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Twenty Ahmadiyah followers have missed work and school,
remaining holed up in the Al-Misbah Mosque in Bekasi, east of Jakarta,
since local officials sealed it off on April 4.
The security
coordinator for the Ahmadiyah Indonesia Congregation, Deden Sudjana,
said on Saturday that the Ahmadis were in good condition and would stay
in the mosque until the city administration allowed the followers of the
minority Muslim sect to practice their religion and remove the fence
sealing the mosque.
However, officials appear unlikely to honor that request.
Deden
said that Bekasi Mayor Rahmat Effendi invited the Bekasi Ahmadiyah
congregation members to a dialogue on April 11, which he said ended in
deadlock and was attended by representatives of the Bekasi branch of the
Indonesia Ulema Council (MUI).
The administration, according to
Deden, had agreed to open the mosque only if the Ahmadis removed Islam
from their congregation’s name or allowed officials to arrange all
services at the mosque, including deciding on its imams.
“We refused to agree to the first point because, just like other Muslims, we are Muslims, too,” Deden said.
“Please do not decide who will be the imam in our own mosque either.”
Deden
earlier said that the administration justified shutting down the mosque
under the terms of a West Java gubernatorial decree and the 2008 joint
ministerial decree banning members of Ahmadiyah from propagating their
beliefs.
The closure drew anger from groups promoting pluralism
and religious freedom, with 200 clerics in Greater Jakarta taking to the
street on April 8 to criticize the government for its failure to crack
down on religious intolerance.
The clerics in their cassocks,
along with the representatives of Shia, Ahmadiyah and practitioners of
indigenous faiths, marched from Bung Karno Stadium to the House of
Representatives’ compound in Senayan, Central Jakarta, calling on the
government to heed the 1945 Constitution that guarantees religious
freedom for minorities.
Eva Kusuma Sundari, a lawmaker on House
Commission III overseeing law and human rights, met the 20 besieged
Ahmadis on Saturday, saying that the Ahmadis had not met their families
in 23 days.
The Ahmadis have been given food and water delivered through the fence from their fellow believers, Eva said.
“I
witnessed how they did it. It was inhumane and I was sad about it, but
it was the only thing that they could do for their fellow believers who
are fighting for their rights,” the Indonesian Democratic Party of
Struggle (PDI-P) politician told The Jakarta Post.
Contacted
separately, Hendardi, the chairman of the Setara Institute, which
monitors religious freedom in Indonesia, said that Bekasi had a bad
record on guaranteeing religious freedom for the Ahmadis and Christians.
“The
administration has to protect and enforce religious freedom for
minority groups, instead of being one of the actors attacking religious
minority groups,” Hendardi said.
(hrl)
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