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Want to marry RI woman? Pay Rp 500m in deposit
Muninggar Sri Saraswati, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
If you happen to be a not-so-rich foreign gentleman who plans
to marry an Indonesian lady here,
you'd better tie the knot quickly as the authorities may put an expensive price
tag on Indonesian
women in the future.
Unknown
to many, the Supreme Court is mulling requiring foreign men to deposit some
Rp 500 million
(about US$50,000) before marrying Indonesian female citizens.
The idea
was recommended during a recent Supreme Court national working meeting, which
was attended
by the Supreme Court leadership and top judges from across the country. It was
not immediately clear
how the proposed scheme would be implemented.
But according
to a document studied at the meeting, such a regulation is applied in Egypt,
where foreign men are required to pay a sum of money into a state bank before
marrying Egyptian citizens.
"In
a bid to protect women, the state of Egypt requires every (male) foreigner who
plans to marry an Egyptian
citizen
to pay 25,000 Egyptian pounds into the Nasser Bank as a bond," said the
document, a copy of which
was made available to The Jakarta Post over the weekend.
The Supreme
Court may likely follow up on the idea by submitting it to the government or
the House of
Representatives, which would draft the ruling.
The recommendation
by the male-dominated Supreme Court will add to the complications faced by
transnational couples wishing to register their marriages here.
Many consider
the current Indonesian law on citizenship as failing to protect transnational
couples,
particularly marriages between Indonesian women and foreign men.
Such couples
must go through lengthy and complicated immigration and other processes to legalize
their marriage under Indonesian law.
More problems
usually occur later since the Citizenship Law (No. 62/1958), which applies the
outdated bloodline principle, does not allow foreign men married to Indonesian
women to change
nationality, while any children of the marriage will automatically take the
same citizenship as
the father.
The non-Indonesian
husband and children are then treated in much the same way as foreign tourists
or visitors. It means they must fly to neighboring countries to renew their
visas should the family
decide to live in Indonesia.
According
to the law as it now stands, when an Indonesian woman who is married to a foreign
man dies,
her name cannot be inherited by her husband and children.
The Indonesian
government instead auctions off the property within one year, leaving the mourning
family homeless.
The unfavorable
situation has forced many Indonesian women to marry their foreign fiances abroad,
although this does not actually solve the problem should they decide to live
in Indonesia.
The Ministry of Justice and Human Rights has submitted a bill to amend the 1958
Citizenship Law
to the House of Representatives. However, the House has yet to list it for further
deliberation.