A
radical group in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia refused to allow the
HKBP Church (Huria Kristen Batak Protestant) Betania Rancaekek to
worship at its shophouse March 23.
In a video that has gone viral on social media, a group of radical Muslims surrounded the church and put up a banner that read: "Stop the illegal HKBP worship plan at the Maris Square shophouse!!! Or we will act.”
HKBP
Betania Rancaekek was established in April 1999. The church has
struggled to obtain a building permit (IMB) from the government, a move
many churches in Indonesia are familiar with. Without proper permits,
churches cannot gather legally. Often, IMBs are denied without solid
reasoning to prevent Christians from worshipping.
“Too
often, churches in Muslim-majority Indonesia are unfairly subjected to
Indonesia’s religious harmony laws, which require several conditions be
met to worship legally; these conditions are often subject to the
consent of reluctant Muslim majorities,” said Gina Goh, International Christian Concern’s (ICC) regional manager for Southeast Asia. “Even
if they manage to obtain the necessary IMB permit, the existence of
such religious harmony laws empowers activists and extremists with legal
tools to disrupt the social order and create a new challenge to one’s
right to worship, as local governments are unwilling to risk public
unrest. If Indonesia truly honors Pancasila, the nation’s core ideology
to promote pluralism, Jakarta needs to ensure that one religion cannot
strip the rights of another.”
In 2015, the assembly and the
committee began working on the IMB of the shophouse building in Maris
Square as a place of worship. In the following years, the assembly
approached residents and local authorities to receive their consent.
Their
efforts yielded positive results, as 85 residents signed a letter
stating they did not object and supported the conversion of shophouses
into HKBP worship buildings in late 2019. The local village chief also
approved the plan.
Yet, the church still faces resistance from
the Camat (district leader) and the local Military District Command.
They refused to sign the letter and the Camat issued a letter in January
2020 to seal the church. A hardline Islamic organization, Forkomi
(previously called Islamic Defenders Front), then forcibly shut down the
building so it could no longer be used for worship.
Since
then, HKBP Betania Rancaekek has continued to work with government
agencies to resolve their differences. While taking care of the permit
issue, the church planned to worship in the building on Sunday, March
27.
But their plan was disrupted by the protesting Forkomi and hardline residents last Wednesday.
A Christian lawyer familiar with the case told ICC, “The
church now plans to resume their worship after the month of Ramadan.
They will consult with [the] district leader before they send me a
formal letter requesting legal assistance.”
Wednesday, March 30, 2022
The Camat from Bandung is a joke
For interviews, please contact: press@persecution.org.
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