Dear members,

Assalamu Alaikum.All countries, particularly all Muslim countries, should take 
strict action in this regard and make proper laws for that.

Shah Abdul Hannan
House passes controversial anti-porn bill
House passes controversial anti-porn bill
Ati Nurbaiti ,  The Jakarta Post ,  Jakarta   |  Thu, 10/30/2008 2:14 PM  |  
Headlines

Cries of joy and shouts of Alhamdullillah (praise God) came from the balcony of 
the House of Representatives' plenary hall as the gavel was struck to mark the 
passage of the controversial bill on pornography.

Compared to those who supported the bill, those who opposed it only occupied 
two rows on the balcony towards the end of the meeting.

Pro anti-porn law activist Lasmiantini of Salima (Muslim sisterhood) said, 
"Insyaallah" (God willing), Indonesians will eventually undergo a moral revival 
-- the basis of a country, and
later economic revival."

"We are very happy with the result of our struggle to protect children, and 
also to protect women," said Lasmiantini, of several groups who supported the 
pornography bill.

"If our husbands are (exposed to) pornography then our families will be 
destroyed."

"Now our children are safe," said Lasmiantini, chairwoman of Salima's Bekasi 
chapter.

With exposure to pornography contributing to instances of rape and murder, the 
country was no longer safe for women and children, she said.

Lasmiantini said, under the new law, sinetron (popular television serials) 
would have to be those "of quality" and contribute moral value, such as the 
recent hit 'Laskar Pelangi' (Rainbow Troops) -- referring to the movie based on 
Andrea Hirata's biography of his childhood.

In response to questions of whether she feared any excessive implementation of 
the new law, while justifying state interference in private matters, she said, 
"for good things, like an injection, people are negative about it only because 
they fear it will hurt."

The activists cited revisions to the bill which they said would guarantee that 
only pornography in the public sphere was regulated.

Meanwhile, Save Indonesian Children (ASA Indonesia) chairwoman Wuryaningsih and 
a Salima leader both said, "We should work together to watch out for any 
excesses."

"The law may not be perfect but it is a start ... We must protect our 
families," she said.

"We really hope that the (pornography) industry can be regulated."

In response to fears among women that they would become unwitting victims of 
the law, Wuryaningsih said the issue of women was only "political," as if 
Islamic parties were not behind the law.

"This has nothing to do with the Islamic parties," Wuryaningsih said.



















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