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Jakarta may criminalise unmarried couples

Published: 09 Mar 2013 - 03:04 am | Last Updated: 03 Feb 2022 - 02:01 pm

JAKARTA: Indonesia is deliberating criminalising unmarried couples living together and lengthening jail terms for adulterers, a lawmaker said yesterday, in plans that activists have dubbed regressive.

The proposals were drafted by the Justice and Human Rights Ministry as the House of Representatives revises the nation’s dated criminal code, garnering support from several members. “If couples are living in one home and aren’t married, of course they should be sanctioned,” Khatibul Umam Wiranu, a member of the commission overseeing the revision, said.

“In my opinion, adultery is the root of many social problems.”

The proposed revision would raise the maximum jail term for adultery from nine months’ jail — considered “too light” by the ministry — to 30 months, while couples living together outside marriage could face five years.

Rights activists said elements of the 500-page draft revision were politically motivated, aimed at winning votes of key conservative demographics ahead of legislative elections next year.

“We’ve seen this before when the parliament passed the anti-pornography law to appease conservatives ahead of the last elections,” Haris Azhar of the prominent rights groups Kontras said.

Cohabitation of unmarried couples is generally frowned upon in Indonesia, Azhar said, though such cases were becoming more common. “If there are moral concerns about it, they should be addressed maturely and peacefully in the community, not through the law,” Azhar said, adding that jailing Indonesians for such cases was extreme.

AFP