Jakarta Globe, Tri Listiyarini, Apr 05, 2015
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| Maritime and Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti says she will closely monitor fishing companies operating in Indonesia to prevent slave labor. (Reuters Photo/Tim Wimborne) |
Jakarta.
Maritime and Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti pledged to closely monitor
fishing companies operating in Indonesia after a year-long Associated Press
investigation revealed at least one Indonesian firm — and likely many more —
using slave labor.
Susi said
she was disturbed to learn Pusaka Benjina Resources had been keeping 327
workers, mainly from Myanmar, working in captivity without pay, on pain of
torture or even death.
Her office
has since shut down the company, based in Benjina, in Maluku’s Aru Islands
district.
“We will
launch an investigation; we will sanction [those involved],” the minister said
on the sidelines of her visit to a fishing village in Pangandaran, West Java.
“In
Benjina, even though the victims are foreigners, Indonesia felt it must take
action because [the case] happened within Indonesia’s jurisdiction,” she said.
Susi said
her office quickly inspected other fishing companies operating in Benjina and
found 1,185 fishermen working there, mostly from Cambodia, Thailand and
Myanmar, in slave-like conditions.
The
minister said there was rampant evidence that other firms in the area were
using slave labor — and had been for years.
With the
help of sympathetic locals, the AP interviewed the Myanmar workers, who said
they were forced to work 22 hours a day, whipped with toxic stingray tails,
denied any pay, and barred from returning to their home country or tell anyone
about their plight. Some were put in cages.
The
director general for monitoring maritime resources, Asep Burhanuddin, said the ministry formed a task force with
the local prosecutors, immigration offices, the Indonesian Navy and National
Police.
On Friday,
days after the story broke, task force officials deployed to Benjina for a
crackdown.
“We were
able to confirm that there are slavery practices [at PBR],” Asep told Detik on
Sunday. “Some were electrocuted for the tiniest mistake like falling to sleep.
This is inhumane.”
The
workers, some of whom have been slaves for nine years, were taken to the Tual,
some 100 kilometers west of Aru Islands, where they were repatriated.
Company
officials have been charged with human trafficking and violating the Manpower
Law while the task force investigates who else may have been involved.

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