www.nytimes.com Open in urlscan Pro
151.101.129.164  Public Scan

URL: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/18/world/asia/indonesia-slavery-drugs.html
Submission: On June 18 via manual from US — Scanned from US

Form analysis 2 forms found in the DOM

POST https://nytimes.app.goo.gl/?link=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/18/world/asia/indonesia-slavery-drugs.html&apn=com.nytimes.android&amv=9837&ibi=com.nytimes.NYTimes&isi=284862083

<form method="post" action="https://nytimes.app.goo.gl/?link=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/18/world/asia/indonesia-slavery-drugs.html&amp;apn=com.nytimes.android&amp;amv=9837&amp;ibi=com.nytimes.NYTimes&amp;isi=284862083"
  data-testid="MagicLinkForm" style="visibility: hidden;"><input name="client_id" type="hidden" value="web.fwk.vi"><input name="redirect_uri" type="hidden"
    value="https://nytimes.app.goo.gl/?link=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/18/world/asia/indonesia-slavery-drugs.html&amp;apn=com.nytimes.android&amp;amv=9837&amp;ibi=com.nytimes.NYTimes&amp;isi=284862083"><input name="response_type" type="hidden"
    value="code"><input name="state" type="hidden" value="no-state"><input name="scope" type="hidden" value="default"></form>

POST https://nytimes.app.goo.gl/?link=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/18/world/asia/indonesia-slavery-drugs.html&apn=com.nytimes.android&amv=9837&ibi=com.nytimes.NYTimes&isi=284862083

<form method="post" action="https://nytimes.app.goo.gl/?link=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/18/world/asia/indonesia-slavery-drugs.html&amp;apn=com.nytimes.android&amp;amv=9837&amp;ibi=com.nytimes.NYTimes&amp;isi=284862083"
  data-testid="MagicLinkForm" style="visibility: hidden;"><input name="client_id" type="hidden" value="web.fwk.vi"><input name="redirect_uri" type="hidden"
    value="https://nytimes.app.goo.gl/?link=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/18/world/asia/indonesia-slavery-drugs.html&amp;apn=com.nytimes.android&amp;amv=9837&amp;ibi=com.nytimes.NYTimes&amp;isi=284862083"><input name="response_type" type="hidden"
    value="code"><input name="state" type="hidden" value="no-state"><input name="scope" type="hidden" value="default"></form>

Text Content

Skip to content

Sections
SEARCH
Asia Pacific

SUBSCRIBE FOR $1/WEEKLog in
Sunday, June 18, 2023
Today’s Paper
SUBSCRIBE FOR $1/WEEK
Asia Pacific|Addicts Went in for Treatment. Instead They Were Enslaved.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/18/world/asia/indonesia-slavery-drugs.html
 * Give this article
 * 
 * 

Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



Supported by

Continue reading the main story





ADDICTS WENT IN FOR TREATMENT. INSTEAD THEY WERE ENSLAVED.

Families in Indonesia thought they were sending their sons to a rehab facility
run by a powerful local official. Those who stayed there say it was a brutal
human slavery operation.

 * Give this article
 * 
 * 
 * Read in app
   


Part of Terbit Rencana Perangin-angin’s estate, as seen from a cage where drug
addicts were held, in Raja Tengah, Indonesia.Credit...Ulet Ifansasti for The New
York Times


By Richard C. Paddock

Reporting from Raja Tengah, Indonesia

June 18, 2023, 5:00 a.m. ET

The Indonesian anti-corruption investigators began hunting for the powerful
local official after they caught two of his aides taking a $40,000 bribe.

Their six-month investigation led them to a sprawling estate in North Sumatra,
where they made a shocking discovery: 65 men locked in two cages.

The captives, investigators learned, had been imprisoned under the guise of a
drug rehabilitation program and forced to work as slaves at a palm plantation
and palm oil factory owned by the official, Terbit Rencana Perangin-angin, and
his family.

Dozens of victims told the authorities that they received no treatment for their
addiction.

“This was not rehab. This was jail,” said a former captive who goes by Bambang
and assisted two government investigations. “They treated us like animals. We
were just hopeless there.”



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



The corruption investigators arrested Mr. Perangin-angin, 50, on bribery charges
in January 2022, days after the cages were discovered. He was tried and
convicted of bribery in Jakarta, the capital, and sentenced to seven and a half
years in October. The police seized his factory and he was stripped of his
elected post as regent, similar to the leader of a county in the United States.

But Mr. Perangin-angin has not been charged or tried on any charges related to
the men who were found caged on his property.

The case highlights Indonesia’s dismal human rights record and the rampant
corruption that flourishes at the regional level, where governors, regents and
big-city mayors are often called “little kings.”


Image

Bambang said his parents sent him to Mr. Perangin-angin’s estate in early 2021
because of his meth addiction. The guards accused him of lying and whipped him
repeatedly with a compressor hose, he said.Credit...Ulet Ifansasti for The New
York Times

Image

Ardi was imprisoned at 15 and ordered to sweep floors at the regent’s
mansion.Credit...Ulet Ifansasti for The New York Times


An investigation by the North Sumatra provincial police found that 656 men and
teenage boys had been imprisoned in cages on Mr. Perangin-angin’s land during
the decade before his arrest. They were usually held for about 18 months before
being released.



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



Most of the victims were forced to work at the factory or on the plantation,
often alongside paid workers. Many were tortured, whipped, burned and sexually
assaulted. Six prisoners died, including at least three who were tortured to
death, according to Indonesia’s National Commission on Human Rights.

Former captives also cleaned Mr. Perangin-angin’s mansion, washed his vehicles
and fed his 200 cows. The captives were easily recognizable by their closely
cropped hair.

“The regent didn’t want to spend money to hire workers and so they enslaved us
by using rehab as the excuse,” said Ardi, 18, who was imprisoned at 15 and
ordered to sweep floors at the regent’s mansion. “But they never gave us any
treatment. It was basically a scam.”

Ardi is one of four victims under witness protection who agreed to speak to The
New York Times on the condition that they not be identified by their full names
for fear of retaliation.

Although the cages were an open secret in the community, local police and
officials never intervened because Mr. Perangin-angin was seen as all powerful
in Langkat Regency, the jurisdiction where the cages were found. Some police
officers and soldiers even helped guard or torture the men, victims and the
authorities said.



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



“No one could stop him,” said Rianto Wicaksono, an agent with Indonesia’s Victim
and Witness Protection Agency, an independent government agency that safeguards
victims and witnesses of crime. “The police in the area were under his command.
No one was brave enough to go up against him.”



While Mr. Perangin-angin has avoided charges in the slavery case thus far, 13 of
some 60 men identified by the victims have been prosecuted for their role in the
operation.

Victims who testified about their mistreatment say they are frustrated by the
leniency that the police and courts have shown. None of the accused has faced
more than a single charge, and the longest sentence handed down was three years.

A military court convicted five soldiers of torturing prisoners and sentenced
them to a year or less. Five police officers — including Mr. Perangin-angin’s
brother-in-law — were demoted but not charged.



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



Mr. Perangin-angin’s son, Dewa Rencana Perangin-angin, 25, was convicted in
November of torturing a man to death and sentenced to 19 months. Mr.
Perangin-angin has denied any knowledge of the operation. He and his son did not
respond to interview requests or written questions submitted through their
lawyer.


Image

Palm oil plantations near the cages where drug addicts were held.Credit...Ulet
Ifansasti for The New York Times


The push for prosecutions has been led by the witness protection agency and the
national human rights group, Kontras, which both conducted their own
investigations and urged the police to do more. The witness protection agency
estimated that Mr. Perangin-angin’s businesses made $12 million from the
captives’ unpaid labor.

“It is no surprise that the legal process would go easy on all the culprits,”
said Rahmat Muhammad, Kontras’s North Sumatra director. “It is because the
regent is wealthy and has a powerful network.”

As the top elected official of Langkat Regency, Mr. Perangin-angin enforced his
will through violence, intimidation and political connections. He headed the
locally dominant political party, as well as a politically influential youth
organization known for extortion. Relatives held key leadership positions,
including his sister, the regency parliament’s speaker.

All four victims interviewed by The Times testified against the handful of
perpetrators who have been brought to trial. The witnesses say they fear for
their safety when they see men who guarded and tortured them roaming free.



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story


Image

Rahmat Muhammad, 29, the North Sumatra coordinator of Kontras, a nonprofit group
focusing on the disappeared and victims of violence in Indonesia, in his office
in November.Credit...Ulet Ifansasti for The New York Times


Mr. Perangin-angin’s walled estate stands among the small open-air shops and
one-story houses that line the main road of Raja Tengah, a small village in
Langkat Regency.

Illegal drugs, especially meth, plague the region. Many families welcomed the
offer of free drug treatment on the estate, enrolling their children and
releasing the program from responsibility for death or injury.

Despite the program’s reputation for harsh treatment, many in the community
supported the effort to get addicts off the streets. Mr. Perangin-angin publicly
promoted the drug rehabilitation program in speeches and on a government YouTube
channel.

The two cages, built by prisoners in 2016 to replace an earlier cage, sit side
by side, half-hidden at the edge of the palm plantation. With bars like a jail,
each cell had one primitive toilet for 30 men or more.



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



Men who were caught after escaping received brutal punishment. Roni, 25, said a
guard lit his pubic hair with a match and burned the tip of his penis with a
cigarette after he was recaptured.

The guard then ordered Roni and another escapee to sodomize each other. He said
they simulated the act while the guard recorded a video. Roni said he gave the
police the names of the guard and 10 others, but none have been arrested.

He has since seen the guard several times in the village.


Image

Residential buildings for the workers at the palm oil factory owned by Mr.
Perangin-angin. The drug addicts were forced to work at the factory alongside
the workers, but were kept in cages instead.Credit...Ulet Ifansasti for The New
York Times


Sangap Surbakti, a lawyer who previously represented Mr. Perangin-angin, said
that his client was aware of the cages because he sometimes went swimming
nearby, but that he did not know that men were imprisoned, tortured and forced
to work at his properties.

“He just had bad luck because the cages were located near his house,” the lawyer
said. “He knew about the cages, but he did not know what happened in there.”



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



Mr. Surbakti said the existence of the cages was well known to provincial and
regency police chiefs and anti-narcotics officials.

“Mr. Perangin-angin just focused on the business,” he said. “He did not even
know at the time that these men were transported to the factory.”

Mei Abeto Harahap, the chief prosecutor, said the police have not found enough
evidence to support human trafficking charges against Mr. Perangin-angin and
others who have not faced trial. “We know it happened, but the police didn’t
submit the documents for these particular cases,” he said.

Hadi Wahyudi, a spokesman for the North Sumatra police, defended the
thoroughness of the police investigation and said that the police went to great
lengths to find potential witnesses to crimes that date back many years.


Image

Roni said he gave the police the names of the guards who tortured him, but none
have been arrested. He has since seen one particular guard several times in the
village.Credit...Ulet Ifansasti for The New York Times

Image

Sueb, another victim, said Dewa Perangin-angin “had this excitement seeing
people being tortured.”Credit...Ulet Ifansasti for The New York Times


Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



Bambang, 31, said his parents sent him to rehab at Mr. Perangin-angin’s estate
in early 2021 because of his meth addiction. The guards accused him of lying
about his source of drugs when he arrived and whipped him repeatedly with a
compressor hose, he said. He was given coffee grounds to put on his wounds and,
after his recovery, put to work.

Eventually, he said, his captors designated him a “cage-free man.” He was given
a key to his enclosure and ordered to supervise other men. His relative freedom
allowed him to witness many instances of torture and a killing, he said.

When Sarianto Ginting arrived on the estate for drug treatment in mid-2021, Dewa
Perangin-angin, the regent’s son, interrogated him, Bambang said.

When Mr. Ginting insisted he did not use drugs and only drank, Dewa
Perangin-angin beat him with a piece of wood and whipped him with a compressor
hose, Bambang said.

“He had this excitement seeing people being tortured,” said Sueb, 34, another
victim, describing Dewa Perangin-angin. “When he tortured people himself, it was
out of control.”



Advertisement

Continue reading the main story



Despite the man’s injuries, Dewa Perangin-angin ordered Mr. Ginting to bathe in
a nearby pond and told guards to push him in, Bambang said. The second time Mr.
Ginting went under, he did not come up.

Bambang, who helped recover Mr. Ginting’s body from the pond, said he refused an
offer of a car and $33,000 — a huge sum in the village — not to testify against
the Perangin-angins. Dewa Perangin-angin and another man were convicted of
torturing Mr. Ginting to death.

Dewa Perangin-angin was quietly released after serving half his 19-month
sentence. A video showed him smiling and dancing at a wedding this year.

Dera Menra Sijabat contributed reporting.



Richard C. Paddock has worked as a foreign correspondent in 50 countries on five
continents with postings in Moscow, Jakarta, Singapore and Bangkok. He has spent
nearly a dozen years reporting on Southeast Asia, which he has covered since
2016 as a contributor to The Times. @RCPaddock

 * Give this article
 * 
 * 
 * Read in app
   





Advertisement

Continue reading the main story




SITE INDEX




SITE INFORMATION NAVIGATION

 * © 2023 The New York Times Company

 * NYTCo
 * Contact Us
 * Accessibility
 * Work with us
 * Advertise
 * T Brand Studio
 * Your Ad Choices
 * Privacy Policy
 * Terms of Service
 * Terms of Sale
 * Site Map
 * Canada
 * International
 * Help
 * Subscriptions




READ THIS ARTICLE FOR FREE, OR GET
EVERYTHING WE OFFER.


CREATE A FREE ACCOUNT.


ACCESS ADDITIONAL ARTICLES FOR NO COST, NO CREDIT CARD INFORMATION NEEDED.


FREE

Create a free account
Already have an account? Log in.
NEW OFFER


ENJOY ALL OF THE TIMES.

ALL OF OUR NEWS COVERAGE, PLUS RECIPES, GAMES, PRODUCT REVIEWS, AND MORE.


$6.25 $1/WEEK

BILLED AS $4 EVERY 4 WEEKS FOR YOUR FIRST YEAR.

Subscribe now
Cancel or pause anytime.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Offer for a New York Times All Access subscription; current subscribers not
eligible. Subscription excludes print edition. Your payment method will
automatically be charged in advance the introductory rate of $4 every 4 weeks
for 1 year, and after 1 year the standard rate of $25 every 4 weeks. Your
subscription will continue until you cancel. Cancellation takes effect at the
end of your current billing period. Taxes may apply. Offer terms are subject to
change.
© 2023 The New York Times Company
Help
Feedback