The Jakarta Post
Friday, December 30, 2005
Sect Leader, Followers Arrested
Abdul Khalik, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
In a move that many saw as unnecessary, Jakarta Police declared on Thursday
Lia Eden and 32 of her followers suspects for defamation of religion a day
after members of the cult were forcibly evacuated from their headquarters on Jl.
Mahoni in Senen, Central Jakarta.
Another 15 people also evacuated from the house by the police to prevent a
clash with local residents on Wednesday were not named suspects because they
were just participants in the gathering at the headquarters.
Jakarta Police Insp. Gen. Firman Gani added the police would charge members
of the cult, known as Salamullah, under Article 156a of the Criminal Code on
religious defamation.
Former president Abdurrahman "Gus Dur" Wahid, however, criticized the move
saying that the authorities should hold a dialog with the group to straighten
things out.
"If they are considered a heretic group then the authorities should hold a
dialog to clear things up instead of arresting them," he said during a
discussion on freedom of religion in Jakarta.
Gus Dur said the government should leave religious affairs to civil society
as it was not the government's concern.
He proposed that a new institution with clear-cut jurisdiction be set up to
determine if a religious teaching was a heresy or not.
Many of the residents in the neighborhood even acknowledged they did not
know, or at least did not care about the presence of the cult headed by Lia, who
was previously known as Lia Aminuddin, located at Jl. Mahoni No. 30.
Neighbors only become aware of the group after Lia, who claims to be the Holy
Spirit, distributed flyers to her neighbors announcing that the house had
become the Kingdom of God or Eden Palace on Dec. 5.
Several other flyers, including a clarification on a report that the cult's
teachings were heresy and an invitation to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
to the house, were also distributed to houses in the neighborhood several times
after that.
"They never bothered or intimidated us before. Sometimes Lia's followers went
outside and we met them. However, they recently became active distributing
several flyers to us. We just don't like the content of the flyers. They should
have kept their teachings to themselves," Firdaus, 40, whose house is only 20
meters from Lia's place, told The Jakarta Post.
He said that they considered Lia and her followers strange people with a
different way of thinking.
Lia's flyers, however, were responded to by members of the congregation of
nearby Meranti Mosque, which also distributed flyers condemning Lia's teachings
as heresy, and asked residents to join a gathering in front of Lia's house on
Dec. 30.
Lia, who this time claimed to be God's messenger Gabriel, responded with new
flyers on Dec. 25, threatening to take the lives of the Meranti Mosque's
committee members if they held the gathering.
The flyers invited residents to gather in front of her house on Wednesday to
see what kind of people were there in the house.
"We were just very curious in the beginning. But as more people came, many
began to shout and boo at them. I think it would have ended up in violence if
the police had not come quickly," Rahman, 30, another neighbor said.
Friday, December 30, 2005
Sect Leader, Followers Arrested
Abdul Khalik, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
In a move that many saw as unnecessary, Jakarta Police declared on Thursday
Lia Eden and 32 of her followers suspects for defamation of religion a day
after members of the cult were forcibly evacuated from their headquarters on Jl.
Mahoni in Senen, Central Jakarta.
Another 15 people also evacuated from the house by the police to prevent a
clash with local residents on Wednesday were not named suspects because they
were just participants in the gathering at the headquarters.
Jakarta Police Insp. Gen. Firman Gani added the police would charge members
of the cult, known as Salamullah, under Article 156a of the Criminal Code on
religious defamation.
Former president Abdurrahman "Gus Dur" Wahid, however, criticized the move
saying that the authorities should hold a dialog with the group to straighten
things out.
"If they are considered a heretic group then the authorities should hold a
dialog to clear things up instead of arresting them," he said during a
discussion on freedom of religion in Jakarta.
Gus Dur said the government should leave religious affairs to civil society
as it was not the government's concern.
He proposed that a new institution with clear-cut jurisdiction be set up to
determine if a religious teaching was a heresy or not.
Many of the residents in the neighborhood even acknowledged they did not
know, or at least did not care about the presence of the cult headed by Lia, who
was previously known as Lia Aminuddin, located at Jl. Mahoni No. 30.
Neighbors only become aware of the group after Lia, who claims to be the Holy
Spirit, distributed flyers to her neighbors announcing that the house had
become the Kingdom of God or Eden Palace on Dec. 5.
Several other flyers, including a clarification on a report that the cult's
teachings were heresy and an invitation to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
to the house, were also distributed to houses in the neighborhood several times
after that.
"They never bothered or intimidated us before. Sometimes Lia's followers went
outside and we met them. However, they recently became active distributing
several flyers to us. We just don't like the content of the flyers. They should
have kept their teachings to themselves," Firdaus, 40, whose house is only 20
meters from Lia's place, told The Jakarta Post.
He said that they considered Lia and her followers strange people with a
different way of thinking.
Lia's flyers, however, were responded to by members of the congregation of
nearby Meranti Mosque, which also distributed flyers condemning Lia's teachings
as heresy, and asked residents to join a gathering in front of Lia's house on
Dec. 30.
Lia, who this time claimed to be God's messenger Gabriel, responded with new
flyers on Dec. 25, threatening to take the lives of the Meranti Mosque's
committee members if they held the gathering.
The flyers invited residents to gather in front of her house on Wednesday to
see what kind of people were there in the house.
"We were just very curious in the beginning. But as more people came, many
began to shout and boo at them. I think it would have ended up in violence if
the police had not come quickly," Rahman, 30, another neighbor said.
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