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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Jon Sharman

Indonesian gay couple beaten on video before vigilantes hand them over to religious police

Video captures the moment two gay men are assaulted by Indonesian vigilantes who caught them having sex and then turned them over to religious police.

The shaky footage appears to show a young man covering his head while talking on the phone, before he is struck and rocks backwards on a bed.

One of the intruders can be heard shouting in the clip as the naked man cowers. 

The pair are to go on trial in an Islamic court for having gay sex and could receive 100 strokes of the cane if found guilty, officials in the conservative province of Aceh said, sparking calls for their release.

Aceh is the only province in Muslim-majority Indonesia that criminalises same-sex relations and that uses sharia as its legal code in addition to the national criminal code.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) called on Indonesia to release the men, who were detained last month.

“These men had their privacy invaded in a frightening and humiliating manner and now face public torture for the 'crime' of their alleged sexual orientation,” HRW's Phelim Kine said earlier this week.

In 2014, Aceh enacted a law that punishes anybody caught engaging in consensual gay sex with 100 lashes, 100 months in jail or a fine of 1,000 grams of gold.

It also sets out punishment for sex crimes, unmarried people engaging in displays of affection, adulterous relationships and underage sex.

Authorities in the province on the northern tip of Sumatra island caned 339 people in 2016 for a range of crimes, according to HRW.

Religious police in Aceh have also been known to target Muslim women without head scarves or those wearing tight clothes, and people drinking alcohol or gambling.

Two women were detained in October last year on suspicion of being lesbians after they were seen hugging in public, and were made to undergo “rehabilitation”, according to media reports.

The lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community has faced growing pressure since high-ranking government officials last year expressed reservations about activism by its members.

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