http://www.scmp.com/week-asia/society/article/2115077/indonesias-islamisation-swipe-right-polygamy-left-womens-rights
Indonesia’s Islamisation: Swipe right for polygamy, left for women’s rights

On the rise: polygamy in Indonesia, domestic violence in Malaysia, sharia
in Brunei. Is Southeast Asia going backwards when it comes to gender
equality?

By Resty Woro Yuniar <http://www.scmp.com/author/resty-woro-yuniar>

14 Oct 2017



CREEPING ISLAMISATION IN Southeast Asia’s Muslim-majority countries is
threatening to undo recent progress in gender equality, say women’s rights
advocates who are stepping up campaigns for greater legal protections. They
say recent controversies, including the launch of a mobile dating app for
polygamists in Indonesia <http://www.scmp.com/topics/indonesia>, have
highlighted how cultural and religious views are increasingly impeding
efforts towards gender equality in the world’s most populous
Muslim-majority nation.

The app, called AyoPoligami, lets men and women scroll through users’
profiles, much like the popular dating app Tinder – in which members swipe
right to indicate a romantic interest, left to reject. The maker of
AyoPoligami claims to have registered 10,000 users since it launched in
April, mostly men looking to engage in polygamous marriages.

Polygamy is legal in Indonesia; men are allowed to marry up to four women
at once. The practice was once frowned upon, but now seems to be on the
rise as religious leaders openly parade their wives in public and endorse
the practice to followers, activists say.

A society that allows polygamy “is male-centred and insensitive towards
women,” says Yuniyanti Chuzaifah, deputy chairwoman at state agency
National Commission on Violence Against Women. “In reality, many women who
are involved in polygamy reported to us that they were being treated
unfairly. It is clear that polygamy is a type of violence against women
that’s rendered possible by culture and religion.”

Polygamy is just one of many manifestations of gender inequality in the
region. In Malaysia <http://www.scmp.com/topics/malaysia>, civil and sharia
law at times conflict, especially in family law. Brunei will soon fully
implement sharia law, leaving women’s rights up in the air – interpretation
of religious doctrines is usually from a male perspective, activists say.

Saudi Arabia’s King Salman has issued a decree that will allow women to
drive. Photo: EPA

Women in Southeast Asia fare better than counterparts in the Middle East
and South Asia when it comes to human development. Saudi Arabia only
recently decided to lift its ban on women driving, which will take effect
in June 2018.

Women in Muslim-majority nations in Southeast Asia have long enjoyed more
freedom of mobility than their counterparts in the Gulf and other Muslim
countries. Brunei and Malaysia churn out more female graduates than males,
while the rate is almost equal in Indonesia.
What turns a Hong Kong maid towards Islamic State?
<https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/society/article/2105470/what-turns-hong-kong-maid-towards-islamic-state>

Gender-based violence, discrimination and low female political
participation, however, remain prevalent. Nearly 260,000 cases of violence
against women were reported to Indonesia’s state agency in 2016, mostly
incidents of domestic abuse. Activists say the true number could be higher,
since many victims – particularly those in remote areas – hesitate or face
difficulties in reporting such crimes.

In Malaysia, the number of reported domestic violence cases jumped from
3,173 in 2010 to 5,796 in 2016, according to Selangor-based Women’s Aid
Organisation (WAO).

Malaysian women wait for a bus as they return from work in Kuala Lumpur. In
Malaysia, most university graduates are female. Photo: AFP

In Brunei, domestic abuse is a taboo issue, as women and children often
withdraw reports against their abusers due to fear, activists say.

In Indonesia, there are 421 gender-based discriminative policies
implemented by local officials, all derived from religious and cultural
biases, according to the women’s commission.

These include requiring women to undergo virginity tests before joining the
armed forces and enforcing night curfews for women in Aceh, the only
province in Indonesia that has adopted sharia law.

“Indonesia has made headway in attaining gender equality. Women here have
freedom of mobility, freedom of expression and we also have many female
Muslim scholars,” Chuzaifah says. “Radical conservative groups disrupt all
that.”
What’s driving Malaysian support for Islamic penal code?
<https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/politics/article/2079953/whats-driving-malaysian-support-islamic-penal-code>

In Malaysia, “about 40 per cent of pregnant women were discriminated
against by employers; this includes making their positions redundant,
denying them promotions, placing them on prolonged probation, demoting them
and terminating their jobs,” says Tan Heang-Lee, WAO’s communications
officer. “Malaysia also lacks legal protections against gender
discrimination, especially in the private sector.”

In Brunei, women are not allowed to participate in sports such as football,
among other prohibitions.

Women attend a rally in Jakarta demanding the Indonesian government to
protect overseas maids and migrant workers from abuse. Photo: AFP

“Why can’t we play football? Because our body parts moving is considered
promiscuous. Why can’t women take up leadership roles? Because we won’t be
able to take care of our children at home. Why can’t we be opinionated and
independent? Because we won’t get a husband,” says Nur, a local activist.

Women are rarely leaders in Malaysia and Brunei, and thus have little say
over laws and policies that affect their lives. In Malaysia, women account
for only 10 per cent of parliamentarians and 9 per cent of cabinet
ministers, while in Brunei women cannot hold ministerial positions, though
debates about allowing them to do so crop up occasionally. This is in stark
contrast to the Philippines, a Catholic-majority nation, where last year
nearly 30 per cent of the seats in the country’s Lower House were occupied
by women and more than 40 per cent of civil servants are female.

Gender disparity is also noticeable at the corporate level; the gender wage
gap ranges from 30 per cent to 40 per cent in favour of men. Of 144
countries, Indonesia, Brunei, and Malaysia were ranked 88th, 103rd, and
106th in last year’s World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap report. This
is no doubt costly for their economies; the Asian Development Bank
estimated income per capita in Asia could grow 30 per cent if female
participation in the workforce jumped from its current 57.7 per cent to
66.2 per cent.

A customer holds a smartphone inside a Samsung showroom in Jakarta. The
Asian Development Bank estimates income per capita in Asia could grow 30
per cent if female participation in the workforce jumps to 66.2 per cent.
Photo: Reuters

Although all members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
<http://www.scmp.com/topics/asean> have ratified or acceded the United
Nations Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination
Against Women, a treaty on women’s rights, they have yet to incorporate it
into domestic laws, depriving women of legal protections in discrimination
and sexual harassment cases.

Despite these challenges, women’s rights groups are committed to continuing
the fight. Indonesia’s women’s commission is campaigning for better legal
protections for, among others, domestic workers and victims of sexual
harassment. It also wants to have the practice of female genital mutilation
criminalised. In Malaysia, WAO and other women’s groups are seeking a
Gender Equality Act to protect women from discrimination.

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In the meantime, these campaigns would be more effective if male
policymakers addressed the cultural and religious biases that are deeply
rooted within the systems, the biggest stumbling block for gender equity,
rights activists say. “The rate women are breaking barriers in Brunei is
not in line with how fast we can shift cultural expectations,” Nur in
Brunei says. “I think we’ve gender mainstreamed our policies quite well in
some relevant areas such as education, workplace, and health, but since
Brunei is such a small country that functions so much like a community, our
culture dictates our actions more than the law.” ■

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