http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/jakarta/putting-indonesias-children-first-orphanage-abuse-in-spotlight/

Putting Indonesia’s Children First: Orphanage Abuse in Spotlight 
Allegations of abuse at a children’s home in Tangerang have raised concerns 
about other facilities nationwide

By Vita A.D. Busyra & Fana F.S. Putra on 11:30 pm March 3, 2014.
Category Crime, Featured, Human Rights, Jakarta, News
Tags: child protection, Orphanage 
 
Arist Merdeka Sirait, the chairman of the National Commission for Child 
Protection. (Komnas PA). (JG Photo/Fajrin Raharjo)

Jakarta. Ali, like most youths in Indonesia labeled “orphans,” has a family, 
but has since the sixth grade been placed in the care of an orphanage because 
his parents had no means of taking care of him, much less keeping him in school.

Today, Ali is 19, an undergraduate on a scholarship at a private university in 
Jakarta, and one of the success stories of the Putra Nusa Orphanage in Central 
Jakarta.

“Living in this place has been such a blessing for me,” says Ali, who should 
have left the orphanage when he turned 18 but has been allowed to stay on while 
he completes his studies.

“The carers have been patient and helpful in accommodating me, and the positive 
atmosphere has given me the chance to succeed academically. This place I call 
home is irreplaceable,” he tells the Jakarta Globe.

Ali is one of the fortunate ones, children from destitute families or broken 
homes who have wound up at a properly managed institution that has given them a 
chance at a bright future.

Not everyone will be so lucky, says Eti Nurbaeti, the treasurer at the Putra 
Nusa home.

She says that while some of the orphanage’s former wards are now studying at 
places like the University of Indonesia or the Bandung Institute of Technology 
(ITB), two of the country’s top centers of higher learning, the majority can’t 
expect to aim as high and have to settle for what few job opportunities are 
available right out of school.

“We’ve been asking the Jakarta government to provide jobs for the children 
after they finish vocational school, but they’ve ignored our requests,” Eti 
says. “The only thing we can do is guide the children based on their passions, 
so that when they finish school they can immediately be employed by any 
institution.”

She says Putra Nusa is currently home to 45 boys and 40 girls, ranging in age 
from 7 to 19 years. She says 38 of them are parentless, eight are from broken 
homes, and the rest have families that are destitute.

Taking advantage

The issue of the country’s orphanages shot into the public glare last month 
with allegations that children at a home in Tangerang, the Samuel Orphanage, 
had been mistreated and abused by the staff.

Twenty-six of the children have since been removed and placed in other homes, 
including infants as young as three months. Police are now investigating the 
orphanage’s administrator, Chemy Watulingas, and his wife Yuni for allegations 
of abuse.

The question of the orphanage’s legitimacy is also in question, with Arist 
Merdeka Sirait, the chairman of the National Commission for Child Protection 
(Komnas PA), who led the evacuation of the children from the facility, saying 
he suspected Chemy had no license to run and orphanage.

“The owner took advantage of the children’s vulnerable positions by mistreating 
them, restricting their freedom of expression, and forcing them to obey rules,” 
Arist tells the Globe.

He says he believes the practice has been going on for years, and has left 
permanent psychological scars on the children.

“Children have different ways of dealing with abuse,” he says. “Some will 
isolate themselves because they develop a high level of distrust against 
people, often feeling insecure. Others become very aggressive and tend to pick 
fights with their peers.”

A lawyer representing the children says the latter appears to be the case among 
some of the children taken from the Samuel Orphanage, who were reported to be 
hitting one another and stealing items at the safe house provided for them by 
the Social Affairs Ministry.

“They usually steal food items,” the lawyer said as quoted by Merdeka.com. 
“Whenever a guest comes to visit, they root into their belongings without 
permission.”

Arist says Komnas HAM received 3,039 reports of child abuse last year, an 
increase of 15 percent from the 2,637 cases reported to the commission in 2012.

But he says these figures are just the tip of the iceberg, with the vast 
majority of child abuse cases going unreported, either because the victim has 
no recourse to channels of grievances or because they are too afraid of the 
consequences.

Orphanages, he says, have a duty to protect the children in their care, but 
many unscrupulous ones simply take in the children to increase their chances of 
getting funding from the government, charitable institutions and private donors.

“Children must be allowed to know their rights,” Arist says. “For children 
living in an institution like an orphanage or a boarding school, where they are 
kept under tight surveillance by adult guardians, it is the latter who are 
responsible for explaining these rights to them so that the children won’t be 
reluctant to report crimes or offenses to a figure of trust or perhaps to the 
police.”

Unregistered orphanages

There are around 8,000 orphanages throughout Indonesia, 10 of them run by the 
central government, 200 by regional governments and the rest by private 
institutions, according to data from the Social Affairs Ministry.

The data show 2,000 of them do not have the requisite permits to operate as 
orphanages.

Samsudi, the ministry’s director general for social rehabilitation, whose 
office oversees orphanages, says the permits ensure that a given institution 
has the necessary facilities and trained human resources to properly care for 
the children.

Any orphanage found not to be complying with those standards is answerable to 
the regional social affairs office, he says, noting that in the case of the 
Samuel Orphanage, the Tangerang Social Services Agency has ordered the home 
shut down pending the police investigation.

Eti from the Putra Nusa Orphanage blasts the Samuel administrators as 
“inhumane,” saying that anyone who abused their responsibility to care for 
vulnerable children should be jailed immediately.

“I fear it will take a long time for the children to recover, emotionally and 
mentally,” she says.

The Putra Nusa Orphanage, established in 1958, is registered with the Jakarta 
Social Service Agency and has a raft of permits, says Abdulloh T.R., the head 
of the home.

He says it is funded by the Jakarta Social Services Agency, individual donors, 
and charitable institutions like the Dharma Bhakti Foundation.

Children like 14-year-old Friskila would have been fortunate to end up there. 
Instead, she found herself at the Samuel Orphanage, where she wound up taking 
care of a newborn baby named Felicia for the next one-and-a-half years, until 
their rescue last month.

She says Felicia was given up by her parents because of a deformity in the 
fingers of her right hand.

She denies some of the more outrageous claims of physical abuse, saying that at 
most Yuni used to pinch the children or get angry at them, but says the older 
children like her effectively worked there, taking care of the younger ones.

She also says the orphanage had a lot of donors, particularly during Christian 
holidays. But Chemy, a Pentecostal minister, held all the money and didn’t pay 
to get more staff or improve the facilities.

Government inaction

Maria Ulfa, a former chairwoman of the Indonesian Commission for Child 
Protection (KPAI), says it is shocking that officials never flagged the alleged 
abuse at the Samuel Orphanage in the 15 years that it had been in operation.

She says the KPAI first investigated allegations of abuse at the home two years 
ago and filed a report with the police, urging them to shut it down.

“It’s truly regrettable that this case ever happened, and that there was no 
earlier action by the police or the social services agency,” she says.

Maria cites a 2011 Social Affairs Ministry regulation on child care service 
providers, which requires all licensed providers to provide regular reports to 
the government and for government officials to conduct routine inspections of 
the providers.

“The Samuel Orphanage case epitomizes the lack of monitoring and supervision by 
the local social services agency, because it has been allowed to operate 
unhindered for 15 years,” she says.

She says the Socials Affairs Ministry must be more proactive about checking on 
orphanages, and not assume that their regular reports necessarily reflect the 
true conditions in the homes.

“The ministry should have the data and records of all registered, unregistered 
and illegal orphanages from all local-level social services agencies, so that 
it can evaluate them thoroughly and set up a better system to monitor the 
running of the orphanages throughout the country,” Maria says.

Arist says the concept of the Indonesian orphanage needs to be overhauled 
completely.

Rather than see them as a place of last resort for the destitute, at best, or a 
means for generating tax-free money through donations, at worst, orphanages 
should put the care of children first and foremost, he says.

“We need to set a standard for building orphanages,” he says. “An orphanage 
ideally has to have a playground, hygienic restrooms, a nice pantry, a health 
clinic with a doctor, a recreation room, adequate sleeping quarters for 
toddlers and children and employees. There’s no reason to build more orphanages 
if we can’t meet those standards.”

He says that with so many orphanages not registered with the authority, and the 
likelihood of abuse taking place in many of them as well as in the registered 
one, cases like the Samuel Orphanage one are bound to recur.

“Many orphanage owners think they ‘own’ the orphans, but that’s wrong,” Arist 
says. “I would prefer if the children could be adopted by a family, which would 
be a much better environment for them. But with so many children in orphanages 
there’s no easy way to achieve this.”

Maria agrees that children would be much better off in a family environment, 
and suggests that destitute families thinking of putting their children in an 
orphanage should instead try to find a family willing to care for their child.

“Children are in better care in a family environment, either in their own 
families, or when necessary, in an adopted one,” the former commissioner says.

Back at the Putra Nusa Orphanage, 15-year-old Atrian is looking forward to a 
brighter future than his desperately poor family could have given him. At the 
government safe house, Friskila is waiting for the chance to complete her 
general equivalency test for the sixth grade.

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