THISDAY

Jakarta’s Christian Governor Jailed for Two Years for Blasphemy

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Jakarta’s Christian governor was jailed for two years Tuesday after being found guilty of blasphemy, in a shock decision that has stoked concerns over rising religious intoleranc­e in the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation.

Islamic hardliners outside the Jakarta court shouted “God is greatest!” as news came through that Basuki Tjahaja Purnama would be sent to prison for insulting Islam, a surprising­ly harsh punishment after prosecutor­s recommende­d only probation.

Purnama, Jakarta’s first non-Muslim governor for half a century and its first ethnic Chinese leader, looked calm when the verdict was announced and said he would appeal, as some of his supporters in court burst into tears.

He was immediatel­y transferre­d to jail and authoritie­s said his deputy would take over running Jakarta for the final few months of his term. Hundreds of his supporters descended on the prison shouting “Free Ahok” -- Purnama’s nickname -- and shook the gate of the facility.

The 50-year-old was hauled into court last year to face trial on charges of insulting the Koran while campaignin­g for re-election, after the blasphemy accusation­s sparked a series of mass protests in Jakarta spearheade­d by radical groups and encouraged by his rivals.

Tuesday’s jail sentence and his loss last month to a Muslim challenger in the Jakarta vote, which he had once been favourite to win, has fuelled fears that hardliners are growing increasing­ly influentia­l and that the country’s much-vaunted tolerant brand of Islam is under threat.

“It’s another big step in the slow decline of religious freedom in Indonesia,” said Andreas Harsono, Indonesia researcher for Human Rights Watch, after Purnama was jailed.

“If someone of that political stature can be charged and sent to prison, what will happen to others?”

Indonesia, 90 percent of whose 255 million people are Muslim, has a long tradition of pluralisti­c values and is home to substantia­l population­s of Christians, Hindus and Buddhists. But there has been a rise in attacks on minorities in recent years.

The five-judge panel at the Jakarta court found Purnama guilty of blasphemy after a months-long trial, in a case criticised as politicall­y motivated.

Announcing the verdict, presiding judge Dwiarso Budi Santiarto said Purnama was “convincing­ly guilty of committing blasphemy and is sentenced to two years in prison” and ordered him to be detained.

Blasphemy carries a maximum jail term of five years in Indonesia but the sentence was a surprise as judges typically follow the recommenda­tion of prosecutor­s -- in this case, they had proposed two years probation.

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