Bali alert! Busybodies at large
It was excruciatingly embarrassing.
The hotel receptionist was adamant: We either proved our marriage or we
left. Voices were raised which drew more
staff and onlookers to the foyer. Security guards appeared.
Our two-night stay earlier this year in the East Java
regency of Jombang (motto – City of Tolerance)
had been paid in advance through an on-line booking site with no-refund
conditions.
Passports don’t specify marital status and we hadn’t packed
our marriage certificate. It’s in
Kiwinglish from a NZ registry office so more likely to bemuse than convince.
Reluctantly we used our Indonesian ID cards as licenses to
lie abed together – though not a pleasant stay as anger at the humiliation simmered
throughout.
The cards were passed around and photocopied. They also include, age, job, address and affiliation
with one of the six approved religions. Atheism is not an option in Indonesia. Nor is privacy.
We’ve used sharia hotels which follow Islamic law before and
had no hassles. No booze, a Koran by the
bedside, a prayer mat in the wardrobe and an arrow on the ceiling pointing to Mecca. No bacon for breakfast
– but that’s all.
These minor irritants could enlarge into serious impediments with new legislation
passed by the Dewan
Perwakilan Rakyat (DPR - House of Representatives) criminalizing consensual
extramarital sex and gay relationships. Penalties start with six months in
jail.The outrage hasn’t been confined to human rights groups; businesses are also sweating. Hoteliers foresee jets diverting to more liberal lands like Thailand and Cambodia.
Neatly tagged a ‘bonk ban’ by the Australian media it’s delivering headlines the Republic doesn’t want. But it’s an own goal and foreseeable as the changes have been debated for years.
President Joko Widodo, 58, is a Muslim moderate, though his clerical sidekick Ma’ruf Amin, 76, is not. Widodo fears the negative publicity will impact his target of 20 million overseas tourists next year and damage appeals for investors to park their dollars in his once welcoming archipelago.
He wants the legislation held back and reconsidered by DPR members elected in April and due to be sworn in next month. He hopes the new politicians will be less Tory and prune the contentious bits; the danger is that they could be more zealous and fertilise the shoots.
(Some foreign media have reported that Widodo has ‘ordered’ a delay by the DPR. Not possible; he’s politely ‘requested consideration’.)
Around 1.2 million Australians visit Indonesia every year, almost all landing at Kuta’s splendid Ngurah Rai airport. Balinese follow Hinduism which is more relaxed about sex than Islam, the nation’s dominant faith. Island life may be laid back but hardline Jakarta-made laws still apply.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade at first dampened panic by saying the rules will not be enforced for two years. Then, most curiously, it let loose the frighteners by re-issuing a travel warning (‘exercise a high degree of caution’), and details of the conducts unbecoming:
‘Adultery
or sex outside of marriage, encompassing all same-sex sexual relations’, and
‘cohabitation outside of marriage with charges only proceeding following a
complaint by a spouse, child or parent’.
However
these are Australian government interpretations from translations of the new
laws; they may not tally with either local understanding or enforcement. Other
reports say accusations can also be lodged with the police by ‘community
leaders’, which includes any self-styled guardian of public decency, aka
Peeping Toms.
Indonesia is
the world’s most populous Islamic country and prides itself as morally superior
to the decadent West. However a study
cited by the Indonesia Institute for Criminal Justice Reform claims – surprise,
surprise – that local teens are just as curious about sex and keen to explore
as their overseas cousins, with 40 per cent exercising their desires ahead of
marriage.
Then
there are the practical problems. Indonesian
jails are so overcrowded remote isles are being considered as crim dumps. We know about penal colonies so could assist
by organizing fact-finding tours of Christmas Island.
Indonesians are skilled at bending laws. This is not
authoritarian China
with cameras on every lamppost. Uniformed
police are seldom seen after the morning and evening rush hours, so it’s unwise
for motorists to assume a red light means STOP to all road users.
Cigarettes glow under NO SMOKING notices while plastic bags
filled with garbage bob down grimy streams past banners prohibiting rubbish dumping.
The new laws may get overlooked in some areas, but they’ll
lie in wait like unsleeping gin-traps with jaws agape ready for the unwary paw.
Tenderfoot tourists are the target species as they’re known to be well-heeled.
There’s also a long tradition of mob enforcement known as
‘sweeping.’ This involves self-righteous
thugs wearing religious garb hitting hotels and demanding to see the register.
There have been fewer reports of these shakedowns recently. Maybe the police are getting more
professional and less likely to be intimidated by hoons swearing they’re driven
by piety. That could change if the
volatile mix of religion and politics is given a fundamentalist shake.
The government’s slogan selling tourism abroad is ‘Wonderful
Indonesia’. ‘Worrisome’ might be a
better fit.
First published in Pearls and Irritations, 30 September 2019. See: https://johnmenadue.com/duncan-graham-bali-alert-busybodies-at-large/
No comments:
Post a Comment