Indonesia passes law to ban organizations deemed against its ideology
JAKARTA
(Reuters) - Around 1,000 Indonesians, led by hardline Islamist groups,
protested outside parliament on Tuesday as lawmakers approved a
presidential decree banning any civil organizations deemed to go against
the country’s secular state ideology.
Tuesday’s
approval puts into law a policy President Joko Widodo set in a decree
in July. The policy was aimed at containing hardline groups who have
cast a shadow over the long-standing reputation for religious tolerance
in the world’s largest Muslim-majority nation.
“We
have seen mass organizations that are against the Pancasila (state
ideology) and have created social conflict,” said Arya Bima, a lawmaker
in favour of the policy. “This law doesn’t impede freedom of
organization or assembly, it strengthens it.”
In late 2016 and early this year, groups such as Hizb-ut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI) and the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), which call for Islamic law to be imposed in Indonesia, led mass street rallies attacking Jakarta’s governor, a Christian, whom they accused of insulting Islam.
Basuki
Tjahaja Purnama, who in April lost an election to get a new term, was
jailed one month later after being convicted of blasphemy, in a court
ruling widely criticized in Indonesia and overseas as unjust.
The
presidential decree Widodo signed in July ordered the disbanding of all
organizations deemed to be in conflict with the secular state ideology.
HTI, which seeks to establish an Islamic caliphate, was the first
organization to be disbanded under the policy.
Pancasila or ‘five
principles’ is Indonesia’s state ideology, which includes belief in
god, the unity of the country, social justice and democracy, and which
enshrines religious diversity in an officially secular system. VIOLATION OF RIGHTS?
Under the new law, anyone who “embraces, develops of spreads ideology that is in conflict with the (state ideology) Pancasila” can face imprisonment of six months to life, according to a copy of the draft law reviewed by Reuters.
Rights
activists and civil organizations have decried the move, saying it harks
back to the era of authoritarian ruler Suharto, who demanded loyalty to
Pancasila and took repressive measures against some opponents.
Opposition
lawmaker Al Muzamil Yusuf said the new law could “violate democratic
rights and remove checks and balances on the government”.
During
the protest outside parliament on Tuesday, around 5,200 police and
military personnel stood guard around the complex in central Jakarta.
A hashtag supporting Widodo’s policy was a top trending topic on Indonesian Twitter.
“This policy is not about (Widodo) or any political party, it’s about safeguarding the unity of the country,” said user @Senopati.
Writing by Kanupriya Kapoor; Editing by Richard Borsuk
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sumber : http://www.reuters.com/article/us-indonesia-islamists/indonesia-passes-law-to-ban-organizations-deemed-against-its-ideology-idUSKBN1CT1JZ
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