Ahmadiyah Again Faces Minister’s Call for a Ban
Camelia Pasandaran | September 08, 2010
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395172Has the government officially banned Jemaah Islamiyah yet?
its now obvious main stream government have been infiltrated by Radicals... I call on Densus 88 to investigate them and remove...
The real jihad is to fight all Radicals as they are the son's of Satan...
How can the government of Indonesia appoint such people as ministers? Next he'll be calling to bring in lions against the Christians. Back to the Dark Ages, Indonesia
If Indonesia ever wants to progress and join the rest of the world it will have to get rid of the religious affairs department once and for all. Talk about the Dark Ages.
If I was to be given one choice...I would want FPI to be banned. Blasphemy? Check out FPI and their goons Mr. Minister, will you!
Jakarta. Ignoring the outrage of rights activists, the religious affairs minister
on Tuesday reiterated his belief that an outright ban on Ahmadiyah
would be good for both the country and the sect.
Suryadharma Ali
said the government had two options: maintain the restrictions on the
group’s activities, or ban Ahmadiyah. A ban, he said, would protect
group members from attack and also help bring them into the fold of
mainstream Islam.
“The government can let them be or ban them.
Both carry risks,” he said. “To let them be is not regulated by our
laws, but we can ban them because we have regulations for this.”
The
minister, who last week caused an uproar by saying Ahmadiyah should be
banned because the group had angered mainstream Muslims, was referring
to the 1965 Blasphemy Law and a joint decree issued in 2008 by the
religious affairs and home affairs ministries, and the Attorney
General’s Office, restricting the group’s religious activities.
The
decree stopped short of banning the sect but prohibited Ahmadiyah
followers from publicly practicing their faith and from proselytizing.
“Banning
Ahmadiyah, in my opinion, is not an act of hatred or enmity, it is an
act of love and care for all our brothers across the nation. To ban them
is far better than to let them be,” Suryadharma said.
“To
outlaw them would mean that we are working hard to stop deviant acts
from continuing. It is better for us to take the hard steps now and, God
willing, all will be well.”
According to Suryadharma, all
Ahmadis want to follow mainstream Islam, and therefore “it is the duty
of every Islamic figure to take them in, teach them the correct way of
the religion.”
The minister also said that until a ban was
enacted, Ahmadiyah followers would continue to be targets for violent
attacks by hard-line groups.
“Why don’t you study the reactions
toward the Ahmadiyah?” he said. “We believe such harsh reactions are
because there are rules that are not being followed.”
Ahmadiyah
followers have been the target of numerous attacks by hard-line Muslim
groups, with authorities being accused of failing to take steps to
protect sect members.
Rights activists have said the minister’s
comments could be construed by hard-liners as justification for more
attacks on the group. Suryadharma, however, said that, in principle,
there should be no violence.
Founded in India in 1889, Ahmadiyah
holds that the group’s founder, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, was a prophet — a
belief that goes against mainstream Islam, which holds that Muhammad was
the last prophet.
Said Aqil Siradj, chairman of Nahdlatul
Ulama, the country’s largest Muslim organization with an estimated 40
million members, last week urged caution against banning Ahmadiyah.
“Ahmadiyah
has been in Indonesia since 1925. Why is it being made a problem now?”
he said. “This is not a local organization, it is present in 102
countries around the globe.”
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