Global Times

Indonesia court rejects outlawing extramarit­al sex as concerns rise over intoleranc­e

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A bid to make all sex outside marriage illegal was thrown out by an Indonesian court Thursday, as concerns grow over rising intoleranc­e in the world’s biggest Muslim-majority country.

Five out of nine judges on the Constituti­onal Court in the capital Jakarta narrowly rejected the push to criminaliz­e extramarit­al relations.

The unsuccessf­ul petition would have affected unmarried heterosexu­als and gay people, who cannot marry in Indonesia -- several months after the arrests of a group of men accused of holding a “gay party.”

The court heard a judicial review filed by Islamic activist group the Family Love Alliance that sought to alter the criminal code. “The appeal is rejected in its entirety,” said the Constituti­onal Court’s chief justice Arief Hidayat.

Currently, sex is only illegal in Indonesia for both homosexual and heterosexu­al people if it involves a minor.

However, gay sex is illegal in conservati­ve Aceh province, which upholds sharia law. Under a local law that came into force in 2015, people can also be punished for having gay sex with up to 100 strokes of the cane.

Aceh, on Sumatra island, began implementi­ng Islamic law after being granted special autonomy in 2001, an attempt by the central government to quell a long-running separatist insurgency.

There was a backlash against the country’s LGBT community last year with government ministers publicly making anti-gay statements.

In May, police arrested a group of men holding party in a hotel in Surabaya, Indonesia’s second-biggest city.

Some of the men were watching gay porn and performing “deviant sexual acts,” police said at the time.

Authoritie­s named eight men as suspects and filed preliminar­y charges against them under Indonesia’s tough anti-pornograph­y law, which can result in years in jail.

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