The Jakarta campus
Child rape case regarded as bogus, expat community
jittery
In April, the
mother of a 5-year-old kindergartner at Jakarta Intercultural School, the
city’s most prestigious school for expatriate children and one of the most
highly regarded in Asia, charged that her son had been sodomized repeatedly in
a school bathroom by janitors.
The case,
which is universally regarded as specious, was later expanded to include school
personnel who allegedly raped other children. It has sent shudders through the
international business community because of the capricious nature of the
Indonesian court system and resulted in the possibility that the school, with
2,400 students and 270 teachers, could be closed as a result of a US$125
million lawsuit filed by a parent of the first child.
US Ambassador Robert O.
Blake, in a prepared statement, said the international community, foreign
investors and foreign governments are following the case very closely and that
its outcome “and what it reveals about the rule of law in Indonesia will have a
significant impact on Indonesia’s reputation abroad.”
Earlier this week, four of
the janitors were given eight years in prison by the South Jakarta District
Court for the offense and a fifth, a woman, was given seven years. A sixth
janitor was said to have committed suicide in police custody although there are
concerns that he was beaten to death.
Neil Bantleman, a
Canadian-born school administrator, and Ferdinant Tjiong, a teaching assistant,
are now facing charges they raped an additional three children although the
evidence is fanciful at best. Parents have unequivocally backed both the
teachers and the janitors and medical authorities say the rapes never took
place.
The school’s main campus,
opened 60 years ago, now stands on some of Jakarta’s most valuable real estate.
Unnamed interests in Jakarta are said to covet the 49 acres of property that
the school’s three campuses sit on in the event that it is closed as a result
of the US$125 million lawsuit. There are deep concerns that the South Jakarta
District Court, considered one of the most corrupt in one of Asia’s most
corrupt court systems, may want to help them out.
The case has drawn
international criticism on charges that the confessions were beaten out of the
janitors, who later recanted their statements. Blake called on the Indonesian
government to investigate the allegations of torture. The Canadian and
Australian embassies have issued statements critical of the charges.
“We have been watching this
case with great interest,” Blake said in his statement. “The protection and
welfare of children is of utmost importance to educators, law enforcement, to
all of us, and all allegations of abuse must be taken seriously. However, we
note with concern that the investigative proceedings of both this case, and the
accusations against the JIS teachers, raise serious questions about the
standards of evidence applied.”
From the first, the case
has been regarded as deeply suspicious. The allegations came to light based on
a claim by the first boy’s mother, who said her son had contracted herpes after
being sodomized in the school bathroom. But laboratory and medical
reports submitted to the court found no evidence of the herpes simplex virus.
When Nairain Punjabi, the doctor who first examined the boy, asked the mother
to bring him back for further tests, she never returned. Nonetheless, she
used the inconclusive tests as the basis for a criminal complaint and to file
the lawsuit against the school.
John Kevin Baird, a
professor at the Center for Tropical Medicine at the University of Oxford’s
Nuffield Department of Medicine, who was called as a witness, told the Jakarta
Globe that “I was asked by the defense attorneys to review the clinical
laboratory evidence in the dossier for prosecuting the JIS cleaners. They asked
a simple question: ‘Is there evidence here proving [the boy] has contracted a
sexually transmitted infection?” After a thorough technical review, my answer
was a simple “No.’”
When Baird told the judges
of his findings, he said, he gathered the impression they learned for the first
time that they knew the tests used to determine whether the child had herpes
were inadequate. Baird told The Globe that he had agreed to testify
because “ I felt a moral obligation to do so, despite the risks. My view, based
on the clinical laboratory findings, is that the defendants are almost
certainly falsely accused. I could not have lived with myself had I declined to
testify. That is the truth.”
The evidence trail calls up
the tragedy of the specious McMartin preschool trial in California in the
1980s, in which six years of criminal proceedings ended with an acquittal on
the basis that the case stemmed from prosecutors coaching the allegedly
molested children.
In the Jakarta case, the
boys’ testimony includes allegations by one that he was raped multiple times
during the school day in an open, heavily populated block with glass walls
where such an act would be virtually impossible without being seen. Another
allegation was that there was a secret underground dungeon at the school where
Bantleman could click his fingers and pluck a “magic stone” out of the sky to
anesthetize the boy’s rectum before he was raped.
Other allegations include a
female principal videotaping the attack and supplying a “light blue drink” to
drug the boy. The boys, however, had never been taught by the teachers and
identified them by pointing out their photographs in a school yearbook.
Asia
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