http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/indonesian-christians-protest-over-intimidation/494399

Indonesian Christians Protest Over Intimidation
January 29, 2012

 An Indonesian priest gestures during a Sunday mass outside the presidential 
palace in Jakarta. Hundreds of Christian worshipers held a Sunday mass outside 
the presidential palace in Jakarta calling President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono 
to allow them the right to worship at their church in Bogor which they claimed 
had been sealed off by local authorities. (AFP Photo/Adek Berry) 

Indonesian Christians held a prayer vigil in Jakarta on Sunday urging President 
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to re-open their church and stop intimidation by 
Muslim hardliners

About 200 people, mostly members of the Taman Yasmin Indonesian Christian 
Church, prayed and sang hymns outside the state palace.

“We hope the president will protect us from harassment by radical groups and 
re-open the church which is legally ours so we can conduct worship,” the 
group’s spokeswoman Dwiati Novita Rini told AFP.

The Christians have been forced to hold services on the pavement outside their 
church in Bogor city, south of Jakarta, after its permit was revoked in 2008, 
Rini said.

“But the Supreme Court overturned the decision in December 2010 and ordered for 
the church to be re-opened. The Bogor city administration however refused to 
comply,” she added.

The congregation has since moved their weekly service to a house near a church 
but faced intimidation and verbal abuse from Muslim hardliners, Rini said.

“A few dozen would harass us every weekend. But last Sunday, hundreds 
intimidated us with sticks and rocks and shouted at us to leave,” she added.

Although the constitution explicitly guarantees freedom of religion and the 
country of some 240 million people, laws make it difficult for faiths other 
than Islam to establish houses of worship.

Rights groups say religious intolerance is on the rise in Indonesia, which has 
the world’s biggest Muslim majority, citing the persecution of the minority 
Muslim Ahmadiyah sect and the torching of churches.

Amnesty International last Wednesday called on the government to guarantee the 
safety of the congregation and conduct “prompt, independent and impartial” 
investigations into reports of intimidation.

It also urged the government to ensure the Bogor city authorities immediately 
comply with the court’s ruling to re-open the church.

Agence France-Presse


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