Talk:Gerakan Pramuka Indonesia
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Alumni
[edit]Any proof that Barack Obama was a member of Gerakan Pramuka? [1][2] --evrik (talk) 22:59, 5 March 2013 (UTC)
original image
[edit]I have asked for the original image to be restored. Replacing it with the sprouting coconut is like taking the Commonwealth Star from the flag of Australia, coloring it black and saying it is sufficient to represent the Australian flag. It is not.--Kintetsubuffalo (talk) 13:23, 6 April 2013 (UTC)
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"The Indonesian government has suspended support for the Boy Scouts movement after its chairman expressed support for Hizb-ut Tahrir, the banned pro-Islamic caliphate group".
[edit]Not so good news for Indonesian Scouts perhaps. According to WOSM, of the current 28 million Scouts worldwide, 21 million of them are in Indonesia, due to Scouting being a compulsory, in-school program for youth.--Kintetsubuffalo (talk) 13:58, 26 July 2017 (UTC)
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/indonesian-boy-scout-leader-called-for-sharia-law/news-story/889feb92be1eefc9f06412fb6387363a Indonesian Boy Scout leader called for sharia law
The Indonesian government has suspended support for the Boy Scouts movement after its chairman expressed support for Hizb-ut Tahrir, the banned pro-Islamic caliphate group.
Youth and Sports Minister Imam Nahrawi said yesterday financial assistance for the Scouts movement, known as Pramuka, had been suspended pending clarification from its chairman Adhyaksa Dault, a former sports minister, over his presence at a Hizb-ut Tahrir rally in 2013.
“The bottom line is: all civic, youth and student organisations, managed by anti-Pancasila officials will not receive financial support by us,” the minister said, referring to the Indonesian state ideology.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo enacted a regulation this month that allows the government to disband all civic bodies deemed to be anti-Pancasila.
The new authority was swiftly exercised last week, when the government disbanded Hizb-ut Tahrir in a move seen as calculated to stem the momentum of an Islamist opposition force ahead of the 2019 election.
The Indonesian chapter of Hizb-ut Tahrir is part of an international organisation committed to removing all governments in the Muslim world in favour of a pan-Islamic theocracy. In Indonesia, it is estimated to have up to 3.5 million members.
Hizb ut-Tahir is banned in many countries, including Germany, China and Egypt.
The group vowed to challenge the ban in the Constitutional Court, Indonesia’s highest judicial authority.
Mr Adhyaksa, a minister under president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, admitted he attended the 2013 rally and gave an interview to a Hizb-ut Tahrir videographer. Footage of the interview has gone viral since the Islamist group was disbanded.
“I came as an invitee, not as a member or a sympathiser,” he told The Australian. “As a religious nationalist, I support every religious movement aimed at building youths’ spirituality. If I am invited, I will come. It is heartless to accuse me of being anti-Pancasila just because I came to a Hizb ut-Tahrir event.
“I have written a letter to Mr Imam Nahrawi. I hope to see him personally and explain myself as well as ask for his apology. Check my resume. Check my life’s work. I was a student activist, I became a minister for five years. If anyone wants to change Pancasila I will be at the frontline fighting them.”
But the video showed Mr Adhyaksa expressing support for Islamic theocracy to be implemented in Indonesia.
“Caliphate is the teaching of the Prophet. If God is willing, with or without our help, the caliphate will rise. Our ways may be different but our goal is the same. That is why I’m here,” he told the interviewer at the rally while holding and waving a Hizb-ut Tahrir flag. “We keep making small changes. We have to make big changes. World order must be changed. We must impose sharia.”
Asked if he supported Hizb-ut Tahrir’s goal of a caliphate in Indonesia, Mr Adhyaksa responded: “Of course I do. I wouldn’t have come if I disagree. Allahu akbar (God is great).”