இந்தோனேஷியாவில் தொடர்ந்து கிறிஸ்துவ சர்சுகள் தாக்கப்படுகின்றன. அதன் தொடர்ச்சியாக இன்னொரு ஜாவாவில் உள்ள இன்னொரு கிறிஸ்த்துவ சர்ச் தாக்கபப்ட்டு உடைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.
இதுவரை ஜாவாவில் 30 சர்சுகள் இது போல மூடப்பட்டுள்ளன.
நன்றி ஜகர்த்தா போஸ்ட்
Another Christian church attacked in Bandung
Yuli Tri Suwarni, The Jakarta Post, Bandung
After yet another attack against a Christian church this week in Bandung, West Java -- UK human rights movement Christian Solidarity Worldwide's (CSW) research showing West Java is the launching pad for Indonesia's anti-Christian movement has once again been confirmed.
In light of the growing number of attacks on Christian churches in West Java, CSW recently warned Indonesia that international concern was on the rise.
In the most recent attack, dozens of unidentified people Sunday broke into Sidang Jemaat Allah church at Gading Tutuka complex in Soreang, Bandung forcing church-goers, including 15 children, to stop their religious activities, which they have conducted weekly since 2000.
The attackers allegedly forced their way into the church at 9.30am Sunday, hit the Reverend's wife over the head with a bible and forced the children's Sunday School activity to stop.
Church-goer Lidia said the attackers claimed they were from the Anti-apostate Movement Alliance (AGAP).
Sunday's incident shows the suppression of religious freedom in this predominantly Muslim nation continues in West Java, where dozens of churches and places of worship have been forcibly closed by Muslim extremists over the past few months.
The number of churches forcibly closed in West Java alone since September 2004 is reported to be more than 30.
Dozens of other churches have been also forced to close in other provinces.
Under the revised joint decree issued by Religious Affairs Minister Maftuh Basyuni, the establishment of a house of worship must gain the approval of at least 60 local residents and have a minimum of 90 followers.
Shouting Allahu Akbar (God is Great), the attackers forced their way into the church and destroyed at least four glass pictures of Jesus Christ.
"They knocked on the church door, damaged it and forced themselves into to our school room," Lidia said.
"They said (Sunday School) was an act of apostate."
After picking up a bible in the church, one of the attackers hit Reverend Robby Elisa's wife, Moni over the head, Lidia said.
Ani, another church-goer, said the Sunday attack was the second to have taken place at the church where the attackers demanded the church be closed.
Last time the attackers said the church was not equipped with the necessary licenses, Ani said.
Church-goers however received permission from local neighborhood communities more than seven years ago to hold their religious activities, she said.
At the time of the first attack, a new head of the local neighborhood community questioned the existence of the church and later demanded the church be closed.
But Ani said, "We are here to serve our church followers because it's impossible for us to go into town to attend church activities -- transportation costs are very high".
Rev. Robby Elisa was away at the time of the attack and AGAP representatives have denied any involvement.
Moni was until Sunday evening questioned about her attack by the Katapang police station.
Muhammad Mukmin, head of AGAP, denied his group was behind the attack.
"In the case of any attack, we usually inform in advance," Mukmim said.
I was at home the whole day because I had attended the funeral of my father and we were still discussing the distribution of the heritage (of the family)."
Hedi Muhammad from the Anti-Apostate Division of the Islamic Ulema Forum (FUUI), an organization in support of AGAP, also denied any involvement in the attack.
"Usually when there is a kind of mass movement, we have coordination," Hedi said.
"We don't know at all from which groups they (the attackers) come from."
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