Basuki "Ahok"
Tjahaja Purnama to two years in prison for blasphemy on Tuesday (09/05), they
cited firebrand Islamist Rizieq Shihab as a Koranic authority.
Imprisoned
twice for inciting violence, the leader of the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI)
had until recently occupied the fringe of Indonesian society; his followers are
regarded as thuggish vigilantes with a penchant for extremism and extortion.
His
recognition by the court as a venerable Islamic theologian — and the
court's verdict itself — highlights the rising influence of Islamist
groups in Indonesia, the world's largest Muslim-majority country but one with a
multi-religious constitution and a tradition of tolerance.
As the panel
of five judges delivered the verdict condemning Jakarta Governor Basuki
"Ahok" Tjahaja Purnama to two years in prison for blasphemy on
Tuesday (09/05), they cited firebrand Islamist Habib Rizieq as a Koranic
authority.
However,
President Joko "Jokwi" Widodo — a moderate reformer and an ally
of Ahok — has publicly played down concerns about rising Islamic
intolerance. After Tuesday's sentencing, he urged Indonesians to respect the
legal process, noting that Ahok will appeal.
As he geared
for an election to win another term as governor of the Indonesian capital last
year, Ahok told a group of fisherfolk that his rivals were deceiving
people by using a verse in the Koran to say that Muslims should not be led by a
non-Muslim.
That comment
triggered mass demonstrations, which were spearheaded by the FPI, and the
blasphemy case against the ethnic Chinese and Christian governor.
Voting for Non-Muslim
Rizieq was
mentioned among several witnesses as the judges dissected the contentious verse
in the Koranic chapter Al Maidah. The court endorsed his interpretation that it
forbids Muslims to vote for non-Muslims. Ahok had "deliberately"
and "convincingly" blasphemed, the judges found.
"Rizieq
is not qualified as an expert," said Todung Mulya Lubis, a leading Indonesian
lawyer and rights advocate. "I was so shocked listening to that."
Shocking,
too, said Todung, was the verdict itself.
Rizieq had
been a prosecution witness, but the prosecutors had asked only for a suspended
sentence on the lesser charge of insulting language. In the end, the judges
went for a jail term under the more serious charge of blasphemy.
"The
judges did not really take into account what was submitted from the defense
team," said Todung, noting many senior clerics had sided with Ahok.
While
Ahok repeatedly apologized for any hurt caused to Muslims, one judge,
Abdul Rosyad, said the sentence was warranted because "the defendant
didn't feel guilt."
Ahok was
immediately taken to a detention facility in Jakarta after the sentencing. He
had been due to hand over the governor's post in October.
'Victory for Hardliners'
Ahok was
widely admired as governor of Jakarta for his no-nonsense style and programs to
fix the Indonesian capital's traffic-clogged and flood-prone streets.
He had held
a double-digit in opinion polls over his electoral rivals until an edited video
of his comments on the Koranic verse was distributed by Islamist groups last
September. Hundreds of thousands of Muslims then joined rallies to demand his
imprisonment. On April 19, he was defeated by a Muslim candidate in a runoff
vote for the governorship.
Tim Lindsey,
a University of Melbourne expert on Indonesia's legal system, said it was not
unprecedented for Indonesian judges to take a harder line than prosecutors.
Even so,
Lindsey said, conservative clerics had clearly influenced the panel of judges.
"This
is the complete victory for the hardliners."
Andreas
Harsono of Human Rights Watch said the case would consolidate a literalist
interpretation of Al Maidah that demands Muslims be led by other Muslims in all
facets of life.
"This
will spread to the workplace. They will be demanding Islamic chief executives and
senior civil servants. Islamists are already talking about it."
While
President Jokowi displays outward calm, several government sources have
told Reuters he believes the rising influence of Islamism has been fueled by
political adversaries and is distracting him from reforms.
On Monday,
Jokowi's government announced a ban on Hizbut Tahrir, a non-violent group that
advocates an Islamic caliphate and was an organizer of the anti-Ahok rallies.
Police,
meanwhile, have arrested leaders of Islamic groups for treason. Rizieq is also
under investigation for distributing pornography and blasphemy.
Reuters
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