Ref: Lima tahun hukuman penjara untuk pelaku “black magic” adalah jauh lebih 
berat dari pada hukuman yang dijatuhkan kepada anak menteri yang menabrak mati 
manusia, dia hanya  dihukum  delapan bulan penjara. 

Apakah tukang sulap termasuk pelaku “black magic”?

http://www.theage.com.au/world/push-to-make-black-magic-a-crime-in-indonesia-20130308-2fpc7.html


Push to make 'black magic' a crime in Indonesia
  Date  March 8, 2013 - 9:57AM 

 
Michael Bachelard
Indonesia correspondent for Fairfax Media


Australian travellers to Indonesia beware: smuggling drugs will still earn you 
jail time but, if an official draft of the country's new criminal code becomes 
law, witches and people practising "black magic", even adulterers and those 
living together outside wedlock, may also be locked away.

The new draft law is meant to modernise Indonesia's 1918 Criminal Code, which 
was last updated in 1958, but some of its proposals constitute a big step back 
to the Middle Ages.

In a country where many people earnestly believe that they could be killed, 
injured or robbed by a sorcerer using black magic, that crime will, for the 
first time, become part of the criminal law.

News portal Detik.com reported late on Thursday that people guilty of using 
black magic to cause "someone's illness, death, mental or physical suffering", 
face up to five years in jail or 300 million rupiah ($A31,000) in fines.

Even claiming to have the power to cast dark spells would become a criminal 
offence, and if the magic was performed for financial gain, the penalty would 
increase by one-third. "White" magic would remain legal.

Commentators quoted in the Jakarta Globe newspaper agreed it may be difficult 
to gather hard evidence for these offences.

The new criminal code, which was drafted by the country's Ministry of Justice 
and Human Rights and circulated this week to parliamentarians, is also informed 
by the growing sense of religious puritanism in Indonesia, and so takes a much 
stronger line on moral "offences". Indonesian law has long contained criminal 
sanctions against adultery, but in the new 500-page draft, the penalties are 
beefed up considerably – now those caught straying outside the marital bed may 
find themselves spending up to five years on a prison pallet.

Ministry spokesman Goncang Raharjo said the existing maximum penalty for 
adultery of nine months had failed to stop the practice, so "we increased the 
sanctions to prevent people from easily committing adultery".

Living together outside wedlock would also be criminalised for the first time, 
earning cohabiters up to one year in jail, and putting it on a par with 
prostitution.

All the provisions in the new law, including those related to the dark arts, 
were included for the good of the people, the ministry insisted. Khatibul Umam 
Wiranu, an MP from president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's Democrat Party, agreed 
with the new proposals when contacted by the Jakarta Globe, but said of 
witchcraft that charges should be "based on fact finding, not [just] on 
someone's statement".

As for adultery, it was "the beginning of many social problems", so the 
sentence "should deter offenders, [and] nine months is not long enough". Five 
years, however, was "too long", he said.

The law contains 766 articles across the gamut of criminal and immoral 
activity. But before becoming law, it must pass through the country's House of 
Representatives, where it could potentially pick up significant amendments.


Read more: 
http://www.theage.com.au/world/push-to-make-black-magic-a-crime-in-indonesia-20130308-2fpc7.html#ixzz2Mwa1auWY


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