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Jakarta Post

University, high school graduates form organization to oppose radicalism, hate speech

Rizki Fachriansyah (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Mon, December 21, 2020

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University, high school graduates form organization to oppose radicalism, hate speech Dozens of university and high school graduates from across the country formed the Alumni for Indonesia organization on Monday to address concerns about the country’s potential tilt toward social and political tribalism. (Shutterstock/File)

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ozens of university and high school graduates from across the country formed the Alumni for Indonesia organization on Monday to address concerns about the country’s potential tilt toward social and political tribalism.

Alumni representative Bilmar Sitanggang said the movement aimed to maintain public order and national unity given that certain mass organizations had appropriated free speech rhetoric to disseminate hateful propaganda against the government and jeopardize social cohesion.

Growing intolerance and radicalism could serve as fertile grounds for terrorism, eroding public trust in authorities, he said.

“Intolerance and radicalism distilled in widely disseminated hate speech, if not immediately stemmed, could disrupt political stability and national security,” Bilmar said in a statement.

During a public demonstration held on Monday afternoon, the organization affirmed its stance against intolerance and pledged its support for the country’s authorities in the fight against radical groups that ran counter to the values of state ideology Pancasila.

The organization also urged the government and lawmakers to revise the law on deradicalization to prevent attempts at polarization. It called for the immediate establishment of a task force aimed at counteracting intolerance and radicalism in the country.

The return of Islam Defenders Front (FPI) leader Rizieq Shihab and the controversy surrounding the controversial cleric and hardline group in recent weeks has once again stoked fears about a polarized society.

The apparent animosity between the government and the FPI escalated earlier this month with the police shooting of six FPI members. The police reportedly had been tailing the members in response to a tip about plans to disrupt the police questioning of Rizieq regarding health protocol violations.

Rizieq went to the Jakarta Police headquarters on Dec. 12, nearly a week after the fatal shooting, to fulfill a police summons for questioning in the health protocol case, in which he had been named a suspect.

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