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Showing posts with label anti-gay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anti-gay. Show all posts

Friday, February 2, 2018

Indonesia Edges Closer to Criminalizing Gay and Extramarital Sex

World's largest Muslim nation goes more Sharia

Prison sentences up to 5 years for unmarried partners among measures being considered by Parliament
The Associated Press 

Revisions to Indonesia's criminal code being considered by Parliament would allow prison sentences of up to five years for sex between unmarried people and also criminalize gay sex, the bugbear of Indonesia's Islamic and secular political parties. (Heri Juanda/Associated Press)

Riding a tsunami of moral conservatism and anti-gay prejudice, Indonesia's Islamic political parties appear on the cusp of a major victory: outlawing all sex outside marriage. 

Revisions to Indonesia's criminal code being considered by Parliament would allow prison sentences of up to five years for sex between unmarried people. Those changes would also criminalize gay sex, the bugbear of Indonesia's Islamic and secular political parties.

Rights groups and legal experts fear a profound setback to human rights and privacy in Indonesia, one of the world's largest democracies, and the spread of vigilantism, already common in parts of the sprawling Muslim-majority nation of more than 250 million people. They are racing to organize opposition.

An online petition launched this week has gathered more than 20,000 signatures.

"Indonesia, whose constitution guarantees human rights and has ratified many human rights covenants, will be ridiculed by the world for creating a law that is potentially violating many of those rights," said Said Muhammad Isnur, head of advocacy at the Indonesian Legal Aid Institute Foundation.


Majority of parties appear to support move

While the possible criminalization of sex between unmarried consenting adults has grabbed attention, the revised criminal code, which has nearly 800 articles, also contains changes that could weaken checks and balances in Indonesia's young democracy.

One article potentially makes criticism of the president defamation. Other articles could be used to weaken the Corruption Eradication Commission, one of Indonesia's most effective public institutions.

Asrul Sani, a lawmaker from the Islamic-based United Development Party, has told reporters that a 25-member parliamentary working committee agreed on nearly all the articles in the revised code. It and another Islamic party are seeking longer prison sentences for gay sex in circumstances that involve force, public acts or pornography and that is still being argued, he said.

Statements from different committee members indicate there isn't total agreement but a majority of parties appear to support criminalizing gay sex. Bambang Soesatyo, the speaker of Parliament and a lawmaker from the major secular party Golkar, said same-sex relationships should be criminalized because they could "corrupt the morality of the nation."


Islamic parties 'using' issue as 'marketing'

A few politicians outside the committee have raised concerns about the fundamental threat to privacy.

One of the obstacles in the way of the Islamic parties is President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo's power of veto. But with provincial elections due this year and a presidential race in 2019, it's unclear whether Jokowi would risk political capital on protecting a hated and misunderstood minority or being seen as soft on morality issues. 

At a public caning last May outside a mosque in Banda Aceh, Indonesia, an official whips one of two men convicted of gay sex. (Heri Juanda/Associated Press)

"The Islamic parties are really using this issue as their marketing going into the political years, this year and next year," said Bivitri Susanti, a constitutional law expert who helped establish the Indonesian Center of Law and Policy Studies.

"The only thing we can do is to push the government, the  president, to stop this," she said. "Because if we see how the political parties, both the secular ones and the Islamic ones discuss this, I think this draft law will be passed as it is now."

Islamic parties make up four of the 10 factions in Indonesia's Parliament and due to the popular vote threshold being raised to four per cent, are at risk of losing their seats in Parliament next year if they can't rouse their bases.

They have typically commanded far less votes than secular parties, but their concerns resonate with a broad cross-section of Indonesians.


'Guardians of morality'

Hardline Muslim groups considered fringe a decade ago, such as the Islamic Defenders Front, have moved into the mainstream and shook Jokowi's government last year with a mass movement against the minority Christian governor of Jakarta, who was subsequently imprisoned for two years for blasphemy.

Conservative groups such as the Family Love Alliance believe Indonesia is being overwhelmed by immoral behaviour such as sex between unmarried young couples, and in December nearly succeeding in convincing Indonesia's constitutional Court to outlaw gay sex and sex outside marriage.  

Moderate groups, meanwhile, have struggled to muster their  forces. While many speak out online, that has little impact compared with the ability of Islamic groups to summon tens of thousands for mass protests.

The Islamic parties' message is perhaps at its most politically potent when aimed at Indonesia's besieged LGBT minority, which for the past two years has been the target of an escalating campaign of raids, arrests, hateful rhetoric from government officials and vigilante attacks.

Police in the conservative province of Aceh, which practices Shariah law, over the weekend rounded up 12 transgender people who worked in hair salons and publicly humiliated them by forcing them  into men's clothing and cutting their hair.

Susanti and other legal experts said enforcement would be a huge and impossible burden on police and encourage vigilante acts from self-appointed "guardians of morality," undermining an already fragile rule of law in Indonesia.

She said people who practice religions not recognized by the state could also be criminalized because their marriages aren't recognized. 

"The president should say no to this law," Susanti said. "But looking at how Jokowi is handling issues related to Islam I think he wouldn't do that."


Tuesday, September 22, 2015

When Political Correctness Implodes

What happens when the 2 darlings of political correctness collide?

Sweden Now Condemns Gay Pride March as Racist… 
Against Muslims?!
From Louder with Crowder
Gay pride march, Sweden
Last month the Swedish nationalists planned a gay pride parade (featuring everyone’s favorite day time entertainment, gay public kissing and/or heavy petting) and routed the parade through two Swedish Muslim districts of Tensta and Husby.

For those of you who’ve been living under a rainbow-painted rock, Muslims don’t like gay people. And not in the, “Ew it’s gross when two men kiss, make it stop,” kind of way. No, no, Muslims will kill gay people for being gay. Or because they’re jealous of their fashion sense. Just kidding, Muslims just kill gay people for all the gay reasons.

But as much as leftists champion equality and compassion, one group came out on top… Um, I mean one group won.

Three guesses as to which group got ahead? Yep, the group associated with beheadings, gay-hangings and slamming airplanes through skyscrapers. Whoops, I mean, the religion of peace. PEACE, yo.

Here’s where it gets rich: the gay marchers were branded racists by the ‘Swedish Federation for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights.’ That’s right, a fellow group in gayness didn’t have the gay marchers’ backs. Whatever happened to gay solidarity, united under one glorious, oiled-up rainbow flag? Perhaps the Federation for LGBT were just a tweensy bit nervous about losing their heads… or getting blood on their boas.

Two residents of the Muslim area said the gay pride march, “pits two oppressed groups against each other.” Like that’s something liberals never do… Noted athiest blowhard Richard Dawkins also noted the homosexual vs. Muslim game:

‏@RichardDawkins
“To place an LGBT parade” [in a Muslim area of Sweden] “is an expression of pure racism.” Sums up the pathetic Left. 

What’s the takeaway from this liberal vs. liberal social experiment? If you want preferential treatment from liberals, be associated with the religion that repeatedly abuses women. Or be associated with the religious group that tries to kill you for drawing a cartoon. Or if you really wanted to fall into liberal favor, just be a gay Muslim. At least no one will accuse you of racism or homophobia as you’re strung up and hanged.

Want to play the gay vs. Muslim game at home? Try getting a gay wedding cake made in a Muslim bakery and witness the deafening liberal silence.

Does anyone else find this hilarious? I can think of lots or reasons to stop a gay pride parade, but that it's racist was not one I would ever have thought of. 

Sweden's frantic rush into cultural suicide will result in Muslim persecution of gays as more and more areas in Sweden add significant Muslim people. Soon there will be no place for a gay pride parade and left leaning Swedes will go apoplectic.

Now if we were talking Christian opposition to gay pride parades rather than Muslim, the Christians would be run right out of the country and Christian Sweden would no longer be Christian. Isn't that delicious irony?