Houston Chronicle

8 to serve jail time for enslaving fishermen in Indonesia

- By Daniel Leonard

AMBON, Indonesia — Five Thai fishing boat captains and three Indonesian­s were sentenced Thursday to three years in jail for human traffickin­g in connection with slavery in the seafood industry.

The suspects were arrested in the remote island village of Benjina last May after the abuse was revealed by The Associated Press in a report two months earlier. The men were tried separately in Tual, an island in southeaste­rn Maluku province, about 1,800 miles east of Jakarta.

The three-judge panel also ordered the defendants to pay fines of about $12,250 each or serve two more months in jail. In addition, the Thai captains — Youngyut Nitiwongch­aeron, Boonsom Jaika, Surachai Maneephong, Hatsaphon Phaetjakre­ng and Somchit Korraneesu­k — have to pay a total of $67,800 in compensati­on to their crew members.

Indonesian prosecutor­s had demanded prison sentences of up to 4½ years for the five Thais and Indonesian Hermanwir Martino, and 3½-year sentences for two other Indonesian­s, Yopi Hanorsian and Muklis Ohoitenan. They also demanded compensati­on ranging from $3,750 to $26,000 for the crew members.

Thirteen fishermen from Myanmar testified under protection of Indonesia’s Witness and Victim Protection Agency. They told the court they had been tortured, forced to work up to 24 hours a day and not paid. They also said they were locked in a prison-like cell in a compound owned by fishing company Pusaka Benjina Resources, which has since been shut down. Martino and Ohoitenan worked for the company, and Hanorsian was known as the “enforcer” among the fishermen, who accused him of beating and torturing them in front of an Indonesian flag until they collapsed.

Some workers were angered by the outcome.

“They should be sentenced more because they tortured many fishermen for years. It’s not fair for us,” said Win Ko Naing, 26, who was enslaved in Benjina for almost six years. He has been following the case closely from Myanmar, but did not testify at the trial.

“They will never pay us compensati­on because they know how to get away from punishment,” he added. “I will never forget what they did to many people over many years. Three years imprisonme­nt is too easy for them. “

The AP investigat­ion found that thousands of poor migrant fishermen, mostly from Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos, were recruited in Thailand and brought to Indonesia using fake travel documents where they were subjected to brutal labor abuses. Some had been enslaved for years or decades. The AP found some men locked in a cage. A company graveyard with dozens of bodies buried under fake names was also located. The Indonesian government carried out a dramatic rescue in Benjina in April, just over a week after the report ran.

More than 2,000 men were freed and sent home last year as a result of the investigat­ion, which traced slave-caught seafood to some of the most wellknown U.S. grocery stores and pet food brands, including Wal-Mart, Sysco, Kroger, Fancy Feast, Meow Mix and Iams.

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