Tag: Aceh

  • Thousands Flee Aceh After Church Burning

    Thousands Flee Aceh After Church Burning

    Thousands of people, mostly Christians, have left Aceh Singkil regency, Aceh, for neighboring regencies in North Sumatra after an Islamic group attacked a village and set fire to a church.

    The attackers, grouped under the Aceh Singkil Islamic Care Youth Students Association (PPI), arrived in Suka Makmur village, Gunung Meriah district, Aceh Singkil, in several trucks on Tuesday afternoon and set alight the Huria Kristen Indonesia (HKI) Church, which they considered to be unlicensed.

    Hundreds of police and military officers who had earlier been deployed to the village failed to prevent the attack as they were outnumbered. One of the attackers, identified as Samsul, was shot dead when Christians, the majority in the village, tried to defend their church.

    Samsul, 21, a resident of Bulu Sema village, Suro Makmur, died from an air rifle wound, while three other attackers were injured and were taken to the regency’s general hospital for treatment.

    The church was one of 10 in the regency that was protested by the Islamic group. At a recent meeting at the regency office between the protesters, the churches’ board members and local officials, it was reportedly agreed that the churches would be demolished on Oct. 19.

    After the attack, about 75 percent of the villagers moved to other areas, with many houses in Suka Makmur left empty and locked up.

    “We are still afraid that an incident could occur again if [the situation is] not handled properly,” congregation member Silaban said on Wednesday.

    The police recorded that 3,433 people had moved to Central Tapanuli regency and 976 to Pakpak Bharat regency, both in North Sumatra.

    Many parties have denounced the attack in Aceh, the only province in the country to implement sharia.

    “Stop violence in Aceh Singkil. Any act of violence, whatever the reasons behind it, not to mention if it is related to religion and faith, will kill diversity —Jkw,” President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo said on Wednesday on his Twitter account @jokowi.

    Jokowi has ordered Coordinating Political, Legal and Security Affairs Minister Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan and National Police chief Gen. Badrodin Haiti to take immediate action to stop violence and promote peace in the regency.

    Badrodin acknowledged that the National Police had foreseen such an attack but had not readied enough security personnel on Tuesday to protect the church from the attackers, estimated to have numbered 500 to 700 people.

    “We knew [about conflict involving the church] from four months ago. This is why I truly regret the fact that the arson happened,” Badrodin said on Wednesday.

    The police have questioned 45 people connected to the incident.

    The Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) also denounced the attack and discouraged Muslims in Aceh from taking part in any activities that could incite a larger conflict between Islamic and Christian communities in the region.

    “First of all, the burning will never be justified. Even if the church committed a violation, let the local authorities solve the problem according to the existing rules,” MUI chairman Ma’ruf Amin told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday.

    The Wahid Institute recorded 158 incidents of religious rights violations throughout 2014, with 78 percent enacted by non-state actors.

    Meanwhile, Setara Institute research director Ismail Hasani condemned the incident as a violation of human rights which was facilitated by the local administration.

    Ismail argued that similar incidents in Aceh, namely in 1979, 2001 and 2012, were caused by a discriminatory 1979 agreement between Muslim and Christian communities that stipulated there would be only one church and four small Christian houses of worship in Aceh Singkil.

     

    Source: www.thejakartapost.com

  • Two Suspected Lesbians In Aceh To Undergo Rehabilitation

    Two Suspected Lesbians In Aceh To Undergo Rehabilitation

    BANDA ACEH — Two suspected lesbians detained earlier this week by Islamic Shariah police in Indonesia’s conservative Aceh province will undergo rehabilitation instead of being charged with a crime, a police chief said today (Oct 3).

    The women, 18 and 19 years old, were taken in for questioning Monday night by Sharia police officers who saw them sitting and hugging each other in Ulee Lheue, a coastal neighbourhood in the capital, Banda Aceh, according to the Shariah police chief, Evendi Latief.

    “They later confessed to be a lesbian couple and that was supported by pictures found on their handphones,” Mr Latief said.

    The two women, identified only by the initials “AS” and “N” will not be charged because a new criminal code for Aceh that criminalises homosexuality won’t take effect until later this month, he said.

    Under that code, any person found guilty of homosexuality could face up to 100 cane lashes or a maximum fine of 1,000 grams of fine gold or imprisonment of up to 100 months. Indonesia’s national criminal code doesn’t regulate homosexuality.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Tsunami Miracle Boy Now With Sporting Lisbon Youth Academy

    Tsunami Miracle Boy Now With Sporting Lisbon Youth Academy

    Portuguese club Sporting Lisbon have just unveiled a new player in their academy.

    And the story of Martunis will melt your heart.

    Eleven years ago, a severely dehydrated Martunis, about seven at the time, was found stranded on a beach.

    He had been swept away when the Boxing Day tsunami, which claimed more than 230,000 lives in 14 countries, devastated Aceh, Indonesia.

    But he managed to survive.

    For about three weeks he was on his own and ate instant noodles that he found and drank water from puddles.

    Brink of death

    When discovered by journalists, he was on the brink of death — and wearing a No 10 Portugal national team jersey bearing the name of Portuguese legend Rui Costa.

    The image and story of the miracle boy immediately made headlines around the world, and touched the Portuguese football community deeply.

    So the Portuguese FA, helped by superstar Cristiano Ronaldo’s fund-raising efforts, rebuilt his home.

    Martunis’ mother and two brothers perished in the disaster, but he was reunited with his father Sarbini.

    Ronaldo was so moved that he also met the boy a few times, most recently in 2013.

    Martunis, whose ambition is to become a professional footballer, now has a chance to follow in the footsteps of his Portuguese idols at Sporting’s famous academy, where players such as Ronaldo himself, Nani and Luis Figo were groomed.

    Forward

    A check on the Internet showed that Martunis used to play as a forward for PSAP Siglis, a second-tier club in Indonesia.

    At his presentation in Lisbon, he said: “It’s great to be here, this club makes my dream possible.

    “I am incredibly excited about this opportunity. Viva Sporting!”

    Sporting president Bruno de Carvalho said: “Martunis will work at the academy. We will work with him also in his development as a human being and as a man.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Indonesia’s Aceh Province Introduces Curfew Banning Women From Work, Entertainment Venues After 11PM

    Indonesia’s Aceh Province Introduces Curfew Banning Women From Work, Entertainment Venues After 11PM

    The capital of Indonesia’s Aceh province has banned women from working or attending entertainment venues late at night, legally requiring them to be home by 11:00pm, Banda Aceh’s mayor says.

    Internet cafes, tourist sites, sports facilities and entertainment venues have been instructed to refuse service to women after 11:00pm unless they are accompanied by a husband or male family member.

    The directive, which came into effect on June 4, will also bar women from working in such businesses after the cut-off time, in a bid to protect them from sexual harassment.

    “Our aim is to provide protection to female employees, especially those who work in area such as cafes, restaurants, internet cafes and tourist attractions,” Banda Aceh mayor Illiza Sa’aduddin Djamal said.

    “Women in Aceh are vulnerable to sexual harassment so we want to protect them from untoward incidents.”

    The new measures also ban children from being unaccompanied in public places after 10:00pm.

    Businesses that insist on making their female employees work beyond the curfew risk losing their licence, while women who break the rules would be reprimanded.

    “They will be asked to go home and be given a warning,” Illiza Sa’aduddin Djamal said.

    Women in certain professions, like nursing, are exempt from the curfew, she said.

    Aceh is the only Indonesian province that implements Islamic law and makes homosexuality, gambling and drinking alcohol punishable by caning. It also reprimands women for wearing form-fitting clothing.

    The chief of Indonesia’s national commission for violence against women said the measure would only restrict women’s freedom and threaten their livelihoods.

    “The government should stop meddling in women’s affairs,” said Azriana, who like many Indonesians goes by only one name.

    “If the intention of the Aceh government is to provide protection for women, it must instead educate the public and men to respect women or provide security at the nightspots.”

    The decision comes just a month after unmarried men and women were banned from riding together on a motorbike in one of Aceh’s districts.

    Indonesia has the world’s biggest Muslim population, but the vast majority practise a moderate form of the faith.

     

    Source: www.abc.net.au

  • Mosque Stands As Reminder of God Amidst Devastation During 2004 Tsunami

    Mosque Stands As Reminder of God Amidst Devastation During 2004 Tsunami

    BANDA ACEH, Indonesia – Thousands of Indonesians gathered on Thursday to pray at a mosque that was one of the few buildings left standing in Banda Aceh, the city flattened by the Boxing Day tsunami that killed at least 226,000 people 10 years ago.

    Pictures of the 135-year-old mosque left isolated in a plain of desolation after almost everything around it was wiped away were among the most memorable from the disaster, caused by a freak wave triggered by a 9.1-magnitude earthquake off the coast of Indonesia’s Sumatra island in 2004.

    “Allah kept his house unscathed, that’s what we Muslims believe,” Azman Ismail, great imam of the Baiturrahman Grand Mosque, told Reuters. About 5,000 men, women and children crowded inside for its largest mass prayer since the tsunami.

    Aceh province bore the brunt of the devastation with at least 168,000 people dead from the tsunami which also killed thousands in Sri Lanka, India and Thailand.

    Syahirizal Abbas, a local government official, said he was attending “to pray that the dead will be welcome to Allah’s side.”

    Although the tsunami brought devastation, Ismail said it had also led to peace in the province, which had suffered years of conflict between rebels and the military, as well as much needed development.

    “The tsunami should be seen as a blessing instead of punishment by Allah,” Syeikh Ali Jaber, an imam from Saudi Arabia, told worshippers. REUTERS

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com