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Sex tape sparks call to control Internet in Indonesia
By SUNANDA CREAGH | REUTERS 

Published: Jun 15, 2010 20:58 Updated: Jun 15, 2010 20:59 

JAKARTA: The release of video clips appearing to show top starlets having sex 
has sparked renewed calls for tighter Internet controls in majority-Muslim 
Indonesia and more use of a controversial anti-pornography law.

The anti-porn law, passed in 2008, was seen by many as a sign of the growing 
influence of religion in policy-making in traditionally moderate Indonesia, a 
worry for some investors hoping for pro-market reforms.

Police are now considering invoking it in an investigation into the release on 
the grainy clips that appear to show pop singer Nazril "Ariel" Irham having 
sex, in one clip with television star girlfriend Luna Maya, while in another 
with actress Cut Tari.

The stars have denied it is them. Local media reported Irham as saying his 
laptop was stolen last year and police have called the stars for questioning.

Information Minister Tifatul Sembiring has expressed disgust at the clips, 
which have dominated Indonesian news since being leaked earlier this month.

"Why would anyone tape such a private thing?" Sembiring was quoted as saying by 
local newspaper the Jakarta Post, which also reported him saying new rules were 
needed to ban "negative" Internet content.

Sembiring's Islam-based party PKS, seen as one of the most conservative parties 
in Parliament, is a key member of President Bambang Susilo Yudhoyono's ruling 
coalition and pushed earlier this year for more Internet censorship controls. 
The plan was dropped after public outcry.

The party's president, Luthfi Hasan Ishaaq, told Reuters the clips showed 
inappropriate material was too easily accessible.

"To protect a community, there must be control, we cannot have total freedom," 
said the Saudi Arabia-educated politician. "To create comfort and overcome 
negative effects on communities who are not ready and not supposed to consume 
certain material, then controls are a very good idea."

When asked if he would support limiting access to sites like YouTube or 
Facebook, Ishaaq said he would "if it was in the national interest." He 
expected the anti-porn law, used to charge nightclub dancers this year, to be 
used more often in future.

If letters to the editor are any judge, reactions from ordinary Indonesians to 
the country's first celebrity sex tape scandal have varied from voyeuristic 
interest to irritation.

"I think corruption is worse for society than a few sex videos," one scribe, 
"Peter," wrote to the Jakarta Post.

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