The Borneo Post

‘Junior jihadist’ march sparks outrage in Indonesia

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PROBOLINGG­O, Indonesia: An Indonesian kindergart­en apologised yesterday after images of its pint- sized students marching in niqab veils and carrying cardboard cutouts of assault rifles sparked outrage.

Organisers were left redfaced after a torrent of criticism suggested the Islamic Statestyle outfits promoted jihadist violence in a country that has long struggled with militant attacks.

The group of about 15 students were taking part in a parade for Indonesia’s independen­ce day Friday near the country’s second-biggest city Surabaya.

The Kartika kindergart­en, which is located inside a military complex in Probolingg­o town, said the costumes were resurrecte­d from storage to save parents the cost of buying new ones.

It denied that the gun replicas and full- body veils promoted extremism.

“I never meant to teach violence to my students,” said school principal Suhartatik, who like many Indonesian­s goes by one name.

“We only used the props that we already had to cut costs for parents. I deeply apologise.”

The costumes had been used in previous parades to teach students about the prophet Muhammad’s faith and beliefs, she added.

But the principal’s explanatio­n was met with derision on Indonesian social media.

“Nobody carried assault rifles in the prophet’s time — is this teacher that clueless about history or was she just trying to dodge the blame?” one user posted on Twitter.

Another tweeted: “Obviously the seeds of ISIS are being nurtured early on.”

Indonesian parliament­ary speaker Bambang Soesatyo also lashed out at what he dubbed a ‘ very concerning case’.

“Parents and teachers should protect children from damaging their way of thinking,” he told news site Detik.

Parade organisers said they were embarrasse­d for failing to notice the provocativ­e outfits.

“I really apologise — I did not check beforehand,” said chief organiser Supini.

“This was supposed to be a cultural parade.”

The i nc ident c ame a s Indonesia looks to promote itself as host of the 18th Asian Games, the world’s biggest multi- sport tournament after the Olympics.

Indonesia has endured a spate of deadly militant violence in recent years.

The 17,000 island archipelag­o, which has the world’s biggest Muslim population, suffered its worst attack in a decade in May after IS-inspired suicide bombers at tacked several churches.

Indonesia’s deadliest terror at tack was the 2 0 02 Bal i bombing which killed over 200 people.

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