Cuplikan berita dari VOA tentang an Indonesian woman of courage. Selamat 
membaca.
   
  Siti Musdah Mulia was one of ten women from around the world honored by the 
U.S. State Department for exceptional courage and leadership in promoting 
women’s rights and advancement. 
   
  In 1997, Ms. Mulia became the first woman to obtain a doctorate in the field 
of Islamic political thought from the State Islamic University of Syarif 
Hidayatullah, in Jakarta. Two years later, she was appointed research professor 
by the Indonesian Institute of Sciences, the first woman to hold that position. 
Today Ms. Mulia is the chairwoman of Muslimat Nahdlatul Ullama, which, with 
more than forty million members, is the largest Islamic social organization in 
Indonesia.
   
  In 2004, Ms. Mulia and a team of eleven experts completed a project aimed at 
revising Indonesia’s Islamic legal code. Among the revisions recommended are a 
ban on polygamy and forced marriages, raising the legal age of marriage for 
girls from sixteen to nineteen years old, and granting wives equal rights with 
husbands. Ms. Mulia says these recommendations would help prevent violence 
against women and child abuse. The recommendations ignited violent protests 
which prompted Indonesia’s minister of religious affairs to cancel the project. 
But Ms. Mulia has not been deterred from speaking out. “Many women are not 
aware of their rights,” she says.
   
  In its latest human rights report, the U.S. State Department says that in 
Indonesia, “State policy and the law state that women have the same rights, 
obligations, an opportunities as men.” However, women in many regions of the 
country, particularly in Papua, complain that they are treated differently 
because of their gender. During 2006, local governments increasingly passed 
Shari’a-based local laws that women’s activists say discriminate against women. 
The Indonesian government has not challenged the validity of these regulations. 
In some areas, including Banda Aceh and West Sumatra, women were forced to obey 
Shari’a dress codes.
   
  U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says Sita Musdah Mulia and others 
“are voices for freedom who continue the work of brave women reformers.” The 
U.S., she says, stand with them:
   
  “It is not possible to think about democracy without thinking about the 
empowerment of women.”
   
  Secretary of State Rice says that all who work for democratic rights and 
equality and against oppression and prejudice “will always have a friend in the 
United States of America.”

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