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The first subject: Debunking sexual myths. They include that putting a bead beneath a boy's foreskin will enhance his sexual pleasure, and that girls will be nymphomaniacs if they don't get circumcisions, which continue despite a 2006 ban. Folklore that gecko saliva could cure AIDS, in a country grappling with the fastest growing endemic in Asia, unleashed a wave of gecko hunting and a surge in prices for the reptiles a couple of years ago. Eventually, the website will include a free online chat service. Both women are ready for criticism.
Though most of Indonesia's 210 million Muslims are moderate, a hard-liner fringe has become more vocal and violent in recent years, attacking bars, transvestites and anything else deemed "blasphemous." The hard-liners also have succeeded in influencing politicians who -- afraid of being labeled unIslamic
-- pushed through a controversial anti-porn law, used to imprison Nazril "Ariel" Irham, the pop star, even though it appears his sexcapades were never intended for public viewing. Amirin defended him at his trial, saying he did not show any signs of being an exhibitionist. More recently, Jakarta Gov. Fauzi Bowo captured the conservative mood of the country's leaders when he responded to the gang-rape of two young women on a public minibus by blaming the victim. Wear a miniskirt, he said earlier this month, and you're practically asking for it. Aside from a small protest in the capital, Bowo's comments barely made any waves. Though Amirin's website marks the latest attempt at online sex education, it's certainly not the first. Last year the National AIDS Commission launched an interactive Web page aimed at teens and young adults. Others have come and gone during the past decade. Amirin hopes hers is here to stay, "I want to change mindsets," she said. "It's about time everybody in Indonesia be more open-minded about sex." ___ Online:
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