"A Pentecostal congregation in Bandar Lampung, Indonesia, says it has spent 22 years fighting for the right to build a church. Now, allegations involving local officials and a delayed rejection letter are fueling renewed concerns over religious freedom"
Bandar Lampung, Indonesia — For 22 years, members of a small Pentecostal congregation in the Tanjung Senang district have pursued what many Indonesians take for granted: the right to build a place of worship.
Now, their struggle has erupted into a new controversy — one involving allegations of official interference, delayed government action and growing questions about the state of religious freedom in the world’s largest Muslim-majority democracy.
The conflict dates back to 2004, when the congregation of the Pentecostal Church of Indonesia, known locally as GPI, held a groundbreaking ceremony after securing support from dozens of local residents and community leaders. But the optimism did not last long. According to church members, the partially constructed building was soon attacked and burned by a mob. Police reports were filed, but no meaningful legal resolution followed.
Over the next two decades, repeated attempts to obtain construction permits ran into resistance from neighborhood leaders and local officials, despite claims from the congregation that they had fulfilled administrative requirements mandated under Indonesian regulations governing houses of worship.
In 2025, church organizers submitted another proposal, saying they had once again gathered sufficient community support. But tensions escalated after a rejection letter dated Nov. 3, 2025 — reportedly signed by 91 residents — was only delivered to church representatives on March 27, 2026.
The nearly five-month delay immediately raised suspicions.
Local reports and circulating accounts have alleged that an official identified only by the initials “AA” may have played a role in collecting signatures opposing the church. While the allegations have not been formally proven, they have intensified scrutiny over whether state authorities are acting impartially in disputes involving religious minorities.
Government officials and local security authorities are now said to be verifying both the support and opposition documents submitted by residents. Legally, experts note, authorities have little basis to reject the church if all regulatory conditions are satisfied.
But Indonesia’s reality on the ground is often more complicated.
Human rights organizations, including Setara Institute, have repeatedly documented cases in which churches and minority religious groups face prolonged obstacles despite complying with legal requirements. Administrative hurdles, social pressure from majority groups and inconsistent enforcement of constitutional protections remain recurring themes across the country.
The case in Tanjung Senang has once again placed Indonesia’s commitment to religious freedom under public scrutiny.
For the congregation, however, the issue is painfully personal. After more than two decades of setbacks, the fight is no longer just about permits or paperwork. It is about whether equal rights under the constitution truly apply to all Indonesians — including those whose faith places them in the minority.
(Sources: ICC/persecution.org, Viva Lampung, Portal Cakrawala, Setara Institute, local reports April 2026)
Editor: OYR
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