Nearly 20 per cent of high school and university students in Indonesia support the establishment of a caliphate in the world’s largest Muslim-majority country over the current secular government, a new survey showed this week. The survey echoes similar findings by Saiful Mujadi Research and Consulting, which reported in June that some 79.3 percent of 1,500 respondents nationwide rejected the idea of establishing an Islamic state proposed by several extremist organizations such as Hizbuth Tahrir Indonesia, according to the poll released June 4. The rise of hard-line Islamist groups has alarmed moderate Indonesian Muslims, the Washington Post reports.