http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/bogor-church-to-complain-to-un-about-closure/378478

June 03, 2010 
Armando Siahaan

Bogor Church to Complain to UN About Closure

A Protestant congregation in Bogor, which has been forced to hold services on 
the street after its half-finished church was sealed by the city administration 
in April, said it would soon submit a formal complaint to the United Nations. 

Ujang Tanusaputra, chairman of the GKI Yasmin Bogor congregation, said on 
Wednesday that after years of frustration in dealing with the authorities in 
Indonesia, it would approach the UN's Special Rapporteur on Religious Freedom. 

According to Ujang, the congregation, which has more than 300 members, has 
struggled against the local administration for nine years to secure a permit to 
allow it to build a church at its 1,720-square-meter property in West Bogor. 

He said he believed that the church site had been sealed off in March because 
of protests by a group of religious hard-liners calling itself the 
Communication Forum for Indonesian Muslims (Forkami). 

Ujang said the church had exhausted all legal possibilities, including filing 
official complaints with the Bogor administration, the West Java provincial 
government as well as the police. The church had even brought the case to the 
State Administrative Court in both Jakarta and Bandung, and both courts had 
ruled in favor of the church, he said. 

But Ujang said its efforts had been "abused and ignored" by the authorities in 
Bogor. 

The Human Rights Working Group said it would facilitate the complaint to the 
UN. 

"We are trying to get a UN special rapporteur to come to Indonesia to look at 
the case," said Hirim Nurliana, a program officer for the group. 

But she admitted that such a process would be an uphill battle, as the UN 
special rapporteur could only come at the invitation of the government. 
Nonetheless, the HRWG would lobby the government on GKI Yasmin Bogor's behalf, 
she said. 

Bonar Tigor Naispospos, of the Setara Institute for Democracy and Peace, said 
getting the government to invite the UN delegation would be a tough ask but was 
"worth a shot." 

He said, however, that if more churches facing similar opposition would take 
concrete steps like what GKI Yasmin Bogor had done, it would not be impossible 
for the government to take a stand on the matter. 

Bonar said the Bogor case was just one of many violations of religious freedom 
across the country. This year alone, Setara had noted 10 cases related to 
objections to non-Muslim groups building places of worship, he said. 

Late last year, the Wahid Institute released a report into religious freedom 
that found 35 cases of government violations of religious freedom and 93 
instances of community intolerance of churches, with West Java accounting for 
most of the cases in both categories. 

"So far, the government has done very little in resolving these cases," Bonar 
said. 

The HRWG's Hirim said that even if the UN special rapporteur were allowed to 
investigate the case, it would not mean that punitive measures would be taken 
against the perpetrators. 

But Bonar said that even if the recommendations of the special rapporteur did 
not eventuate in sanctions, it would put pressure on the government finally to 
take action. 

Bonar said that the majority of residents near the church site in Bogor had no 
objections with its construction, but the administration had been bullied into 
opposing it by protests from what he labeled as small and intolerant groups. 

He even argued that it was very likely that these groups were mobile and 
responsible for similar protests in other areas. Local authorities, he said, 
were reluctant to take action against these groups because they needed them for 
their political support during regional elections.


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