Bambang Wuryanto, head of the parliamentary commission overseeing the revision of Indonesia's criminal code, speaks during a parliamentary plenary meeting as the law is passed.

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Indonesia has passed a controversial law punishing sex outside marriage with up to a year in jail – for citizens and tourists alike. 

The amended criminal code includes several revised articles that make sex outside marriage punishable by a year in jail and cohabitation by six months, but adultery charges must be based on police reports lodged by their spouse, parents or children.

Also according to the new code, the promotion of contraception and religious blasphemy are illegal.

Additionally, in the code, abortion is a crime, but it adds exceptions for women who have life-threatening conditions and for rape. 

This is provided that the fetus is less than 12 weeks old and is in line with the 2004 Medical Practice Law. The code also preserves the death penalty within the criminal justice system, restores a ban on insulting the president and vice president and expands on the Blasphemy Law.

A ban on insulting a sitting president and vice president has also been restored. It also restores a ban on insulting national ideology and state institutions. 

Insults to a sitting president must be reported by the president and can lead to up to three years in jail. 

Also, the code would preserve the death penalty within the criminal justice system despite calls from the National Commission on Human Rights and other groups to abolish capital punishment, as dozens of other countries have done.

In Indonesia, the penal code languished for decades as legislators in the world’s biggest Muslim-majority nation struggled with how to adapt its native culture and norms to the criminal code. This was a lasting legacy of the Dutch colonial administration.   

The death penalty will be imposed alternatively with a probationary period under the new code. It means that a judge cannot immediately impose a death sentence.

If the convict behaves well within a period of 10 years, the death penalty will be changed to life imprisonment or 20 years imprisonment.

Under the new code, the existing Blasphemy Law is also expanded, maintaining a five-year prison term for deviations from the central tenets of Indonesia’s six recognised religions: Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Hinduism, Buddhism and Confucianism.   

Also, citizens could face a 10-year sentence under the bill for associating with organisations that follow Marxist-Leninist ideology and a four-year sentence for spreading communism.

The new criminal code must be signed by the president after it is approved, according to the Deputy Minister of Law and Human Rights Edward Hiariej. It will not apply immediately. 

Hiariej said that the new law has a lot of “implementing regulations” that must be worked out, so its “impossible in one year” but it takes a maximum of three years to transition from the old code to the new one.   

The government provided the “strictest possible explanation that distinguishes between insults and criticism”, according to Hiariej. 

Some of the revisions were criticised by rights groups as overly broad or vague and warned that rushing them into the new criminal code could penalise normal activities as well as threaten freedom of expression and privacy rights.  

But some advocates hailed it as a victory for the country’s LGBTQ minority. Eventually, lawmakers agreed to repeal an article proposed by Islamic groups that would have made gay sex illegal.

Indonesia, which is the world’s fourth most populous nation and third largest democracy, proclaimed independence on August 17, 1945. 

In 2019, a previous bill was poised to come in, but President Joko Widodo urged lawmakers to delay a vote on it. 

This was amid mounting public criticism that led to nationwide protests when tens of thousands of people took to the streets.

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