
by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Chief International Correspondent
JAKARTA (Worthy News) – Dozens of residents, including Christians, have been rescued from a halfway house in Indonesia’s West Java province after local Muslims stormed the building because it had been used for church services, Christians told Worthy News.
Footage obtained by Worthy News on Sunday showed a large crowd storming the complex, taking away a wooden cross and smashing windows inside the house in Cidahu District’s Tangkil Village in the Sukabumi Regency area of West Java.
Witnesses also said the garden area was damaged, “the gazebo behind the house was destroyed, and the rear toilet facilities were damaged” in Friday’s incident.
Residents reportedly pushed a black Honda Beat motorbike into the nearby river, and the masses broke down the house’s gate.
“The spontaneous action was triggered by the suspicion that the house was often used as a place of worship for Protestant Christians without permission,” a local source said.
As many as 200 residents flocked to the location, Christians said. “They demanded that the worship activities be stopped. There was an act of vandalism against several facilities at the halfway house,” Christians explained.
“We have been conducting mediation since April 2025. But the worship activities still continued,” added a local community leader who did not want to be named.
SECURITY OFFICERS
Police rushed to the scene and asked the demonstrators to disperse. “Security officers successfully evacuated 36 residents of the halfway house and three cars to a safe place. This was done to avoid clashes and further damage,” police said.
Authorities put up police lines around the halfway house, which guarded it to anticipate further actions, witnesses said
There were no reported fatalities in this incident, but concerns remained about Maria Veronica Ninna, who owns the safe house.
The material losses are estimated to be quite large, Christians said. The incident highlighted broader concerns over pressure on devout Christians in Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim nation.
Several (home) churches have had their worship services stopped by angry Muslims and extremist groups or did not receive official permissions to operate, Worthy News learned.
Christian leaders say more than 10 percent of Indonesia’s 282 million people identify as ‘Christian,’ though the real figure could be higher.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
A Russian drone slammed into a home in Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region overnight, killing a father and his three small children and wounding their pregnant mother, Ukrainian officials said Wednesday, in one of the deadliest single-family attacks in recent months.
Tropical Cyclone Gezani collapsed houses in Madagascar’s main port city of Toamasina and left at least 31 people dead as it tore across the Indian Ocean island with powerful winds and heavy rain, authorities said Wednesday.
Iran warned Wednesday that its missile capabilities are “non-negotiable” as tensions increased with the United States, which appears to be preparing military options, even as the Islamic Republic faces unrest at home following a deadly nationwide protest crackdown.
Authorities in the United States intensified efforts Wednesday to find Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of NBC’s “Today” show co-host Savannah Guthrie, after law enforcement briefly detained and then released an initial suspect.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog has met victims’ families and survivors of Australia’s worst-ever terrorist and antisemitic attack that killed more than a dozen people, amid mounting tensions between the two nations.
Efforts to dismantle Hamas’ military infrastructure in Gaza are moving forward according to plan, despite tensions surrounding the ceasefire, a senior official involved in U.S. President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace initiative told Ynet in an exclusive report Wednesday.
As diplomatic talks continue between Washington and Tehran, new reports from inside Iran describe intensifying repression and widespread fear among ordinary citizens.