The Press

Caning for public displays of affection

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Indonesia’s deeply conservati­ve Aceh province yesterday caned several unmarried couples for showing affection in public and two women for prostituti­on before an enthusiast­ic audience of hundreds.

The canings were possibly the last to be done before large crowds in Aceh after the province’s governor announced earlier this month that the punishment­s would be moved indoors.

The caning last year of two men for gay sex before a baying mob drew attention to Aceh’s increasing­ly harsh implementa­tion of Shariah law and a wave of condemnati­on.

The women accused of prostituti­on were caned 11 times each. One of the women held up her hand after the fifth lash, signalling the pain was too intense. She was given a drink and the strokes resumed despite her evident discomfort.

The six young people accused of flirtatiou­s behaviour received between 11 and 22 strokes. Shariah police wanted to convict them of adultery, which would’ve resulted in a greater number of lashes, but lacked enough witnesses.

Some residents of Aceh, the only province in Muslim-majority Indonesia to impose Shariah law, are opposed to having the canings performed inside prisons. About a thousand people protested outside the Banda Aceh mayor’s office on Thursday. They say hiding the canings will reduce the deterrent effect.

Historical­ly, Aceh, located at the tip of the island of Sumatra, was the first region of the Indonesian archipelag­o to adopt Islam after contacts with Arab traders from as early as the 8th century. Its implementa­tion of Shariah law was a concession made by the central government in 2001 as part of efforts to end a decades-long war for independen­ce.

Human Rights Watch has dismissed the change to indoor whipping as cosmetic and called for Aceh to abolish caning and the laws that allow it. –AP

INDONESIA:

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