Indonesia: Churches Forced to Close
At least 22 churches have been
forced to close in Indonesia this year due to mounting pressure on local
governments. Eighteen of the closed churches are located in the Singkil regency
of Aceh province, where Muslims held a “peace rally” on April 30 urging the
local government to tear down all churches lacking legal permits.
At least 300 Muslims, including
religious leaders, gathered at the April 30 rally to demand that local
authorities enforce the Agreement of 1979, which dictates that only one church
building can operate in the district. At the suggestion of the head of district
police, Muslim leaders agreed to give the Christians three days to tear down
their own church buildings. The Muslims formed a group to monitor the
Christians, with the understanding that police would tear down the unregistered
churches if they were still standing in three days.
On Tuesday, May 1, a group of local
officials and radical Muslims from the Islamic Defender Front visited the
Pakpak Dairi Protestant Christian Church (GKPPD) in Siatas with the intent of
closing the church. After they announced that the church would be closed
because it did not have a building permit, several female church members
collapsed and tensions increased between the two groups.
The pastor eventually persuaded them
to leave the church open, arguing that closing the church would “kill” the
congregation and have a negative effect on the community. He reminded them that
the church had contributed to the community by combating social problems like
prostitution and gambling and that Muslims and Christians had coexisted
peacefully in the village for years.
These churches were closed by their
local governments.
The next day, the monitoring team
moved on to another GKPPD church in the village of Biskang and repeated their
closure demands. After objections from church members, the team told them they
could continue to meet but that the church must stop its expansion project.
Finally, the team moved on to Sikoran village, where they sealed a Catholic
church.
Nine church leaders met later that
day with the Singkil District Head, who told them, “In two weeks, we will tear
down your church buildings. No more compromise.”
The churches reportedly resumed
services on May 13 despite the threats.
A representative of the Indonesian
Fellowship of Churches said more than 12,000 Christians live in the Singkil
regency, which has a total population of about 102,000.
Sources: Compass Direct News, VOM
contacts
![Description: Church Closure Sign](file:///C:/Users/sony/AppData/Local/Temp/msohtmlclip1/01/clip_image005.jpg)
A sign from the local government stating the closure of a church.
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