According to VOA Indonesia, officers from the Public Order Agency (Satpol PP) of Pesisir Barat Regency apprehended the trio before hosing them down in what they described as “mandi wajib,” an Islamic bathing ritual that removes one’s “junub” or state of “impurity” associated with sexual intercourse.





Satpol PP then uploaded photos of the aftermath on its Facebook page, which Human Rights Watch (HRW) Indonesia researcher Andreas Harsono then shared on Twitter.





In response, LBH Masyarakat (Community Legal Aid Foundation) slammed the officers’ act as extrajudicial.





“Is there [any law justifying] such an inhumane act, hosing down people at night using a fire truck hose? Is there any punishment like that in the regional bylaw? No there isn’t,” spokeswoman Naila Rizki said. “[The officers’] intention was to torture people, demean them. So [the officers’] goal is not to enforce the law but to uphold their own version of morality.”



