That holiday you are planning with your girlfriend or boyfriend to Bali might not be so much fun after all if the Indonesian parliament has its way. The legislative body is mulling a new criminal code that could become law later this month. The bit that affects your holiday activities though is the proposed new law that would outlaw unmarried couples living together and place a criminal penalty on all sex outside of marriage.

What this means is very soon, some vacation sex might put you and your partner in an Indonesian slammer for anywhere between six months to a year, depending on which draft of the resolution becomes law this month.

No room for the unmarried?

Unmarried tourists won’t even be allowed to get a hotel room unless they have a marriage certificate to prove their relationship. Those who do not have such documentation risk falling foul of local law. It will also open tourists to harassment from corrupt local police while on holiday.

Aside from tourists, these laws will also discriminate against Indonesia’s LGBTQi community. The predominantly Muslim country has been in the process of updating its colonial-era criminal code since 1995 and this raft of proposals are part of the latest changes to criminal law being considered.

Other acts that could get you jailed in Indonesia

Other proposed changes include criminalising sex work and making it an offence for anyone who is not a health professional or “competent volunteer” to discuss contraception and family planning. Getting an abortion would also become near impossible and good luck criticising the President and Vice-President if parliament passes these laws. Also under fire–Marxist-Leninists. Being part of an organisation with such an ideology can get you 10 years in prison.

Human rights activists are petitioning the current administration led by President Joko Widodo to strike down some of the more draconian bits of the proposed legislation that will curtail civil liberties and imperil the country’s essential tourism sector. Representatives of various European countries as well as Australia have informed the Indonesian parliament that if these laws pass, the countries will have to issue update travel advisories to their citizens planning on visiting Indonesia.