BFF-48 Indonesia rejects appeal of woman jailed over mosque noise complaint

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Indonesia rejects appeal of woman jailed over mosque noise complaint

JAKARTA, April 8, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Indonesia’s Supreme Court on Monday
rejected an appeal by a woman sentenced to 18 months in jail under the
country’s controversial blasphemy law for complaining about the volume of a
mosque’s call to prayer.

Meiliana, 44, an ethnic Chinese Buddhist, was found guilty of insulting
Islam for asking her neighbourhood mosque in Medan, on Sumatra island, to
lower its sound system because it was too loud and “hurt” her ears.

In a decision posted to its website Monday, the Supreme Court said that it
had rejected her appeal, but did not elaborate further.

Indonesia, which has the world’s biggest Muslim population, is officially
pluralist with six major religions recognised, including Hinduism,
Christianity and Buddhism. Freedom of expression is supposed to be guaranteed
by law.

But criticising religion — particularly Islam, which is followed by
nearly 90 percent of Indonesia’s 260 million citizens — can land offenders
in jail.

Meiliana’s comments more than two years ago triggered riots that saw angry
Muslim mobs ransack Buddhist temples.

Some ethnic Chinese in the area fled in fear.

The case fuelled fears that Indonesia’s moderate brand of Islam is coming
under threat from increasingly influential radicals.

Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), Indonesia’s largest Muslim group, said the woman’s
comments should not have been considered blasphemous.

Rights groups have long campaigned against the nation’s blasphemy laws,
which they say are frequently misused to target minorities.

Last year Jakarta’s former governor — the city’s first Christian leader
of Chinese descent — was sentenced to two years in jail for blasphemy.

There are hundreds of thousands of mosques across the Southeast Asian
archipelago nation, with the five-times-a-day call to prayer heard everywhere
in the biggest cities and smallest towns.

Vice President Jusuf Kalla made a plea in 2015 for places of worship to
turn down the volume slightly to placate nearby residents.

BSS/AFP/RY/1838 hrs