oleh sebab itu harus dibantu memerdekakan pulau Jawa menjadi 
negara merdeka dan berdaulat, agar penyakit penindasan dan intoleransi tidak 
bertambah parah dan berakar di tempat lain dengan wabab harga mati.  

Jangan khawatir pulau Jawa akan berkesusahan, sebaliknya sudah ada banyak 
industri modern dan kemajuan ekonomi terkonsentrasi, universitas-universitas 
nomor wahid sudah dimiliki,  penuh ahli-ahli ilmu surgawi yang memegang kunci 
ke taman taman firdaus penuh kelimpahan abadi. Ayo jangan lalai menyokong 
kemerdekaan pulau Jawa menjadi negara merdeka dan berdaulat penuh. Semoga Allah 
memberkati Anda dan sokongan Anda untuk maksud suci ini. Viva Jawa, Viva  
indenpendencia! Amin.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2017/02/04/religious-minorities-feel-neglected-in-jakarta-election.html

Religious minorities feel neglected in Jakarta election
  a.. Safrin La Batu 
  The Jakarta Post 
Jakarta | Sat, February 4, 2017 | 11:55 am 
 
An Ahmadiyah follower says Friday prayers on the street in Bukit Duri Tanjakan, 
South Jakarta, on Friday, June 12, 2015, while several local people look on. 
Later the local people forced the Ahmadiyah practitioners to disperse from the 
area. (JP/P. J. Leo) 
Despite the three candidate pairs in the Jakarta gubernatorial election 
offering promises to various social and demographic groups across the capital, 
religious minority groups still feel left out as candidates seem to prefer 
wooing members of the majority community.

In the three months since the election campaign kicked off in late October, 
none of the three candidates, namely Agus Harimurti Yudhoyono-Sylviana Murni, 
incumbent Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama-Djarot Saiful Hidayat and Anies 
Baswedan-Sandiaga Uno, have specifically spoken about protecting religious 
minorities from intolerant groups, even in the face of a rising number of 
sectarian incidents in the city.

Human rights organization Setara Institute reported that 31 sectarian incidents 
occurred in Jakarta in 2016, putting it in second place as the most intolerant 
province after West Java with 41 cases. Jakarta had not been in the top 10 of 
the most intolerant provinces list since 2008, according to Setara Institute 
deputy director Bonar Tigor Naipospos.

The Ahmadiyah and Shia are just two of the religious minority groups that have 
often faced discrimination in the past.

The leader of East Jakarta’s Ahmadiyah community, Aryudi Prastowo, said the 
candidates should have spoken more about the issue of religious-minority rights 
because Jakarta was home to people from different religions and ethnic 
backgrounds.

“What makes Jakarta Jakarta is the minorities. If you wipe out all the 
minorities, Jakarta would no longer be Jakarta,” he told The Jakarta Post on 
Friday.

Aryudi said the Ahmadiyah community left its members to vote for whichever 
candidate they wished. Voters, however, were urged not to vote for candidates 
that were backed by intolerant groups, he added.

Similar to Aryudi, a prominent Shia figure in Jakarta, who preferred to remain 
anonymous because of the sensitivity of the issue, agreed that the issue of 
minority rights had only been minimally touched on during the campaign. He 
urged the administration to immediately take action to handle the increase in 
intolerance in the city.

According to Bonar Tigor Naipospos, the issue of minority rights had become 
very sensitive for the candidates as a result of the blasphemy charges against 
Ahok. Candidates were reluctant, Bonar said, to address this issue openly for 
fear of alienating voters.

However, Bonar warned that leaving the issue untouched would have worse 
consequences as it would provide more space for intolerant groups to pursue 
their own agenda and force that agenda later when a particular candidate was 
elected.

“It is unpopular to address it, but there is no way to avoid discussing it,” 
Bonar told the Post over the phone. “The candidates should have the courage to 
show that they are not going to tolerate any intolerant acts.”

Agus spoke about the importance of maintaining a harmonious and tolerant city 
in the first official debate on Jan. 13, without however, elaborating on how he 
would implement the concept and whether he would reject certain intolerant 
groups.

Ahok, a Christian of Chinese descent, previously said that every minority 
citizen like himself had the constitutional right to run for office. However, 
he has not taken a public stance about intolerance toward minority groups like 
the Shia or Ahmadiyah.

Anies once said that he would protect pluralism and “ensure every single law 
enforcement agency enforces the law” against groups carrying out intolerant 
acts. However, his visit to the Islam Defenders Front (FPI) headquarters was 
regarded by many as proof that he has a special relationship with the FPI, 
which in the past has raided places of worship belonging to minority groups.

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