Jubilee Campaign USA, August 15, 2002
Christian Villages Burn Again In Central Indonesia
Greetings!
Protective Armed Forces are Withdrawn Before the Attack
by Geoff Stamp, FLASH NEWS from COMPASS DIRECT
CENTRAL SULAWESI, Indonesia, August 14 (Compass) -- The villages of
Sepe and Silanca, some 10 miles from the city of Poso, have been burned
to the ground. Reports from several sources confirm that attacks on the
Christian villages started on the evening of Monday, August 12, after
units of the armed forces which had been guarding the villages were
unexpectedly withdrawn.
Sepe, with a population of 1,250, was attacked at 6:30 p.m. by a large
group of men dressed in black and firing automatic weapons. Some of the
villagers tried to fend off the attackers with farming implements and
bamboo spears but soon joined the rest of the villagers in flight.
The Rev. Vence Waani, pastor of the Sepe Pentecostal Church, described
the situation as "menacing."
"The sound of automatic weapons was coming from every direction mixed
with the hysterical voices of mothers calling for their children, and shrieks
of fear from the children," he said. "The flames were engulfing the houses
-- it was a scene of horror."
They had no time to watch their newly-rebuilt church being burned down.
Waani and his wife and child were forced to flee the burning village with
the attackers firing volleys of bullets behind them.
By 8:30p.m., the village of Sepe was gutted. The Sepe Pentecostal
Church and the Eklesia Protestant Church were destroyed. The attackers
moved on to Silanca where they followed the same pattern. They chased
away the villagers, looted their houses and then set them alight.
A team from the Crisis Centre of the Protestant Church in Central
Sulawesi (GKST), which is based in the Christian town of Tentena, arrived
to collect four bodies of Christians who had been killed in last week's
violence. They also witnessed the attacks. Five loud bomb blasts were
heard in Silanca, and more blasts came from Sepe. Repeated gunshot
could be heard "all over the place".
All the Christians from the two villages -- some 2,500 -- sought refuge in
Pandiri and Watuawu, further south of Poso on the road to Tentena. Their
number is now being swelled by villagers from neighboring Tambaro and
Maliwuko who no longer feel protected by the armed forces. One report
states that four trucks carrying a small army unit drove to Silanca and
Sepe once the attacks were over and the attackers had gone.
In November and December, 2001, the Laskar Jihad (Muslim extremists)
and local Muslims attacked and destroyed five villages. Sepe was the last
to be targeted and was only partially destroyed due to the defense of the
villagers and the timely intervention of additional armed forces sent by the
government.
Annette Hammond, an Australian pastor working to distribute aid in the
region, said she feared the situation is as dangerous now as it was then.
"This is the second time in just over six months that these people have
lost everything they possess and had to flee from their burning village.
Have they no right to live in their own land? We need to pray for the
Christians in Central Sulawesi," she writes.
The Pentecostal church in Sepe had been rebuilt along with many of the
homes which had been destroyed. These recent attacks have mocked the
government rehabilitation plan and destroyed people's faith in the Malino
Peace Agreement signed between Muslims and Christians last December.
Eight Christians were killed last week in the vicinity of Malei. All Christian
houses in that village and in neighboring Tongko have been destroyed. A
team from the Tentena Crisis Centre attempted to recover the eight
bodies but was blocked. They had to return to the outskirts of Poso to
negotiate with the authorities for the release and transport of the bodies.
According to reports, both Muslim and Christian communities are preparing
for an ensuing conflict. Groups of men are active in defending their
villages, and roadblocks are common.
"While the Christians check passing cars for weapons, the Muslims check
for identity. And if they find a Christian, they will take him or her away.
We fear that many have been killed in this way," said Mona Saroinsong,
the Coordinator of the Crisis Centre of the General Synod of Protestant
Churches in North and Central Sulawesi.
"Many Christians have been reported missing. We know of one man who
was killed in the Kayamanya district of Poso when returning to his house
on his motorbike. He was stopped by an armed Muslim mob, and when
they found out he was a Christian, they killed him."
She also mentioned two other incidents. Five Christians were killed while
travelling on a bus going north to Gorontalo, and the husband of a
teacher from Tagolu is also feared dead. He was on a bus travelling to
Palu and has disappeared without a trace.
Suspicions of collusion between the armed forces and the Muslim
extremists are now growing among the Christian leadership. The Rev.
Rinaldi Damanik, Secretary of the GKST General Synod and Coordinator of
the Tentena Crisis Centre, has recently spoken out against what he sees
as the authorities' bias against the local Christians. He accused Yusuf
Kalla, the Coordinating Minister of Social Welfare, of ignoring the reality of
the situation in Central Sulawesi. The Minister dismissed the recent
shooting of an Italian tourist last week as "not in the style of the Laskar
Jihad" in a report in the Jakarta Post.
"For the people of Central Sulawesi, this is exactly the style of the Laskar
Jihad and is what has been happening since the beginning of the Poso
conflict," Damanik said. "Car shootings, bus bombings, attacks in villages,
the killing of innocent civilians..."
He added that there were always incidents of violence against Christians
following the visit of any group of dignitaries, such as Minister Kalla's
recent visit and the visits of the Minister of Religion and the Chief of
Police.
Copyright 2002 Compass Direct
Sincerely,
Ann Buwalda
Jubilee Campaign USA
email: jubilee@jubileecampaign.org
voice: 703-503-0791
web: http://www.jubileecampaign.org
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