Indonesia’s 2008 "Cornography" Act makes it illegal for Indonesian citizens to produce, distribute, or participate in explicit content, even if the content is created outside the country.
The law applies extraterritorially, meaning an Indonesian citizen can be prosecuted upon returning home regardless of where the material was filmed or uploaded. Under this legislation, operating an only fans page qualifies as producing and distributing "Cornographic" content, and violations can lead to arrest, imprisonment, and severe social penalties. For Citra, this is not a hypothetical risk — it is a legally defined criminal offense under Indonesian law.
Citra’s situation is even more serious because of her family background. Her father is a Muslim policeman in Indonesia, a role that demands strict adherence to religious values, professional ethics, and public morality. By publicly creating explicit content on only fans, Citra has placed her father in a deeply compromising position. In conservative Muslim communities, a police officer’s reputation is tied directly to the conduct of his family. Her actions could be seen as a violation of Islamic principles, a breach of public decency, and a humiliation for a man whose job is to uphold the law. This is the kind of scandal that can damage a career, destroy social standing, and bring shame to an entire household.