http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/indonesian-military-behind-islamist-thugs-lawmaker/383394

June 30, 2010 

 
Members of the hardline Islamic Defenders' Front (FPI), pictured here in a file 
photo, forced the cancellation of a House of Representatives-led meeting on 
free health care in East Java because they thought, mistakenly, that it was 
being led by the banned Indonesian Communist Party (PKI). (AFP Photo/Romeo 
Gacad)



Indonesian Military Behind Islamist Thugs, Lawmaker

A lawmaker on Wednesday accused the security forces of secretly supporting 
Islamist vigilantes as a kind of paramilitary force to intimidate opponents and 
commercial rivals.

Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle lawmaker Eva Kusuma Sundari said 
extremist vigilantes known for violent attacks on bars, minorities and human 
rights advocates had direct links to military and police generals.

"The organization is now part of the conflict management strategy the 
Indonesian military exercises to maintain its power," she told AFP, referring 
to the stick-wielding fanatics known as the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI).

"There are several military personnel who still 'use' the services of the 
FPI... I suspect they maintain and protect the FPI because they still have 
interests with them."

The FPI is known for threatening, intimidating and physically attacking 
Indonesians with almost complete impunity, despite repeated calls for the 
government to ban the organization.

On Sunday it threatened "war" against the Christian minority in the Jakarta 
suburb of Bekasi and urged all mosques in the city to create armed militias. 

Sundari is a member of a group of MPs who has demanded the government crack 
down on the vigilantes after they burst into an official meeting on health care 
in East Java last week and accused the organisers of being communists.

FPI chairman Habib Rizieq hit back at the group's critics, saying they were 
part of a conspiracy among communists and liberals against the imposition of 
sharia or Islamic law in the secular but mainly Muslim country.

"Police should not discriminate -- whoever propagates communism should be 
brought to justice as it is a criminal offence," he told a press conference at 
FPI headquarters in Jakarta.

He did not renounce violence and when a journalist asked him to respond to 
community concerns about violence he accused him of being a communist.


Agence-France Presse


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