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Gay Indonesian policeman loses legal bid for reinstatement

STANLEY WIDIANTO

A gay Indonesian policeman dismissed from the force because of his sexual orientation has lost his legal fight to be reinstated, after a Central Java court rejected his lawsuit, according to his lawyers.

Tri Teguh Pujianto, a 31-year-old former police brigadier, was fired in 2018 after 10 years in the job, after police from a different town apprehended he and his partner on Valentine’s Day when they were saying their goodbyes at his partner’s workplace.

Teguh’s lawyers from the non-governmental group Community Legal Aid Institute in a statement said the local administrative court had rejected his suit.

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The court’s website confirmed that a decision had been made but did not state the outcome. A court official contacted by Reuters did not immediately respond to a request for comment

Aisya Humaida, one of Teguh’s lawyers, said they were still considering their options, including an appeal.

She expressed disappointment at the court’s decision not to proceed with a case during which the legal team had sought to prove that discrimination had occurred.

A spokesman for Central Java police did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Deemed a landmark case by rights groups, it was initially thrown out in 2019 because a judge told Teguh that an internal police appeals process had yet to be completed. He resubmitted his lawsuit last August.

Apart from the sharia-ruled province of Aceh where same-sex relations are banned, homosexuality is not illegal in Indonesia although it is widely seen as taboo.

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Central Java police had accused Teguh of violating police ethical codes “by the deviant act of having same-sex intercourse”, according to a court document.

Usman Hamid, director of Amnesty International Indonesia, said the ruling “could create a bad and dangerous precedent for other members of the police”.

Teguh told Reuters in an interview last month that his most current suit was his “last-ditch effort.”

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By The African Mirror

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