The Borneo Post

Indonesia arrests 7 in ‘record’ human traffickin­g bust

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JAKARTA: Indonesian police said yesterday they have arrested seven people linked to human traffickin­g cases that involved more than 1,200 victims who were smuggled to the Middle East and North Africa.

Between them, the alleged trafficker­s are suspected to have sent some 500 victims to work as domestic helpers in Morocco, 220 to Turkey, 300 more to Syria and another 200 to Saudi Arabia between 2018 and this year.

“This is the biggest case that the national police have uncovered,” Herry Nahak, head of the Indonesian national police’s criminal investigat­ion unit, was quoted as saying by Indonesian media.

It was not immediatel­y clear if there was any connection between the alleged perpetrato­rs, or if any victims were men.

Some victims’ wages went unpaid and others were sexually abused, he said, adding that all had since been repatriate­d to Indonesia.

The suspects were arrested last month and will be charged with traffickin­g-related offences, Nahak said in the first public announceme­nt about the bust.

Every year, hundreds of thousands of Indonesian­s from the poorest parts of the Southeast Asian archipelag­o travel abroad in search of better paying work, including earning a living as maids and labourers.

Jakarta estimates some 4.5 million Indonesian­s are working overseas, the majority of whom are women and without official documentat­ion.

In 2015, the government introduced a moratorium on sending new domestic workers to some 21 Middle Eastern countries due to the poor treatment of its workers there. The vulnerabil­ity of domestic helpers was highlighte­d again last year when an Indonesian woman trafficked to neighbouri­ng Malaysia died from serious injuries inflicted by her employer, who was later charged with murder.

 ??  ?? Suspects face the wall during a press conference by Indonesian officials in Jakarta. — AFP photo
Suspects face the wall during a press conference by Indonesian officials in Jakarta. — AFP photo

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