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The law - which also
allows punishments of up to 400 lashes for child rape,
100 lashes for homosexual acts and 60 lashes for
gambling - was passed unanimously on Monday by lawmakers
in the region at the northern tip of Sumatra island,
according to Agence-France Presse.
The US-based International Christian Concern has
requested Christians to pray for the believers in Aceh
province.
“The law is a part of a trend in the region of stricter
and stricter application of Islamic law - an effect that
always results in increased hostility against Chrsitians
and non-Muslims,” a spokesperson for the group said.
Human rights groups in the country have also condemned
the new law.
“The laws that have been approved in Aceh are cruel and
degrading to humanity,” National Commission on Human
Rights head Ifdhal Kasim was quoted as saying by AFP.
According to Jakarta Post, the Aceh provincial
government official has said it would not sign the
controversial Islamic by-law, but also acknowledged that
the office of the governor is power-less to stop the law
being passed.
The province of Aceh, where Islam arrived from Saudi
Arabia centuries ago, is semi-autonomous from the
central government.
Separatists in Aceh fought the Indonesian government
from 1976 until a peace deal was reached in 2005, ending
a conflict that had claimed over 15,000 lives. Since
then, its application of Islamic law has become
progressively stricter.
According to AFP, the controversial legal change was
passed just weeks before a new, more moderate provincial
assembly is due to take power. The Assembly will be
dominated by the Aceh Party of former separatist
fighters of the Free Aceh Movement (GAM).
Indonesia is an overwhelmingly Islamic country.
According to the 2000 census, Muslims make up 86.1 per
cent of the population, while Christians account for 8.6
per cent.
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