Oct. 16, 2006, 2:54AM
RELIGIOUS TENSIONS INFLAMED

After the government executed three Christians, many in divided nation 
wonder if Muslims convicted in Bali bombings will meet same fate
An eye for an eye in Indonesia?


By JOHN M. GLIONNA
Los Angeles Times

DENPASAR, INDONESIA - Maringan Simanjuntak wipes his brow in Bali's 
equatorial heat and talks in measured words about the fear and frustration 
of being Christian in the world's most populous Muslim nation.

Last month, Indonesia executed three Christians for inciting a mob that 
killed scores of Muslims six years ago in central Sulawesi province. The 
executions led to widespread Christian violence across the area, where 
religious tensions have simmered for years.

Now Simanjuntak and the rest of the nation anxiously await another 
execution. This time, three Islamic militants face death by firing squad for 
their roles in the 2002 Bali bombing that killed 202 people here in a 
crowded Denpasar tourist bar.

The 46-year-old tour guide wants an eye for an eye. But he doesn't expect to 
see the Bali bombers die: The Muslim-led government, he insists, takes care 
of its own.

"This country is a Muslim majority, and Christians are not offered the same 
protections under the laws," Simanjuntak said resignedly.

The executions have fueled new accusations of religious intolerance in this 
sprawling archipelago nation.

Many believe judges at the Christians' trial bowed to pressure from 
hard-line Muslims to send the three farm laborers to their deaths.

"They were not just scapegoats; they were the 'offering,' " said a lawyer 
for the three, who goes by the single name Brodus. "This is discrimination."

Despite government denials, many believe the timing of the Christian 
executions is linked to the fate of the three Bali bombers, who sit on 
Indonesia's death row.

"I miss my father. But what can we do?" said Robert Tibo, whose 60-year-old 
father, Fabianus, was one of those executed in Sulawesi. "We cannot fight 
the government. But it seemed officials were trying to pave the way for the 
Bali bombers' execution. They wanted to make it even between my father and 
the other Christians and the Muslims."

Ill will still lingers in Sulawesi in the wake of Muslim-Christian violence 
that swept the province between 1998 and 2002. Bombings, beheadings and 
machete attacks killed more than 1,000 people from both religious 
communities before the violence was brought to an end by an uneasy peace 
accord.

"For many Christians, there is a question of balance," Sidney Jones, senior 
project director for International Crisis Group, a private think tank, said 
of the government's prosecutions. Muslims charged in Sulawesi were given at 
most 15-year prison sentences, she added.

The result, Jones said, is that "there is this strong sense among non-Muslim 
minorities that they may not have a place in Indonesia."

Even in Bali, described by Travel & Leisure magazine as "the world's best 
island," Indonesia's religious violence has left its lethal mark.

October usually means tourism, but the palm-shaded beachside bars and hotels 
stand mostly empty. Bali's two terror attacks — the 2002 bombing and suicide 
blasts last year that killed 20 people — each took place in October.

Law enforcement officials here now refer to the month as "trouble season" 
and warn that another attack by Islamic extremists could incite violence 
with Bali's 3 million Hindus, who outnumber Christians and Muslims here.

At Kuta Beach, a granite-relief monument stands at the site of the 2002 
bombing, a place known to residents here as Bali's "ground zero." The 
memorial bears the names of all 220 victims.

Many Indonesians say that the fear of sectarian violence has only come in 
recent years. For three decades, former dictator Suharto kept the nation's 
simmering religious and ethnic rivalries at bay. But after his fall in 1998, 
distrust boiled over.

http://article.wn.com/link/WNAT0d387ed89f94e278d41bf29a981a3805?source=upge&template=indonesiapost/headlines.txt





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