Indonesian police arrest Muslim militants over bloody attacks - News - Evening Standard
       

Indonesian police arrest Muslim militants over bloody attacks

Indonesian police have detained 57 members of a hardline Islamic group following a bloody attack on an interfaith rally in Jakarta.

Several members of the Islamic Defenders' Front (FPI) were held at the group's headquarters and at several houses in Jakarta early this morning

Police claimed some of them were suspected of being involved in the attacks.
"We have detained 57, including their leader," Abubakar Nataprawira, national police spokesman said.

Mob-handed: Indonesian police confront members of the Islamic Defenders Front before arresting dozens of them yesterday

Mob-handed: Indonesian police confront members of the Islamic Defenders Front before arresting dozens of them yesterday

Arrested: Members of hardline Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) are taken into a police truck

Arrested: Members of hardline Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) are taken into a police truck

"Then we can figure out how many of them are suspects."

About a dozen people were injured on Sunday when militants wielding bamboo sticks attacked members of the National Alliance for Freedom of Religion and Faith.

The Alliance's members include moderates such as former Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid, also known as Gus Dur.

Artists, scholars and interfaith leaders were among those who gathered in support of religious tolerance.

The attack came after some speakers at the rally urged tolerance over the treatment of Ahmadiyya, an Islamic sect that some Indonesians consider "deviant".

Outbreaks of violence over religious issues have become more common in recent months in Indonesia, particularly over the treatment of Ahmadiyya.

Militant Muslim groups have attacked mosques and buildings associated with Ahmadiyya, and are lobbying the government to outlaw the sect.

The assault by members of FPI - which is well-known for its attacks on bars and nightclubs in Indonesia during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan - has provoked an outcry among moderates.

Sunday's rally was intended to celebrate the anniversary of Pancasila, an Indonesian philosophy marked by belief in one God which was promoted by the country's founding president, Sukarno.

Around 85 per cent of the 226 million people in Indonesia are Muslims, and most are moderate.

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