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RI '€˜failing'€™ to protect religious freedom

A prolonged spat over the Indonesian Christian Church (GKI) Yasmin in Bogor, West Java, has once more drawn attention from abroad, with a US rights body witnessing in situ the situation faced by the beleaguered congregation

The Jakarta Post
Bogor
Sat, August 29, 2015

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RI '€˜failing'€™ to protect religious freedom

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prolonged spat over the Indonesian Christian Church (GKI) Yasmin in Bogor, West Java, has once more drawn attention from abroad, with a US rights body witnessing in situ the situation faced by the beleaguered congregation.

Preparing its 2016 annual report, representatives of the Washington-based US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) joined the congregation for a Sunday morning service held at the home of one of its members in Cimanggu, Bogor.

'€œWe'€™ve been following the development of this case very closely and it'€™s been a concern for a long time. We'€™ve come here so that we can work better on our reports and recommendations when we go home,'€ USCIRF vice chairman M. Zuhdi Jasser said on Sunday.

In its 2014 report released in April, the commission, tasked with providing policy recommendations to the US government, cited the GKI Yasmin case, stating that '€œlocal government officials continue to harass religious minorities over religious sites'€.

'€œWe are advocating for the rights of GKI Yasmin congregation members, their religious freedom and for the opening of their church,'€ USCIRF commissioner Daniel I Mark said.

The report, which assessed 30 countries, included Indonesia on its list of countries where governments '€œengage in or tolerate systematic, ongoing and egregious abuses of religious freedom'€, although it did not categorize Indonesia as a '€œcountry of particular concern'€.

USCIRF recommended that the US government urge the Indonesian government to take measures to ease religious tensions in the county, including the revocation of a 2006 joint ministerial decree on the construction of houses of worship.

The contentious ruling stipulates that congregation members must secure approval from at least 60 local residents of different faiths and the government-sponsored Regional Interfaith Communication Forum (FKUB) prior to establishing houses of worship.

Although the church had met these requirements, the Bogor City Planning and Parks Agency revoked the church'€™s building permit (IMB) in February 2008 in the face of pressure from local residents, including Islamic hardliners.

The Bogor administration then sealed the building in April 2010.

In December of that year, the Supreme Court delivered a verdict restoring the church'€™s IMB. Bogor mayor Diani Budiarto, however, defied the ruling, revoking the IMB once more in March 2011.

Four months later, the Indonesian Ombudsman announced that Diani had broken the law and ordered him to immediately revoke his decision to seal GKI Yasmin.

However, nothing significant has yet been done to resolve the situation, even after Bima Arya replaced Diani in April 2014.

'€œThe mayor keeps on avoiding his legal obligation to guarantee religious freedom for his residents. If the Supreme Court ruling is not implemented, this will lead to legal uncertainty,'€ said Indonesian Communion of Churches (PGI) secretary-general Gomar Gultom.

In a meeting held in August with the ombudsman, Bima insisted on persisting with several options he had previously proposed, one of which involved relocating the church.

'€œWe will only agree with proposals that comply with the 2010 ruling and the Indonesian Ombudsman'€™s recommendations. There have been others that the administration should seriously consider,'€ GKI Yasmin spokesman Bona Sigalingging said. (alm)

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