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  1. #1
    I am in Jail

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    Uganda seeking miniskirt ban

    Uganda seeking miniskirt ban



    Uganda's ethics and integrity minister says miniskirts should be banned - because women wearing them distract drivers and cause traffic accidents.

    Nsaba Buturo told journalists in Kampala that wearing a miniskirt was like to walking naked in the streets.

    "What's wrong with a miniskirt? You can cause an accident because some of our people are weak mentally," he said.

    The BBC's Joshua Mmali in Kampala, the capital, said journalists found the minister's comments extremely funny.

    Wearing a miniskirt should be regarded as "indecent", which would be punishable under Ugandan law, Mr Buturo said.

    And he railed against the dangers facing those inadvertently distracted by short skirts.

    "If you find a naked person you begin to concentrate on the make-up of that person and yet you are driving," he said.

    "These days you hardly know who is a mother from a daughter, they are all naked."

    Vice list

    According to the minister, indecent dressing is just one of many vices facing Ugandan society.

    "Theft and embezzlement of public funds, sub-standard service delivery, greed, infidelity, prostitution, homosexuality [and] sectarianism..." he said.

    Earlier this year, Kampala's Makerere University decided to impose a dress code for women at the institution, our reporter says.

    The miniskirt and tight trousers ban has yet to be implemented, but our correspondent sought the opinions of women on campus about the minister's opinions.

    "If one wants to wear a miniskirt, it's ok. If another wants to put on a long skirt, then that's ok," one woman said.

    But others had more sympathy with Mr Buturo.

    "I think skimpy things are not good. We are keeping the dignity of Africa as ladies and we have to cover ourselves up," one woman, called Sharon, told the BBC.



    Uganda's ethics and integrity minister says miniskirts should be banned - because women wearing them distract drivers and cause traffic accidents.

    I expect Nsaba Buturo was dressed in his traditional loincloth during the interview

  2. #2
    Thailand Expat
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    Quote Originally Posted by gjbkk
    According to the minister, indecent dressing is just one of many vices facing Ugandan society. "Theft and embezzlement of public funds, sub-standard service delivery,
    much bigger problems. I would have thought.

  3. #3
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    zedhex's Avatar
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    Politicians have to be seen to be 'doing something'. But fixing major problems like corruption, unemployment and crime is difficult. Passing laws banning mini-skirts is easy. It works the same in any country.

  4. #4
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    blackgang's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by zedhex
    Politicians have to be seen to be 'doing something'. But fixing major problems like corruption, unemployment and crime is difficult. Passing laws banning mini-skirts is easy. It works the same in any country.
    Sounds like Thailand in that respect, make a bunch of laws that they have no intention of enforcing just to prove that they were actually at the office and doing something besides smoking dope

  5. #5

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    Quote Originally Posted by kingwilly
    much bigger problems. I would have thought.
    Quote Originally Posted by gjbkk
    homosexuality
    You forgot this one

  6. #6
    Thailand Expat
    William's Avatar
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    A similar topic:

    Bali bristles over bikini ban bill


    September 18, 2008 - 4:02PM

    The Indonesian resort isle of Bali is up in arms over a new pornography bill which some say threatens Hindu traditions and bikini-clad tourism.
    From its mountain temples festooned in ancient phallic symbols to its pristine beaches where Westerners bask in skimpy swimmers, Bali is an island famous for its easy-going lifestyle and sensual charms.
    But a new bill designed to define pornography and set a moral tone across the vast, mainly Muslim archipelago of Indonesia is threatening to change all that, according to critics here.
    Balinese legislators, rights activists, artists and tourism entrepreneurs are planning to join forces in a campaign of civil disobedience against what they say is ill-conceived and politically motivated meddling from Jakarta.
    They say the bill overlaps with earlier legislation, defines pornography too broadly and will encourage Muslim extremists to enforce their values on Hindu Bali.
    "Balinese and other ethnic groups have a different view on what sexual or pornographic materials are," local intellectual Wayan Sayoga said at a protest rally of 5000 people here Wednesday.
    "We can view nudity without being trapped by lust because we look at it from an aesthetical perspective."
    The bill, which could be passed in a matter of weeks, criminalises all public acts and material capable of raising sexual desires or violating "community morality," including poetry and music.
    Protesters wore traditional clothes, see-through temple blouses, performed traditional dances and read a poem that repeated the word "genital."
    "The government should never forget that Indonesia is a country based on non-discrimination over race, religion and ethnicity," activist Luh Anggraeni said.
    "This porn bill is a serious threat to the country's unity since it disrespects the perspective of others on many things."
    Luh Anggraeni of the Bali People's Component, an umbrella group of artists and intellectuals opposed to the draft law, said it would criminalise innocent people who did not follow strict Islamic notions of decency.
    "So we will see more women and men arrested in future because they wear clothes or stage art performances that according to the hardliners are violating the pornography law," she said.
    The same bill drew large protests in Bali and other islands two years ago, but Jakarta-based MPs backed by Muslim parties have pushed ahead with the plan and parliament is expected to pass it into law in October.

    Bali Governor Made Mangku Pastika has said the bill fails to consider cultural diversity in a nation which stretches from the conservative Islamic province of Aceh to the animist highlands of Papua, where women go topless and men wear almost nothing but long gourds on their penises.
    "It should provide sufficient space to accommodate the prevailing local wisdom in different communities across the nation," former police detective Pastika was quoted as saying in The Jakarta Post.
    "Many people in Papua still live naked or half-naked. Are we going to arrest them all?"
    The bill has been opposed by the Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) of former president Megawati Sukarnoputri but has won the support of Golkar, the country's largest party.
    Its main backer is the Islamic Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), a new force in Indonesian politics which has caught the eye of mainstream parties as a potential coalition partner after general elections next April.
    One PKS leader has reportedly described the expected passing of the bill into law as a "gift" to the country for the ongoing Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
    Critics say Balinese customs threatened by the bill include the ubiquitous Hindu religious statues of Lingga and Yoni that depict male and female genitals, and the Kecak dance which is performed semi-naked.
    PDI-P lawmaker Made Arjaya said the bill could also hurt the lucrative tourism industry, which is still recovering from the terrorist bombings on Bali in 2002 and 2005.
    "I can't imagine the impact on all the hotels and the tourists we have here if the government insists on issuing the porn law. Everyone will probably be afraid to come to Bali," he said.
    AFP

    This story was found at: Bali bristles over bikini ban bill - News - Travel - smh.com.au


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