Indonesia's national
police were urged Tuesday to halt virginity tests for women applying to join
the force in the world's most populous Muslim-majority country with Human
Rights Watch saying the practice was harmful and humiliating.
The rights group said women
applicants are required to be both unmarried and virgins, and the virginity
test is still widely used despite the insistence of some senior police
officials that the practice has been discontinued.
In a series of interviews
with HRW, young women -- including some who underwent the test as recently as
this year -- described the procedure as painful and traumatic.
The women told how they
were forced to strip naked before female medics gave them a "two-finger
test", to see if their hymens were intact, a practice described by HRW as
archaic and discredited.
"I don't want to
remember those bad experiences. It was humiliating," said one
19-year-woman who took the test in the city of Pekanbaru, on western Sumatra Island,
and whose identity was not disclosed.
"Why should we take
off our clothes in front of strangers? It is not necessary. I think it should
be stopped."
Nisha Varia, associate
women's rights director at HRW, described the tests as "a discriminatory
practice that harms and humiliates women.
"Police authorities
in Jakarta need to immediately and unequivocally abolish the test, and then
make certain that all police recruiting stations nationwide stop administering
it."
The tests contravene the
police's own guidelines on recruitment and violate international human rights
to equality, non-discrimination and privacy, HRW said.
Police spokesman Ronny
Sompie said a "comprehensive health test" was carried out on all
applicants, and officials wanted to ensure that candidates were free from
sexually transmitted diseases.
He said the discovery
that a woman was not a virgin did not necessarily mean she would fail the
application process.
However HRW said that a
posting on the police's own website this month noted that female applicants
must be virgins.
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National Police High
Commissioner Sri Rumiati told the rights group that colleagues had opposed her
calls in 2010 to stop the tests and asked: "Do we want to have prostitutes
joining the police?"
Women currently make up
about three percent of the 400,000-strong force, HRW said, but added the police
had launched a drive to increase the number of female officers.
Society is deeply
conservative in parts of Indonesia and some still value female virginity
highly.
The issue hit the headlines
last year, when the education chief of a city sparked outrage by suggesting
that teenage schoolgirls should undergo virginity tests to enter senior high
school.
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