Ahmadiyya Times | News Staff | Int'l Desk
Source & Credit: The Asian Human Rights Commission
Statement | February 23, 2010 |
U.S. President Barack Obama is scheduled to visit Indonesia, the place of his childhood, in March. It is important that the President does not waste this opportunity and uses his good relations with Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to raise the issue of religious tolerance in Indonesia.
Late last year Obama stated that “Indonesia is important... as one of the world's largest democracies, as one of the world's largest Islamic nations... it has enormous influence and really is... a potential model for the kind of development strategies, democracy strategies, as well as interfaith strategies that are going to be so important moving forward.”
While his statement is no doubt true in some respects, the essence of Obama’s remark is at odds with the current situation in Indonesia.
In
recent years the United Nations has expressed disquiet at religious
discrimination and intolerance in the country. There is continuing
concern at the distinctions made in legal documents between the six
recognized religions of Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Hinduism,
Buddhism and Confucianism, and the adverse impact on the freedom of
thought, conscience and religion of people belonging to minorities,
ethnic groups and indigenous peoples in Indonesia.
In
2007 the U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
noted with concern that mixed-faith couples – in which the man and
woman hold different recognized beliefs – faced difficulties in
officially registering their marriages and that their children were not
provided with birth certificates, as they were not the products of
“lawful” marriage. Paradoxically, people that change their religion in
order to marry their partner can face stigmatization.
Furthermore,
there is no provision for individuals with no religious belief to enter
into a civil marriage contract, and no legal documentation for those
without such a belief. This results in people keeping their atheist
beliefs secret and when the time comes to marry, they make the choice
of either marrying in a religious ceremony that is devoid of meaning
for them, or not marrying at all, which can leave their family and
offspring without legal protection.
Moreover,
under Indonesian Law No. 23 of 2006 on Civic Administration,
individuals are required to record their faith on legal documents such
as identity cards and birth certificates. Atheists who ascribe to no
religion or those who wish to leave the column blank or to register
under one of the “non-recognized” religions face discrimination and
harassment - including refusal of employment.
Forcing
an Indonesian to adopt a religion as part of her identity grossly
undermines his right to freedom of thought and religion under article 18 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
Concern
has been expressed in Indonesia and internationally about religious
minorities such as the Ahmadiya -- followers of a disputed branch of
Islam -- being targeted by fundamentalists that have branded them
members of heretical cults. The Asian Human Rights Commission
and other human rights organizations have highlighted violent attacks
and intimidation against the Ahmadiya people and other religious
groups, and their places of religious worship. But so far there has
been no concerted effort to protect the rights of these groups.
To
the contrary, religious intolerance and discrimination is effectively
condoned under Law No.1/1965 on the Prevention of Religious Abuse and
Blasphemy, which amends the Indonesian Penal Code (Article 156 (a)) to
allow the state to prosecute people deemed to commit blasphemous acts
which “principally have the character of being at enmity with, abusing
or staining a religion adhered to in Indonesia”. The maximum penalty is
five years imprisonment.
To combat this law and
the issues of state-authorized religious intolerance within it, human
rights groups have gone to the Constitutional Court to seek a judicial
review of the law, in the hope that it will be struck down as
incompatible with human rights and freedom of religion.
However,
state officials have reacted against the review. They claim that if the
court were to uphold freedom of religion and expression, as guaranteed
in international and domestic law, as well as in the principles of Pancasila,
the official philosophical foundation of the Indonesian state, it would
create "unlimited religious freedom.” They fear this could lead to
social upheaval, with people worshiping in ways not authorized by the
state. Such intolerance is clearly a breach of the Indonesian
Constitution under Articles 28 and 29.
The
state, by only recognising six religions and enforcing a blasphemy law
which alienates and criminalises those that hold beliefs outside of
those six, is in effect, giving Indonesians a choice between one of six
religions. The right to choose between one religion or another is a
false choice and only creates the illusion of freedom.
Both
President Obama and President Yudhoyono should understand very well
that tolerance and acceptance of varying beliefs, including atheist
belief, are vital for a peaceful, democratic society.
Practices and laws requiring people to adopt a faith that they do not actually hold is not in accordance with the principles of tolerance, equal rights and non-discrimination, which are the cornerstones of democracy and human rights.
Any blasphemy law should be
struck down as unconstitutional. The religions that Indonesia’s
blasphemy law seeks to protect can withstand criticism and do not need
the full force of the criminal law to ensure adherence. No state should
interfere in the practice of religion or belief other than to protect
the rights of individuals to freedom of expression, assembly and
thought including the right to be free from religious thought.
In
a diverse democratic society that prides itself on being multicultural,
multi-religious and multi-racial, the Indonesian government should
welcome this judicial review and enforce laws to prohibit
discrimination based on faith.
In a democratic
Indonesia which seeks to adhere to the rule of law and the supreme law
of its Constitution, the state should seek to protect the rights of
religious minorities from the tyranny of those that wish to foster
intolerance and discrimination.
# # #About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984.
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