Indonesia Blasphemy Protest Swells To Crowd of 200,000
Organizers had agreed to concentrate the protest around the vaulting
monument to reduce disruptions but the area quickly overflowed. National
Police spokesman Rikwanto, who goes by one name, said police estimated
200,000 people were on the streets. Police say 22,000 officers and 5,000
soldiers can be called on to ensure the demonstration stays orderly.
A protest Nov. 4 against Ahok, the first ethnic
Chinese to be Jakarta governor and the first Christian in half a
century, attracted about 100,000 people. After nightfall, it turned
violent, with one death and dozens injured. Police want Friday's protest
to disperse in the early afternoon following prayers.
The crowds massed in the area of the national monument formed a sea of
white that spilled into surrounding streets while gridlocked motorists
sat on the sidewalks. Some held huge banners calling Ahok a blasphemer
who should be jailed while others chanted and prayed. The blasphemy
controversy erupted in September when a video circulated online in which
Ahok criticized detractors who argued the Quran prohibits Muslims from
having a non-Muslim leader.
It has challenged the image of Indonesia, the world's most populous
Muslim nation, as practicing a moderate form of Islam and has shaken the
government of Jokowi, who accused unnamed political actors of trying to
undermine him. The son of former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is
vying against Ahok for Jakarta governor in elections set for February.
Separately, police said they had arrested eight
people suspected of treason including Rahmawati, who is a younger sister
of former President Megawati Sukarnoiputri, and a well-known musician
turned politician Ahmad Dani. Two other people were arrested for alleged
crimes under Indonesia's law on electronic information and
transactions.
Lisnawati Djohar, a resident of West Sumatra's
Padang city, said she flew to Jakarta with a dozen friends for the
protest. "I've been called to defend Islam," she said. "As a Muslim, I
feel guilty if I refuse a demand to defend my religion. I believe Ahok
insulted the holy Quran and it's hurt us."
Rizieq Syihab, leader of the Islamic Defenders
Front, a vigilante group that helped organize the demonstrations, gave a
fiery speech to the protest in which he asserted Indonesia would be
peaceful if there was no blasphemy and other problems such as gays.
Roads leading into the city were clogged in the
early morning as white-robed protesters walked to the city center from
corners of the sprawling metropolis. Speaking on the main stage at the
national monument, National Police Chief Gen. Tito Karnavian called for
the protesters to support the legal process in the blasphemy case.
"We have worked to finalize the dossier and have
handed over to the prosecutors. Therefore, I request support from all of
you so that the legal process goes well," he said as the crowd cheered
"God is Great."
The accusation of blasphemy has animated the
political opponents of Ahok and Jokowi, including hard-liners who have
used the issue to seize a national stage for their extreme agenda, which
includes Shariah law.
Ahok's blasphemy case took a step forward Thursday
when it was formally accepted for trial. The offense is punishable by up
to five years in prison. Police say Ahok can't leave the country during
the case. However, hard-line Muslim groups continue to demand he be
arrested.
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