The razed Gafatar camp
at Mempawah regency, West Kalimantan. Photo: Amilia Rosa
In
recent news, a minority sect in
Indonesia known as Fajar Nusantara Movement, or Gafatar, had its village burnt
to the ground on suspicions it was connected to terrorism. Although this comes
just days after a terrorist attack in Jakarta, the incident must not be blown
out of proportion.
The attack
on the village is certainly devastating and a violation of rights, but the link
to international terrorism is tenuous if non-existent. The targeting of this
minority group represents just one incident in a long pattern of vigilante
violence against minority religious communities in Indonesia. Such violence has
affected groups ranging from the minority Shiite community to Ahmadiyah, a
group that is said to believe in another prophet after Muhammad.
Indonesia's
concern should not primarily be whether this minority group has links to
international terrorism. It is domestic radicalism – those who organised the
attack on the village – that should be the cause for concern. Local mobs cannot
be allowed to take matters into their own hands, orchestrating attacks and
burning down villages of religious groups that are so-called 'deviant'.
This problem
can be traced to the introduction of democracy in Indonesia since 1998 that
displaced the former centre of power – the authoritarian state. This has
led to new contests for power and authority including from religious groups. One
such source of authority is the informal power of Islamic leaders to issue a
fatwa to declare the teachings of a particular group as 'deviant' or outside of
orthodox Islamic.
The news that the Indonesian
Ulama Council, Indonesia's peak Islamic body, may issue a fatwa against Gafatar
and deem it heretical needs to be considered in context. A fatwa, the opinion
of an Islamic religious scholar, is not law in Indonesia. Fatwa are not sanctioned
by the state.
The impact
of a fatwa on the actions of Muslims may vary, and may have no impact at all.
For example, the Indonesian Ulama Council has issued fatwa in the past
against smoking and using Facebook. Clearly most Indonesian Muslims have ignored
such opinions.
A fatwa by
the Indonesian Ulama Council does not have the approval of the government.
Although the council claims to represent all Muslims in Indonesia, it is only a
quasi-official body with connections to the Ministry of Religion. It is not an
official state institution as such. The real problem is that despite the
informal status of the council, fatwa have been used in the past as
evidence to convict a person in court for blasphemy.
Some media reports suggest that
the Indonesian Attorney-General's Office is now preparing to bring Gafatar or
its leaders to court, potentially on charges of blaspheming Islam. This is
possibly why the Indonesian Ulama Council may issue a fatwa declaring the group
'deviant' from Islamic teachings.
There is a
common connection between a fatwa and criminal prosecutions in Indonesia. A
minority religious group ruffles the feathers of established Islamic religious
authorities and their orthodox teachings. A major Islamic organisation in the
area issues a fatwa against a group. The group or its leaders are reported to
police. The public prosecutor then pursues charges of blasphemy.
A fatwa is
then used in court as evidence against the group. The courts generally show an
attitude of deference to religious authorities, and the person is convicted.
This has happened many times before. My research has demonstrated that there
have been over 50 court cases, or at least 130 individuals convicted, under the
Criminal Code between 1998 and 2012. Many of these were convicted for
blaspheming Islam.
The bigger
issue in Indonesia is not whether groups like Gafatar have links with
international or local terrorist organisations. At any rate there seems little
evidence of this. Even if the group has links with a former homegrown
organisation al-Qiyadah al-Islamiyah, that group was never convicted for
terrorism but only for blaspheming Islam. The key issue is that the Indonesian
government must take a tough stance against domestic radicalism.
Instead of
pursuing criminal charges of blasphemy against the leaders and followers of
Gafatar, who have been victims of violence, serious action must also be taken
against the mob that burnt down their homes and drove them out of their
village. Targeting domestic radicalism would demonstrate that the Indonesian
government is taking its constitutional responsibility to protect religious
freedom seriously.
Dr Melissa Crouch is Lecturer at the University
of NSW. She is the author of Law and Religion in Indonesia (2014).
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