The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Indonesia’s new party draws fire for ‘Islamophob­ic’ comments

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JAKARTA: Police in Muslimmajo­rity Indonesia have questioned the head of one of its newest and most progressiv­e parties, who is battling accusation­s of ‘Islamophob­ia’ from rival politician­s, after she said her party opposed the growth of bylaws based on religion.

Indonesia is officially secular and has a tradition of pluralism but Islam has increasing­ly crept into politics in a country home to significan­t Christian, Hindu and other religious minorities.

Grace Natalie set up the Indonesian Solidarity Party (PSI), often dubbed the ‘millennial­s party’, in 2014 to offer an alternativ­e for young voters disillusio­ned by traditiona­l parties often run by an entrenched elite.

In a speech this week attended by President Joko Widodo, Natalie, who is ethnic Chinese, spoke out against intoleranc­e, saying PSI would not support local regulation­s based on Islamic law or Christian scripture.

“We want to return back to the constituti­on so that there is a guarantee for all citizens, whatever their background, or religion they believe, or faith they have,” said Natalie, whose party is part of a coalition backing Widodo’s bid for a second term in 2019 elections.

Police questioned Natalie following a complaint filed by Eggi Sudjana, a lawyer and politician of an Islamic party, who told Reuters her comments breached laws on hate speech and attacked religion. He urged her to apologise.

Some rival politician­s also accused her of ‘Islamophob­ia’, while defending the adoption of bylaws based on sharia or religious values.

Jakarta police are still investigat­ing to determine if any law was broken, said spokesman Argo Yuwono.

In a party statement, Natalie said that during six hours of questionin­g she had told police her speech referred to “a willingnes­s to implement equality and justice for all citizens before the law”.

She also said it was based on an academic study showing how religion-based rules could affect women and minority groups.

The only province in Indonesia allowed to enforce Islamic law is Aceh, but other regions have adopted bylaws enforcing elements of sharia.

Such bylaws were divisive, said Muhammad Abdullah Darraz, director of the Maarif Institute, which promotes religious and cultural harmony, who defended Natalie.

“We have witnessed identity politics recently emerging and it has the potential to divide the unity of the nation,” he said.

Indonesia’s state ideology includes national unity, social justice and democracy alongside belief in God, and enshrines religious diversity in a secular system of government.

But religious and political tension has spiralled in the last few years after hundreds of thousands in Jakarta protest against the capital’s then governor, an ethnic Chinese Christian charged with insulting the Quran.

Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, a Widodo ally, lost his bid for reelection in 2017 after a radical group agitated against him for months. He was jailed for two years over blasphemy. — AFP

 ??  ?? Grace Natalie, poses for a photograph in her office at the party's headquarte­rs in Jakarta. — Reuters photo
Grace Natalie, poses for a photograph in her office at the party's headquarte­rs in Jakarta. — Reuters photo

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