http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/e-java-officials-backflip-on-exam-ban-for-pregnant-girl/440365

E. Java Officials Backflip on Exam Ban for Pregnant Girl
Nurfika Osman | May 10, 2011



An 11-year-old girl previously barred from taking national examinations in East 
Java because she was pregnant was allowed to take the tests on Tuesday after it 
was revealed she had been raped. 

After drawing the ire of government officials and women's rights activists by 
banning the girl because of her condition, the head of the Education Office in 
Mojokerto district, Muhammad Talqin, said that in light of the new information 
the girl was now being allowed to take the elementary school exams. 

"She's healthy and is taking the national examinations today," he said on 
Tuesday. 

The girl, who is six months pregnant, had been raped by a 30-year-old neighbor 
last year, Talqin said. 

He said the victim, whose parents divorced several years ago and whose mother 
died in 2009, was living with her grandmother and was being assisted by local 
child protection officials. 

The girl's suspected rapist, who has not been identified, is in police custody. 

However, even though the girl has been allowed to take the exams, Talqin said 
she would be placed in a separate room away from the other students. 

Masruchah, deputy chairwoman of the National Commission on Violence Against 
Women (Komnas Perempuan), told the Jakarta Globe that the government should 
have policies in place to ensure that pregnant students were not barred from 
taking national exams. 

"Discriminating against a student for any reason should never be allowed," she 
said. 

"Whatever their condition - as long as it doesn't disturb their activities - 
they should be allowed to do the test. 

"The Ministry of National Education should issue a decree guaranteeing that 
students, whether pregnant because they were raped or otherwise, should be 
allowed to take the national exams." 

Ibnu Hamad, a spokesman for the ministry, said its hands were tied when it came 
to enforcing policies such as that. 

"The prevailing regulations are clear that elementary school students fall 
fully under the jurisdiction of local administrations," he said. 

Education officials in each region, he added, are allowed to set their own 
standards according to local cultural leanings. 

"All we can do is try to find a way to compromise, and one way is to urge 
parents to fully support their children to continue their studies," he said. 

"There are still many parents out there who force their children to get married 
before graduating from school."


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