Indonesia mulls ban on investigative journalism, LGBTQ content

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Homosexuality is a taboo subject in Indonesia, one of the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nations, where it is illegal in the sharia-ruled Aceh province.
A drag queen performs at Mixwell Bar in Bali, Indonesia, in 2018.
A drag queen performs at Mixwell Bar in Bali, Indonesia, in 2018.Ulet Ifansasti / Getty Images file

JAKARTA — Indonesia’s parliament is proposing changes to its broadcast law that would ban investigative journalism and LGBTQ content, sparking criticism from civil society groups and filmmakers over restrictions to press freedom and creative expression.

Changes to the 2002 broadcast law were first discussed in 2020 but the details in the latest revisions have spurred concern, with Indonesia’s Press Council saying it would undermine media independence.

“The impact on press freedom is very serious,” said Arif Zulkifli, head of the council’s law and legislation division. “Indonesia’s press law says there must not be any censorship or banning of journalism. So this is contradictory.”

The government is yet to receive the draft bill, communications minister Budi Arie Setiadi told Reuters, adding the revisions must not muzzle media freedom.

The planned curbs on journalism in the world’s third-largest democracy would harm freedom of expression and hard-won liberties since Indonesia emerged from decades of authoritarian rule in 1998, journalism and civil society organizations say.

The bill does not provide details on the proposed ban on investigative reporting and how it might work, but journalist groups were concerned about censorship.

“It will mean that we as journalists will no longer be able to reveal important stories, such as on corruption, nepotism and environmental crimes,” said Bayu Wardhana, head of the association of independent journalists, of the bill.

“If the bill is implemented, there will be no press independence,” the chair of Indonesia’s Press Council, Ninik Rahayu, said, adding that the council had not been consulted during the bill’s drafting process.

The bill has drawn criticism also because it seeks to ban content displaying violence, mysticism, LGBTQ or “negative behavior or lifestyles that potentially harm the public”.

Prominent filmmaker Joko Anwar slammed the proposal, describing it as “dangerous” and “impossible” to implement.

“The ban on such content not only impedes the creativity of the creative industry, and freedom of the press, but also undermines people’s capacity to filter what they watch,” he said.

Legislators from commission 1, which is overseeing the bill, have stressed the bill’s revisions are in the initial phases and subject to change.

“We don’t want to give the impression that we are homophobic, and monitor excessively,” said Nico Siahaan, a commission 1 member, adding the law would be strongly debated.

Homosexuality is a taboo subject in Indonesia, one of the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nations, where it is illegal in the sharia-ruled Aceh province.

If passed, the changes would apply to all content broadcast in Indonesia, including online streaming platforms.

The Indonesian parliament has been deliberating a series of controversial legal revisions in recent weeks, including changes to the constitutional court law that would allow the government greater power to remove sitting judges.

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