The Star Malaysia

Woman’s jailing over mosque noise sparks backlash

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JAKARTA: Indonesia’s jailing of a woman for complainin­g about the volume of a mosque loudspeake­r has sparked a wave of criticism, with a petition calling for her release gaining more than 100,000 supporters.

Rights groups and the Muslimmajo­rity country’s biggest religious organisati­on slammed the 18month blasphemy sentence handed out to the defendant, an ethnic Chinese Buddhist, in Medan.

The 44yearold woman named Meiliana was found guilty of insulting Islam for asking her neighbourh­ood mosque in 2016 to lower its sound system because it was too loud and “hurt” her ears.

There are hundreds of thousand of mosques across the SouthEast Asian archipelag­o nation, with the fivetimesa­day call to prayer heard everywhere in the biggest cities and smallest towns.

An online petition to Indonesian president Joko Widodo calling for the woman’s release had more than 115,000 supporters as of yesterday.

“Eighteen months in prison for asking people to lower the call to prayer volume? Come on!” wrote one petition supporter.

The verdict is likely to aggravate concerns that Indonesia’s moderate brand of Islam is coming under threat from increasing­ly influentia­l radicals.

The case triggered riots two years ago that saw angry Muslim mobs ransack Buddhist temples as some ethnic Chinese fled the area.

Amnesty Internatio­nal has denounced the ruling as “ludicrous”, while Nahdlatul Ulama, Indonesia’s biggest Muslim organisati­on, said the noise complaint “did not constitute blasphemy”.

“I don’t see it as hate speech or showing animosity toward a certain group or religion,” Robikin Emhas, head of the group’s legal and human rights division, said in a statement on its website.

Critics of Indonesia’s blasphemy laws say they are frequently misused to target ethnic and religious minorities.

“Meiliana is a victim of injustice,” said Bonar Tigor Naipospos, vice chairman of think tank Setara Institute for Democracy and Peace.

Indonesia, which has the world’s biggest Muslim population, is officially pluralist with six major religions recognised, including Hinduism, Christiani­ty and Buddhism. Freedom of expression is guaranteed by law.

But criticisin­g religion – particular­ly Islam, which is followed by nearly 90% of Indonesia’s 260 million citizens – can land offenders in jail.

Last year Jakarta’s former governor – the city’s first Christian leader of Chinese descent – was sentenced to two years in jail for blasphemy for comments he made about a verse in the Quran. — AFP

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