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Indonesia’s president, Joko Widodo, will soon sign a decree authorising the use of chemical castration to punish paedophiles, the attorney general said. The decision comes following a string of headline-grabbing child sex crimes.
Indonesia will join a small group of nations that allows such punishment, including Poland, Russia, and Estonia, as well as some US states. In 2011, South Korea became the first Asian country to use chemical castration as a punishment.
Widodo is expected to issue a presidential decree soon approving the punishment after the cabinet agreed to the measure late on Tuesday, Prasetyo said.
Chemical castration would involve injecting convicted paedophiles with a female hormone in the hope that “his sexual desire will vanish”, he said.
The rape of a six-year-old student by a group of janitors at the US embassy-backed Jakarta Intercultural School last year rekindled calls for tougher punishment.
A nine-year-old schoolgirl was raped and killed in the capital, Jakarta, earlier this month.
A 39-year-old man has been arrested in relation to that case. Police believe the girl was strangled with a cellphone charger cable, Indonesian media has reported.
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