Houston Chronicle

Indonesia police arrest 141 men accused of having gay sex party

- NEW YORK TIMES

JAKARTA, Indonesia — Police in Indonesia have arrested 141 men at a sauna in the capital on suspicion of having a gay sex party, the latest crackdown on homosexual­ity in the country.

After the arrests in Jakarta on Sunday night, the police released to local news organizati­ons numerous photograph­s of shirtless men who had been detained, alarming rights activists who said friends and families of the men may not have been aware of their sexual orientatio­n.

Same-sex relations are not illegal in most of Indonesia, a predominan­tly Muslim nation, although gay people are frequent targets of police raids and vigilante actions.

A police spokesman said the men had been detained on suspicion of violating Indonesia’s pornograph­y law, a broad piece of legislatio­n that is used to punish a wide range of sexual behavior.

Similar police raids and arrests have been reported around the country, including in Jakarta in November, when 13 men were taken into custody. Last week, two men in the northweste­rn province of Aceh were sentenced under Shariah law to 85 public lashes each for having sex with each other.

Because of strong social and religious taboos against homosexual­ity in much of Indonesia, gatherings of gays often take place away from the public eye, like in saunas or at undergroun­d parties.

“It’s very difficult for us to express our sexuality like heterosexu­als,” said Hartoyo, the director of Suara Kita, a gay rights advocacy group, who goes by one name. He said that releasing pictures of the shirtless men to local news outlets was “extremely dangerous.”

Analysts said the arrests in Jakarta were part of enforcemen­t efforts by the police before Ramadan, the monthlong holiday in which observant Muslims fast throughout the day.

Tobias Basuki, an analyst at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Jakarta, said the police appeared to be formally taking on a role that had previously been held by hard-line Islamist groups.

“The government is trying to co-opt the religious narrative,” he said.

The Indonesian government, under the leadership of its pluralist president, Joko Widodo, has been engaged in political battles with hard-line Islamist factions that recently succeeded in getting a close presidenti­al ally, Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, Jakarta’s Christian governor, imprisoned on blasphemy charges.

The two young men discovered in bed together in Aceh, sentenced last week to caning, are expected to be punished Tuesday. Activists say they believe the punishment has been set to take place before the start of Ramadan, beginning Saturday in Indonesia.

 ?? Tatan Syuflana / Associated Press ?? Indonesian officers escort dozens of men arrested in Sunday’s raid on a sauna to police headquarte­rs. Similar raids have been reported around the country.
Tatan Syuflana / Associated Press Indonesian officers escort dozens of men arrested in Sunday’s raid on a sauna to police headquarte­rs. Similar raids have been reported around the country.

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