/ 5 January 2005

Criminals may target tsunami orphans

Fears are growing for children orphaned in the tsunami disaster after a senior United Nations official warned of credible reports that criminal gangs in Indonesia are offering them for adoption or exploitation.

Carol Bellamy, executive director of the UN Children’s Fund (Unicef), said on Tuesday that organised syndicates are exploiting the crisis in Aceh province.

”They have been using sophisticated technology such as SMS messages to people throughout this region offering children for adoption,” she said, citing reports from Unicef’s partner agencies in Indonesia.

She continued: ”Whether it is [for] adoption or exploitation purposes or sex trafficking, these are criminal elements so it is very important not to let them get a foothold.”

A colleague in Kuala Lumpur received an unsolicited cellphone SMS message that offered to sell children according to buyers’ wishes, Unicef spokesperson John Budd said.

”Three hundred orphans aged three to 10 years from Aceh for adoption. All paperwork will be taken care of. No fee. Please state age and sex of child required,” the message read.

Budd said: ”If you read that text message, and if it is true, then either they have 300 orphans for sale or they have the capacity to seize children according to orders received.”

Sri Lanka is already compiling a register of orphaned children to forestall attempted trafficking. Indonesia on Tuesday said it is investigating rumours of child trafficking to Java and abroad but that there is no evidence yet to substantiate the reports.

Commander General Suyitno Landung said officers are paying particular attention to Medan, a city south of Aceh.

”They’ve been tasked to check refugee camps as to whether children there were evacuated with their families or with other people,” he said. ”The data will be compiled and crosschecked.”

On Monday, the government banned Acehnese under-16s from leaving the country.

The Medan-based Aceh Sepakat Foundation has found evidence that 20 Acehnese children have been smuggled out of the province since the disaster, according to Tuesday’s Jakarta Post newspaper.

It quoted an Aceh Sepakat manager, Mazria, as saying that the children were allegedly whisked to Malaysia and the city of Bandung in West Java by an unnamed organisation in Medan.

Gen Landung said traffickers tend to use one of three methods: posing as members of a charitable foundation, as relatives or as a foster parent.

The Jakarta Post also reported that an unnamed foundation is offering Acehnese children for fostering via cellphone SMS messages.

Indonesian Social Affairs Ministry data shows that about 35 000 Acehnese children lost one or both of their parents in the disaster.

A ministry spokesperson said on Tuesday that the department is doing all it can to prevent child trafficking.

”We are taking these reports very seriously and are doing all we can to prevent the children who lost their parents in the natural disaster from becoming victimised again,” he said.

Wivina Belmonte, a Unicef spokesperson in Geneva, said many children are in shock after losing parents or siblings and need psychological counselling.

”We probably underestimated the impact on children. Many people are already talking about the tsunami generation.”

In Sri Lanka, Unicef said there are no confirmed cases of abduction but it is working with the government to register every child in the makeshift refugee camps.

”The aim is to identify and register all children, separate those who are unaccompanied from the rest of the camp population, and arrange for fostering, preferably by a member of the extended family, or otherwise by a reputable foster carer,” Ted Chaiban, Unicef’s representative in Sri Lanka said on Tuesday night. — Guardian Unlimited Â