The rights of all Indonesians are at greater risk following a Constitutional Court ruling this week that the central government could no longer repeal local Sharia (Islamic law) ordinances adopted in the country.
In recent years, the government had begun analyzing local regulations for compliance with Indonesia’s secular constitution, and pledged to repeal those that didn’t. “I want to underline that Indonesia is not a religiously-based country,” the home affairs minister said in 2015. But the government was tepid in its approach, steering clear of controversy by leaving Sharia ordinances intact.
|
Dispatches
Indonesia’s Jokowi Fails to Abolish Abusive Sharia Laws
Political Foot-Dragging Was Missed Opportunity to Protect Rights
Your tax deductible gift can help stop human rights violations and save lives around the world.
Most Viewed
-
January 8, 2026
Iran: Authorities’ Renewed Cycle of Protest Bloodshed
-
November 25, 2019
A Dirty Investment
-
January 8, 2026
Myanmar: Critical Hearings in Rohingya Genocide Case
-
March 29, 2021
“Everything I Have to Do is Tied to a Man”
-
December 19, 2024
Extermination and Acts of Genocide