Indonesia's Anti-Gay Hysteria
At about 9pm on Sunday, four mini buses, the
kind commonly used for public transport in Jakarta, slunk into the Ruko
Kokan Permata Complex in Kelapa Gading, in the north of the city. The
convoy then wound its way past the Playboy Sensation Funtasty massage
parlour and trundled by the blacked out windows of the Delta Massage
Health Club – both, in effect, brothels for “straight” men – before
making two right turns to stop at Block B, units 15-16. There, a dozen
or so plain-clothes police officers jumped out of the buses and stormed
the front entrance of the unassuming putty coloured building. Inside, a
gay sex party, complete with strippers and about 140 naked men, was in
full swing.
“I think they are deviant,” said Ade Dwi, a soft-spoken young contractor
working across the street on a renovation project when the raid
occurred. As he tied a metre-wide roll of sketches to the side of his
scooter, he seemed uncomfortable discussing the events of that night.
“I’m embarrassed I have to work near that place.”
“That place” is Atlantis Gym, a gay sauna in a working class
residential district that is ground zero in the latest convulsion of
homophobia to hit Indonesia. On Tuesday, its ultraconservative province
of Aceh flexed its two-year-old sharia-based criminal code to claim the
dubious honour of being host to Asia’s first public caning of gay men
outside Iran.
Homophobia crested when the two men, in their
early 20s, received 83 lashes of the cane for having gay sex. Footage
showed hundreds roaring with approval as each of the men were beaten in
front of a sea of smartphones recording the event.
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Seemingly spurred on by the attention given to the event,
police in West Java, the country’s most populous province, announced a
plan on Tuesday for a task force to investigate LGBT (lesbian, gay,
bisexual, transgender) activity.
“I hope there are no followers in West Java, no
gay or LGBT lifestyle or tradition,” West Java police chief Anton
Charliyan said. “If there’s anyone following it, they will face the law
and heavy social sanctions. They will not be accepted in society.”
The anti-gay hysteria in Indonesia stands in
sharp contrast to the scenes in Taiwan, which this week became the first
jurisdiction in Asia to recognise same sex marriage.
Until recently, Indonesia, with its 225 million Muslims,
stood apart in the Islamic world as a relatively tolerant juggernaut.
Activists worry that may no longer be true. Further sharia-inspired laws
in the country’s more conservative localities seem likely. Activists
fear a nationwide ban on homosexuality could be on the cards.
“Everything is moving that way, yes,” said Yuli Rustinawati, the
chairwoman of LGBT rights group Arus Pelangi.
Indonesia’s Aceh was granted autonomy as part of
its 2005 agreement to end its long running independence struggle. In
2015, the province, which sits at the northernmost tip of Sumatra
adopted a sharia-based criminal code which also bans extramarital sex,
alcohol and makes headscarves compulsory for women.
News of police busting up gay gatherings is a staple of Indonesian
media. This month, police arrested 14 men in Surabaya for allegedly
violating the country’s vague anti-pornography laws during a sex party
at a hotel. The police forced the accused to have HIV tests, later
posting the results. Last year police detained 13 men for a sex party in
the Kalibata district in South Jakarta, on the request of Islamic
vigilantes. The men were released but not before being paraded in front
of television cameras.
“The police increasingly want to be seen as the guardians of the
country’s morality,” said Ricky Gunawan director of LBH Masyarakat, a
non-profit law firm defending the men detained in both of the Jakarta
raids. “That is not their job. They are violating the human rights of
these men, who have done nothing wrong.”
To be sure, other countries have anti-gay laws. India and Singapore
retain British colonial laws against homosexual sex and punish violators
with prison. Brunei’s 2014 sharia code metes out death by stoning for
homosexuals, though the punishment is yet to be used.
But in Indonesia the environment has become particularly
toxic. Last year senior government officials called for a ban on LGBT
groups on university campuses and even likened the spread of gay rights
in Indonesia to a “nuclear bomb detonating in Jakarta”.
Last May, an outfit called the Family Love
Alliance petitioned the Constitutional Court to ban homosexual acts
between consenting adults. While the court, which is still considering
the case, can’t make new laws, it can amend existing ones, said Helen
Pausacker, deputy director of the Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and
Society at the University of Melbourne
“Currently, the Criminal Code only prohibits gay sex with a minor – it
would be possible for the court to recommend deleting the reference to
‘minor’,” Pausacker said. “The decision could go either way.”
Todung Mulya Lubis, a lawyer with the Jakarta firm LSM, thinks the court
will ban homosexual acts. Lubis, who has argued nearly a dozen cases
before the Constitutional Court since 2004, said judges in Indonesia
tended to echo popular sentiments when handing down verdicts. Most,
according to Lubis, see gay people as depraved and not entitled to legal
protection. “In all likelihood the court will ban it,” Lubis said. “For
them it is ‘human rights minus LGBT’.”
With its economic heft in Association of Southeast Asian Nations and
moral clout as one of the region’s few true democracies, Indonesia’s
views matter. The hope was that under Joko Widodo, who included LGBT
rights in his manifesto when he was campaigning for president in 2014,
Indonesia might become a bright spot in a dark place for gay rights.
That hasn’t happened. Asean still hasn’t included LGBT rights in its
Human Rights Mechanism and almost certainly won’t for some time. Last
week, Singapore announced that it would ban foreigners from attending
Pink Dot festivities – the city state’s version of a gay pride parade.
Even so, Taiwan’s ruling to recognise same sex marriage, and Vietnam’s
decision last year to lift its ban on the unions, will go some way to
balance out the bad news further south, said veteran Indonesian gay
rights campaigner Dede Oetomo. “Taiwan is a vision of the future. It
will be a while for Indonesia to get there.
-----"Where will Indonesia's anti-gay hysteria end?" 6 July 2017 by Jeffrey Hutton, South China Morning Post
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