Appaently the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) run rampant round Jakarta trashing businesses.
The scenario is this:
It is Ramadan
Indonesia is not a Muslim country, it is specifically montheistic (to include Buddhism, Hinduism, Christianity and Islam)
Various bars and restaurants are open serving expatriates, non-Muslims, etc.
The Islamic Defenders don't like this, and will trash the businesses (alternative being that they close down or pay protection money).
The Indonesian police merely warn the businesses that the Islamic Defenders are coming - they do not protect them.
Some of the other things that happen in the name of Islam in Indonesia include:
www.indonesiamatters.com/2768/pujiono-cahyo/
"43 year old Pujiono Cahyo Widayanto/Widianto, aka Syech/Syekh Puji, the head of an Islamic boarding school (Ponpes Miftahul Jannah) in Bedono, Jambu, Semarang, Central Java, in August 2008 informally married (nikah siri) Lutfiana Ulfa, 11 years and 10 months old, who had just begun studies at a local junior high school, but has now taken up wifely duties at home.
He also intends to marry two other girls, aged 9 and 7. Of these latter two, Syech Puji says that neither has begun menstruating, so he will refrain from interfering with them, while Ulfa has already entered puberty.
Syech Puji believes his actions have a legitimate basis in Islam, considering that the prophet Muhammad married the 7 year old Aisha.
I'm not just doing what I like, it's based in religion. It's in accordance with the prophet's teaching. You can marry a 7 year old if you like but you can't have relations with her until she starts menstruating.
One supporting voice is that of politician Hilman Rosyad Syihab from the Islamist Partai Keadilan Sejahtera (PKS), who says that marrying young girls is allowed within Islam provided the marriages are not consummated until the girl has begun menstruating."
There is also the case of SETIA, a Christian College in East Jakarta, which was established 25 years ago in what was then a rural area, but now is in the middle of a Muslim community.
'Two SETIA students, Julius Koli and Jonny Gontoh, returned to their dormitory to find a large rat, and one of them threw his sandal at it. The sandal fell onto a neighbor?s property, and when the two went there to retrieve the sandal, area residents shouted ?Thieves!?'
'By midnight mobs had formed and were attacking two male dormitories. At 2:30 a.m., mobs had reached the third floor of one of the dormitories and were trying to burn it down. Local sources said that when they set the building on fire, gasoline spilled onto the leg of one of the attackers, and they ran away.
Another mob attacked the main building of SETIA with stones. Male students threw the stones back at them, and by 5:30 a.m. Saturday morning (July 26) local policemen arrived.
That night, area residents and Muslim extremist groups made their way past police checkpoints and some of them armed with metal clubs and machetes broke into a women?s dormitory, where male students had been transferred after female students were relocated. While the attackers ransacked the dormitory, those outside threw tear gas and home-made ?Molotov cocktail? bombs at the structure.
Evacuations of students began that night. On Sunday evening (July 27), as police were further evacuating students and staff members, the attackers slashed some male students with swords. At least 17 students received treatment for injuries at the Christian University Indonesia Hospital Cawang, East Jakarta.'
The Islamic Defenders Front had previously held demonstrations at the college, saying that it was growing too big, and in 2007 200 Muslims set fire to the premises of construction workers who were building a new dormitory.
Worse incidents have happened in Poso, where Arab-trained jihadists (of Jemaah Islamiyah, the terrorist group responsible for high profile attacks in Bali and Jakarta, mong others) have fermented hate between Christian and Muslim residents, resulting in numerous deaths, and culminating in the beheading of three Christian schoolgirls as a celebration of Ramadan.