State Has No Right to Dictate Religion, Court Hears in Blasphemy Law Review
Camelia Pasandaran | March 13, 2010
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363631If i am a muslim and you are a christian then i commit Blasphemy everyday from your point of view and vice versa. Keep freedom of speech alive.
padt, might is not always right... especially true to this crowd.
i say, why the ruckus? religion and states can't be mixed together, it's like mixing and stirring gunpowder and hoping it doesn't blow up.
Quote: "the crowd of (Muslim) protesters could be heard calling both Ulil and Emha devils. “Kill them! Slash their necks!” the protesters screamed.
Tell me why I should convert to Islam if this is the face of it?
“Kill them! Slash their necks!”...what a ??? attitude of, shall we call it, conservative, or better anarchistic, Muslim groups! That's how voices of moderation and logic are in Indonesia silenced!
Embarrassing for the state in which certain groups are putting Indonesia!
Just get rid of this terrible law and show that Indonesia is truly a secular democracy in which the government can clearly separate religious interests and interests of the state! And get rid of this nerving , permanent display about, of which religion a person belongs to on each and every single questionnaire and document!
Unless Indonesia repeals all "blasphemy" laws, removes the compulsion to believe in the god myth, disbands the Religious Affairs Ministry, ends religious indoctrination in schools, stops funding any religious activities and eventually takes steps to rid itself of the outdated superstitions called religion, it will never develop...
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Islamic scholars and religious experts on Friday demanded the Constitutional Court either revise or annul the 1965 Law on Blasphemy, arguing that the outdated law contradicted the democratic principle of freedom of religion.
“Religious bodies, like the MUI [Indonesian Council of Ulema] or PBNU [Nahdlatul Ulama National Board], can issue edicts about whether certain interpretations [of Islam] are misguided or otherwise. This is fine,” said Islamic scholar Ulil Abshar Abdalla, founder of the Liberal Islam Network (JIL), at Friday’s hearing of the judicial review into the 1965 Law on the Prevention of Blasphemy and Abuse of Religion.
“What is not right, however, is if the state is given the power to judge whether interpretations are right or wrong. It’s a problem when what should only be an edict is instead enforced by governments through law,” he added.
“Indonesia is not a country based purely on religion and must remain neutral. I would prefer it if the law was annulled altogether.”
Ulil’s arguments were met with jeers from those watching the proceedings, most of whom were members of conservative Muslim groups.
The review itself was filed by several rights activists and nongovernmental organizations. According to Choirul Anam, a lawyer representing the applicants, the law was unconstitutional because it only recognized six religions: Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Buddhism, Hinduism and Confucianism.
The law bans people from publicly espousing other religious views or following nonmainstream interpretations of the state-sanctioned religions.
As was the case at the previous day’s hearing, more than 50 people from hardline Muslim groups protested outside the courtroom on Friday, declaring that they were against the judicial review.
Emha Ainun Najib, an Islamic scholar and poet who is also known as Cak Nun, proposed the law be revised but only after discussions involving not only theologians, but also cultural and other religious figures.
“Whether it’s annulled or not, the consequences could end in anarchy or, at least, disturbances in society,” he said. “The solution should not only be left in the hands of the Constitutional Court. We should discuss this first at a theological and cultural level.”
Emha said he trusted someone like Constitutional Court Chief Mahfud MD, who is currently presiding over the judicial review, to initiate the discussions on the issue.
Emha said that Islam preached peace and goodness, which was contrary to the law that he said had been used to threaten and hurt people.
The Blasphemy Law was previously used to officially ban Ahmadiyah, a minority Islamic sect, because it held that its founder, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, was the last prophet of Islam, a claim that contradicts mainstream Muslim beliefs.
During the court recess, the crowd of protesters could be heard calling both Ulil and Emha devils. “Kill them! Slash their necks!” the protesters screamed.
Security guards were forced to escort both men out of the court through a different exit to avoid the raucous crowd.
Mudji Sutrisno, a Catholic priest and lecturer, said it was not necessary for so-called deviant groups to be punished by the law. “The highest authority is God alone,” he said, adding that the 1965 law violated human rights because those who did not follow the state-sanctioned religions were discriminated against by the state.
“In the past, when the government only recognized five religions, Confucian believers were not allowed to celebrate their religious holidays,” Mudji said.
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