Indonesian lawmakers approved on Tuesday a presidential decree banning any civil organizations deemed to go against the country’s secular state ideology. The policy was aimed at containing hardline groups which have cast a shadow over the long-standing reputation for religious tolerance in the world’s largest Muslim-majority nation. The Indonesian government disbanded Islamic hardline group Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI) in May for creating unrest in the community that could threaten the peace and stability in the country. Previously, Foreign Policy reported that Indonesia’s moderate Islam is crumbing as fundamentalists seize the popular movement pertinent to the recent Jakarta gubernatorial election.