The Star Malaysia

Four jailed for torture in oil palm plantation slavery case

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FOUR Indonesian­s were each sentenced to 19 months in prison after being found guilty of torturing to death two people trafficked to work on an oil palm plantation that supplied global brands.

The victims succumbed to their injuries inside two cages on the property of a local politician in Indonesia’s North Sumatra province, in the country’s latest case of modern slavery.

Rights groups say key industries in Indonesia such as palm oil and fishing are riddled with forced labour or exploitati­on of workers.

“The defendants have been found guilty of committing torture that caused the deaths of others, which was done together,” judge halida Rahardini ruled on Wednesday in a North Sumatra court.

One of the defendants, the son of a local politician, was also ordered to pay 265 million rupiah (RM75,360) in compensati­on to the families of the victims. Prosecutor­s had been seeking a three-year sentence for each defendant.

The oil palm plantation where the cages’ occupants were forced to work had supplied major consumer goods companies such as Nestle and Unilever, according to environmen­tal investigat­ive group The Gecko Project.

Unilever suspended its ties to the plantation after being confronted by the allegation­s while Nestle said it was investigat­ing, the group said.

The grisly details of the case and use of modern slaves to service the facility run by company PT Dewa Rencana Perangin Angin have shone a light on human traffickin­g in Indonesia.

The cages, found by police conducting a graft-related raid in January, were holding 57 people, most of them drug users, male and poor, the country’s human rights commission said in a March report.

The commission said the facility had been used as an illegal drug rehab facility before its discovery to lure Indonesian­s who could be put to work on the plantation.

In 2015, hundreds of foreign fishermen were found held on the remote Indonesian island of Benjina where they were being forced to work in abusive conditions without pay.

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