Religious conservatives continue to increase pressure on the queer community.
According to reporting by Reuters, an LGBTQ human rights event has been forced to cancel after receiving security threats.
The ASEAN Queer Advocacy Week was scheduled to be held in Jakarta from 17 July, bringing together activists from across Southeast Asia to discuss advocacy and navigating challenges. It was jointly organised by Philippines-based rights group ASEAN SOGIE Caucus, Indonesia-based Arus Pelangi and other activists.
But the organisers have said that they have now moved the event outside Indonesia to ensure the safety and security of both the participants and the organisers.
The event is the latest casualty in a concerted campaign by Islamic religious leaders against the LGBTQ community in Indonesia.
JAKARTA, July 12 (Reuters) - Rights groups have cancelled a Southeast Asian LGBT event in Indonesia after receiving security threats, the organisers said, the latest sign of increasing pressure on the community from religious conservatives in the country.
Homosexuality is a taboo subject in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim-majority nation, even though it is not illegal except in the sharia-ruled Aceh province.
Other LGBT-related events have also been cancelled in Indonesia due to objections from Islamic groups. In December, the United States called off a visit by its LGBT special envoy after an influential clerical body denounced the visit.
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Jakarta was set to host the 'ASEAN Queer Advocacy Week' from July 17, bringing together activists from across Southeast Asia to discuss advocacy and navigating challenges. It was jointly organised by Philippines-based rights group ASEAN SOGIE Caucus, Indonesia-based Arus Pelangi and other activists.
But ASEAN SOGIE Caucus said they have now moved the event outside Indonesia "to ensure the safety and security of both the participants and the organiser".
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"The organizers of the ASEAN Queer Advocacy Week decided to relocate the venue of the programme outside Indonesia, after receiving a series of security threats from various groups," ASEAN SOGIE Caucus said in a statement late on Tuesday.
It also cited a wave of "anti-LGBT sentiments" on social media.
The organisers did not disclose the new venue due to security concerns.
The event has also drawn attention as Indonesia hosts a regional meeting of Southeast Asian foreign ministers this week, raising questions from some anti-LGBT groups on whether the event was linked to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) gathering.
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Indonesia's foreign ministry said the event had "nothing to do" with the regional bloc.
The LGBT event was condemned online and by Islamic groups.
"The government must not give a permit to an event that contradicts the values of religions in Indonesia," said Anwar Abbas of the Indonesian Ulema Council, the powerful Islamic clerical body.
"Thus, we warn and urge the government not to give permit on the event."
Reporting by Ananda Teresia in Jakarta and Karen Lema in Manila; Editing by A. Ananthalakshmi and Raju Gopalakrishnan
What’s life like for LGBTQ people in Indonesia?
What’s life like for LGBTQ people in Indonesia? Let’s take a look at some of the key equality indicators.
Is homosexuality legal in Indonesia?
Pretty much. In most of Indonesia, homosexuality is not criminalised. But there are some parts of the country that operate under Sharia law, which criminalises same-sex sexual activity.
Are there anti-discrimination protections in place for LGBTQ people in Indonesia?
No. There are no protections from discrimination on the grounds of sexuality.
Is there Marriage Equality in Indonesia?
No. There is no legal recognition for same-sex relationships.
What’s life like for LGBTQ people in Indonesia?
Indonesia is a socially conservative country. Homosexuality is seen as a taboo subject.
Homophobia is systemic. It appears that censorship restrictions and public decency laws are being used to target and persecute LGBTQ people.
LGBTQ people conceal their sexuality.
Reader's Comments
I realize that boycotting Indonesia may cause economic hardship, but people won't stand up and demand change when things are going ok. Unfortunately, you have to get people angry to evoke change.
Religion has no place in government or making laws.
I fear for my gay friends in Indonesia. As a Westerner who has visited that country since the '70s and lived there (in East Java, not Bali) more or less permanently from 2013 until Covid sent me home, I have seen more than most how the widespread homophobia of the great majority of Muslims has hurt the GLBT sub-culture - oddly, under Soeharto gays seemed to have MORE freedom than they do now under the so-called democracy, even though they often had to live and operate under the mainstream of life there. Everything was more free and easy than it has become now, in Java almost all the gay discos and other meeting places the local gays would meet in have closed down, police regularly visit the popular 'beats' and the society in general has become so much more conservative and anti-gay. Even Bali has felt this repression in recent years. I've. not hung out there (Bali) for a long time as my long-term partner lives elsewhere, but I do, or rather did visit often on my way to and from Australia. Now, not so much. Covid did a lot of damage to the 'scene' which hasn't really recovered. These repressive laws are a BIG setback. I have six friends who planned to visit Bali this year but have now changed their itineraries to go elsewhere, most to Thailand.
Me, I will be going back to East Java in February '23, but my new plan is now to fly to Bali, maybe stay overnight, hang out in Sanur (I have friends there and anyway my Indonesian partner will be in Bali to meet me, also he isn't happy with me going out to party) and not visit the few gay venues still open in Seminyak etc as I fear the risks to my well-being are just too great. Corruption is everywhere in Indonesia and it could take only one trouble-making person with a few connections to put my safety and security at risk. Sad, but ias I see it t's the way things will go there from next year.
What on earth is Jokowi trying to do to the country's (and especially Bali's) economy and the not small amount of money the tourists spend there? Surely he knows that Bali (which is Hindu and not Muslim) will be the place most badly affected by these ridiculous laws. His Vice-President is a fundamentalist imam and may have religious motives in his very clear agenda to possibly create the first die-hard Muslim caliphate in Southeast Asia. As others here have written here, gay tourists are now looking elsewhere to spend their money - Thailand (as well as other countries) have taken great leaps in recognizing the gay sub-culture and even same-sex marriages while Indonesia just seems to go backward.
As for a boycott, I have mixed feelings. In some ways, I think it would hurt our own more than the economy - but then I've lived long enough to know that money talks, and talks BIG. This is a truism in today's harsh real world, and we have to understand this.
I think enough of my "serious" musings for this post. Next year my Indonesian partner and I will be discussing future options for him (and for us). We have been together since 2013 and I want to do what I can to secure his future and his safety. He has a degree and a good career so immigration to Australia may be one option. Time will tell and we will see - but as gay tourists we must do what we can to help our friends and our sub-culture there.
Thank you for reading all this, it's much too long but I wanted to say what I believe and feel and think. Best regards, DANN.
You guys are great contributors to this thread! Excellent, very insightful, and valid thoughts. Please keep contributing to the "Reader's Comments" guys! It is great to hear your voice.
Cheers and Happy New Year!! 🎊🎉 🙏🏼🙏🏼 👍🏼
None of this augurs well for gay tourism in places like Bali, all the more so from mid January as Indonesia will surely be welcoming the mobs of mainland Chinese visitors who will be flocking to Bali and Jakarta, with Covid infections sure to follow.
Between the antigay actions we are now seeing and the very real danger of getting Covid in Bali, 2023 promises to be a fairly quiet time on the Bali gay scene. I for one won't be going there... Best regards, DANN.
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