Trial for Indonesian woman who complained about mosque noise

Indonesian prosecutors have demanded an 18-month prison term for a woman charged with blasphemy after she complained about the volume of a mosque’s loudspeakers.


The ethnic Chinese defendant, Meiliana, 44, was arrested on May 18, about two years after her case triggered a riot in Tanjung Balai, a port town in North Sumatra province.

A spokesman at the local prosecutor’s office, Sumanggar Siagian, said the sentencing demand for Meiliana was made at the District Court in Medan, the province’s capital.

Prosecutors said the defendant had violated Indonesia’s criminal code by committing blasphemy against Islam, the dominant faith in Indonesia.

Mobs burned and ransacked at least 14 Buddhist temples throughout Tanjung Balai in a July 2016 riot after reports of Meiliana’s complaint emerged.

Police arrested more than a dozen suspects but only two were charged with instigating violence.


Meiliana’s lawyer, Rantau Sibarani, said there was no clear evidence she had committed blasphemy.

“This case seems to be very forced,” Mr Sibarani said. “This is only to fulfil the will of the people.”

Indonesia is the world’s most populous Muslim nation. Its constitution guarantees freedom of speech and religion, but in recent years blasphemy cases have been filed against those perceived as offending Islam, and the overwhelming majority end with guilty verdicts.

Presiding judge Wahyu Prasetyo Wibowo said the trial will resume on Thursday with the defendant’s lawyers making their final arguments.

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