Deden Sujana was the head of security for the Indonesian Ahmadiya Congregation, and his exact offense is unclear. As the Ahmadi movement is increasingly banned or marginalized after essentially being blamed for provoking the attack by existing, it appears he is in hot water for trying — or considering trying — to fight back: “According to the prosecutors, the evidence proves that Deden prepared himself [for the clash].”
And so Sujana got nine months in jail, where his attackers, who were videotaped beating Ahmadis to death to shouts of “Allahu akbar,” got less than that.
An update on this story. “Injured Ahmadi Faces Jail Time,” by Ulma Haryanto & Markus Junianto Sihalolo for the Jakarta Globe, August 3 (thanks to Twostellas):
Adding insult to injury, prosecutors at the Serang District Court on Tuesday recommended nine months in jail for an Ahmadi man critically injured in the deadly attack on members of the community in Cikeusik, Banten.
Prosecutors last month recommended prison sentences of between five months and seven months for 12 men accused of participating in the attack, from provoking violence to assault leading to death or injuries.
Last week, the court handed down sentences of only between three months and six months, prompting stern criticism from international and local human rights groups.
Deden Sujana, who was the head of security for the Indonesian Ahmadiyah Congregation (JAI) at the time, has been detained since May for allegedly inciting the Feb. 6 attack, during which three Ahmadiyah community members died.
“According to the prosecutors, the evidence proves that Deden prepared himself [for the clash],” Kiagus Ahmad, Deden’s lawyer, told the Jakarta Globe.
“The prosecutors seem to think that what Deden did was worse than the men who carried out the slaughter,” he added.
“When someone repeatedly hits someone with a rock and beats their lifeless body, that is slaughter.”
Some 1,500 people attacked the home of an Ahmadiyah community leader in Cikeusik in February, brutally killing three members of the Muslim sect, which some consider deviant.
Kiagus said prosecutors had neglected the fact that Deden was a victim in the incident.
“They said that the factors that helped reduce his sentence demand was his helpful attitude during the hearings and that he has never been convicted before,” he said.
He compared this to the prosecution’s argument for some of the attackers, namely Ujang Muhammad Arif, Muhammad bin Syarif, Endang bin Sidik and Muhammad Munir bin Basri.
“At the time, they said that the sentencing recommendation was light because they were religious leaders and there was a request from clerics and religious leaders in Banten to reduce their punishment,” he said.
Separately, Serang’s chief prosecutor, Jan Maringka, told the Jakarta Globe that his team was convinced that Deden had provoked the attack.
“He prepared weapons, spears, sickles and catapults. When the mob came, police warned him but he told them to step aside,” he said.
Jan said the mob had gone to Cikeusik for a communal prayer. “They didn’t come there to start a fight,” he added.
Consider for a moment how absurd that claim is, given the climate of hostility toward Ahmadis in Indonesia. The Ahmadis are denounced as heretics and unbelievers for believing in a prophetic figure after Muhammad.
Meanwhile, Eva Kusuma Sundari, a member of the House of Representatives” Commission III, which oversees legal affairs, said the disparity in the sentence demands was a clear indication that law enforcers had lost their impartiality….