Christians Most Hit by Religious Freedom Violations in Indonesia

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Mob succeeds in
getting local official to shut down HKBP church in West Java.

A moderate Muslim research institute focusing on interfaith issues in
Indonesia reported 35 cases of government violations of religious freedom –
including 28 against Christians – and 93 instances of community intolerance of
churches in 2009.

(Photo is not of HKBP church in West Java)

The Wahid
Institute issued a year-end report of violations that included the revocation of
the building permit for the HKBP Cinere Church – later overturned in court –
opposition to a Catholic Church in Purwakarta and an order forbidding worship by
the Filadelfia Huria Kristen Batak Protestan Church (HKBP) in Bekasi,
West Java.

The highest
number of violations occurred in West Java, with 10 cases, including seven
against Christians; next was East Java with eight, including four against
Christians, followed by Jakarta Province with four (three against Christians).
In Central Java, two of three religious violation cases were against Christians,
and in West Nusa Tenggara, one of the three violations violated Christians’
rights.


Government
infractions included closing churches and failing to intervene in mob actions.
Police were cited in 18 cases, provincial governments in eight, village and
sub-district governments in six cases each and courts in two
incidents.

Just as
government violations were highest in West Java, community intolerance there was
also highest with 32 cases, of which 14 were against Christians. Next was
Jakarta, where eight of 15 cases of community intolerance were against
Christians, then East Java where six of 14 cases hurt Christians. In Central
Java, Christians were the victims in five of the 13 cases of community
intolerance.

In West Java,
the root problem is the spread of hatred against religious groups, including
Christians and Jews, according to the report.

While the
reported violations of religious freedom were lower than in 2008, the issue of
religious intolerance continued to grow during 2009, aided by legislative and
presidential elections as religion is often used to gain votes in Indonesian
elections, according to the study. The overall figure of 128 cases of violations
of religious freedom by government or society in 2009 represents a drop from the
2008 figure of 234 cases, according to the Wahid
Institute.


Yenny Zanuba
Wahid, director of the institute, told Compass that the government has not
considered freedom of religion an important issue that needed attention. As a
result, the government has not addressed reports of intolerance even in the face
of international pressure.

“The government
has been timid to acknowledge violations of religious freedom, but these are
real and are carried out directly by government bodies or indirectly as a result
[of government] policies,” Wahid said.

Muslims make up
88.2 percent of Indonesia’s population of about 240 million people, with
Protestant Christians making up 5.9 percent, Catholics 3.1 percent, Hindus 0.8
percent, Buddhists 0.2 percent, and other religions 0.2 percent.

 

Church
Closure


In West Java,
mob efforts to shut down the Filadelfia Huria Kristen Batak Protestan
Church (HKBP) in Bekasi succeeded on Dec. 31 when the district officer issued a
decree ordering a stop to all worship activities at the site of the church
building under construction.

The decree
ordered that the construction of the building stop, and that the structure not
be used for worship until the building permit process was final. The district
officer based his recommendation upon a 1990 rule regarding building permits in
Bekasi.

Tigor
Tambubolon, head of the church building committee, acknowledged that the
building permit had not been formally granted even though the process had been
under way since 2000.

“We already have
the permission of the Jejalen citizens,” Tambubolon told Compass. “That’s why we
were brave enough to hold Christmas Eve services.”


Last Christmas
Eve hundreds of protestors demanding a halt to worship demonstrated against
services at the site, where 279 Christians had gathered.

A New Year’s
service scheduled to take place at the site moved to the office of the village
head due to fears that protestors would become unruly. Police Chief Herry Wibowo
said his officers guarded the church site at that time.

The Rev. Palti
Panjaitan of Filadelfia HKBP told Compass that the church had been worshipping
in the area since 2000 by meeting at various members’ homes. As the congregation
grew, they rented a building combining a home and store in Vila Bekasi 2 Tambun.

“The local
citizens demonstrated against our worship services,” said Panjaitan. “From there
we moved to a member’s home in Jejalan village. We profited because the Jejalan
citizens were very good.”


Eventually the
church bought a piece of land there. A number of the community leaders and the
village head gave their agreement to build the Filadelfia HKBP church
there.

The Interfaith
Harmony Forum of Bekasi district gave approval for the building with the
stipulation that the church obey a joint ministerial decree revised in 2006
regarding construction of houses of worship. The building committee obtained
signatures of 259 non-Christians endorsing the project, though the joint decree
required only 60 signatures. Then the building committee wrote a formal request
for a building permit.

Church elder
Tambubolon, however, added that a sub-district officer collected signatures from
citizens opposed to the construction of a house of worship in Jejalan. The total
number of signatures is unknown, but the sub-district office sent a letter to
the district officer rejecting the building permit.

Nevertheless,
Tambubolon said, the church is not considering a lawsuit over the district
officer’s decree.


“We are going to
continue worshipping, because it is the right of every citizen,” he said. “If we
are forbidden to worship even in the village office, we will continue to do
so.”

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