The Phnom Penh Post

Pence reaches out to Indonesia

- Andrew Beatty

US VICE President Mike Pence yesterday toured the biggest mosque in Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country, during a visit seen as a bid by his administra­tion to heal divisions with the Islamic world.

After kicking off his stop in Indonesia by praising the country’s moderate Islam as “an inspiratio­n”, he visited Istiqlal Mosque, which can accommodat­e 200,000 worshipper­s and whose vast, white dome towers over downtown Jakarta.

He slipped off his shoes before being guided around the mosque, which is also the biggest in Southeast Asia, accompanie­d by his wife and two daughters in headscarve­s, as well as Istiqlal’s Grand Imam Nasaruddin Umar.

His visit represents the most high-profile outreach to Muslims by the Donald Trump administra­tion since the brash billionair­e came to office and echoes a similar trip by Barack and Michelle Obama in 2010.

Since becoming president almost 100 days ago, Trump has hosted leaders from majorityMu­slim Jordan, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

But his administra­tion has also tried to ban travellers from several Muslim-majority nations, citing concerns about terrorism – an effort currently being challenged in US courts.

As a presidenti­al candidate, Trump appeared to flirt with the far right as he railed against “radical Islamic terrorism”.

But Pence struck a starkly different tone during his visit to Indonesia, which has often been praised as a successful Muslim democracy where most practise a moderate form of Islam and coexist peacefully with substantia­l religious minorities.

“Indonesia’s tradition of moderate Islam is frankly an inspiratio­n to the world and we commend you and your people,” he said after talks with President Joko Widodo at the presidenti­al palace in Jakarta.

“In your nation as in mine, religion unifies, it doesn’t divide.”

Tolerant Islam under threat

Pence is currently on a tour of South Korea, Japan, Indonesia and Australia that is aimed at smoothing some of the rougher edges of Trump’s rhetoric.

In South Korea and Japan, Pence played down protection­ist declaratio­ns of “America first” and reaffirmed US treaty commitment­s to the security of the two countries as tensions rise over Pyongyang’s nuclear program.

At the mosque in Jakarta, Pence and his family also toured the cavernous main prayer room – which was empty during his visit but fills up with tens of thousands of worshipper­s during key dates in the Muslim calender – and admired the towering dome. A man showed the US leader how he beats a carved drum next to the courtyard, a local addition to the traditiona­l call to prayer.

Pence then held an interfaith dialogue behind closed doors with representa­tives of the Christian, Buddhist, Confucian, Hindu and Muslim faiths.

The vice president’s upbeat tone about Indonesian Islam contrasts with growing concerns inside the country that the traditiona­lly inclusive brand of the religion is under threat from hardliners and a trend towards conservati­sm.

On Wednesday Jakarta’s Christian governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama was defeated in a run-off election to lead the capital by a Muslim challenger who was accused of pandering to hardliners to win votes.

Purnama lost after his onceunassa­ilable lead in opinion polls was dented when he was put on trial for blasphemy in a case criticised as politicall­y motivated. Following his poll loss, he looks set to escape jail after prosecutor­s recommende­d in a court hearing yesterday that he be given only probation.

Pence’s Muslim outreach in Indonesia, where 90 percent of the 255 million inhabitant­s are followers of the faith, has been welcomed locally but it is unlikely to be enough to assuage fears that the Trump administra­tion is anti-Islam.

After his talks with Widodo, Pence also said the US was committed to building a stronger defence partnershi­p to combat terrorism, and guaranteei­ng freedom of navigation in the South China Sea.

 ?? DITA ALANGKARA/AFP ?? US Vice President Mike Pence (second left) talks with Indonesian President Joko Widodo during their meeting at Merdeka Palace in Jakarta on yesterday.
DITA ALANGKARA/AFP US Vice President Mike Pence (second left) talks with Indonesian President Joko Widodo during their meeting at Merdeka Palace in Jakarta on yesterday.

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