https://www.insideindonesia.org/reformasi-s-broken-promises


Edition 138: Oct-Dec 2019
<https://www.insideindonesia.org/edition-138-sep-dec-2019>
*Reformasi’s broken promises*




Muslim protesters hold an anti-LGBT rally outside a mosque in the
provincial capital Banda Aceh, Aceh province, Indonesia on February 2,
2018. © 2018 Antara Foto / Irwansyah Putra
*Dédé Oetomo*

Ten years into reformasi, waria (trans women) participants in HIV/AIDS,
human rights and organisational development workshops started complaining
that their situation had worsened. I used to remark at how much we were
able to do in terms of openly public activism as sexual minorities;
something unimaginable before reformasi. Nowadays, I cannot help but concur
that tolerance is in decline, as has been reported by waria and other
sexual minorities (lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, trans people and other
people of non-normative genders and sexualities).

Why have I changed my view on the status of sexual minorities in
contemporary Indonesia?

First, let us return to the eve of reformasi when ominous clouds started
appearing on the horizon. The year 1997 saw gay men gathering in the
northern part of the square in front of the palace in Yogyakarta facing
harassment by young men claiming to represent the youth wing of the United
Development Party (PPP). In various locations, similar groups pushed for
the closure of brothels and related businesses (in areas known as
lokalisasi). This led to the increasing harassment of waria, who had long
been vulnerable to such harassment in public spaces anyway.

After reformasi, the harassment extended to waria in the salons where they
worked, and also to beauty pageants and shows that were popular among waria
and their friends. Such events had been commonplace before reformasi,
sometimes held with local government support. Gay men would organise
parties in hill resorts, with guests (often including waria and their male
partners) coming from all over Java and even neighbouring islands. These
parties were held with the permission and protection of local governments.
*The promised rainbow*

At the same time, reformasi brought with it the promise of democracy and
human rights. While members of sexual minority communities did not take
part in the action that led to reformasi, soon enough, its hopeful
discourse spread to their organisations. The more systematic inclusion of
gay men, waria and other men who have sex with men (MSM) in HIV/AIDS and
sexually transmitted infection (STI) control programs opened the doors to
better organisation of these communities with the aid of funding and
technical support from health departments. Other forms of human rights
activism, including women’s rights, provided opportunities for lesbians,
bisexual women and transgender men to also participate.

Starting with timid baby steps right after reformasi, the mid 2000s
witnessed the rise of a new generation of activists that started organising
themselves in many parts of the country. From just a handful of
organisations existing in the years preceding reformasi, their number has
now reached almost 100, not counting the informal communities that have
emerged across the archipelago. Widespread use of the internet most
certainly facilitated this explosion of activity.

The movement also became more diverse. While initially organisations
provided social spaces and support services, as time went by, other groups
of activists started to organise around film festivals, including the Q!
Film Festival <https://www.insideindonesia.org/indonesia-s-q-film-festival>
(2002-2017).
Some forward-looking human rights organisations like ELSAM (the Institute
for Policy Research and Advocacy) started discussing the rights of sexual
minorities as an integral aspect of human rights. By 2012, the loose
network of LGBTIQ organisations was able to organise their own human rights
training in collaboration with prominent human rights trainers from
national organisations. The Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM) and the
Commission Against Violence Against Women (Komnas Perempuan) have also
provided varying degrees and forms of support.

A few openly gay and transgender activists ran for public office at various
levels, though none were elected. Individual clerics and theologians issued
positive statements on non-normative genders and sexualities, and
institutions such as the Jakarta Theological Seminary and the Reformed
Baptist church, Gereja Komunitas Anugerah, regularly held discussions on
various aspects relevant to minority genders and sexualities.
*Early backlash*

The increasingly visible public events, starting prior to reformasi,
provoked a backlash with the first major attack occurring in November 2000.
An HIV/AIDS edu-tainment event involving drag shows in Kaliurang,
Yogyakarta, was attacked
<https://www.insideindonesia.org/gay-men-in-the-reformasi-era> by around
150 men who called themselves the Anti-Vice Movement (Gerakan
Anti-Maksiat). The format of the event had followed the previously
acceptable hill resort parties, with the addition of HIV/AIDS education.

In subsequent years, similar attacks occurred in other places. One must
note that similar attacks also targeted religious minority groups and
survivors of the 1965-1966 genocide and their families. Two major attacks
happened in 2010: a conference of the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,
Trans and Intersex Association Asia (ILGA) in Surabaya was attacked by a
coalition of Islamist groups; and a workshop on trans issues organised by
Komnas HAM in Depok was attacked
<https://www.insideindonesia.org/homophobia-on-the-rise> by the Islamic
Defenders’ Front (FPI). The aforementioned Q! Film Festival also had its
share of harassment and attacks, starting from its very first year.
*Today*

The verbal and physical hostility suddenly heightened in the beginning of
2016, triggered by reports in mainstream and social media about objections
from the Minister of Research, Technology and Higher Education, Mohamad
Nasir. These statements condemned a student group at Universitas Indonesia,
the Support Group and Resource Centre on Sexuality (SGRC-UI), because it
had started offering services
<https://www.insideindonesia.org/a-dispensable-threat> to students who were
struggling with their non-normative gender or sexuality.

This time the rhetoric reached moral panic proportions. Just about every
politician, as well as many religious leaders, issued statements condemning
LGBT communities. The minister of defence accused these communities of
waging ‘war by proxy’
<https://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-network/2017/feb/22/why-lgbt-hatred-suddenly-spiked-in-indonesia>
and
threatening the nation’s sovereignty and various members of parliament said
that the LGBT presence in Indonesia was symptomatic of undesirable foreign
intervention and westernisation
<https://www.hrw.org/report/2016/08/10/these-political-games-ruin-our-lives/indonesias-lgbt-community-under-threat>.
The UNDP and USAID-initiated program ‘Being LGBT in Asia’ was singled out
as a foreign attempt to interfere with social affairs, and was even
criticised by the vice president, and was eventually forced to cease
operations. Government agencies such as Bappenas (the Ministry of National
Development Planning) placed international funding agencies under close
scrutiny and explicitly told them not to support LGBT organisations.

At any rate, this moral panic did not emerge in a vacuum but in the context
of the decade-long attempt by Islamist politicians to incrementally
introduce syariah-based governance. Hence, the push against LGBT is part of
a broader agenda to diminish secularism, pluralism and liberalism. The LGBT
issue was leveraged as low-hanging fruit in an effort to raise support for
broader conservative interests.

/ Fahrul Jayadiputra Antara Foto

The struggle took place on many fronts. In regions such as Aceh, West
Sumatra and West Java local governments enacted syariah-based systems of
authority. In some provinces and districts this included criminalisation of
same-sex relations. Aceh has imposed the harshest regulations, including
severe corporal punishment such as caning. In other places punishment is
not even mentioned but the rules validate conservative community groups’
harassment of different minorities, including sexual minorities.
Vigilantes, neighbourhood thugs and ordinary people have been known to
evict from their homes trans women who are visible and women workers in
boarding houses suspected of being lesbians.
*The response of the LGBT movement*

Organisations have responded to the barrage of verbal and physical attacks
by quickly developing strategies and programs. Public events are carried
out underground, and dates, times and venues are provided only to
pre-registered participants very shortly before the event. Location
functions of smartphones are deactivated, and participants are asked not to
post pictures and videos on social media until after the event and without
revealing the location.

International human rights organisations have assisted by implementing a
crisis response mechanism in collaboration with local partners within
Indonesia. Emergency procedures were established in especially vulnerable
provinces.

One blessing in disguise amongst all this catastrophe is that organisations
became stronger, and allies came forward in a more consolidated,
intersectional way. Some public activism is also possible within the
context of more acceptable events such Women’s Day and May Day marches.

Upon reflection, one can say that sexual minorities are not the only group
for whom the promises of reformasi have been broken. These promised reforms
have also failed religious minorities, West Papuan activists and, arguably,
all Indonesians.

For better or for worse, most Indonesians are now familiar with the concept
of LGBT, if only vaguely. The issues have been placed squarely on the
table, and visibility will perhaps make these challenges easier to tackle.
We must move towards a more tolerant future to realise the promises of
reformasi for all Indonesians and embrace the genuine meaning of Bhinneka
Tunggal Ika as a diverse nation.

*Dédé Oetomo ([email protected] <[email protected]>)** is founder and
trustee of **Yayasan GAYa NUSANTARA <https://gayanusantara.or.id/>** in
Surabaya.*

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