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Nias residents warn of child trafficking

Tuesday, June 21st, 2005

Tuesday, June 21, 2005 Abdul Khalik, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

Several prominent figures from Nias alleged on Monday that dozens of children had been taken off the island illegally since the tsunami in December.

Director of Jakarta-based Nias Potential and Empowerment Council (LP2N) Ebenezer Hia said that in addition to the 10 children now under the social affairs ministry's custody, some 30 others had been taken to the capital in the past few months without going through proper procedures.

He said he had received many requests from Nias parents asking the council to trace their children's whereabouts after being taken to Jakarta by different foundations.

"The foundations left no addresses or contact numbers. They just took the children away without any letter of approval from their parents or documents from local authorities as we've found no records in the local administration office," Ebenezer said.

Ebenezer, together with several other Nias figures, arrived at the city police headquarters on Monday to demand that the 10 children under the social welfare ministry's care in Jakarta be returned to Nias as soon as possible.

The 10 were taken to Jakarta by four people identified as Hendra, Hikua, Yohana and Halana, workers with the Youth Foundation (YWAM) in Cipayung, East Jakarta and the Nation's Hope Foundation (YHB) in Parung, Bogor, West Java.

The four, however, failed to produce letters of consent from parents and approvals from local administrations as required by law in order to take children from their parents.

The four were subsequently arrested for questioning before they were released 24 hours later. After that police arrested the head of YHB in Parung, where the children were supposedly taken to.

The 10 children are Adil Putra Jaya Lombu, 3, Fiberman Lombu, 7, Pontianu Lombu, 4, Beziduhu Lombu, 6, Jois Dorkas Orienti Lombu, 4, Yuferius Lombu, 8, Miralina Lombu, 7, Yujuniman Lombu, 7, Jhoni Alexander Hululu, 5, and Dirman Pati Yulianu Ulu, 7.

Another prominent Nias figure S. Laoli, chairman of the Nias Society Association (Himni), claimed that hundreds of Nias children had been taken to many areas in Indonesia since the massive flood in 2001, and the trafficking worsened after the tsunami.

"We just have to do a survey to find out how many children have actually been taken from our island. Several mothers said to me that they had lost their children after a foundation took them away," he explained.

Chief of the women and children unit at the city police Comr. Sri Suwari said that the police would soon return all the children, who are now in a state-run orphanage in Bambu Apus, East Jakarta, to their parents in Nias.

"Hopefully, we can return the children to their parents on Wednesday. We have questioned all witnesses, including two men identified as Edo and Benny in Nias. For now, we haven't found a criminal offense in the case," she said.

Nias children to be reunited with parents

Friday, June 17th, 2005

Friday, June 17, 2005 Abdul Khalik and Theresia Sufa, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta, Bogor

Ten young children from Nias, brought to Jakarta on Tuesday without proper documents, will soon be returned to their parents, pending identification of their families and addresses in the earthquake-ravaged island.

Jakarta police said on Thursday that the children were currently staying at the government-run orphanage in Bambu Apus, East Jakarta.

"All of them are healthy. After discussions with the ministry of social affairs, we decided to put them in an orphanage under the ministry's auspices," Comr. Edi Tambunan, chief of women and children affairs at the city police, said.

He said that his team and a local non-governmental organization (NGO) in Nias were now trying to locate the parents because nobody else had the right to take care of them.

Jakarta police arrested on Tuesday four people identified as Hendra, Hikua, Yohana and Halana. They then took the 10 children away from them the group after they had all arrived together at Tanjung Priok port, presumably after taking the children off of Nias.

The children have been identified as Adil Putra Jaya Lombu, 3, Fiberman Lombu, 7, Pontianu Lombu, 4, Beziduhu Lombu, 6, Jois Dorkas Orienti Lombu, 4, Yuferius Lombu, 8, Miralina Lombu, 7, Yujuniman Lombu, 7, Jhoni Alexander Hululu, 5, and Dirman Pati Yulianu Ulu, 7.

The police discovered that the four adults did not have the necessary documents to take the kids from Nias island.

Suspecting that the four were part of a child trafficking syndicate, with the intention to sell them overseas, the police detained them and interrogated them.

It was found that the four were staff members from a group called the Youth Foundation (YWAM) based in Cipayung, East Jakarta and the Nation's Hope Foundation (YHB), based in Parung, Bogor, where the children were headed.

"After interrogating them for hours we had to release them as we found that other people had told them to bring the children to Jakarta. However, we are still keeping an eye on them. We suspect two men identified as Edo and Benni were responsible," Edi surmised.

The officers here also contacted the Nias police and a local NGO to locate the two men, he said.

Edi added that the police had not declared any suspects in the case as they were still searching for more evidence.

Meanwhile, the Bogor police arrested on Thursday YHB's chairwoman Yuniati, alias Aryanti, for illegally caring for nine children from Nias, one from Pontianak, one from Kupang and one from Palembang.

"We discovered that the foundation had no permits. So, they have no right to keep the children. They said that they were going to help the children go to school, but we don't care because they have no permits to take care of the children," avowed Parung subprecinct chief Adj. Comr. Rudi Hartono.

Rudi added that they would charge Yuniati with Article 9 of Law No. 23/2002 on child protection.

Fears of child trafficking also grew following the Dec. 26 tsunami, which displaced hundreds of thousands of families.

Earthquake altered Nias’ position

Tuesday, June 7th, 2005

Tuesday, June 07, 2005 The massive quake that hit Nias island on March 28 has altered its position. (more…)