JAKARTA, Indonesia — The Indonesian president, Joko
Widodo, signed a decree on Wednesday authorizing chemical castration for
convicted child sex offenders and requiring those released on parole to
wear electronic monitoring devices.
The new
punishment comes in response to the brutal gang rape and murder in April
of a 14-year-old girl on her way home on the island of Sumatra. Seven
teenage boys were each sentenced to 10 years in prison for the crime,
which prompted national outrage and revived previous calls for chemical
castration as a punishment against child sex offenders.
Mr.
Joko told a news conference at the presidential palace in Jakarta, the
Indonesian capital, that he had signed a decree amending the country’s
2002 law on child protection to enable judges to hand down the
punishment at their discretion.
“The inclusion of
such an amendment will provide space for the judge to decide severe
punishments as a deterrent effect on perpetrators,” Mr. Joko said.
“These
crimes have undermined the development of children, and these crimes
have disturbed our sense of peace, security and public order,” he said.
“So, we will handle it in an extraordinary way.”
Mr. Joko said that “sexual violence against children has increased significantly” in Indonesia,
although his government has not provided data to back his assertions.
He also increased the jail sentences for child sex offenders to a
maximum of 20 years from 10 years.
Last year, Mr. Joko, claiming Indonesia was facing a “drugs crisis,” removed an unofficial moratorium on capital punishment by executing 13 convicted drug traffickers
by firing squad, all but one of them foreigners, prompting
international condemnation. A second Indonesian was also executed for
murder.
The
local news media has cited the country’s National Commission on
Violence Against Women as saying that around 35 Indonesian women a day
are victims of sexual violence.
Through chemical
castration, drugs are used to reduce a person’s sex drive. A number of
countries have employed the punishment for convicted sex offenders and
pedophiles, in many cases in exchange for more lenient prison sentences.
They include Australia, Russia, South Korea and the United States.
However, there are many skeptics of the procedure, which was first performed in the 1940s.
“Chemical
castration risks offering a false solution, and a simple one, to what
is inevitably a complex and difficult problem,” said Heather Barr, a
senior researcher on women’s rights with Human Rights Watch, the New
York-based organization.
“Protecting children from
sexual abuse requires a complex and carefully calibrated set of
responses,” she said, including an effective social services system,
school-based efforts to prevent and detect abuse, treatment services for
people at risk of abusing children and criminal justice measures that
focus on prevention.
“Chemical castration on its
own addresses none of these needs,” Ms. Barr continued, “and medical
interventions should be used, if at all, only as part of a skilled
treatment program, not as a punishment.”
http://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/05/26/world/asia/indonesia-chemical-castration.html?_r=2&referer
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