The Indonesian government has been trying to ban sex outside of marriage for a number of years. However, due to mass protests, the project was shelved. But now the corresponding law has been passed. A “law-violating catastrophe,” say human rights activists.

In Indonesia, sex outside of marriage will be banned by law and punishable by up to a year in prison. Despite protests and criticism, the parliament in the Southeast Asian island state approved a corresponding draft law. Human rights activists had previously urged the House of Representatives not to pass the new rules because they violate civil rights in the largest Islamic country in the world. The new legislation is scheduled to come into force in 2025.

“Indonesia wants to take the path of law-violating catastrophe by criminalizing extramarital sex,” Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director of human rights organization Human Rights Watch, warned on Twitter a few days ago. Hundreds of people took to the streets in several Indonesian cities on Monday to protest the project. There had already been a draft law for a new code of conduct in 2019, which was initially postponed due to mass protests.

Not only sex between unmarried people is forbidden: according to the law, couples are no longer allowed to live together before marriage. Violators face six months imprisonment. However, the police can only start an investigation if a family member files a complaint. This point is seen as a compromise between Liberals and Conservatives in Parliament.

Tourists on the holiday island of Bali, for example, should therefore hardly be affected by the law. So far, sex outside of marriage and homosexual relationships have not been considered criminal offenses in Indonesia, but both have long been considered taboo in the conservative country. Only in the province of Aceh on the north-western tip of the island of Sumatra is the Islamic Sharia legal system implemented. Sex outside of marriage is punished with up to 100 strokes of the cane.