Analysis-Politics and Islam bring Indonesian compromise on criminal code
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[December 20, 2022]
By Kate Lamb and Ananda Teresia
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia's new criminal code has grabbed headlines
for making sex outside marriage illegal but Islamic parties wanted even
harsher punishment for moral crimes in the world's largest
Muslim-majority nation, accounts of behind-the-scenes negotiations
reveal.
The so-called morality code is just one part of the legislative overhaul
that the Indonesian parliament ratified this month, a 226-page set of
new laws that critics say threaten civil liberties, but officials defend
as reflective of Indonesia's identity.
Behind the scenes, secular nationalist parties holding a majority in
parliament opposed the tighter laws on morality but risked being branded
supportive of adultery if they remained unyielding in their opposition.
What resulted was a compromise between political parties and the
government, said Taufik Basari, a member of the parliamentary commission
overseeing the changes.
"We found a middle ground, not only between nationalists and religious
parties but also between progressive liberals and conservatives," he
said.
The world's third-largest democracy has a tradition of pluralism and
moderate Islam, although more conservative interpretations of Islam have
gained ground since the fall of authoritarian leader Suharto in 1998.
The new criminal code, decades in the making and created to replace a
colonial-era set of laws, includes articles that ban insulting the
president and state institutions, and spreading views counter to the
state ideology, known as Pancasila.
The United Nations has warned the laws threaten media freedom, privacy
and human rights.
'BEST WE COULD DO'
The morality laws have, not surprisingly, drawn the most attention and
criticism but some officials said they would have been even stricter if
the religious parties had their way.
Islamic parties had called for a maximum jail term of seven years for
sex outside marriage, and for anyone to be able to report a suspected
offence, said sources familiar with the discussions.
With negotiations deadlocked until late November, the religious parties
called for a parliamentary vote, something the nationalist parties were
reluctant to see as it would have meant every party having to reveal its
stand in parliament, and potentially to the public, said Muhammad Nasir
Djamil of the Islamic Solidarity Party.
"This issue is very sensitive among religious people," he said.
In forming the laws, a team of legal professors had turned to
Indonesia's official dictionary, which defines adultery as any sex
outside marriage, not just extramarital sex.
That definition is now law.
Other articles criminalise cohabitation between unmarried couples,
promoting contraception to minors, and abortion, apart from cases linked
to rape or a medical emergency.
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Muslim girl holds a balloon while
attending mass prayers at the Sunda Kelapa port during Eid al-Fitr,
marking the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan, in Jakarta,
Indonesia, May 2, 2022. REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan/File Photo
"Indonesia was trying to make its own code, based on its values,"
said University of Indonesia law professor Harkristuti Harkrisnowo,
part of the drafting team.
'DEFUSE ATTACKS'
None of the nationalist parties, which dominate the ruling
coalition, favoured the morality clauses but eventually agreed to
the watered-down version, said President Joko Widodo's deputy chief
of staff, Jaleswari Pramodhawardani.
The compromise reached in the final version carries a maximum
one-year sentence for sex outside marriage and six months for
cohabitation. Suspected offences can only be reported by a spouse,
parent or child, which officials hope will prevent police raids and
finger-pointing by moral crusaders.
"This was the best we could do ... It was a win-win solution, a
middle ground," said Taufik. "The article is still there, but we
included some tight limitations."
The new laws come into effect in three years and the largely muted
public response indicates they are unlikely to threaten political
stability.
Jokowi, as the president is known, is constitutionally barred from
running again in the 2024 election but ahead of the polls, support
for the morality laws carries a political advantage, analysts said.
"Nationalist parties were thinking ahead to the 2024 election," said
Greg Fealy of the Australian National University.
"They want to defuse potential Islamist attacks upon them."
If the Islamic parties largely got what they wanted on sex, the
government and its allies got some of what they wanted too,
parliamentary and government sources said.
A contentious article that outlaws insulting the dignity of the
president was reintroduced by the government, said law professor
Harkristuti, despite a similar law being annulled by the
constitutional court for being undemocratic.
That offence, which sources said was not supported by Jokowi
himself, can only be reported by the president.
The government was also able to include a last-minute adjustment in
its favour to a law banning the spread of values counter to the
state ideology, without public consultation, said two sources
involved.
Andreas Harsono of Human Rights Watch said both sides got what they
wanted at a cost to rights.
"The Islamic parties benefit from the morality agenda ... while the
other parties will benefit from strengthening of authoritarianism,"
he said.
(Reporting by Kate Lamb in Sydney and Ananda Teresia in Jakarta;
Editing by Ed Davies)
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