The New Economist
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Analysis
    • Human Trafficking Features
  • Gossip
  • Life & Style
  • Opinions
    • Editorial
    • Columnists
      • Ikebesi Omoding
      • Isa Senkumba
      • Ramathan Ggoobi
    • Letters
  • Business
    • Corporate
  • Airlines
  • National Parks
The New Economist
  • Home
  • News
    • Analysis
    • Human Trafficking Features
  • Gossip
  • Life & Style
  • Opinions
    • Editorial
    • Columnists
      • Ikebesi Omoding
      • Isa Senkumba
      • Ramathan Ggoobi
    • Letters
  • Business
    • Corporate
  • Airlines
  • National Parks
No Result
View All Result
The New Economist
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Indonesian president halts pre-marital sex Bill

byHattie Wright
September 27, 2019
in News
0
President Joko Widodo

President Joko Widodo

152
SHARES
1.9k
VIEWS
WhatsAppShare on TwitterFacebook

              Indonesian President Joko Widodo has postponed a vote that could have criminalized consensual extramarital sex after an outcry from human rights groups worldwide.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo has postponed a vote that could have criminalized consensual extramarital sex after an outcry from human rights groups worldwide.

The vote would have been on a new penal code, which the government agreed on last week. The code was set to pass into law this week, with lawmakers describing the vote as a formality. The code would also have effectively outlawed same-sex relations and made it a criminal offense to insult the president.

In a televised address on Friday, Widodo said he decided to postpone the vote after “seriously considering feedback from different parties who feel objections on some substantial content of the criminal code.”

“There are some contents that need an in-depth study,” he said. “In that case, I ordered (the) Law and Human Rights minister to deliver my standpoint to Parliament. I also ordered Law and Human Rights Minister to gather feedback from the public again as an input for a better criminal code.”

News of the code drew international criticism, with Human Rights Watch describing the draft code as “disastrous not only for women and religious and gender minorities, but for all Indonesians.”

Rights groups said the law would discriminate against members of the LGBT community, while articles such as the criminalization of insulting the president may limit freedom of speech.

Even national governments began to warn their citizens of the new code — Australia issued a travel advisory specifically pointing to the revised code and the harsh penalties.

The new criminal code has been in the making for decades. It was reintroduced in 2015, and was set to replace the 100-year-old Dutch colonial-era penal code.

Under the draft code, unmarried couples who are reported to police for living together could be sentenced to six months in prison.

“Obscene acts” could be punished with a penalty of up to six months in prison — meaning same-sex relationships could be targeted and effectively criminalized.

Anyone who helped a woman terminate her pregnancy could also face five years in jail.

The code was expected to go to a parliamentary plenary session on 23rd September, and would come into effect two years after being ratified.

Comments

comments

Tags: IndonesiaJokoSexWidodo

Related Posts

Sex with no strings Attached
Life & Style

Sex with no strings Attached

bySunrise Reporter
October 19, 2019
0

Friends with benefit is a very old adage, in the olden days, when the Persians used to rule this world,...

Read moreDetails

Recent News

HOCW’s Dr. Bolingo launches ‘Unlock the Mind’ Book

HOCW’s Dr. Bolingo launches ‘Unlock the Mind’ Book

January 24, 2024
EC urged on civic education as  2021 electoral season hots-up

Justice Byabakama retains EC top job

January 11, 2024

Site Navigation

  • About us
  • Our Staff
  • Careers
  • Contact Us
  • Support

The New Economist's major concentration is on Ugandan and East African affairs, politics, and business, but it also includes regular sections on science and technology, books, and the arts.

© 2024

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Analysis
    • Human Trafficking Features
  • Gossip
  • Life & Style
  • Opinions
    • Editorial
    • Columnists
      • Ikebesi Omoding
      • Isa Senkumba
      • Ramathan Ggoobi
    • Letters
  • Business
    • Corporate

© 2024