An Indonesian Tikto-Tiktoker was sentenced to nearly three-year imprisonment after reporting ‘speaks’ a picture of Jesus on his phone and told him to get a haircut.
Ratu Thaalisa, a muslim transgender woman with more than 442,000 follibrians, which is in a living life, and answer a comment that sent her to cut her hair to check for her hair.
On Monday, a medan court, Sumatra found Thalisa guilty of spreading a controversial law of online hatred, and judged her for two years and 10 months in prison.
The court said his comments could harm public order “and” religious companionship “in society, and he was commanded to blaspheme.
The court’s judgment comes after many Christian groups filed police complaints against MS Thaases for blasphemy.
Penalty was condemned by human rights groups, including Amnesty International, which describes this “a shocking attack on the freedom of declaring Ratu Thaalisa.
“The Indonesian Authorities should not use the country’s electronic information and transactions (EIT) law to punish people for comments made on social media,” Amnesty International Indonesia’s Executive Director Usman Hamid said in a statement.
“While Indonesia must prohibit the adult of religious hatred that contains the prompting of discrimination, hostility or violence, the address of Ratu Thalisa’s address.”
Mr Hamid called on Indonesian authorities to ignore MS Thalisa’s convictions and ensure that his immediate release from custody.
He also encouraged them to repeat or make many changes as he describes “problem with the provisions” of the law saying, to blame and hate.
First indicated in 2008 and revised in 2016 to answer online Chirator, EIT law is designed to protect individuals in online spaces in online spaces.
However, it is criticized, however, through groups of rights, groups and legal experts have been stressed, longing to worry about the potential threat of freedom to express.
At least 560 people were charged with the alleged violations of the EIT law while using their freedom to express between 2019 and 2024, and 421 convicted, according to the data from Amnesty International.
Those who are accused of criticizing criticism and hatred for speaking include many influences on social media.
On September 2023, a Muslim woman condemned in the prison for two years For blasphemy of Islam, after he posted a viral note video where he said a set of Islam before eating the pig.
In 2024, another tiktoler was detained for blasphemy after they posted a quiz asking children what kind of animals were read in the Quran.
Indonesia is the residence of many religious minorities, including Buddhists, Christians and Hindu. But most of Indonesia are Muslims – and most cases of people found in violation of the law are often related to religious minorities that are said to insult Islam.
Ms Thalisa’s case, where a Muslim woman is accused of speaking to hate against Christianity, less common.
The prosecutors asked him to receive a sentence of more than four years, and then the judge appealed to Monday. Ms Thalisa was given seven days to appeal.

