A man who allegedly sold his 11-month-old baby on Facebook for $955 (£729) to fund his online gambling has been arrested by Indonesian police.
The 36 year-old, who is being identified as RA, was caught after the child’s biological mother returned home to find her baby missing.
Zain Dwi Nugroho, the police chief in Tangerang, a city that merges into the east of the capital, Jakarta, said: “She pressed RA to share the whereabouts of their child until he eventually confessed that he had sold the newborn.
“RA saw on Facebook that the buyers were looking to purchase a toddler so he sent them a message and arranged the purchase.”
He added that the man claimed to police that he needed the money because of financial hardships but then used the proceeds for online gambling.
The police found the baby in a rented home in Tangerang, alongside two adults who were also arrested for suspected involvement in a human trafficking network – a crime that carries a punishment of up to 15 years in jail and a 600 million rupiah fine in Indonesia.
Ai Maryati, the head of the Indonesian Child Protection Commission, told detiknews: “There is no excuse to be treating children this way and violation of their rights has to be punished severely.”
It comes a month after authorities dismantled a baby trafficking ring in the vast archipelago.
These cases are not isolated. Roughly 9.3 per cent of people were living under the international poverty line in 2023, and police say that some people consider their children as a way out.
In September, police uncovered a baby trafficking ring after receiving a tip-off in Depok, a city directly south of Jakarta, where they arrested eight people involved in buying and selling young children online.
Arya Perdan, the city’s police chief, said that the children were advertised on Facebook, with prices ranging 10 million to 15 million Indonesian rupiah (£490 to £740).
The traffickers then took the infants to Bali, where they were re-sold for as much as 45 million rupiah (£2,195), CNN Indonesia reported.
According to the United Nations, about 56 per cent of all human trafficking victims worldwide are in the Asia Pacific region, with south and south-east Asia considered key hubs for supplying victims.
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