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PKS defends chief'€™s polygamous lifestyle

Anis Matta: (JP/Ricky Yudhistira)Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) chairman Anis Matta’s decision to go public with his polygamy should not harm the party’s overall performance, a party official has said

Hasyim Widhiarto (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Wed, January 8, 2014 Published on Jan. 8, 2014 Published on 2014-01-08T08:01:45+07:00

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PKS defends chief'€™s polygamous lifestyle Anis Matta: (JP/Ricky Yudhistira) (JP/Ricky Yudhistira)

Anis Matta: (JP/Ricky Yudhistira)

Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) chairman Anis Matta'€™s decision to go public with his polygamy should not harm the party'€™s overall performance, a party official has said.

PKS lawmaker and deputy secretary-general Sitaresmi Soekanto said it was unfair for the public to judge Anis'€™ leadership based on nothing more than his decision to publicize his preference for a polygamous lifestyle.

'€œInstead of discussing Pak Anis'€™ personal life, it would be more relevant to discuss his ideas on how to manage the country. It is his
personal right to choose [a polygamous way of life],'€ she told The Jakarta Post on Tuesday on the sidelines of a discussion at the University of Indonesia (UI).

Sitaresmi, one of only a few PKS women politicians on the party'€™s central board, did not, however, urge the public to agree with Anis'€™ preference. '€œThose who want to follow it [polygamous life] must have sufficient understanding about Islamic teachings as well as a strong financial capability,'€ she said.

The PKS, the country'€™s largest Islamic party, has been struggling to maintain its popularity ratings following the beef import graft case, which implicated Anis'€™ predecessor, Luthfi Hasan Ishaaq.

Anis came under the media spotlight after making a public appearance with his second wife, Hungarian-born Szilvia Fabula, last month. A recent series of messages on Twitter, posted by outspoken PKS lawmaker Fahri Hamzah, about Anis'€™ polygamous lifestyle turned the issue into a public debate.

Tuesday'€™s discussion at UI, which was scheduled to discuss the PKS'€™ platform on development policies, suddenly became a forum to question Anis, the discussion'€™s keynote speaker, about the party'€™s stance on polygamy, which many Indonesian women consider unacceptable.

'€œOverpopulation is clearly a burden for a country. So, there is actually no problem with polygamous practices if they do not contribute to an increase in the population,'€ said Abdillah Ahsan from the UI'€™s Demographic Institute.

Meanwhile, UI political science professor Chusnul Mar'€™iyah jokingly raised an issue about increasing state expenditure for supporting state officials who practice a polygamous lifestyle. '€œThe more wives and children a president has, for example, the more Paspampres [Presidential Security Detail] officers are needed to protect them. All, of course, must be paid with taxpayers'€™ money,'€ she said.

Anis, a father of ten, offered only a short response, however.

'€œIslam sees population, including children, as a gift and not a burden. However, people'€™s capacity to manage such a gift is different, from one to another,'€ he said.

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