New York Daily News

Indonesian teenager survives sea ordeal

- BY ALI KOTARUMALO­S

JAKARTA, Indonesia — An Indonesian teenager, who survived 49 days adrift at sea after the wooden fish trap he was employed to mind slipped its moorings, says he ran out of food within a week and survived on fish and seawater he squeezed from his clothing. Aldi Novel Adilang told The Associated Press on Monday that he turned on a lamp every time he sighted another ship and can’t remember how many passed by “unaware of my ordeal.” The Indonesian Consulate in Osaka, Japan, said the 18-yearold was rescued by a Panamanian­flagged vessel on Aug. 31 off Guam, about 1,200 miles from his original location, and returned to Indonesia officials earlier

with this month.

He was employed since age 16 in one of the world’s loneliest jobs: lamp lighter on a rompong — a wooden raft with a hut on top that’s lit at night to attract fish — moored about 78 miles off the coast of North Sulawesi.

The coastline is not visible from the fishing rafts and the numerous rompong are miles apart, said Adilang’s mother, Net Kahiking. Supplies including food and fuel for a generator are dropped off about once a week. The minders, who earn $130 a month, communicat­e with fishing boats by handheld radio.

The boy’s father, Alfian Adilang, said the family is overjoyed at his return but angry with his employer. It was the third time the teen’s raft had drifted. The previous two times it had been rescued by the owner’s ship, the boy said.

The MV Arpeggio, which rescued Adilang off Guam, contacted the Indonesian mission in Japan when it docked in Tokuyama and officials from the Osaka consulate collected him Sept. 6, the consulate said in a statement. He returned to Indonesia on Sept. 8.

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