Woman jailed in Indonesia for complaining that call to prayer is too loud Indonesia Woman jailed in Indonesia for complaining that...
Indonesia Woman jailed in Indonesia for complaining that call to prayer is too loud
Islamic groups criticise blasphemy sentence imposed on ethnic Chinese Buddhist who asked mosque to turn it down

Indonesiaâs largest Islamic bodies have denounced the jailing of a Buddhist woman in Sumatra, after she complained ab out the volume of the adzan, or call to prayer, from her local mosque.
The Medan district court sentenced Meiliana, a 44-year-old ethnic Chinese Buddhist, to 18 months in jail after she reportedly asked the mosque to turn it down.
The conviction under Indonesiaâs controversial blasphemy law has been slammed by rights groups, with senior figures from Indonesiaâs two largest Islamic bodies backing them. âI do not see how saying âadzan is too loudâ is an expression of hatred of hostility toward a particular group or religion,â said Robikin Emhas, head of Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) legal division.
Robikin urged authorities to refrain from using blasphemy laws as âan instrument to supress freedom of expressionâ and said Indonesian Muslims should take such opinions as âconstructive criticismâ.
Critics argue that Indonesiaâs blasphemy law is being used to arbitrarily attack minorities. Amnesty International Indonesia described t he court decision as âludicrousâ.
Abdul Muâti, secretary of the Muhammadiyah Islamic organisation, suggested Meiliana had fallen victim to mob justice â" a fate he compared to that of ex-Jakarta governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, or Ahok.
Ahok was sentenced to two yearsâ imprisonment for blasphemy in 2017 after he was found guilty of insulting the Koran.
âI assume that [Meilianaâs] case is similar to that of Ahok in which [the blasphemy conviction] is more of a result of pressure from the masses instead of the trial,â Abdul told the Jakarta Post.
Meilianaâs comments, made in July 2016, triggered an anti-Chinese riot in which several Buddhist temples were burned. Critics of her sentence have pointed out that those tried for damaging the temples were only given several months in prison while others were released. At the time local and national Islamic figures in Indonesia, the worldâs largest Muslim-majority nation, pressured the police to release the rioters.
A lawyer for the Sumatran woman says her sentence will be appealed.
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