Jakarta Globe, Made Arya Kencana, September 2, 2013
Dozens of Bali youths protest in support of the Miss World contest in Catur Muka statue crossing in Denpasar, Bali, on Monday, Sept 2, 2013. (JG Photo/ Made Arya Kencana) |
Denpasar.
Despite mounting calls by state officials and mass organizations for the
upcoming Miss World beauty pageant to be canceled, Bali Governor I Made Mangku
Pastika voiced his support for the event, arguing that it will present Bali and
the whole of Indonesia in a positive light.
“What is
wrong with the Miss World [pageant]? What are the reasons behind the protests
and objections?” Pastika asked on Monday.
He said
that the contest would be conducted in line with his island’s customs and not
be a showcase for indecent displays of the female figure.
“[Participants]
will follow our ethics and procedures. They will also act in accordance with
Balinese tradition and culture,” he said. “The Miss World pageant will not
bring any losses to Bali or Indonesia.”
It will,
instead, he said, boost Bali’s, and by extension Indonesia’s, international
reputation.
“For Bali,
the event could act as a free promotion. The [contest] could lead to economic
benefits and encourage tourism to the country,” he said.
The Miss
World contest has drawn criticism from the hard-line Islamic Defenders Front
(FPI) and the more moderate Indonesian Council of Ulema (MUI).
An MUI
official said the group opposed the event because exposing a woman’s body
violated Islamic teachings. He said the decision by contest organizers to
exclude the traditional bikini contest did not overcome the problem as
contestants will still be required to wear tight dresses that showed their
curves.
The FPI has
also vowed to disrupt the event, which is scheduled to include a gathering in
Bali before the main ceremony on Sept. 28 at the Sentul International
Convention Center in Bogor, West Java.
Suryadharma
Ali, Indonesia’s Minister of Religious Affairs, and Maneger Nasution, an
official at the National Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM), also condemned
the contest as not being compatible with Islamic teachings and for putting
women’s bodies on display.
Pastika, meanwhile,
dismissed concerns that the contestants will expose their aurat, or body parts
that are supposed to be clothed as stipulated by Islam, as illogical.
Echoing the
governor’s sentiments, dozens of college students and youths in Bali held a
demonstration in Denpasar on Monday in support of the pageant.
“We don’t
think the MUI should meddle [in this issue],” Gede Mas Megantara, a protest
coordinator, said. “Such an attitude is against the principles of [Indonesia’s
state ideology] Pancasila.”
The protestors
also asked for security officials to ensure that the event runs smoothly.
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