Since early June, videos allegedly showing the pop singer Nazril Irham,
popularly known as Ariel, having sex with his actress girlfriend, Luna
Maya, and a married television presenter, Cut Tari, have spread rapidly
across the country via social networking sites, cellphones and pirated
DVDs.
Like celebrity sex scandals anywhere, the case has prompted plenty
of head-shaking. But this being Indonesia, where laws old and new
criminalize acts deemed immoral, those involved in the scandal could
suffer more than just embarrassment.
The police have so far questioned at least two celebrities about
the videos, and news reports have said that investigators are on the
trail of people suspected of distributing the clips online.
The chief detective of the national police, Gen. Ito Sumardi, said
the authorities probably would use a controversial 2008
anti-pornography law to charge those responsible for distributing the
videos. The law was passed at the urging of Islamic parties, against
the resistance of some secularists and religious minorities. It
includes heavy penalties for those who download or produce pornography —
which critics say is defined so broadly that it could effectively
criminalize many of Indonesia’s diverse non-Islamic cultures.
General Sumardi said the celebrities could also be charged if it
could be shown that they produced the videos for the consumption of
others.
“It depends on whether the clips were stolen, if the laptop was
stolen,” General Sumardi said. “We’ll know after questioning if it was
really stolen, when and where. We have to check their alibis.” He added
that the police could also arrest those involved with the videos under a
separate information technology law.
The sex scandal has opened a debate in Indonesia between defenders
of free speech and social conservatives who see the situation as a
reason for further moral regulation.
“The spread of this video is very worrying, especially if the
government or the information minister try to use it to implement a
ministerial regulation on new media content,” said the chairman of the
Alliance of Independent Journalists, Nezar Patria. “It’s kind of a test,
not only of how far the anti-pornography law can be used, but also a
test of how the instruments of the government respond to content that
wasn’t around five years ago.”
The newspapers initially gave the videos front-page coverage, and
news channels broadcast extracts of the clips until they were rebuked
by the national broadcasting commission. Articles have carried reports
that around 30 videos of Mr. Irham with dozens of women have yet to be
released.
Discussion of the scandal, dubbed Peterporn after Mr. Irham’s
band, Peterpan, briefly became the most popular topic worldwide last
week on the social networking site Twitter.
In response, the police have raided Internet cafes and schools have searched students’ cellphones.
Advertisers have deserted the celebrities allegedly involved in
the scandal, despite their denials. Both Mr. Irham and Ms. Maya, who
interviewed Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton during her visit
to Jakarta last year, have seen their advertisements for the soap brand
Lux removed.
Information Minister Tifatul Sembiring,
a member of the Islamic Prosperous Justice Party that pushed the 2008
anti-pornography law through Parliament, said the scandal was a good
reason to revive plans that were floated this year to censor the
Internet. The ideas were shelved after public objections and the
lukewarm response of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
“Indonesia is still free, but in the future we will try to
minimize the amount of access to pornographic sites,” Mr. Sembiring
said, adding that any filter would also block blasphemy, gambling,
violence and online fraud.
“I think today the people understand about the usefulness of that regulation,” he said.
“We need to make the same regulation as Australia, the same as Singapore, but not like China, I think.”
Mr. Sembiring said that it was unlikely anyone would be charged
under the anti-pornography law for the videos, but that those involved
in one video could be charged under provisions in the criminal code
banning adultery.
Despite the tough talk from conservatives, the videos remain
freely available. For social liberals, they reflect Indonesians’
attitudes toward religion and sexuality — evident in traditional
customs, often-racy popular culture and a thriving commercial sex
industry.
“We try to close our eyes that it doesn’t exist in Indonesia, but
it does exist in Indonesia,” said Julia Perez, a model, actress and
singer famous in the country for skimpy outfits and sexually suggestive
lyrics.
“We cover it with religion, we cover it with culture, but we have
to open our eyes, us Indonesian people, that there exist people like
that who love sex — sex is normal, sex is like what you need.”
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