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April 24, 2006

Indonesia: Muslim Activists Tearing Country Apart

We have reported on the growing Muslim religious intolerance in Indonesia, which has led to the introduction of Sharia-based bylaws in local districts in Tangerang and South Sulawesi, and also in Depok, a satellite city outside Jakarta. The government is considering introducing an "anti-pornography" bill, which amongst clauses banning public kissing would also prevent areas of flesh being exposed. As such, it would destroy the tourist-driven economy of the Hindu island of Bali, where Westerners wear bikinis and speedos on the beaches.

The government is doing little to prevent the rampages of the Arab-led vigilante group the Front Pembela Islam, or Islamic Defenders' Front which has attacked the US Embassy, has assaulted Christians, has threatened foreigners, and has prevented churches being built. After the tsunami of December 24, 2004 the Front Pembela Islam intimidated aid workers accusing them of trying to convert victims to Christianity, and threatening death. They frequently smash up pool halls and bars, and gain their money by extortion from businesses. And they appear to be above the law. Recently they attacked the offices of Indonesian Playboy, and despite injuring two police officers in the subsequent violence, no-one was prosecuted.

Despite their catalogue of civil unrest and violence, this group, which launched an anti-US vendetta in 2001, was actually consulted by the Depok city council when they were consulting about their new Islamic regulations.

A report in today's Jakarta Post reports on the current trends among Islamic militants to gain influence in the nation, and the deleterious effects these trends are seen to be bringing to Indonesia. As the articles on Jakarta Post slip off the main pages within 24 hours, I am going to reproduce the article in full, with apologies to the JP.

Intellectuals warn of mob rule, disintegration of nation

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

Painting an ominous picture of religious intolerance and national disintegration, a group of activists and intellectuals warned Saturday that Muslim hard-liners threatened to hijack the country's hard-won unity.

Speaking at a one-day seminar here, they said that sharia-based ordinances being adopted by an increasing number of local administrations and the controversial pornography bill represented a danger to national unity.

The seminar featured young intellectuals from the Indonesian Youth Circle, which brings together prodemocracy activists from the country's two largest Muslim organizations, Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah, as well as from civil society NGOs and academia.

Speakers said Muslim hard-liners were increasingly gaining sway over mainstream society, as they took advantage of an administration in Jakarta disoriented by newfound democracy and human rights issues.

Weak government, combined with ineffective law enforcement, has allowed mobs to take the law into their own hands with no intervention by the state, the activists said in a joint statement.

They pointed to the recent attack by the Islam Defenders Front (FPI) on the building housing the editorial office of Playboy Indonesia, in protest of what they considered the magazine's un-Islamic content.

An intellectual from Muhammadiyah, Zuly Qodir, said sectarian groups saw the democracy the country has pursued since the 1998 fall of the authoritarian Soeharto had failed to bring about the envisioned prosperity.

"Now the sectarian groups are pressing their agenda to change Indonesia into a theocratic state. They seek to formalize Islam as the state ideology," he said.

The campaign for sharia, he said, is part of the euphoria following the fall of Soeharto, who while in power suppressed all attempts to replace the state ideology Pancasila.

Numerous municipalities and regions have passed sharia-inspired ordinances on public behavior and morality. Tangerang municipality, just outside Jakarta, has adopted a highly controversial prostitution bylaw that critics say degrades women. A similar ordinance is being considered by Depok municipality in West Java, and Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam and several regencies in South Sulawesi have also enacted Islamic bylaws.

The pornography bill being debated in the House of Representatives has been widely criticized for its perceived lack of respect for cultural and religious diversity and gender equality.

Zuly said that because Indonesia was predominantly Muslim, the government found it tricky to deal with religiously motivated matters.

"The government tends to bow to the majority's will," said Zuly, who is also the coordinator of the Center for Security and Peace Studies at Gadjah Mada University in Yogyakarta.

The young intellectuals at the seminar also raised concerns about the use of violence by hard-line groups in pursuing their political agendas.

Zuhairi Miswari from Nahdlatul Ulama said he believed educational institutions had a major role to play in saving Indonesia from disintegration through sectarian conflicts.

"Scientists, teachers and students have to act as role models in showing respect for differences and humanity," he said.

Scientist Effendy Ghazali called on the media to promote tolerance and decency, rather than fanning the conflict.

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Posted by Giraldus Cambrensis at April 24, 2006 3:52 PM

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