Pages

Showing posts with label illegal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illegal. Show all posts

Papua believed to be human traffickers` market : minister

Antara News, Wednesday, January 5, 2011 

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Women`s Empowerment and Children`s Protection Minister Linda Amalia Sari said here Tuesday there were indications that Papua and West Papua were a human trafficking market.

"There are indications that Papua and West Papua have become a destination for victims of human trafficking ," said Linda who is also executive chairperson of the government`s Human Trafficking Handling and Prevention Task Force in an expose of her ministry`s work programs in 2011.

She said her ministry was making an effort to further investigate the indications and find out the truth. "We are going to folow up the clues on human trafficking victims in Papua," she added.

Based on preliminary data her ministry had received, Papua and West Papua were thriving markets for human traffickers.

"According to preliminary reports, many underage women from other parts of the country have been brought to Papua and West Papua to work as waitresses and possibly as commercial sex workers," she said.

She said she was planning to set up branches of the Human Trafficking Hand;ing and Prevention Task Force in all cities and districts in Papua and West Papua.

At present such Task Force branches already existed in 20 provinces and 70 districts across Indonesia.

"The Task Force`s function is to monitor, discuss problems and obstacles as well as to synergize implementation of prevention and management actions against human trafficking nationally," she said.

Read more

Trafficked Girl, 14, Heads Back Home

Jakarta Globe, Nurfika Osman, March 24, 2010

Police officers using a scarf to protect the identity of 14-year-old ‘H’ at the Child Protection Agency in Jakarta on Wednesday. The girl lived as a domestic servant in Aceh against her will for six months. (Antara Photo)

A14-year-old girl who was abducted by traffickers and taken to Aceh nearly six months ago will finally head back home to Banjarnegara in Central Java today.

The girl, identified only as “H,” was told by a recruitment agent that she would work on the staff of a cleaning service in Pekalongan, Central Java.

“Her mother was really sick and she was offered a job at Gedung Huni in Pekalongan,” said Taufik Riswan, the secretary general of the Rights of Acehnese Children Coalition. “However, after working for three days in Pekalongan, she was brought to Jakarta to see the capital.”

In Jakarta, Taufik said H was given a pill that knocked her out. When she woke up, she was on her way to the airport to be taken to Aceh.

“She was promised a job as a domestic worker in a house, and told she would be paid Rp 300,000 per month,” he said.

However, she was never paid and was forced to work from 4 a.m. to 11 p.m. each day.

“She was also beaten by the employer if she did not work well at the house,” he said, adding that the girl did not eat properly during her stay.

H told the Jakarta Globe, “I was exhausted, but I could not take any time to rest. My rest was only sleep at night.”

Though she was wearing a veil, a scar was visible on her forehead. According to Taufik, the girl’s employer gouged her with a knife.

H was rescued a month ago by Aceh Police after her employer’s neighbors reported what they had witnessed. She arrived at the office of the National Commission for Child Protection (KPAI) on Wednesday.

Three people have been named as suspects in this case. They are in the custody of Aceh Besar Police.

KPAI chairman Hadi Supeno said H’s case revealed a new pattern in human trafficking. “Aceh did not used to be a trafficking destination, but now we can see that underage children are trafficked to Aceh. It is hard for us now to map the illegal traffic as it has become more rampant. And we should take note that people who are involved in trafficking cases are those who are close with our children,” he said.

Zulaekha, from the Banjarnegara Women’s Empowerment and Child Protection Agency, told the Jakarta Globe that H’s hometown, the village of Dukuh Selimpet in Banjarnegara, was isolated and poor and known as a source of domestic workers.

She said H’s case was an indication of the existence of a trafficking network in Banjarnegara. “If we look at her case closely, many people are involved [in the trafficking network] from ojek [motorcycle taxi] drivers to employers. This is going to be our concern as working as domestic workers is a normal thing. But we may forget that the traffickers are behind this,” she said.

The International Labor Organization estimates that 100,000 Indonesian children are trafficked overseas and domestically every year, and between 40,000 and 70,000 become the victims of sexual exploitation.


Related Article:

RI housemaid in KL forced to sleep outside because of dog


Read more