Selasa, Juli 1, 2025
  • Login
SUBSCRIBE
SEJUK
No Result
View All Result
  • Isu
    • Agama
    • Disabilitas
    • Gender dan Seksual
    • Etnis
  • Liputan Kolaborasi
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • 2021
    • <2020
  • Panduan Jurnalis
  • Kontributor
  • English
  • Agenda
  • Galeri
  • Isu
    • Agama
    • Disabilitas
    • Gender dan Seksual
    • Etnis
  • Liputan Kolaborasi
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • 2021
    • <2020
  • Panduan Jurnalis
  • Kontributor
  • English
  • Agenda
  • Galeri
No Result
View All Result
SEJUK
No Result
View All Result
Home English

Unending Stigma against LGBTIQ during Covid-19 Period in Bandung

by Redaksi
29/06/2020
in English
Reading Time: 6min read
Unending Stigma against LGBTIQ during Covid-19 Period in Bandung

Pride Month 2020 (hustle4diversity.com)

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Fanny Syariful Alam

A local vlogger in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia, Ferdian Palekka is on the rise of media publication everywhere in Indonesia. On 4 May 2020, he and his team produced and released a video with the content ofa prank for transwomen in Kiaracondong, Bandung.

Transwomen in Indonesia are impacted from the Covid 19 pandemic, making them uneasy to look for work and leading to income loss potential as well as to access food and even places to live. Ferdian pranked them by giving some boxes of food. Instead, they contained decayed food and trashes as well as some bricks. In this content, he mentioned what he did was to assist the local government for monitoring the number of transwomen on the street because he thought it was inappropriate for them to wander around during the holy month, Ramadan, when most Moslems conduct their fasting.

Soon, the video drew most negative reactions due to his insensitivity to see the current condition towards the impacted ones. Most people, activists, reacted that this was a humiliation for transwomen, and it gathered a great amount of criticism. Eventually, the video was taken down officially by Youtube due to the reason of inappropriateness, while currently based on public’s reports to the police, Ferdian and his team had been arrested.

It was unfortunate that around the end of May 2020, they were released due to the victims and some transwomen’s report revoke, and ironically some periods after that the local official, the deputy of Bandung Regent welcomed him in his office, saying that it was better for him to apologize to public while adding that he was one of the talented boys, encouraging him to see better future after the arrestment.

What seems imperative to consider is the difficulty to see transwomen generally in Indonesia as same as other humans with their basic rights. Despite diversity principles in Indonesia towards backgrounds of social and culture, most public and even public officials show various objections and hatred to accept the existence of LGBTIQ societies openly. Sometimes, it becomes a reason why most of public might accept the prank for the transwomen on Youtube channel.

Government and Religion as Basis Stigma against LGBT

The vlogger at least mentioned the basis of his video: to assist the local government. The local government of West Java categorized them as a human deviation against social and religion norms so as to coordinate with the provincial police to monitor them for being “public disturbance”. In 2012, the Ministry of Social Affairs’ Regulation No.12/2012 about the Guidance of Data and Data Management of People with Social Welfare Issues and Potential of Social Welfare Resources was released and ratified by the local government of West Java through the West Java’s Regional Law no 10/2012 about Implementation of Social Welfare (bphn.go.id), underlining that one of the beneficiaries was minority group who referred to LGBT. It is inevitable to see some of them work on the street as prostitutes since hardly any formal work accepts them as their employees, as a solution, most of them work in informal sectors, such as waitress, massage parlor, hairdresser, stylist. The ones with unfortunate positions with those jobs end as street prostitutes. It is what the vlogger targeted in his prank.

The negativity against LGBT communities was almost formalized in the law of order by the local government and city municipality based on the recommendation of West Java’s Regional Ministry of Religion Affairs in 2016 (Republika: 07/03/2016). In the same year, the allegation towards lesbians and gay men was spread by Islamic Defender Front just because they lived in the boarding house together (Tempo: 27/01/2016). The front raided their boarding house, displaying a banner written “No LGBT are allowed in this area”. In the same city, another case occurred to some gay men who collaborated in Facebook as a community when some of police officers who undercovered as the community members found out that some members’ communication explicitly was considered out of norms or immoral to same-sex prostitution (Kompas: 20/10/2018). Two of the group moderators were apprehended by the police on 18 October 2018 along with some evidence, such as sex tools and contraception. This action inferred LGBT with false sexual orientation as the ones who should be fought openly. This action triggered some junior and high schools in West Java Province to settle their commitment to raid as well to eliminate LGBT students in their schools. Immediately, many local governments from the province encouraged the law of order which would restrict their existence by possible criminalization based on the State Crime Law.

Furthermore, the legalization of criminalization against LGBT through the applicable laws as well as prank towards transwomen refers to the Islamic law conducts which forbid their existence and any of their practice. The religion basis tends to provide the justification for the societies as well as the government to discriminate and to hate them, and becomes a standard to settle the regulation or law to restrict their existence openly.

Is Bandung The City of Human Rights?

The objection to admit LGBT societies’ rights, particularly transwomen’s, conjuncts with their sexual orientation conditions, which are condemned by existing religion, in Indonesia Islam due to the consideration of their deviation against God’s rules and nature. This ‘religiously legalized’ claim unfortunately becomes a fundamental in the establishment of existing applicable laws, mostly the ones of order for public. Therefore, it is socially justified when they encounter some raids and persecutions, meanwhile the government apparatus ignore their function to comply with the protection for all with no exceptions based on human rights perspectives.

Indonesia has ratified International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) through Law of Republic of Indonesia no 12/2005 about the Legalization of ICCPR. It basically secures Indonesians to be respected for their civil and political rights. Three highlighted rights as the dignity of public with no exceptions based on religions, culture, languages, sexual orientation are the rights of life, free from persecution and inhuman actions, and personal freedom and security. Despite the State Constitution and ratified ICCPR legalization, the fact of intolerant and discriminative actions against LGBT all over shows a clear disconnection between the laws and their implementation. A reluctance occurs when some government apparatus with human rights perspectives face their colleagues backed up by religious groups with strong objections against LGBT. The latter group is believed to have profound capacity to influence policy makers for their produced law to show condemn against LGBTIQ societies.

The impact from the early elaboration could be seen under Covid-19 pandemic, when transwomen, in particular, encounter some severities, such as the income loss potential, famine, and the loss of adequate places of living. Furthermore, their condition with rights to get formal jobs meet some difficulties due to their legally accepted gender identity, find informal jobs which eventually stumble them financially particularly in this pandemic period. In Indonesia, for example, this circumstance is underlined by Kanzha Vina, the head of Sanggar Swara (UNAIDS; April 2020), mentioning that more than 640 transgender people, mostly transwomen, in greater Jakarta, Indonesia have already lost their jobs, putting some hardships to support themselves. They face some upcoming problems for accessing social aids distribution, such as basic food staples, due to not having their identity cards and their gender identity. Fortunately, according to the news of UNAIDS, they set up a coalition for crisis response management, and it works well through inter-communities and partners as well as public’s fundraising and other food aids initiatives with positive response. It shows the evidence that humanity is still in people’s mind to share their help and to impose social affirmation as a part of Indonesian culture.

Remembering a flashback, Bandung used to be claimed   “the city of human rights” in December 2015 by the initiation of the past city mayor, now West Java governor, Ridwan Kamil. He underlined the establishment of Bandung as the city of human rights accorded with the city’s partiality towards minorities, statistic number of human right violations. Added by him, Bandung’s standard of human rights would refer to United Nations’ Human Rights Principles. In 2018 before the period of his governor campaign, in contrast he mentioned his plan of strict prosecutions against all LGBT societies despite his incapability to conduct them legally due to unavailable current law products.

Moreover, it is concluded that what he mentioned to promote the city’s human rights commitment relied on the harmony amid the different religions groups through open dialogues (Deklarasi Sancang). Unfortunately, he did not underline LGBT’s positions in Bandung as the city of human rights. An anomaly which disrespects human rights principle in conjunct with Universal Declaration of Human Rights as well as other relevant international covenant ratified through one of the state’s national laws.

In general, where will all the leaders in this country direct their people in sense of humanity? Or should all of us finally stand for ourselves without their support?[]

Fanny Syariful Alam is the regional coordinator and program director of Bandung School of Peace Indonesia, a youth organization working to empower youth in the city of Bandung, West Java, to improve tolerance, empathy and collaborative engagement to accomplish peace and social justice. Contact: fannyplum@gmail.com

Tags: #Bandung#LGBT#LGBTIndonesia#RidwanKamil#WestJavaLGBTIQ
Previous Post

Sineas Nia Dinata: Berpikiran kritis adalah bagian dari Pancasila

Next Post

Kebebasan beragama: dari ancaman digital ke kekerasan fisik

Redaksi

Redaksi

Journalists Association for Diversity (SEJUK) is an organization formed by journalists, activists, and writers to encourage the creation of society, with the support of the mass media, to respects, protects, and maintains diversity as part of the defense of human rights. SEJUK actively promotes perspectives of pluralism, human rights, gender, and diversity of sexuality to revive peaceful journalism. The aim is to spread issues of diversity in religion/belief, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation as well as other minority groups.

Related Posts

Dead End: How Christians Continously Being Denied to Build Church in Bandung Regency

Dead End: How Christians Continously Being Denied to Build Church in Bandung Regency

12/09/2023
Ruang Aman, Demokrasi, dan Kesetaraan untuk ASEAN

Reclaiming Safe Space, Restoring Democracy, and Equity For ASEAN

04/09/2023
God is Miraculous in Creating LGBT People

Pandemic and Religion Hit LGBT Communities

31/05/2020

Amnesty International Indonesia: Politics of Demonization Brings LGBT more Vulnerable

15/05/2020
Next Post
Kebebasan beragama: dari ancaman digital ke kekerasan fisik

Kebebasan beragama: dari ancaman digital ke kekerasan fisik

Please login to join discussion

Terpopuler

  • “Mama, Aku Lesbian dan Aku tetap Putrimu”

    “Mama, Aku Lesbian dan Aku tetap Putrimu”

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Ini Gereja Pertama di Indonesia yang Menerima LGBT dengan Terbuka

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Gereja Ortodoks Rusia di Indonesia: Menjumpa dan Menyapa yang Berbeda dengan Cinta

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Elisheva Wiriaatmadja, Contoh Penganut Judaisme yang Terbuka di Indonesia

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Dewi Kanti Rela Tak Punya Akta Nikah

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Tentang Kami

Serikat Jurnalis untuk Keberagaman (SEJUK) didirikan tahun 2008 oleh para jurnalis dari berbagai media mainstream, aktivis hak asasi manusia (HAM), dialog antar-iman dan penulis.

Hubungi Kami

Kontak

Karir

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • TikTok
  • YouTube

Community Guidelines

Kontributor

Pedoman Media Siber

© 2020 Serikat Jurnalis untuk Keberagaman

No Result
View All Result
  • Isu
    • Agama
    • Disabilitas
    • Gender dan Seksual
    • Etnis
  • Liputan Kolaborasi
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • 2021
    • <2020
  • Panduan Jurnalis
  • Kontributor
  • English
  • Agenda
  • Galeri

© 2020 Serikat Jurnalis untuk Keberagaman

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In