Human Rights Watch (HRW) says virginity tests
have been recognized internationally as a violation of human rights. The
procedure particularly violates the prohibition against cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment under Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights and Article 16 of the Convention against Torture, both of
which Indonesia has ratified.“The Indonesian armed forces should immediately
stop the discriminatory, arbitrary and gender-based violence of so-called
virginity tests,” HRW’s women’s rights advocacy director Nisha Varia said in a
release on Thursday.
She made the statement ahead of the
world conference of the International Committee on Military Medicine (ICMM), a
Belgium-based intergovernmental organization dedicated to fostering
professional collaboration between members of the Armed Forces Medical Services
of all states, which is set to take place in Bali from May 17 to 22.“The ICMM
should make clear to the Indonesian Military that this abusive practice has no
place in a job application process or an individual’s choice of whom to marry
and should not be inflicted under a veneer of ‘military medicine’,” Varia said.
HRW found that the testing required all
women applying to enter the military or planning to marry military officers
included invasive “two-finger tests” to determine whether female applicants’
hymens were intact.“Finger test findings are scientifically baseless because an
old tear of the hymen or variation of the size of the hymenal orifice can be
due to reasons unrelated to sex,” it says.HRW says a military doctor at a
military hospital in Jakarta told the group that the test was part of the mandatory
military exam. It is given early in the recruitment process as part of a
applicants’ physical exam.
Officers who wish to marry require a
letter of recommendation from their commanders, who only issue such letters
upon confirmation that the respective officer’s fiancée has undergone a medical
examination, including a virginity test, at a military hospital.Female military
recruits said that military officers informed them that the tests were crucial
to preserving the dignity and the honor of the nation, HRW says.”
A retired Air Force officer wondered how
she could ‘defend the honor of our nation if we cannot defend our own honor’ by
undergoing virginity tests,” it says.“Two military wives said that they were
told that virginity tests helped stabilize military families, in which the
husbands often travel for months.”HRW notes that in December last year, Home
Minister Tjahjo Kumolo announced that his ministry would stop administering
virginity tests to women aspiring to be civil servants.
In a hearing at the House of
Representatives on Jan.21, Health Minister Nila Moeloek promised to raise the
issue at a Cabinet meeting. (ebf) - See more at: http://www.thejakartapost
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