Global Times

Indonesia moves blasphemy trial of Jakarta’s Christian governor after polls

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An Indonesian court on Tuesday adjourned the blasphemy trial of Jakarta’s Christian governor until after the city’s April 19 election, a contest pitting him against a Muslim rival that has divided the city and fanned religious tension.

The trial of Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama, Jakarta’s first ethnic Chinese and Christian leader and an ally of President Joko Widodo, has raised questions about the role of religion in politics in the world’s biggest Muslim- majority nation.

Purnama has been allowed to campaign in the election despite his trial and prosecutor­s had been expected on Tuesday to call for him to be jailed on a charge of insulting Islam.

Instead, judges agreed to a request by prosecutor­s to postpone the hearing to April 20, a day after the election for city governor.

Police had also written to prosecutor­s to ask for a delay over security concerns.

“We think the police letter can be taken into considerat­ion due to the matter of security,” prosecutor Ali Mukartono told the court, referring to the timing of the next hearing.

The prosecutio­n’s main reason in asking for a delay was to have more time to prepare, he said.

City police last week called for the trial to be delayed until after vote because of worries that religious and ethnic tension in the city of more than 10 million people were running high.

Purnama went on trial late last year after some Muslim groups objected to comments he made about his opponents’ use of the Koran in campaignin­g.

Some anti- Purnama protesters said they were disappoint­ed with the delay.

“This hearing was delayed deliberate­ly until after the election ... The election, a political factor, is affecting this legal process,” said Pedri Kasman, a member of the moderate Islamic group, Muhammadiy­ah.

Muslims make up nearly 90 percent of Indonesia’s 250 million people but there are sizeable communitie­s of Buddhists, Hindus, Christians and people who adhere to traditiona­l beliefs.

The state ideology, Pancasila, enshrines religious diversity in an officially secular system.

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