However, the government only recognizes six official religions Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Hinduism, Buddhism and Confucianism[3][4][5] and Indonesian law requires that every Indonesian citizen hold an identity card that identifies that person with one of these six religions. Indonesia does not recognize agnosticism or atheism, and blasphemy is illegal.[6] In the 2010 Indonesian census, 87.18% of Indonesians identified themselves as Muslim predominantly Sunnis also including Shias and Ahmadis, 6.96% Protestant, 2.91% Catholic, 1.69% Hindu, 0.72% Buddhist, 0.05% Khong Hu Chu, 0.13% other, and 0.38% unstated or not asked.[7]
via Religion in Indonesia – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.