http://www.asianews.it/news-en/Christians-in-Bekasi-forced-to-celebrate-in-the-open-air-under-police-protection-19063.html

07/29/2010 12:21
INDONESIA

Christians in Bekasi forced to celebrate in the open air under police 
protection 
by Mathias Hariyadi



Islamic extremists have targeted the HKBP community for years. Christians have 
been denied the right to build their own places of worship, have seen 
facilities used for services shut down, and have had to endure insults and 
threats during open-air celebrations. "I will never give up seeking justice," 
Rev Luspida Simanjutak says. "Law enforcement performance has been very poor. 
Security officials have been hopeless and silent on this crucial matter, "NGO 
laments.

 Jakarta (AsiaNews) - The members of the Batak Christian Protestant Church 
(Huria Kristen Batak Protestan or HKBP) celebrated Mass last Sunday in an open 
field in Ciketing, a suburb of Bekasi (West Java), under the protection of 
hundreds of police agents. 
The HKBP community has been the target of Islamic extremists for years. Muslims 
have shut down their church twice and prevented them from holding services in 
private locations. This month, they have begun to disrupt open-air Sunday 
services with threats and insults. In the first six months of the year, there 
were 28 anti-Christian attacks across Indonesia, seven in the city of Bekasi 
alone.

Rev Luspida Simanjytak, who heads the HKBP community, said she would never give 
in to continuous violence. "I will never give up seeking justice," she told 
AsiaNews. "I shall fight for the most fundamental of human rights, the right to 
worship God and profess our faith."

In Indonesia, the country with the greatest number of Muslims in the world, the 
constitution guarantees everyone's right to practice their faith.

"Why do we have to suffer like this?" the pastor asked when she spoke to 
AsiaNews after explaining that local administration officials have not done 
anything yet to help them.

The HKBP community has been in Bekasi for more than 20 years and can count on 
about 1,500 members. Islamic extremists are against them, especially charging 
them with proselytising.

"We speak Batak," Rev Simanjytak said, "our native language. How can we 
proselytise if others do not understand it."

After 500 Islamic extremists from the Islamic People's Forum (FUI) and the 
Islamic Defender Front (FPI) surrounded the field on 18 July where they hold 
their Sunday services, she filed a complaint with the West Java State 
Administrative Court against the Bekasi municipality.

For Bonar Tigor Naipospos, vice president of the Setara Institute for Democracy 
and Peace, an NGO involved in the defence of human rights, the fault lies with 
the local administration.

"Such violent actions by Muslim extremists are possible only because law 
enforcement performance has been very poor. Security officials have been 
hopeless and silent on this crucial matter."


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