Church elders on Friday claimed a woman from their congregation in East
Java had been kidnapped by suspected Islamic hard-liners .
Rev.
Yessaya Malino, head of the Pentecostal church in Situbondo, told the
Jakarta Globe that church member Aprilia Dyah Kusumaningrum had
disappeared on Wednesday night after a church service.
Rev. Nico
Lamboan, Aprilia’s former teacher, said the 22-year-old had texted her
mother at 9 p.m. and told her she had been forced into a car by a group
of unknown men.
“Her mother called me and forwarded her message,” Nico said.
“It
said: ‘Mom I’m really scared, I’ve been forcefully taken into a car by
some men in white robes and headscarves, I don’t know where they’re
taking me.’ ”
She added that family and friends had tried to
call Aprilia’s cellphone immediately after receiving the message, but
the number was already unreachable. They also went out to look for her,
but to no avail.
“She’s new at the Pentecostal church,” Nico
said. “She told me she really loved her job, but she never mentioned
anything about a kidnap threat.”
Yessaya confirmed the church
had never received any threats or intimidation from any parties prior to
Wednesday’s incident. He added there had also been no ransom demands
since Aprilia’s disappearance.
“This is very unexpected and we still don’t know what’s going on,” he said.
He added he had reported the case to the Situbondo Police.
“We’re obviously very concerned, but I think it’s a little too early to confirm this is a kidnapping. Hopefully it’s not.”
When
the Globe first attempted to confirm whether a police report had been
filed, Adj. Comr. Sunarto, the Situbondo chief of detectives, denied
receiving any reports of a kidnapping.
However, a local
journalist speaking on condition of anonymity said that a church
representative had indeed gone to the police station to file a report.
The journalist added that officers had prohibited reporters from taking
any pictures at the time.
Sunarto later acknowledged that the
Pentecostal church had filed a report. “We’re still investigating the
case,” he said. “We just want to be extra careful because it’s related
to religious issues, so please try to understand.”
The incident, if confirmed to be a kidnapping by Islamic hard-liners, would be the latest in a disturbing trend of intolerance.
Theophilus
Bela, secretary general of the Indonesian Committee of Religions for
Peace, said recently that while police were on high alert for such
incidents in large cities, smaller towns, where security measures were
lax, were prone to outbreaks of intolerance.
However, Hendardi,
who chairs the human rights Setara Institute for Peace and Democracy,
warned against concluding that Aprilia was kidnapped as a result of
religious intolerance. “With limited information about the case, we
should not accuse anyone,” he said.
http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/indonesia/church-woman-abducted-by-men-in-islamic-clothing/446281
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