Children
are (supposedly) our future
Primastuti Handayani ;
Managing
editor at The Jakarta Post
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JAKARTA
POST, 02 Maret 2014
"Let the children’s laughter remind us how we
used to be..."
(The
Greatest Love of All, c. 1977, first sung by George Benson )
If all
adults reminisced about their childhoods, we might never hear stories of
abused children.
If only
adults were willing to share their abundant love with children, probably none
would die from malnourishment and mistreatment.
But
reality bites. The news of abused toddlers at Samuel’s Home orphanage in
Gading Serpong housing complex, Tangerang regency, shocked many.
The
allegations were first reported to the National Police on Feb. 11 by a legal
aid foundation.
Allegations
surfaced after a 20-year-old orphan escaped and reported mistreatment to the
orphanage donor. Reports said seven orphans ran away after being beaten up,
starved and made to sleep in dog cages.
The independent
National Commission for Child Protection (Komnas PA) and the police were also
informed that a three-month old baby had died at the orphanage on Feb. 15,
also allegedly from abusive treatment.
A dozen
toddlers from 32 children at the orphanage had been removed by the
authorities to a safer place.
The
orphanage’s owner, Samuel Watulinggas, is in police custody but he insisted
that there was no violence in the house.
Komnas
PA chairman Arist Merdeka Sirait questioned Banten Social Welfare Agency on
the orphanage’s operational permit and Social Welfare Ministry director
general for social rehabilitation Samsudi revealed that child abuse and human
trafficking often took place at orphanages.
“It may
happen because many orphanages do not have permits [from the ministry],” he
said.
There
are around 6,000 orphanages nationwide and some 800 of them are illegal.
Samsudi
acknowledged that monitoring by social welfare agencies in regencies or
municipalities had been very weak.
“Orphanages
are always the last option for children. If they no longer have parents or
families to take care of them or nobody wants to adopt them, then they will
stay in orphanages,” he said, adding that ideally each orphanage should refer
to the ministry’s regulation no. 30/2011 on the national standards on
parenting for child welfare institutions.
However,
alleged torture against minors at home is more common. The latest case was
when police general Brig. Gen. Mangisi Situmorang and his wife were accused
of hiring underage maids and treating them inhumanely.
Arist
said Komnas PA had detected indications of human trafficking and domestic
violence as according to the maids’ statements, they were hired by Mangisi’s
wife, Mutiara, after she paid Rp 1 million (US$86.13) per person to a labor
recruitment agency in Pulogadung, East Jakarta.
Bogor
Police have named Mutiara a suspect in the case. She has been implicated in
human trafficking and abuse of the 16 housemaids, seven of them reportedly
underage, at her home in Bogor, West Java.
She will
face multiple charges from the Human Trafficking Law, the Domestic Violence
Protection Law or the Child Protection Law and she could face 15 years
imprisonment.
The
increasing number of child abuse cases in the past four years should alert us
to be more observant of our surroundings. Komnas PA recorded that abusive
acts toward children kept rising each year from 2,335 reported cases in 2010
to 2,508 cases in 2011, 2,637 cases in 2012 and 3,023 cases last year.
The
Indonesian Child Protection Commission (KPAI) reports an increase of “around 20 to 30 percent per year” in child
abuse. Until last October, for the last three years the KPAI said an average
of 45 children were sexually abused each month.
The
Child Protection Law guarantees children’s basic rights, including health,
education, proper living and protection.
However,
many families think they have done a great deed by “unofficially employing”
children to do household chores and babysitting in exchange for their monthly
allowances and, sometimes, school tuition.
Many may
not realize that they have violated the Child Protection Law because it is a
common practice to employ generations of domestic helpers in families,
especially in Java.
Many
poor families sacrifice their children’s education because they need minors’
help to deal with daily needs. Therefore, cases of child workers in factories
are often heard.
According
to data from the International Labor Organization (ILO) in 2009, there were
about 2.3 million child workers in Indonesia.
This
figure was much higher than the Central Statistics Agency’s (BPS) 1.76
million. However, according to Komnas PA, as of July 2013 there were around
4.7 million children forced into labor.
It is easy
to conclude that these children have lost their basic rights.
Do not
imagine them playing PlayStation 4 or Xbox or having the luxury of overseas
holidays. They may not even have time for playing with kites. Many still have
to do household chores after working.
They may
not be beaten up but forcing them to do labor at a very young age is just
another form of abuse. They do not have scars on their skin but they do not
have the luxury of having a dream.
Children
are supposed to enjoy their childhood, to have beautiful dreams of what their
future will bring, to have hopes of a better life and a better world.
Adults should not turn a blind eye and deaf ears to fulfill their
needs. We should make sure that they have their basic rights. ●
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