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The Gereja Kristen
Indonesia Taman Yasmin Church in Bogor, West Java has
filed a religious discrimination appeal with the United
Nations Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or
belief,
church leaders said.
JAKARTA, Indonesia
(Compass Direct News) – The Gereja Kristen
Indonesia (GKI) Taman Yasmin Church in Bogor, West Java
has filed a religious discrimination appeal with the
United Nations Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion
or belief, church leaders said.
Since April 11 the congregation has held services on the
roadside in front of the sealed church in stifling heat.
The church pastor, the Rev. Ujang Tanusaputra, told
Compass that the congregation has held Sunday services
six times in front of the building that the mayor of
Bogor sealed.
“We are going to continue worshipping by the roadside as
part of the struggle to remove the seal,” he told
Compass.
Tanusaputra said that the church had received an
official building permit from the Bogor City government.
“Yet, somehow, because of a group that objected to the
presence of a church, our construction was stopped and
later sealed,” he said.
He said that even though the church brought suit against
the sealing in court – and won – the congregation is not
permitted to worship in the building, which is 80
percent completed.
Tanusaputra said he hopes the Lord will intervene to
show that Indonesia is a country where laws are followed
and all faiths may freely worship.
One of the church elders, Thomas Wadu Dara, said that
before the church was constructed, and after the
congregation had won the court case, there was a meeting
with the Bogor mayor. The mayor told them to go ahead
with construction and to build relations with the
community so that their presence would be understood and
accepted.
The construction was going smoothly until a Muslim group
began demonstrating and the government sealed the
building to appease them.
“I am greatly disappointed and cannot accept this
reasoning in a law-abiding country,” Wadu Dara said.
Wadu Dara said he hopes that the Bogor government will
be firm and honor the decision of the court in Bandung,
the provincial capital.
“I hope that the seal will be taken away and that we can
finish construction,” he said.
Jayadi Damanik, a member of the church’s legal team,
added that the sealing of the church is arbitrary and
without legal basis.
“We have requested that the Bogor government be aware of
the sealing and remove it,” he said, adding that he was
astonished that Bogor city officials were not obeying
the Bandung provincial court decision in favor of the
GKI Yasmin church.
The government wants people to obey the law, yet the
government itself is not respecting the rule of law,
Damanik added.
“This is most ironical in a law-abiding country such as
Indonesia,” he said.
On June 20 Compass visited the church’s Sunday worship,
where about 200 people met in a service limited to one
hour. Approximately 100 policemen were present with at
least 10 vehicles and nearby water cannon.
“If the building were unsealed, we wouldn’t need such
tight police security,” said Wadu Dara.
During the service, a 20-year-old woman fainted from the
heat of the sun.
Defying the Law A survey by the denomination showed that
there was a need for the church in the Taman Yasmin
area. The Taman Yasmin Housing development had land
zoned for a church, but that land was used for a worship
place of another faith.
The GKI Yasmin development team purchased a 1,720-square
meter commercial lot from PT Inti Inovaco and contacted
community members, leaders, and civic groups regarding
the construction of a church building. On March 10,
2002, the church had collected 170 signatures of
citizens agreeing to the presence of a church on West
Bogor Ring Road, Curug Mekar village, Bogor City.
The church canvassed the area six times between 2003 and
2006, holding public information meetings attended by
hundreds of people, including youth and local leaders.
It secured and submitted the necessary recommendations,
and on July 13, 2006, the mayor of Bogor issued a decree
granting GKI Yasmin a building permit.
On Aug. 18, 2006, the church held a public meeting with
the head and the secretary of the Indonesian (Muslim)
Cleric Elders (Majelis Ulama Indonesia Bogor), the West
Bogor district officer, Muslim leaders, village heads,
the chief and deputy chief of the West Bogor police and
leaders of community organizations. The next day, a
representative of the Bogor government who read a
message from the mayor laid the church cornerstone.
Yet less than two months later, on Oct. 11, the church
received a letter from the Bogor City secretary ordering
the church to stop construction and move to another
location.
On Dec. 6, 2006, the church received a letter from PT
Inti Inovaco stating that the Taman Yasmin Housing area
was not zoned for non-Muslim community facilities. The
Taman Yasmin Great Mosque was using the land zoned for
community facilities (its foundation had been laid). The
church therefore decided to stay where it was, and on
Jan. 10, 2007 laid the foundation for its building.
On Feb. 10, 2007 a demonstration took place in front of
the Bogor City Legislature demanding that the church
building permit be revoked. Four days later, the Bogor
government sent a letter to the church freezing the
building permit.
The church immediately reacted. It sent letters to the
mayor, other involved government bodies, Muslim clerics
and Islamic community organizations and filed a
complaint with the national human rights commission.
The church argued that according to Article 6, paragraph
1 of Joint Ministerial Decree No. 8 and No. 9 (2006),
there is no legal “freezing” of a permit. This decree
says that a permit can be cancelled only through court
proceedings. GKI Yasmin went to court.
On Sept. 4, 2008, the court in Bandung nullified the
Bogor government letter “freezing” the building permit.
Bogor City appealed the decision and lost. The Bandung
court issued a letter on March 30, 2009 stating that
Bogor City had exhausted all appeals.
With the legal issues cleared, the church resumed
construction. On Jan. 8, 2010, however, the church
received a threatening letter. A short time later, a
band of people damaged a fence around the property.
On Feb. 25, Bogor Mayor Diani Budiarto retracted his
recommendation for the project, citing community
pressure and protests since the building permit had been
issued in 2006. The church received a letter on March 8
from the Bogor government ordering that construction
stop.
On March 11 the Bogor government hung a sign saying
“sealed” on the fence without following legal
procedures, so the church continued construction. Church
leaders wrote a letter to police and a local military
commander in April notifying them that worship services
would start on April 11. On the day before this initial
service, members of the church people were setting up
chairs when police – in defiance of previous court
decisions – arrived at 5 p.m., cut the lock on the gate,
and replaced it with their own lock. They also placed a
sign on the gate that read, “Sealed.”
Since April 11 the congregation has been holding
services in front of the fence by the roadside. Compass
Direct News, Victor R. Ambarita.
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