Indonesia’s new criminal code to allow village heads to report cohabitating couples to police

A major revision to Indonesia’s national criminal code (RKUHP) has been heavily criticized by activists who warn that the bill contains several severely problematic articles, but, rather than removing them, legislators in the House of Representatives (DPR) apparently added even more controversial statutes to the revision before completing their discussions on the bill over the weekend.

Activists argue that the new adultery and cohabitation laws would not just be a major violation of privacy rights, it would also open the door to more vigilante acts.

A member of the RKUHP Special Committee, Arsul Sani, told the media yesterday that they had finished their discussion on the bill Sunday and mentioned that one of the final additions they had agreed upon was an expansion of the laws concerning adultery, including a new article making cohabitation (which the legislation defines as two people living together as man and wife outside of marriage) a criminal act that can be reported upon by third parties, including village heads, and punished by up to six months in prison.

Although some Indonesian regions have local laws against cohabitation (which are often used to persecute those suspected of pre-marital sex), the current national criminal code does not. Arsul justified criminalizing cohabitation on the grounds that it constituted a social problem that can affect the community.

Indonesians who have been accused of cohabitation or adultery are sometimes made the targets of local vigilantes, and incidences of self-appointed moral police dragging people out of their homes to shame parade them in public (often while the victims have been stripped of some or all of their clothes) are not uncommon. Read more via Coconuts