Region
A potential problem
Survey shows 10% Indonesians justify suicide bombing, 40%
want sharia laws. Ridwan Max Sijabat, Jakarta Post.
Mar 18, 2006
Islamic
conservatism is a growing force to be reckoned with across
the country, with research indicating about 40 percent of
citizens would support the replacement of state laws with
sharia and one in 10 consider suicide bombings justified
in some circumstances.
A survey
conducted in late January by the Indonesian Survey Institute
(LSI) found 40 percent of respondents approved of adulterers
being stoned to death, 34 percent did not want to see another
female president and 40 percent accepted polygamy.
On a
thief's hands being chopped off, 38 percent of respondents
said the punishment fitted the crime.
The
survey involved 2,000 respondents from different backgrounds
nationwide.
In presenting
the survey results on Thursday, a senior researcher at the
LSI, Anis Baswedan, said it was clear that certain Muslim
groups had already embraced sharia as a value system as
evidenced by their support for conservative organisations,
such as the Islam Defenders Front and the Indonesian Mujahidin
Council.
On the
whole, respondents were less acquainted with right- and
left-wing extremist groups, such as the Eden sect, the Liberal
Islam Network, Syiah, Hisbut Tahrir and Ahmadiyah.
Anis
said, however, that despite the obvious support for conservative
organisations, the majority of Muslims did not want to see
the existing election system replaced, as was indicated
by the results of the 2004 general election.
Muslim-based
parties advocating the adoption of sharia did not fare well
in the legislative election.
Likewise,
the presidential candidates nominated by them did not get
the support they were counting on from mainstream Muslim
groups.
Yet,
the majority of respondents saw eye to eye with the country's
largest Muslim organisations -- Nadhlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah.
On the
other hand, the survey also revealed that one in 10 people
tolerate suicide bombing and other attacks on civilian targets
in the name of Islam.
Anis
said the strong support for conservatism and "radicalism"
had much to do with what respondents called the negative
influence of Western culture and the global injustice blamed
on the US as a superpower representing the West.
Sixty
two percent of respondents were of the opinion that Western
influences had brought no good to Indonesian Muslims and
between 22 and 49 percent held the US responsible for global
injustice.
Amin
Abdullah, rector of Sunan Kalijaga State Islamic University
in Yogyakarta, said he was not surprised by the survey results
as conservatism had long flourished in the country but,
despite strong conservatism, Muslims did not want to replace
the existing state ideology with an Islamic one.
"The
majority of Muslims have been moderate and accepted pluralism
because Indonesia - as the most populous Muslim nation -
lies far from the centre of Islam, the Middle East, and
this has made Islam in Indonesia rather different from that
in Pakistan and Afghanistan," he said, adding that
conservatism here had gotten stronger on the eve of the
reform era in 1998.
Imam
Prasodjo, a sociologist of the University of Indonesia,
disagreed with the parameters the survey used to measure
radicalism, saying they were relative.
"Women
oppose polygamy, all communities dislike mixed marriages
and all human beings are against terror acts," he said.
The
two agreed that, despite the strong grip of conservatism,
the "silent majority" supported the two largest
Muslim organizations, which see themselves as tolerant of
modern ways of thinking
Jakarta Post