A district in Indonesia’s Aceh Province has passed legislation banning unmarried men and women from riding together on motorbikes, a lawmaker said on Monday, the latest new Islamic regulation in the conservative province.
Members of parliament in North Aceh District last week approved the regulation, which is to come into effect in a year, said lawmaker Fauzan Hamzah, adding that authorities were making “efforts to implement Shariah law fully.”
“Unmarried people sitting closely together on a motorcycle is clearly against Islamic Shariah, as it could lead to sinful acts,” Hamzah said.
Aceh, on the northern tip of Sumatra island, is the only province in the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country that is allowed to implement Islamic law; gay sex, gambling and drinking alcohol are already punishable by caning.
The province began implementing Shariah law after being granted special autonomy in 2001, an effort by the central government in Jakarta to quell a long-running separatist insurgency.
The latest move to ban shared motorbike rides, which is expected to affect more than 500,000 people on North Aceh, came after one city in Aceh in 2013 prohibited women from straddling male drivers on motorbikes, requiring that they ride sidesaddle instead.
The new regulation was the most eye-catching in a series of Islamic bylaws approved in North Aceh on Thursday last week, which also included a ban on live music performances and the separation of male and female students in school. The new rules are to take effect in May next year after a one-year grace period.
Hamzah did not say what punishments would be meted out to unmarried couples caught together on a motorbike. He did list several punishments that could be implemented for all the new Islamic laws, which ranged from a formal reprimand to fines and people being expelled from their villages.
“We will make efforts so that deeds which can lead to sin are eliminated gradually in North Aceh District,” he added.
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