Saudi-style fundamentalism is gaining ground in Indonesia’s Aceh province. They even have their own muttawa-style sharia police:
Last weekend a music festival began in Banda Aceh, featuring one of the nation’s most popular bands, Nidji. The event ended in chaos with Nidji’s six members sheltering from mobs in a police station before fleeing the province.
Radical Muslims had complained the festival had encouraged promiscuity and breached sharia (Islamic law) by failing to segregate the audience by gender.
Police closed the festival after one night at the request of the Banda Aceh Ulema Council, the provincial capital’s leading religious authority…
A fatwa (religious decision) covering entertainment activities must be enforced across the province, Mr Bardad said. “According to the fatwa it is not only the spectators that should not mix between opposite sexes but the performers themselves.”
It was not natural for unmarried couples to associate in public, he said…
The band spent one night at the local police headquarters, as no hotels would accommodate them due to fear of fundamentalist mobs.
Aceh has seen an upsurge in fundamentalism since the 2004 tsunami, with many locals believing the disaster was punishment for failing to respect religious values. The Indonesian Government allowed the province to impose religious bylaws enforced by sharia courts in 2001.
Sharia police sweep the province arresting unmarried men and women found together, who are usually publicly caned.
Vigilante groups have also begun scouring beaches near the capital.
Earlier this year, a gang of youths badly beat a female Australian aid worker who was sitting on a beach with two male friends.
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