http://www.scmp.com/week-asia/society/article/2131814/sex-marriage-fudge-gives-hope-indonesias-persecuted-gays
Sex before marriage ‘fudge’ gives hope to Indonesia’s persecuted gays

Are cooler heads beginning to prevail in the country’s latest bout of moral
panic?

By Jeffrey Hutton <http://www.scmp.com/author/jeffrey-hutton>

4 Feb 2018



Amid Indonesia’s  <http://www.scmp.com/topics/indonesia>latest bout of
moral panic, that has seen its transgendered citizens rounded up by police
and politicians calling for outright bans on sex outside marriage, there
are signs that cooler heads may prevail – if only slightly.

The ranking member of a parliamentary committee, charged with overhauling
the country’s voluminous criminal code, said most politicians were eager to
avoid language that would make extramarital sex illegal. The provision is
thought to disproportionately impact the country’s gays and lesbians
because they are unable to marry.

“We don’t want to have the criminalisation of LGBT,” Ichsan Soelistio, who
hails from President Joko Widodo’s Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle
(PDI-P), which has the most seats in parliament.

“This is the same with young people before marriage. We don’t want to
criminalise that. The government cannot push into the private matters of
the nation.”

Muslim activists attend an anti-LGBT rally in Banda Aceh, Indonesia. Aceh,
which is governed has established LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and
transgender) practices as a violation of sharia law. Photo: EPA

The comments come as anti-gay prejudice and moral conservatism reach fever
pitch ahead of regional elections this year in the country’s most populous
provinces, where issues of piety play well to voters. In Jakarta,
legislators are debating changes in the criminal code that would hand down
five-year prison sentences for sex between unmarried people.

But the committee charged with including the provision in the country’s
mammoth 750-article criminal code, which dates back to Dutch colonial
times, may have found a way to fudge the issue.

Legislators may opt to make sex outside marriage a crime only if one of the
two consenting parties makes a formal complaint to police. Similar
requirements are made in the case of adultery.

Human rights activists, however, say the proposal still amounts to
criminalisation and leaves the door open for police harassment.

Malaysia's former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim. Photo: Reuters

Nearby in Malaysia, laws that criminalise same-sex relations are even more
strident. Between 1985 and 2013, statutes were enacted making it illegal
for men to “pose” as women, giving leeway to authorities to harass
transgendered people, or anyone who does not conform to norms for the
gender they were assigned at birth. Former deputy prime minister Anwar
Ibrahim, who was convicted of sodomy and has been in and out of prison
since 1998, is perhaps the most prominent public figure to run afoul of the
law.

In Jakarta and Surabaya, police have detained and humiliated hundreds of
gay men in saunas, apartments and hotel rooms, even though gay sex is legal
there. Technically, they are detained on suspicion of violating the
country’s pornography law.

Police officers escort men arrested in a raid on a gay sauna in Jakarta,
Indonesia. Photo: AP

“The provisions are a way to harass people,” said Ricky Gunawan, director
of the human rights public defender LBH Masyarakat.

“Police raids on gays have already taken place without laws banning gay
sex.”

Other commenters agreed. But Bivintri Susanti, a constitutional law expert
who helped establish the Indonesian Centre of Law and Policy Studies said
that while no law criminalising sex is warranted, this may be the lesser of
two evils.
Indonesia cracks down on gays ... and fuels its HIV epidemic
<http://www.scmp.com/week-asia/politics/article/2105151/indonesia-cracks-down-gays-and-fuels-its-hiv-epidemic>

“If they really can’t scrap the provision, then, yes, this is preferable,”
Susanti said.

There is little chance the provision will be dropped completely. For two
years, the country has seen a steady drumbeat of anti-gay hysteria
<http://www.scmp.com/news/asia/southeast-asia/article/2026469/indonesian-transgenders-become-target-religious-hardliners>
..

Last weekend, police in the conservative province of Aceh, which observes
some aspects of sharia law, detained a dozen transgendered women and
humiliated them by cutting their hair and forcing them into men’s clothing.

Unmarried straight couples have also not escaped scrutiny. In November,
police in Tangerang, to Jakarta’s west, arrested four people suspected of
participating in a mob that stripped a young couple naked and paraded them
through the neighbourhood because they were rumoured to be in a romantic
relationship outside wedlock.

Soelistio said a compromise under consideration would limit complaints to
partners or perhaps their parents. Nosy neighbours or religious vigilantes,
for example, would have no standing to file a complaint.

Activists sign a petition during an anti-LGBT rally in Banda Aceh,
Indonesia. Photo: EPA

“It’s like a computer,” he said, referring to privacy. “We want a firewall
to protect it.”

In part, the changes under consideration are a direct consequence of a
ruling handed down by the Constitutional Court in December that declined to
decide on a similar petition made by the Family Love Alliance, a small band
of conservative scholars. The group asked the justices to expand the
prohibitions on sex with minors to include adults of the same gender. The
court punted, saying the question was a matter for parliament.

With elections looming in West Java this year, and a presidential contest
slated for mid-2019, politicians clambered on board. Parliament’s new
speaker Bambang Soesatyo, from Golkar, which has the second-largest number
of seats in parliament, said same-sex relationships should be criminalised
because they could “corrupt the morality of the nation”.
Where will Indonesia’s anti-gay hysteria end?
<http://www.scmp.com/week-asia/politics/article/2095861/where-will-indonesias-anti-gay-hysteria-end>

Such has been the vitriol heaped on the country’s gay men and women.. A poll
last month of more than 1,200 Indonesian adults showed nearly 90 per cent
of respondents felt threatened by their LGBT brethren. Google this week
said it removed 73 dating apps used by gay men and women from its
Indonesian store following a request from the country’s communication
ministry.

Representatives from the other nationalist parties, including Golkar, and
the Democratic Party, the political vehicle of former President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono, were not immediately available for comment.

Police detain men caught in a raid on a gay sauna in Jakarta, Indonesia,
part of a backlash against homosexuals in the Muslim-majority country.
Photo: AFP

Indonesia’s leader, widely seen as a moderate, is unenthusiastic about the
country’s growing preoccupation with other people’s sexual habits.
Following last year’s public caning of two young gay men in Aceh, Widodo,
weary of international opinion, leaned on the governor to limit the
practice and move it indoors. His representative on the committee steering
the changes to the criminal code, Enny Nurbaningsih, has told local media
that she thinks criminalising sex outside marriage is unworkable because
it’s difficult to prove.

“Widodo doesn’t want this issue,” says analyst Kevin O’Rourke, who writes
the *Reformasi *newsletter of Indonesian current events. “There is a
moderate mainstream that will worry about the government invading their
privacy.”
‘Gender confusion’: the video contest fiasco that got Malaysia all mixed up
<http://www.scmp.com/week-asia/society/article/2097334/gender-confusion-video-contest-fiasco-got-malaysia-all-mixed>

Still, the trend of conservatism appears to be moving in only one
direction: to the right. Following the police round-up of transgendered
women, many have taken cover, shuttering their salons and other businesses.

Related articles

Some two decades after the fall of the dictator Suharto, their persecution
makes a mockery of the country’s laws and claims to have embraced
democracy, says Acehnese LGBT activist Hartoyo.

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