Hehehe... spt inilah kegiatan beragama Islam yg tjd di Indonesia.

Perhatikan jg kegiatan Islami ini banyak tjd di Jawa Barat dimana kepala
daerahnya adalah orang2 PKS.

Pasti bini mereka banyak dan anak2nya segudang kayak si Luthfi


http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/incidents-of-religious-intolerance-down-slightly-setara/

 Religious Intolerance Down Slightly in Indonesia: Setara  By Stephanie
Hendarta <http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/author/jakarta-globe/> on 9:24 am
July 9, 2013.
Category Featured <http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/featured-2/>, Law &
Order<http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/law-and-order/>,
News <http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/>
Tags: Ahmadiyah Muslims<http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/tag/ahmadiyah-muslims/>,
Indonesia religious
intolerance<http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/tag/indonesia-religious-intolerance/>,
sectarian violence <http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/tag/sectarian-violence/>,
Setara Institute
<http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/tag/setara-institute/>, sunni-shiite
violence <http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/tag/sunni-shiite-violence/>



[image: A file photo shows an Ahmadiyah Mosque destroyed by mobs in
Haurwangi, Ciranjang, Cianjur, West Java on Feb.18, 2012. (JG Photo/Rezza
Estily)]<http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/islamic-hard-liners-attack-ahmadiyah-community-for-koran-recital/attachment/ahmadiyah_preview/>

A file photo shows an Ahmadiyah Mosque destroyed by mobs in Haurwangi,
Ciranjang, Cianjur, West Java on Feb.18, 2012. (JG Photo/Rezza Estily)

Violence between Sunni and Shiite Muslims on East Java’s Madura Island and
an attack on an Ahmadiyah community in West Java are among the 282 cases of
religious violence in Indonesia reported in the first half of the year by
the Setara Institute, an organization that monitors religious freedom in
the country.

The struggle for religious freedom continues to face headwinds, as the
institute reported only a minor drop in the number of acts of religious
intolerance. In its January-July 2012 report, Setara recorded a total of
297 cases of violence.

Even though Indonesia’s 1945 Constitution proclaims religious freedom,
religious intolerance remains rampant, especially in diverse and densely
populated Java.

Of the 122 incidents of religious intolerance reported, 95 occurred in
Java, with 61 reported in West Java, 18 in East Java and 10 in Jakarta.

Many of the West Java incidents constituted violent attacks against the
Ahmadiyah sect of Islam, considered blasphemous by fundamentalist groups
such as the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI).

According to Setara’s report, Ahmadiyah community members were attacked 46
times between January and June. In May, the West Java governor said
religious tensions involving Ahmadiyah would end if the religious minority
was to leave the province.

Other religious groups frequently targeted include Protestant Christians
and Shiite Muslims.

Pastor Palti Panjaitan, leader of the HKBP Filadelfia Church in Tambun,
Bekasi, was subjected to a second investigation in May after being charged
for hitting Abdul Azis, a resident involved in an argument with church
members last Christmas Eve.

The argument flared after some residents violently objected to the
congregation’s planned Christmas mass and ended with Palti in police
custody.

Many incidents of religious intolerance have been met with little or no
government intervention, allowing vigilantism to take root. National
agencies were behind only 70 of the 160 responses to incidents of religious
intolerance, while citizens instigated the rest, the report said.

“Government figures have been averse to taking significant action in
protecting the rights of religious minorities because they are keeping
their own political interests in mind,” Ismail Hasani, research director at
Setara, told the Jakarta Globe.

In the Sunni-Shiite conflict in Madura Island’s Sampang district, police
and local government officials allegedly compelled Iklil al Milal, the
leader of the Nangkernang Shiite community, to sign a document consenting
to a non-negotiable evacuation of the displaced Shiite people to East Java.

Setara and other human rights organizations have called for stronger
political intervention in incidents of religious violence under President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

“We need to put more pressure on SBY’s regime with the hope that it would
address the issue of religious freedom more seriously,” the Setara report
said.

“The Statesman Award he received from the Appeal of Conscience Foundation,
an interfaith group, has not made any impact on the progress of religious
freedom in Indonesia. Rather, after SBY received the award, the violence
against the Sampang Shiite intensified.”


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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