A swinging anti-pornography bill 


Leon Agusta, Jakarta

The Jakarta Post 11 dec. 2007



After a disappearance from public attention, the anti-pornography and anti-porn 
bill has now resurfaced with the new name "Anti-Pornography Bill", when several 
factions in the House of Representatives, in particular the Prosperous Justice 
Party (PKS), United Development Party (PPP), and Golkar -- after initially 
questioning it, sent on the bill without the required approval of a plenary 
session to the government executives for further study.

Other factions had held a critical stance from the beginning, such as the 
Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), National Awakening Party 
(PKB), and the National Mandate Party (PAN), were not given the opportunity to 
put forward their opinions. 

In terms of legal procedure, the bill is flawed. Thus we need to ask: Why were 
these factions so anxious to hand the bill over to the executive body that they 
actually broke the rules? 

The definition of pornography according to the bill says: "Pornography is any 
man-made work that includes sexual materials in the form of drawings, sketches, 
illustrations, photographs, text, sound, moving pictures, animation, cartoons, 
poetry, conversation, or any other form of communicative messages; it also may 
be shown through the media in front of the public; it can arouse lust and lead 
to the violation of normative values within society; and it can also cause the 
development of pornographic acts within society". 

In regard to exceptions, the bill stipulates that: "... it does not include the 
making, the distribution, and the use of pornography for a) sexual dysfunctions 
therapy, b) art and cultural performances, and c) customary and traditional 
rituals". 

During a discussion, organized by a private radio station in Jakarta last week, 
poet W.S. Rendra asserted that: "The bill displays a crisis of common sense. It 
is against Pancasila (Five Principles ideology), and there is no existing law 
that calls for it. It is against the principles of social justice and the 
sovereignty of the people. ... The Pornography Bill is culturally dangerous. 
Anything that cannot be defined with clarity should never be turned into a 
binding law. Pornography should be left within the territory of morality and 
religions-not some act. The Pornography Bill is flawed as it neglects the codes 
of morality and the codes of religions." 

Having heard Rendra's words regarding the potential dangers of the bill once it 
is approved, some said, "It would be great to see him speak during a 
parliamentary session". 

"Would that be possible?" 

Speaking in the same forum, Sinta Nuriyah Abdurrahman Wahid also underlined the 
dangers of this bill. 

"The bill is politics-ridden; it is a political agenda. It might be used to 
justify repressive conduct. As a woman I don't feel protected. As a woman I 
actually feel under threat. What they should've done is maximize the 
implementation of laws and other legal acts that we already have instead of 
turning the law into some kind of commodity," she said. 

At Taman Ismail Marzuki, a home shared by artists, last Nov. 28, the reaction 
toward the bill was unanimous acrimony. Marco Kosumawijaya, the executive of 
the Jakarta Arts Council, strongly objected to the Pornography Bill. "The 
reasoning behind the bill is ambiguous..." 

According to Marco, to put bodily expressions in the arts, culture, and customs 
under the same category as pornography is blasphemy toward the arts, culture, 
and customs themselves. 

Would the respectable members of the legislature be willing to take the 
reactions of the people into consideration during their final sessions on the 
bill?" 

It is hard to tell (or is it?). 

Apparently, it will take some time before any side can win this battle. It is 
also apparent that it is highly possible that if the controversy becomes too 
extensive, the whole matter will one day make its way into the Constitutional 
Court. 

It is hard to believe that this country can give birth to such a bill. It is 
inevitable that some might get the impression that the House of 
Representatives, or at least the Pornography Bill Special Committee, is 
intentionally sowing the seeds of catastrophe in this nation. 

This is terrifying! Why can't they see this? What is really going on in that 
house of voices? 

The writer is a poet



The Jakarta Post - 11 December 2007

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