Indonesia jails pop star over Internet sex tape

JAKARTA,  (Reuters) – – An Indonesian pop star whose  sex tapes with his celebrity girlfriends spread wildly on the  internet was jailed on Monday for three and a half years, in a  case that led to a wide crackdown on Internet porn in the  country.

The trial highlighted a divide between a youthful Indonesia  set against censorship on the internet and conservative pressure  groups in the world’s most populous Muslim country who rallied  outside the court demanding a harsher penalty.

Nazril “Ariel” Irham, 30, was jailed under a controversial  pornography law, which was passed in 2008 to ban public displays  of nudity and behaviour that could incite lust.

“The defendant is legitimately and convincingly guilty of  giving chances for others to spread, make and provide  pornography,” said judge Singgih Budi Prakoso in a west Javan  court where 1,000 police tried to control a rowdy crowd.

Police said earlier a friend of Irham’s had taken the sex  tape off his computer and posted it on the Internet. Irham  denied it was him on the tape.

The crowd at the court included teenaged female fans of  Irham’s band, Peterpan, wearing T-shirts with the word  “freedom”, and skullcap- and headscarf-wearing members of  Islamic groups.

Members of both groups were angered by the verdict. Irham  was also fined 250 million rupiah ($27,692).

Under the pornography law, anyone who produces, makes,  copies, circulates, broadcasts, offers, trades, loans or  provides pornography can be jailed for between six months and 12  years and can be fined up to six billion rupiah ($665,900).

The law was seen by many as a step back in democratic and  officially secular Indonesia, where foreign investors are hoping  for more openness and pro-market reforms to increase its allure  as an emerging market investment destination.

After the Irham case blew up, Communications and Information  Minister Tifatul Sembiring, of the Islamic PKS party, called for  tighter internet controls, including requiring providers to stop  access to pornography or browsing services could be closed.

Research in Motion  , makers of the popular  Blackberry telephone and messaging system, said two weeks ago it  would comply with the government’s order to block access to  pornographic sites via its devices.