WASHINGTON - The United States on Monday (8/15/2011), criticized the court ruling Indonesia is a member of the Ahmadiyya jailed for six months for defending himself and others of mass attacks that killed three members of the Ahmadiyah.
"We are disappointed with the sentence today against Deden Sudjana who are victims of the attack on 6 February," said a spokesman for the U.S. State Department, Victoria Nuland.
The judges set Deden, a member of the Ahmadiyya, guilty of acts of persecution and ignored orders to evacuate the property belonging to Ahmadiyya in Cikeusik, West Java, while the masses of armed invasion.
The penalty is equal to or more severe than those imposed last month against 12 leaders of the mass rampage in February, including a teenager who filmed a victim's head was crushed with a stone. The human rights activists have expressed outrage, especially since one of the victims who were injured by a mob that attacked should be jailed for longer than the leaders of the violence itself.
Nuland suggests similar things. "Prison sentences of six months to Deden with the most severe punishment received by the 12 people involved in the brutal attack," he said.
"We are again pushing Indonesia to maintain a tradition of tolerance towards all religions, a tradition which praised President (Barack) Obama in his visit to Jakarta in November 2010."
"We are disappointed with the sentence today against Deden Sudjana who are victims of the attack on 6 February," said a spokesman for the U.S. State Department, Victoria Nuland.
The judges set Deden, a member of the Ahmadiyya, guilty of acts of persecution and ignored orders to evacuate the property belonging to Ahmadiyya in Cikeusik, West Java, while the masses of armed invasion.
The penalty is equal to or more severe than those imposed last month against 12 leaders of the mass rampage in February, including a teenager who filmed a victim's head was crushed with a stone. The human rights activists have expressed outrage, especially since one of the victims who were injured by a mob that attacked should be jailed for longer than the leaders of the violence itself.
Nuland suggests similar things. "Prison sentences of six months to Deden with the most severe punishment received by the 12 people involved in the brutal attack," he said.
"We are again pushing Indonesia to maintain a tradition of tolerance towards all religions, a tradition which praised President (Barack) Obama in his visit to Jakarta in November 2010."
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