Sampang: Four killed in clashes between Sunnis and Shiites. Criticism of Government's inaction
Jakarta (AsiaNews) - Tension is still high on
Madura island, Sampang regency, the scene of violent clashes between Sunni and
Shiite Muslims. Hundreds of police and soldiers are patrolling the streets, but
there is a high risk of further skirmishes between the two sides. Yesterday
four people died - two per side - plus eight were wounded and at least forty
houses destroyed. The toll is provisional and may increase if the government
does not intervene decisively to restore calm in an area where open interfaith
conflict has been threatening to break out for months (see AsiaNews 19/01/2012 East
Java: a growing tension between Sunni and Shiite, fears of a conflict), the population points the finger at
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and the central executive in Jakarta, unable
to quell the violence in all these months.
Yesterday the majority Sunni attacked the Shiite minority area, after months of
tension triggered by a family feud between the two groups. The police have not
been able to contain the riots, and the government - add several analysts and
intellectuals - was unable or unwilling to take the necessary measures to stop
the outbreak of tension, which now threatens to spread throughout the country.
Several organizations have launched accusations against the head of state,
which they claim is doing nothing to stop the violence and eradicate the seed
of hatred among the faithful of Muhammad in the most populous Muslim country in
the world. For this reason, many moderate leaders and representatives of the
Islamic Front fiercely criticize the work of Yudhoyono.
Among these is Kiai Hajj Arifin Husaein, better known as Gus Nuril, leader of
Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) in central Java, who says that the president "has
done nothing to resolve the issue." He adds that "no potential
conflict can be eradicated" if the central authority in Indonesia "makes no commitment
to take deterrent measures" to "put an end to the hostilities."
He is echoed by Ahmad Mujahid, who also criticizes the actions of the police
who targeted the Shiite leader Tajul Muluk for "no reason" accusing him -
unfairly - of spreading "illegal" teachings.
The human rights activist Usman Hamid, Jakarta,
also criticizes the actions of the executive under the leadership of Yudhoyono,
the powerful Indonesian Council of Ulemas (MUI) has also issued a statement in
which it explains that the Shia sect has made no "unlawful" teaching.
Speaking to AsiaNews from his office
in Yogyakarta, Mohammad Machasin, professor of
Islamic studies at the Islamic Sunan Kalijaga High School, calls on the authorities
to crack down on provocateurs who "manipulate" opinions and ideas
according to their own interests. As an expert on Islamic history and cultures,
he adds that it is not easy to decide whether the Shiite community of Sampang
is "illegal" or "legal" because of the many
"varieties" of the different movements. But the fact remains that the
government should promote that part of civil society that wants "peaceful
dialogue" to resolve "conflicts between majority and minority confessional
groups."
03/12/2019 09:59