Latest Punk rock fans forced to have their hair cut, change clothes and pray. December 16, 2011 1 min read Indonesian sharia police are “morally rehabilitating” young punk rock fans. Click here to read how people breach human rights… Photo by AFP: Chaideer Mahyuddin. Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: human rightspunk Karol Kamiński DIY rock music enthusiast and web-zine publisher from Warsaw, Poland. Supporting DIY ethics, local artists and promoting hardcore punk, rock, post rock and alternative music of all kinds via IDIOTEQ online channels. Contact via [email protected] You might be interested in June 24, 2026 HONDUH DAZE turn internet-age noise into punk philosophy on “Data Plan” June 24, 2026 DEAFKIDS’ Marian Sarine on living inside a rhythm, and the rivers running through CICATRIZES DO FUTURO June 23, 2026 hubris. announce European tour and share “Death”, the song that started “White Shores” June 19, 2026 OMOIYARI breaks down “The View From Halfway Down” and the PS2 case design built from a Marc Ecko book Previous Story TAKExONExSTEP – The Future Value [EP] announcement Next Story KILLSWITCH ENGAGE working on a new album Latest HONDUH DAZE turn internet-age noise into punk philosophy on “Data Plan” DEAFKIDS’ Marian Sarine on living inside a rhythm, and the rivers running through CICATRIZES DO FUTURO hubris. announce European tour and share “Death”, the song that started “White Shores” OMOIYARI breaks down “The View From Halfway Down” and the PS2 case design built from a Marc Ecko book From Drum Pattern to First Demo: How DIY Artists Shape a Song Before Recording
June 24, 2026 DEAFKIDS’ Marian Sarine on living inside a rhythm, and the rivers running through CICATRIZES DO FUTURO
June 19, 2026 OMOIYARI breaks down “The View From Halfway Down” and the PS2 case design built from a Marc Ecko book
DEAFKIDS’ Marian Sarine on living inside a rhythm, and the rivers running through CICATRIZES DO FUTURO
OMOIYARI breaks down “The View From Halfway Down” and the PS2 case design built from a Marc Ecko book