The Indonesian government has formed an anti-porn task force to monitor and enforce an anti pornography 2008 law that prohibits just about anything vaguely sexy.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who formed the group under a presidential
regulation signed on March 2, created the Pornography Prevention and Management Task Force to more effectively coordinate state bodies.
The government stated on its website:
The task force will work under the
President and be responsible to the President, and will serve as a coordinating institution, which will coordinate efforts to curb and handle pornography.
Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali will serve as executive chairman of
the task force and Agung Laksono, coordinating minister for people's welfare, will act as the organization's chair. Other members include State Minister for Women's Empowerment and Child Protection Linda Gumelar, Justice and Human Rights Minister Amir
Syamsudin and Education and Culture Minister Muhammad Nuh.
Update: As expected, extreme repressive ideas result from putting a nutter in charge of defining pornography
29th March 2012. From thejakartaglobe.com
The government's controversial anti-pornography task force, headed by Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Al, is now working on measures to repress anything sexy in Indonesia. A discussion that includes coming up with a massively broad
definition of pornography, which could potentially equate to dictating how women dress.
We think that there should be general criteria [for women's clothing]. For example, women's skirts should go past their knees, Suryadharma said in
Jakarta on Wednesday.
The task force, he said, is in the process of gathering suggestions from the public about what activities should be classified as pornographic and how best to repress them.
Masruchah, the deputy head of the National
Commission on Violence Against Women (Komnas Perempuan), immediately slammed the proposed legislation, calling it a violation of women's rights.
Offsite Article: Minister's bid to ban miniskirts using anti-pornography law
angers Indonesian women
23rd April 2012. See article from
thenational.ae
One opposition politician, Rieke Dyah Pitaloka, from the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle, told the Jakarta Post that the government
should be focusing on more important issues. The way women wear their skirts, below or above the knees, will not impact others, she said.
One of the country's main women's groups, the National Commission on Violence Against
Women, has denounced the proposed ban as absurd and repressive.
One of the commissioners, Nurherwati, said it bolstered the still common perception in Indonesia that rape victims were to blame for their ordeal.
The pornography law, she said, was supposed to protect women, but it actually criminalises them . Ms Nurherwati gave the example of a striptease dancer in Bandung, West Java, who was prosecuted under the law, although she was a
trafficking victim. When women reported sexual assaults, she said, the first thing police ask is, 'What did you do to get raped?'
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