An Indonesian court sentenced a Buddhist woman to 18 months in prison for blasphemy on Tuesday, after she was accused of insulting Islam for complaining that the neighborhood mosque was too loud, Reuters reports. Indonesia’s Constitutional Court dealt a blow to Indonesia’s already fragile religious freedom last month when it dismissed a petition to revoke the country’s blasphemy law. The government’s refusal to abolish the law, despite pressure from both the United Nations as well as the Indonesian Legal Aid Foundation raises troubling questions about the government’s willingness to respect its international human rights obligations, writes Andreas Harsono for the Human Rights Watch.