The Jakarta Globe, October 08, 2012
A Depok junior high school expelled a 14-year-old girl on Monday who was recently kidnapped and raped by an angkot driver, saying the child had tainted the school’s reputation, according to the National Commission for Child Protection.
“The announcement was made during the flag raising ceremony in front of other students,” Arist Merdeka Sirait, chairman of the National Commission for Child Protection said on Monday. “Even though her name was not mentioned during the ceremony, when she entered her classroom, her teacher asked her to leave.”
The teenage girl was allegedly kidnapped and raped by a 24-year-old angkot driver she met on Facebook. The man reportedly raped her three times after driving her to Bogor, according to reports in Tempo.co.
He allegedly planned to sell the girl to a brothel in Batam, but dropped her off in Depok after learning that police were looking for her, Tempo.co reported.
The girl was allegedly too traumatized to return to school, Arist said. But after some time, her parents, neighbors and friends were able to convince the teenager to return to SMP Budi Utomo, in Depok.
But when the girl returned to school on Monday, she was told to leave.
“The [school] foundation did not allow my daughter to go back to school,” mother Rauden Gultom told Tempo.co. “I could not accept this.”
Arist said SMP Budi Utomo had failed to protect the victim of a terrible crime.
“Schools should be protecting victims,” Arist said. “Children have the right to have education, whether [they are the] victim or perpetrator.”
Arist sent a letter to the school, asking the administrator to allow the student back in class.
“If they [still] dismiss her, we will recommend the Ministry of Education and Culture review the school’s license for violating the children’s protection law,” Arist said.
The school called the entire ordeal a “misunderstanding.”
“She was not ousted at all,” said Ratna, an administrator at the school. “The media has wrongly written about us. It is a misunderstanding.”