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Public Penance: Unmarried Couple Endures 100 Lashes Each for Premarital Sex in Indonesia’s Aceh Province

On April 7, 2026, an unmarried couple in Aceh, Indonesia, received 100 lashes each for premarital sex. The public caning under Sharia law drew hundreds and has sparked renewed human rights debates.

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Public Penance: Unmarried Couple Endures 100 Lashes Each for Premarital Sex in Indonesia’s Aceh Province

BANDA ACEH, INDONESIA — In a stark display of Sharia law enforcement, an unmarried man and woman were subjected to 100 lashes each on Tuesday, April 7, 2026. The public execution of the sentence took place outside a mosque in the provincial capital, drawing a crowd of hundreds who gathered to witness the court-ordered punishment for premarital sex.

The couple, whose identities were withheld in accordance with local privacy protocols, was arrested earlier this year following a "community raid" in a residential neighborhood. Under Aceh’s strict Islamic Criminal Code (Qanun Jinayat), sexual relations outside of marriage are strictly forbidden and punishable by public caning.

Clad in loose-fitting white tunics, the pair was escorted onto a raised wooden platform to face their sentence. A masked "algojo" (executioner) delivered the lashes using a rattan cane in front of a gathered crowd. The ordeal proved so intense that the woman reportedly collapsed during the 60th lash, requiring a brief pause for a medical evaluation before the remaining 40 strikes were administered to complete the punishment.

Aceh remains the only province in Indonesia—the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation—permitted to implement Sharia law. This legal autonomy was granted in 2001 as part of a peace deal intended to end a decades-long separatist insurgency.

While the central government in Jakarta generally maintains a secular legal framework, Aceh has steadily expanded its religious statutes to include bans on alcohol, gambling, and "moral crimes" like same-sex relations and public displays of affection between unmarried individuals.

"This is not about cruelty; it is about upholding the law and providing a deterrent for the community," stated a local Sharia police official at the scene. "We aim to maintain the moral fabric of our society." The incident has once again ignited fierce debate between local traditionalists and international human rights organizations.

Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have repeatedly called on Indonesia to abolish the practice, labeling it "cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment." Critics argue that public caning disproportionately targets the vulnerable and creates lasting physical and psychological trauma.

Following the final lash, the couple was whisked away in an ambulance for medical treatment. While the physical wounds from the rattan cane are expected to heal, the social stigma in the conservative province often remains.

As the crowd dispersed following the midday prayers, the event served as a grim reminder of the cultural and legal divide that separates Aceh from the rest of the Indonesian archipelago. The provincial government continues to stand by the practice, citing high public support for Sharia-based governance.

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