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LGBT event in Indonesia scrapped after security threats

Rights groups had canceled a Southeast Asian LGBT event in Indonesia after receiving security threats, the organizers said, the latest sign of increasing pressure on the community from religious conservatives in the country.
 

Reuters (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Thu, July 13, 2023

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LGBT event in Indonesia scrapped after security threats

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ights groups had canceled a Southeast Asian LGBT event in Indonesia after receiving security threats, the organizers 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 sharia-ruled Aceh province.

Other LGBT-related events have also been canceled 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.

Jakarta was set to host ASEAN Queer Advocacy Week from July 17, bringing together activists from across Southeast Asia to discuss advocacy and navigating challenges. It was jointly organized by Philippines’ rights group ASEAN SOGIE Caucus, Indonesia’s Arus Pelangi and other activists.

But ASEAN SOGIE Caucus said it had now moved the event outside Indonesia “to ensure the safety and security of both the participants and the organizer”.

“The organizers of the ASEAN Queer Advocacy Week decided to relocate the venue of the program 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 organizers 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 ASEAN gathering.

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.”

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