Handshake with Michelle Obama not by choice, says minister

A conservative Muslim minister admits he shook hands with first lady Michelle Obama in welcoming her to Indonesia but says it wasn’t by choice.

Footage on Youtube shows otherwise, sparking a debate that has lit up on Facebook, Twitter and the rest of the blogosphere.

“I tried to prevent being touched with my hands but Mrs Michelle held her hands too far toward me, so we touched,” information minister Tifatul Sembiring told tens of thousands of followers on Twitter.

While Indonesia has the largest Muslim population in the world, the majority practices a moderate form of faith. But Sembiring has flaunted his conservatism and says he avoids contact with women who are not related to him.

The minister was among the dignitaries in a receiving line that greeted President Barack Obama and his wife as they arrived in Jakarta on Wednesday — a homecoming of sorts for the president who spent part of his childhood here.

Indonesians gathered around television sets across the country to watch the American President touch down. Children at the school practiced a song dedicated to him just in case he visited.

In footage of the official welcome, Sembiring appeared to share his countrymen’s enthusiasm. He smiled broadly as he shook the President’s hand and then reached with both hands to grasp Michelle Obama’s. But later he said she forced their contact.

His denial was in response to tweets from Indonesians who noted the handshake and questioned his long-standing claims that, as a good Muslim, he restricts his contact with women.

Many posts had a “gotch ya'” quality to them.

One female journalist — who said the minister had refused to shake her hand — gleefully noted that now he would no longer be able to wriggle out of it.

Sembiring has often tweeted controversial comments, including blaming natural disasters on a lack of morality and joking about Aids.

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