Indonesian province bans Ahmadis from 'spreading faith'

Move is latest in series in which religious minorities have faced harassment and complained of lack of protection


Reuters January 25, 2016
Members of Indonesia's minority Ahmadi community offer prayers at the al-Hidayah mosque in Jakarta on January 21, 2015. PHOTO: AFP

JAKARTA: A tiny Indonesian province has banned the minority Ahmadiyah community from conducting religious activities, a move activists say raises concerns over intolerance in the Muslim-majority nation.

The move by Bangka-Belitung, made up of two main islands off South Sumatra, is the latest in a series in which religious minorities including Christians and Shia Muslims have faced harassment and complained of a lack of protection.

Indonesia rejects outrage over anti-Ahmadi mob sentences

"The Ahmadiyah have a right to live in Bangka," Fery Insani, a senior official in the local government, told Reuters. "In a meeting with community leaders and religious figures, all of us have agreed that it is forbidden for them to conduct activities like spreading their faith."

Indonesia has the world's largest population of Muslims, the majority of whom adhere to moderate Sunni beliefs. But hardline Indonesian Muslims accuse Ahmadiyah and other minorities of apostasy.

Around 1,000 members of a group called Gafatar were evacuated from their homes following violence in West Kalimantan last week, media said. Authorities have outlawed the organisation which they describe as radical and dangerous.

Members of the tiny Ahmadiyah community on the tin-rich Bangka island said they had faced intimidation and official pressure to leave their homes, according to rights groups.

Indonesian court lets anti-Ahmadi mob perpetrators off 'lightly'

"We hope the police can guarantee security for the Ahmadiyah people in Bangka and that the local government guarantee our rights as citizens," said Yendra Budiana, a Jakarta-based spokesperson for the Indonesia Ahmadiyah Community.

A spokesperson for the religious affairs ministry declined to comment on the issue.

Hundreds of hardline Muslims forced the local government to tear down several churches in the conservative province of Aceh last last year, claiming they lacked proper building permits.

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