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updated 4 Jun 2010, 10:28
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Tue, Jun 01, 2010
AFP
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Can’t buy love? Indonesia thinks foreign men should

JAKARTA - Alarm bells, not wedding bells, are ringing over Indonesian proposals to demand a 55,000-dollar “security guarantee” from foreign men who marry Indonesian women.

Enraged brides-to-be are threatening to flee the country and marry their
boyfriends abroad if the government approves the plan, which is part of a wider
marriage law reform being pushed by Muslim conservatives.

And befuddled foreign grooms are asking why they are being targeted when
stories of foreign men being exploited by gold-digging women are rife in the
Southeast Asian country.

The proposal requires foreign men wishing to wed Muslim women – it will
not apply to Christians or Buddhists or Hindus – to put a guarantee of 500
million rupiah (55,000 dollars) into a bank.

If the couple divorce, the wife will be entitled to take the money. If they
stick together for at least 10 years, they can claim it as “shared property”.

“The provision... is intended to protect the rights of women and their
children if their husbands neglect, fail to provide for, leave Indonesia
secretly... divorce or do anything which harms their interests,” the bill
says.

Love-struck couples are outraged.

“How ridiculous... the government wants to sell me off,” sniffed
36-year-old events organiser Roslina, who is planning to tie the knot with her
German boyfriend, Christopher, in September.

“My future husband will pay the amount but that’s not the point. We’ll
definitely marry abroad if this becomes law.”

A 24-year-old model who declined to be named said she and her boyfriend,
also from Germany, were being unfairly discriminated against.

“It looks like the government has no respect for Indonesian women. It’s
crazy to penalise only foreign men. Why not charge local men who marry three or
four wives but can’t afford it?” she said.

Her 39-year-old boyfriend, a banker who declined to give his name, said:
“It’s a clear statement by the government that it owns its people and it sells
them on the meat market.”

“Maybe we’ll also see catalogues in the future of women who are on the
market for sale. Maybe I can open an office abroad and start marketing
Indonesian women,” he added sarcastically.

Female student Masyita agreed: “People say that love is priceless, but you
have to pay a penalty if you fall in love in Indonesia. But don’t worry, it’s
only 500 million rupiah... so cheap, aren’t we?”

The proposal, spearheaded by the religious affairs ministry, will be sent
to parliament for approval by the end of the year, an official said.

The guarantee is designed to stop foreigners entering fake marriages in
order to set up businesses or buy property in their wives’ names, and to ensure
that women are financially secured against divorce, ministry official
Nasaruddin Umar said.

“When the women are no longer of use, it’s usually goodbye to them,” he
added without providing figures or research to back up his statement.

“Marriage is pure and sacred, it shouldn’t be tainted by lust or personal
interests. We want to protect our women.”

The plan has drawn mixed responses from the country’s clerics, women’s
groups and lawmakers.

Clerics in the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country have thrown
their weight behind the draft bill.

Critics say it will only encourage people to “live in sin” outside of
wedlock, leaving women more vulnerable.

“I applaud this proposal. We’ve heard many cases of foreigners marrying our
women and then deserting them and their kids with nothing,” Indonesian Council
of Ulema chairman Amidhan told AFP.

But lawmaker Iskan Qolba Lubis said: “People want to marry because they’re
in love so why are we making things difficult for them? It’s also
discriminatory. We wouldn’t be happy if other countries did the same to us.”

Nia Schumacher of Melati Worldwide, a group which lobbies for the interests
of people in mixed marriages, said the proposal would lead to an exodus of
“runaway brides”.

“Or the couples may not register their marriages or skip marriage
altogether and co-habit instead. Is that what the government wants?” she
asked.

Some women’s rights activists say the plan treats women like a commodity
and discriminates against foreign men.

“We clearly reject the proposal. It lowers the dignity of women and not all
foreign men have that much money,” Association of Indonesian Women in
Multinational Marriages (Srikandi) co-chairwoman Emmylia Hannig said.

“If the basis of the law is to protect women, it should apply to both
foreign and local men. There are many cases of local men having several wives
and ditching them without giving money,” she added.

Roslina said the bill was ruining romances as foreign men walked away from
promises.

“My friend has lost a potential husband. She and her French boyfriend had
been dating for four years and were planning to get married. But I heard the
wedding has been postponed indefinitely,” she said.

“The man said he’s scared to get married because it’s unfair that he needs
to pay.”

readers' comments
Yep. The foreign men mentioned are German, German, French.

Indonesia getting some kind of rebate to put in a pot, to make angmoh pay for the colonisation by the Dutch, and by the looks of it all their present-day neighbours in Europe.
Posted by Trouser Press on Tue, 1 Jun 2010 at 12:56 PM
the opinion of indian of indonesian is supported
Posted by Vachtung on Tue, 1 Jun 2010 at 12:17 PM

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