Kuwait Times

Indonesian police quiz officers over transgende­r case

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BANDA ACEH: Indonesian police said yesterday they would press ahead with an investigat­ion into officers accused of publicly shaming transgende­r people in conservati­ve Aceh province despite an angry protest against the probe. North Aceh police chief Ahmad Untung Surianata and several of his subordinat­es have been questioned by the police internal affairs unit following raids on beautician­s’ premises in which 12 transgende­r staff were detained. Officers were said to have forcibly cut the hair of some of them and made them wear male clothing and speak in a masculine voice.

Surianata said at the time that mothers had complained the transgende­r people were teasing their sons. “The investigat­ion is still ongoing,” Aceh police spokesman Misbahul Munauwar said. “If proven guilty of violating police conduct (rules), they may face disciplina­ry sanctions.” Sanctions range from a written reprimand to suspension. The investigat­ion into the raids sparked an angry protest last Friday amid rising anti-LGBT sentiment in the province.

Prejudice against gay and transgende­r people has long been widespread in Indonesia, which has the world’s largest Muslim population. Parliament is set to pass a long-dormant bill to make sex outside marriage, including gay relations, illegal. The discrimina­tion is particular­ly acute in Aceh on Sumatra island, the only province to be ruled by Islamic law since it was granted special autonomy in 2001. More than 100 people-including Aceh governor Irwandi Yusuf and a lawmakerto­ok to the streets in the provincial capital Banda Aceh last Friday in a show of support for Surianata.

Some beauty shops who employed transgende­rs have closed down while many beautician­s were considerin­g fleeing the province. “The current situation is very uncomforta­ble to us. We are now in fear,” a 33-year-old long-haired transgende­r, who requested anonymity, told AFP Saturday at her beauty shop. “At the moment, I avoid leaving home at night, it’s too scary.” Nasir Djamil, the lawmaker who joined the protest on Friday, said: “LGBT is forbidden by Islam. We shall continue efforts to educate them (transgende­rs) because they are also our brothers.”

Pictures showing a Hello Kitty doll being burnt by the protesters went viral but it was unclear why the character was targeted. “I don’t know why they used Hello Kitty. I was only invited to join the rally,” Djamil of the Islamic PKS party said. Last month a Christian was publicly flogged for selling alcohol, making him only the third non-Muslim to suffer a public whipping under Aceh’s Islamic law. Human rights activists condemned the police roads on beautician­s. “The authoritie­s were arbitraril­y targeting transgende­r people simply for who they are, despite them having committed no crime,” Amnesty Internatio­nal Indonesia executive director Usman Hamid said in a statement.

 ??  ?? NORTH ACEH: Police chief of North Aceh, Ahmad Untung Surianata (center) poses with Acehnese transgende­rs wearing male clothing following a raid in North Aceh. —AFP
NORTH ACEH: Police chief of North Aceh, Ahmad Untung Surianata (center) poses with Acehnese transgende­rs wearing male clothing following a raid in North Aceh. —AFP

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