Indonesia’s Constitutional Court dealt a blow to Indonesia’s already fragile religious freedom when it dismissed a petition to revoke the country’s blasphemy law last week, the Human Rights Watch reports. The petition was filed by one of the most prosecuted minority groups in the country, the Ahmadiyya, an Islamic sect. The Indonesian government allowed citizens to list faiths outside the six state-sanctioned religions on their national ID cards last year, but Ahmadiyya is excluded. Also last year, the United Nations pressed Indonesia to release Jakarta’s jailed Christian governor and repeal blasphemy laws which they say undermine religious freedom in the Muslim-majority nation. Purnama was jailed this month last year for insulting the Qu’ran, a shock decision that has stoked concern about rising religious intolerance in the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country, according to SBS News.