http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2009/11/13/when-women-are-banned-wearing-trousers.html

When women are banned from wearing trousers
Indraswari ,  Kuala Lumpur   |  Fri, 11/13/2009 11:59 AM  |  Opinion 



Starting from Jan. 1, 2010, there will be no more women wearing trousers in 
West Aceh. West Aceh Regent Ramli MS has signed a bylaw which prohibits women 
in the regency from wear trousers. 

To anticipate the huge number of slacks to be cut up by police during raids, 
the regental administration has prepared around 7,000 long skirts, which will 
be provided free to those caught wearing trousers.

The West Aceh regent was quoted by a newspaper last month as saying that "We 
have issued the regulation to further enforce Islamic sharia granted by the 
central government".

The new bylaw on the banning of trousers adds to another controversial law in 
Aceh launched earlier in September under the Islamic bylaw system, which 
included articles on stoning adulterers to death and caning for premarital sex. 
Across the country, the new bylaw adds to many similar policies in other 
regions which rule on women's dress code and behavior.

The report on the ban on women wearing trousers in West Aceh reminds me of 
Lubna Ahmed Al Hussein, a female Sudanese journalist who made headlines for her 
courage in challenging her government by refusing to admit that she had 
committed a crime by wearing trousers.

Lubna was caught wearing a blouse and trousers in a restaurant in Khartoum in 
July this year. Under the strict interpretation of sharia law adopted by the 
Sudanese regime, wearing trousers in public is considered indecent for a woman 
and causes "public uneasiness". The penalty for those caught violating the law 
is paying a fine, imprisonment and a flogging.

While 10 of the other women who were arrested with Lubna immediately pleaded 
guilty, paid the fines and were flogged, Lubna and two others decided to go to 
trial to challenge the law. In the end, Lubna was still found guilty and was 
asked to pay a fine or to go to prison for a month, but there was no flogging.

She refused to pay the fine and chose to go to prison instead. It turned out 
that she stayed in prison for one night only. She was freed, against her 
wishes, after the Sudanese journalist union paid the fine for her.

When I read Lubna's case, I did not think a policy banning women wearing 
trousers would exist in Indonesia until I read the report on such a policy in 
West Aceh.

Again and again women become the victims of gender-biased laws which treat 
women as no more than an object to be controlled at all times and in many 
aspects of their life.

The pretext to justify such laws is always the same: to protect women's safety 
and dignity. 

On the contrary, the laws deny women's rights and have nothing to do with their 
safety and dignity. 

Choosing what to wear, a basic right which, for many of us, is taken for 
granted, is no longer the case for women in West Aceh. 

Today it is about trousers, tomorrow it could be about women's shirts, the 
color of their clothes, their makeup, the way they walk, and the list may get 
longer.

I believe this is not about religion. This is about how a group of people in 
power interpret religion. 

These people have their own "religious" interpretations on what is considered 
indecent and immoral, force others to follow their interpretations and close 
the door on different opinions.

Sadly, such interpretations are often gender-biased and discriminate against 
women. Women's voices are rarely heard and their interests are poorly 
accommodated. Even worse, women are treated as if they are criminals who 
deserve to be punished, such as in the case of Lubna. 

It is now time for the central government to act. Regional bylaws should not 
contravene national law. More importantly, gender mainstreaming has to be 
applied in public policies at all levels. We do not want what happens in Sudan, 
to occur in West Aceh and in other parts of Indonesia.


The writer is an Indonesian visiting senior lecturer for the gender studies 
program, School of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Malaya, Kuala 
Lumpur. The opinions expressed are her own.

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