The Asian Age

Indonesia: Court refuses to bar extramarit­al sex

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Jakarta, Dec. 14: Indonesia’s constituti­onal court on Thursday narrowly rejected a petition by a conservati­ve group to make extramarit­al sex illegal, but rights activists braced for a renewal of the battle in Parliament and other state institutio­ns.

Five of nine judges voted for the case to be thrown out, in a slim victory for rights activists who had feared the petition would spur moral policing and further discrimina­tion against the gay community in the world’s largest Muslim- majority country.

Most Indonesian­s adhere to a moderate form of Islam under an officially secular system, but there has been rise of a hardline, politicise­d Islam in recent years, which until recently had stayed on the fringe of the nation’s politics.

Constituti­onal court chief justice Arief Hidayat said existing laws on adultery did not conflict with the Constituti­on and it was not the court’s authority to create new policies.

The judge said the question could be put to Parliament, which is currently deliberati­ng revisions to the national criminal code.

“The plaintiff should submit their petition to lawmakers, and there it should be an important input in the ongoing revision of the national criminal code,” Hidayat said, as he read a summary of the 600- page ruling.

“Based on that view, the constituti­onal court is of the opinion that the petition is not legally sound.”

Rights activists were comforted by the court’s decision, while expecting more challenges to come.

Family Love Alliance speaker Euis Sunarti talks to reporters after attending a trial at Indonesia’s constituti­onal court in Jakarta, Indonesia, December 14, 2017.

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