Security concerns are growing on the Hindu-majority holiday
island of Bali, where the Miss World final is due to take place Saturday,
despite hardline protests from Muslim groups and warnings that extremists could
attack the pageant they deem un-Islamic.
Indonesia is officially secular, but protests by Islamic radicals
in the world's most populous Muslim-majority country have pushed the
authorities to move the event to Bali, instead of near the capital, Jakarta.
But things haven't calmed down, and the radicals
are
determined to stage another series of protests on Saturday and break through
toughened security at the beauty pageant.
"We are going to protest against it, because it is
unacceptable," AFP quoted the head of the East Java branch of the Islamic
Defenders Front, Haidar Al-Hamid, as saying.
Up to 90 percent of Indonesia's population of 240 million
people identify themselves as Muslim, with the vast majority practicing a
moderate form of Islam. Thousands have joined protests across the Indonesian
archipelago, from Jakarta to cities on Sumatra Island and Borneo, slamming Miss
World as"pornography" and a "whore contest," burning
effigies of the organizers.
Even after a pledge by the British-based organizers to
cancel the main highlight of the contest, the bikini show, and replace the
bikinis with Balinese sarongs, the protesters weren't satisfied, urging the
authorities to change the event's venue. The organizers initially planned to
hold the final and qualifying rounds in and around the capital, Jakarta, where
radicals have a lot of influence.
Earlier this month, hundreds of Islamic Defenders Front
members made an attempt to cross to Bali from East Java. Female police
officers, backed by hundreds of elite police troops, stopped the group from
getting onto a ferry, however.
The US, UK and Australian embassies have also warned that
radicals could attack the pageant, recalling the deadly Jihadist bombings in
Bali that killed over 200 people from 21 nations in 2002.
"Extremist groups may be planning to disrupt the Miss
World pageant... potentially through violent means,"the US embassy in
Jakarta said.
Last year, US singer Lady Gaga had to cancel her concert in
Jakarta after a series of similar protests. Calling her "devil's
messenger" who wears only a "bra and panties," the Islamic
Defenders Front threatened to stop Gaga from getting off the plane and burn
down the venue where the “Poker Face”diva was due to have performed.
Saturday's final in Nusa Dua, southern Bali, will see the
beauty queens sashaying in Indonesian-designed dresses before a winner is
crowned. A total of 129 contestants will show off their talents in the finale
of the three-week event, which will be broadcast to over 180 countries.
Organizers of Saturday’s final are counting on up to 700
security officers, reinforced by traditional Balinese security personnel, known
as "pecalang," to ensure the safety of participants and guests.
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