No more celebrations?
Legal code revisions may criminalize sale of contraceptives in latest
attack on common sense
Just days after President Joko Widodo halted highly restrictive and
embarrassing regulations to curb foreign journalists in Indonesia, another
puzzling rule has surfaced as some lawmakers are pushing to make the public
sale of contraceptives illegal as part of a proposed revision of Indonesia’s
Criminal Code.
According to the
Jakarta Globe, Article 481 of the draft calls for a $700 fine on anyone
promoting the sale of “devices to prevent pregnancy.” Health Ministry officials
and formal family planning activities are exempt. Condoms are widely sold in
the country currently.
A largely liberal and
secular society, Indonesia nonetheless has powerful conservative religious
figures that lobby for curbs on various perceived vices. In June, lawmakers in
Bengkulu, a province on Sumatra Island, introduced legislation that called for
banning condoms and blamed the spread of HIV and AIDS on freely available
condoms, arguing that too many people are having too much sex outside marriage.
The idea violates
virtually all medical and social research on AIDS. That such restrictions find
their way into legislative proposals is perhaps testimony to the power of
suspicion and religious figures able to cow lawmakers into cooperating with an
increasingly conservative agenda.
No beer
Earlier this year,
former Trade Minister Rahmat Goebel banned the sale of beer in all mini-markets
and mom-and-pop stores nationwide. He was responding to a handful of complaints
about teenagers drinking outside mini-markets in Jakarta but rather than call
for the enforcement of underage drinking laws, he took a regulatory
sledgehammer to the problem.
The beer ban has dried
up about 60 percent of retail outlets, derailed huge brewery investments pushed
by the government and driven beer sales underground in many places. He said he
was enforcing morality for young people from his perch in an agency that is
supposed to drive economic activity.
Goebel was replaced as
trade minister in August, partly because the beer ban was a source of ridicule.
Some lawmakers now want to ban all alcohol sales in the country.
More foolishness
The condom sale ban,
even it is not eventually passed, is another example of a regulation that
accomplishes nothing and brings more international embarrassment to the
country. “This makes us all look like a bunch of religious fanatics,” bemoaned
an Indonesian businessman after reading about the possible condom ban. “This
hurts the economy.”
With growth slowing to
below 5 percent, commodity prices down and inflation rising, the country is struggling
to appear attractive to investors. Meanwhile, regulators seemingly acting with
no concern for the economy have increased regulatory hurdles, tightened foreign
ownership rules, restricted work permits for expatriates and taken other steps
out of sync with regional economies like Vietnam and the Philippines.
President Joko,
meanwhile, says the economy is open to foreign investors as he travels the
world seeking customers. A condom ban is not the sort of thing that will make
the country appear modern.
While there are real
problems with law enforcement and the criminal code, condoms are not a burning
issue. “This is overcriminalization,” Institute for Criminal Justice Reform
executive director Supriyadi Widodo Eddyono said of the proposed revision.
The proposed new penal
code also attempts to criminalize adultery and cohabitation, which may be
frowned upon by some but are not illegal in most parts of the country.
The condom provision
has the apparent support of the National Family Planning Coordinating
Board (BKKBN), a government institution.
“[Condoms] are sold
freely in supermarkets, out in the open,” BKKBN deputy chief Julianto
Witjaksono told radio station KBR radio last week. “People can just buy them.
What if they are bought by teenagers?”
Research Miko Ginting
from the Legal and Policy Study Center (PSHK), was quoted by the Jakarta Globe
saying the revision of the Criminal Code should focus on general crimes like
murder and theft.
“Special crimes like
human rights abuses and corruption have their own laws,” Miko said. “Don’t
let this revision override these special laws.”
No comments:
Post a Comment