Indonesian men in Aceh sentenced to 85 lashes each for gay sex

Two Indonesian men arrive for their trials at a shariah court in Banda Aceh on May 17, 2017. 
A sharia court on May 17 sentenced two men to be publicly caned for gay sex for the first time in Indonesia’s conservative province of Aceh, the latest sign of a backlash against homosexuals in the Muslim-majority country. PHOTO: AFP / CHAIDEER MAHYUDDIN
Two Indonesian men arrive for their trials at a shariah court in Banda Aceh on May 17, 2017. A sharia court on May 17 sentenced two men to be publicly caned for gay sex for the first time in Indonesia’s conservative province of Aceh, the latest sign of a backlash against homosexuals in the Muslim-majority country. PHOTO: AFP / CHAIDEER MAHYUDDIN

A sharia court Wednesday sentenced two men to be publicly caned for gay sex for the first time in Indonesia’s conservative province of Aceh, the latest sign of a backlash against homosexuals in the Muslim-majority country.

The pair, aged 20 and 23, were sentenced to 85 strokes of the cane each after being found guilty of breaking Aceh’s strict Islamic laws.

They were caught together in bed in March by vigilantes who burst into the boarding house where they were staying in the provincial capital of Banda Aceh.

Presiding judge Khairil Jamal told the court that the men had been “proven legally and convincingly guilty of committing gay sex, the defendants are sentenced to 85 strokes of the cane in public”. The prosecution had only requested 80 strokes.

Officials have not revealed the men’s names due to the sensitivity of the case. The sentence will be carried out at a later date.

Aceh is the only part of Indonesia, which has the world’s biggest Muslim population, that is allowed to implement sharia law and public canings for offenses ranging from gambling to drinking alcohol were already common.

But the men found guilty Wednesday will be the first to be subject to the punishment for gay sex, which was banned in Aceh under a regulation introduced in 2015. Gay sex is not illegal in the rest of Indonesia.

The verdict is the latest example of growing hostility towards Indonesia’s small lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community, which faced a backlash last year with government ministers publicly making anti-gay statements.

After the men were caught in the raid in March in the provincial capital Banda Aceh, phone footage circulated online showing the vigilantes kicking, slapping and insulting them, with one of them slumped naked on the ground.

They were then turned over to the sharia police. Authorities said the pair admitted to being in a relationship and having had sex three times.

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