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Girls in Indonesia Hold Slut Walk Protest in Miniskirts & Leggings

 Girls in Indonesia Hold Slut Walk Protest in Miniskirts & Leggings

Indonesian women staged what is believed to be the first SlutWalk demonstration in Southeast Asia, taking to the streets of Jakarta in short skirts and leggings to protest the persistent cultural and legal tendency to hold victims of sexual violence responsible for their assault.

The SlutWalk movement began in Toronto in 2011 after a police officer suggested that women could avoid sexual assault by not dressing like "sluts" — a comment that crystallized decades of feminist frustration at victim-blaming rhetoric and sparked demonstrations on six continents within months. The movement's reclamation of the word "slut" as a protest tool was controversial in many contexts, but its core message — that clothing does not cause rape and that responsibility for sexual violence lies with perpetrators rather than victims — found resonance across cultural contexts.

In Indonesia, the demonstration was notable for its courage as much as its statement. The country has a significant conservative religious constituency, and public demonstrations challenging norms around women's dress and sexuality carry real social risk. Participants faced criticism and some hostility, and the decision to march in the specific attire associated with SlutWalk required a degree of boldness that organizers acknowledged directly.

The protest was also a response to specific local legislation that critics argue embeds victim-blaming logic. Several Indonesian regional governments have passed dress codes targeting women under the guise of preventing sexual violence — regulations that feminist organizations argue misplace the burden of prevention while doing nothing to address perpetrators or improve conviction rates for assault.

The Jakarta demonstration represented a small but visible assertion that women in a Muslim-majority society could contest those norms publicly.

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