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Indonesian Singapore - Child Adoption Trafficking Ring Syndicate.

joemartini

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Indonesian / Singapore - Child Adoption Trafficking Ring Syndicate.
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https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/alleged-indonesian-trafficking-ring-bringing-babies-into-singapore-being-investigated-mha-msf

09 JAN 2026

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Alleged Indonesian trafficking ring sending babies to Singapore being investigated: MHA, MSF

Reports of an alleged trafficking ring sending infants to Singapore surfaced in mid-2025 after the Indonesian authorities detained about a dozen suspects in West Java.

SINGAPORE – The Singapore and Indonesian governments are working together to review allegations of babies being trafficked into Singapore for adoption.

The Singapore authorities are also in touch with affected adoptive parents to explain the situation, said the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and the Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF) in a joint statement on Jan 9.

Reports of the alleged trafficking ring sending infants to Singapore surfaced in mid-2025 after the Indonesian authorities detained about a dozen suspects in West Java.

The Jan 9 statement said the police and MSF have asked Indonesia’s police and Ministry of Social Affairs to share their investigation findings and to verify the circumstances surrounding the children who had been brought into Singapore for adoption. The police have also been helping their Indonesian counterparts in their investigations after a request from the Indonesian police in September 2025, added the statement.

The Straits Times reported previously that the Indonesian authorities had asked the Singapore police to verify information on three Singaporeans allegedly linked to the trafficking ring.

The statement said these investigations are important as child trafficking is a serious matter.

“It exploits young children’s vulnerabilities, violates their rights and separates them from their biological families for others’ personal gain or criminal activities. It also affects the children’s long-term well-being and development,” it added.

As a result of the ongoing investigations, there have been some delays in the processing of citizenship applications for the affected children, and MSF and the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority have been engaging the adoptive parents.

MHA and MSF said: “We are keenly aware of the anxiety that the situation has caused to the adoptive parents, and are working to ensure that the cases are dealt with as expeditiously as we can, and to safeguard the welfare and interests of the children.”

Families who require financial support in the interim period can approach a social service office for assistance, the ministries added.

The Jakarta Post reported on July 18, 2025, that the West Java police had arrested 13 people suspected of trafficking dozens of newborn babies to Singapore through an illegal adoption network.

The Indonesian authorities said that a syndicate had been operating since 2023, and was believed to have trafficked at least 25 infants.

According to the report, the Indonesian authorities said that the syndicate had been operating since 2023, and was believed to have trafficked at least 25 infants, mostly to Singapore. Some were also said to have been sent to various cities across Indonesia.

An AFP report on July 15, 2025, said that the case was discovered after a parent reported an alleged baby kidnapping to the police, which led them to a suspect who admitted to trading 24 infants.

ST has contacted MHA and MSF for more information.
 
https://www.asiaone.com/singapore/babies-trafficking-probe-Indonesia

10 Jan 2026

Even after the anguish of two miscarriages in their mid-30s, Singaporean couple Sam, 37, and Jo, 41, clung on to the hope that they would one day start a family.
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They explored alternative means to realise their dream of parenthood — including in-vitro fertilisation.

When the idea of adoption came up three years ago, nothing deterred them — even when it can be costly and tedious.

"Regardless whether it’s a biological child or adopted child, we will still love the baby as our own," said Sam, who is in the finance industry.

After completing a series of steps by the Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF), including interviews and background checks that assessed their suitability for adoption, the couple contacted a Singapore-based child adoption agency, which later matched them with a baby from Indonesia.

Love at first sight

A long-distance video call in August 2023 was the first time they saw the then two-month-old baby, which according to Sam had won him over.

The adoption agency told the couple that the boy, one of five siblings, had been put up for adoption by his birth mother.

"For me, it was love at first sight," said Sam. "I remembered how he smiled. He didn’t cry the moment he saw us."


While it was an immediate "yes" from Sam, his wife, Jo, who is also in the finance industry, needed weeks of "soul searching" before agreeing to the adoption.

They even consulted a feng shui master for the infant’s new name, which reflect their hopes that the child would begin a better life.

The baby arrived in Singapore in December 2024 on a dependent’s pass, which allows a foreign child to remain here for up to 21 months until the adoption proceedings are completed.

After they were granted an adoption order by the Family Courts — giving Sam and Jo full legal rights, obligations, and responsibilities over the infant — the final hurdle was obtaining Singapore citizenship, for which they applied last September.

But the couple said that they were called for a meeting with officers from the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) and MSF a month later, who told them that all citizenship applications for adopted children from Indonesia have been put on hold.

This came after news outlets reported that Indonesian police had uncovered a trafficking ring that had sent more than a dozen babies to Singapore for adoption since 2023.

In September 2025, the Indonesian police said that they have been working with their Singapore counterparts after three Singaporeans were suspected to be involved in trafficking babies.

The allegations came as a shock to Sam and Jo, who were adamant that they did their best to ensure no laws were broken during the adoption process.

The "thorough" checks from MSF and other government agencies aside, they said that Blessful Adoption Agency — which they came across on a Facebook group for adoptive parents — had given them a complete breakdown on what the $37,000 fee would be used for.

This assured them that not a dollar would be paid to trafficking syndicates.

According to adoption documents seen by AsiaOne, half of the amount went to adoption agents in Singapore and Indonesia. A $3,000 "token sum" was paid to the birth parent, while the remainder went to expenses for the baby in Indonesia and legal costs.

"[The owner] is also an adoptive parent, so he would know what we had gone through and the difficulties we faced," said Sam, adding that he spent up to three months conducting background checks by speaking with other adoptive parents before engaging the agency to match a child.

"We were caught off guard at that moment," recalled Sam about his meeting with ICA and MSF.

"The first thought we had was 'how is our child going to be impacted?' and 'what if the birth parents come and claim that the child is part of the [trafficking] syndicate?'

"Reversing an adoption order (which they were granted from the Family Court) has not happened before in Singapore. There is no precedent, so they also don’t know how to answer us."

Added Sam: "From the day we were in the room till now, there isn’t much clarity about the whole issue."

In a joint statement, MSF and the Ministry of Home Affairs said on Friday (Jan 9) they are "keenly aware" of the anxiety the delay in granting citizenships has caused to adoptive parents.

"We are working closely across the relevant authorities to ensure that the cases are dealt with as expeditiously as we can, and to safeguard the welfare and interests of the children," the ministries said.

Singapore citizenship rejection does not cancel adoption: Lawyer

In a written reply to a parliamentary question in 2019, Minister for Home Affairs K Shanmugam said that a successful adoption does not guarantee that the child will be granted Singapore citizenship.

All citizenship applications are assessed on a range of criteria, including the circumstances of the applicant and the family, as well as the Government’s policies, including on marriage and parenthood, he added.

Criminal lawyer Mohammad Baiross of IRB Law LLP told AsiaOne that a rejected citizenship application does not reverse or cancel an adoption order.

It does not immediately lead to a child being taken away from the adoptive family either.

Once an adoption order is granted by the Family Courts, all legal ties with the biological parents are severed and the adoptive parents assume full legal parental responsibility, according to MSF.

An adoption order can only be set aside in very limited circumstances, such as fraud or a serious legal defect in how the order was obtained, said Baiross.

"Citizenship rejections do occur, and that families often respond by either re-applying at a later stage or regularising the child’s stay through other immigration passes, such as a long-term visit pass."

'Devastation an understatement'

As Sam and Jo await a resolution to their child’s future, they admitted to AsiaOne that uncertainty is taking a toll on them.

"The thought that my child might be taken away from us has never stopped. The mental load is there," said Jo, while Sam said that the "tough part is, we can’t show it to our child".

"We can’t let him feel it, right?" he added.

"And he’s here for a year. We have bonded and he has already called us ‘papa and mama’. These milestones. And then what if he has to go back? Devastation is an understatement.

"It’s painful, it’s tough, but we can only hope and pray for the best. A lot of things are not within our control."

The cost of raising the child is even higher while the application for his citizenship is put on hold, according to Sam and Jo.

The fees for playgroups, for instance, is around triple compared to a Singapore citizen, Sam said, claiming that appeals for subsidies were rejected by MSF.

MSF and MHA said in the statement that affected families who require financial support in the period of delay in Singapore citizenship applications can approach a social service office for assistance.

While the statement did not say how many parents have been affected by the delay, AsiaOne understands, after speaking with several adoption agents, that there are at least six parents facing the same issue like Sam and Jo.

All of them had engaged Blessful Adoption Agency to adopt a child from Indonesia.

Sam and Jo said that they are all "stuck in the same limbo" and are trying to get as much clarity from the authorities — on top of the bi-weekly calls with MSF and ICA.

"We want closure to move on with our lives. All I wish for my son is to be happy and we promise to give him the best as much as we can," said Sam.

AsiaOne has reached out to Blessful Adoption Agency for comment.

Despite the ongoing baby trafficking probe, several child adoption agents in Singapore told AsiaOne that demand for adoption has not dwindled.

Carl Chan, managing director at SteppingStones, said that there are more than a hundred parents waiting for a match, with the list getting "longer and longer".

His agency sees up to 10 adoptions a year, while working with parties in Southeast Asia that are "not motivated" by money, such as non-profit
organisations and child shelters.

"With the increased scrutiny for child trafficking, it’s becoming harder for any prospective parents to successfully adopt a child," said Chan.

He said that while the focus is on the alleged flow of money between illegal syndicates, he hopes this will not lead to a negative perception of Singaporean parents having to pay to adopt a child.
"If money has to be exchanged, a child coming to a good home in Singapore really is still the best option."
 
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https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cq536dew1l4o


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Reserved in the womb' and sold for £500: Police bust baby trafficking ring
18 July 2025


Indonesian police have uncovered an international baby trafficking syndicate which has allegedly sold at least 25 infants to buyers in Singapore since 2023.

Authorities made 13 arrests related to the syndicate in the Indonesian cities of Pontianak and Tangerang this week, and rescued six babies who were about to be trafficked – all of whom are around a year old.

"The babies were first housed in Pontianak and had their immigration documents arranged before being sent to Singapore," West Java Police's director of general criminal investigation, Surawan, told BBC News Indonesia.

BBC News has contacted Singapore Police and Singapore's Ministry of Home Affairs for comment, but received no response.



The syndicate's alleged modus operandi was to target parents or expectant mothers who allegedly did not want to raise their child - in some cases initiating contact via Facebook before pivoting to more private channels such as WhatsApp, according to police.

"Some babies were even reserved while still in the womb," Surawan said. "Once born, the delivery costs were covered, then compensation money was given, and the baby was taken."

Police said members of the group included recruiters who tracked down babies to be trafficked; caretakers and people who housed them; and others who prepared fraudulent civil documents such as family cards and passports, he explained.

After being taken from their mothers, the babies were given to caretakers for two to three months before being sent to Jakarta and then Pontianak, where their birth certificates, passports, and documents were prepared, police said.

The babies were sold for between 11 million Indonesian rupiah ($673; £502) and 16 million Indonesian rupiahs each, they added.

According to some of those arrested, the syndicate sold at least 12 male and 13 female babies domestically and abroad - most of them having come from various districts and cities in the Indonesian province of West Java.

Indonesian police on Thursday said that their "immediate task" was to find the adopters in Singapore.

"We will cross-check the data with the babies who departed, so we know exactly who departed, who accompanied them, when they departed, and who the adopters there are," Surawan told reporters.

Most of the information gathered by police indicated that the babies had changed nationality, he added, noting that authorities were still looking for their passports.



Surawan earlier told BBC Indonesia that the babies were obtained through agreements between the traffickers and the parents, and that none so far had been taken by kidnapping. Parents who reported their child as kidnapped did so because the broker had failed to pay them, he said.

It is suspected that at least some parents may have agreed to sell their children due to financial hardship. They too could be charged with a criminal offence, Surawan said.

"If it is proven there was an agreement between the parents and the perpetrators, they can be charged with child protection crimes and human trafficking offenses," he explained.

Police in Indonesia have requested assistance from Interpol and Singaporean police to arrest syndicate members who are still abroad, as well as buyers.

"We will list the perpetrators as wanted persons," Surawan explained. "In addition, we will issue a red notice or request law enforcement in those countries to arrest them."

Child trafficking syndicates typically target women in desperate situations, according to Ai Rahmayanti, commissioner of the Indonesian Child Protection Commission (KPAI).

"For example, they became pregnant due to sexual violence, abandonment by the husband, or unwanted pregnancies from casual relationships," she told BBC News Indonesia.

Abortion is illegal in Indonesia except under certain conditions, such as medical emergencies and pregnancies resulting from rape.

Ai Rahmayanti said baby or child trafficking syndicates often pose as maternity clinics, orphanages or social shelters that appear to care for vulnerable women and children.

"These clinics or shelters use language that sounds compassionate at first, such as 'you can give birth and take your baby home'. But in reality, they offer money and illegally transfer custody of the baby," she explains.

While there is no official data on the numbers of babies being sold in Indonesia, KPAI's own data on human trafficking crimes indicates that the trend is persistent and growing.

While in 2020 KPAI recorded 11 cases of children as victims of illegal adoption, in 2023 it recorded 59 cases related to child abduction and trafficking under the guise of illegal adoption in 2023.

One of the most recent cases that KPAI advocated occurred in 2024, when babies were found in the process of being sold in locations such as Depok, West Java and Bali.

The babies, she said, were sold at varying prices.

"In Java, [the price is] between Rp11 million and Rp15 million, while in Bali it can reach Rp20 million to Rp26 million," she explained. "The price is also based on several indicators, one of which is the baby's physical appearance."
 
https://www.mha.gov.sg/mediaroom/parliamentary/number-of-child-trafficking-and-illegal-adoption-cases-investigated-by-the-police-in-the-past-five-years

04 November 2025

Illegal Adoption Cases Investigated by the Police in the Past Five Years

Question:

Mr Low Wu Yang Andre:
To ask the Coordinating Minister for National Security and Minister for Home Affairs (a) in each of the last five years, how many cases of (i) child trafficking and (ii) illegal adoptions has the Singapore Police Force investigated; and (b) for each category of offences, how many cases have resulted in prosecutions and convictions, respectively, under the relevant laws including the Adoption of Children Act 2022.

Answer:

Mr K Shanmugam, Coordinating Minister for National Security and Minister for Home Affairs:


1. Trafficking in Persons (or TIP) is generally categorised into sex trafficking and labour trafficking.

Over the past five years, the Singapore Police Force (SPF) has investigated 59 alleged sex trafficking cases involving children under the age of 18 under the PHTA, the Penal Code 1871, the Women’s Charter 1961, or the Children and Young Persons Act 1993.

2. Of these cases, 34 cases proceeded to prosecution, of which (i) 27 concluded with convictions, while (ii) the remaining seven are under or pending court proceedings.

3. The other 25 cases are either (i) still under investigation; (ii) concluded and the perpetrators received stern warnings or composition fines; or (iii) concluded and no further actions were taken against the initial suspects.

4. There were no reported cases of labour trafficking involving a child during this period.

5. There were also no reported cases of trafficked children under the Adoption of Children Act 2022 during this period.
 
Sinkieland: money laundering, human trafficking and goods smuggling hub.

Enjoy your 4.8% GDP growth. :biggrin:
 
https://en.vietnamplus.vn/singapore-probes-transnational-baby-trafficking-ring-post335699.vnp

10JAN2026

Singapore probes transnational baby trafficking ring

Singapore (VNA)
– The governments of Singapore and Indonesia are coordinating an investigation into allegations of a transnational baby trafficking ring that smuggled newborns into Singapore for adoption.

In a joint statement issued on January 9 by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and Ministry of Social and Family Development of Singapore (MSF) said the authorities are also contacting affected adoptive families to explain the situation and provide clarification on the ongoing probe.

Information about the alleged trafficking network emerged in mid-2025 after Indonesian authorities arrested around 10 suspects in West Java province, the Straits Times reported.

The statement said the Singapore police and MSF have requested the police and the Ministry of Social Affairs of Indonesia to share investigation findings and to help verify the circumstances of children who had been brought into Singapore for adoption. The Singaporean police have also been assisting their Indonesian counterparts following a request from the Indonesian police in September 2025.

Earlier, Indonesian authorities asked the Singapore police to verify information relating to three Singaporean citizens suspected of involvement in the trafficking ring. As investigations are ongoing, the processing of citizenship applications for the affected children has been delayed. The MSF and Singapore’s Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) are working directly with the adoptive families concerned during this period.

In July last year, police in Indonesia’s West Java province arrested 13 suspects allegedly involved in trafficking dozens of newborns to Singapore through an illegal adoption network. Indonesian authorities said the ring had been operating since 2023 and was believed to have trafficked at least 25 infants, mainly to Singapore, while some were sent to other cities across Indonesia.

The case came to light after a parent reported the abduction of a newborn, leading to the arrest of a suspect who later admitted to trafficking 24 children.
 
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/indonesia-baby-trafficking-adoption-syndicate-crime-5641336

24DEC2025

'Sophisticated' and ‘thriving in secrecy’: What’s beneath Indonesia’s underground baby trafficking trade?
Lawyers and experts say a complex web of social and economic pressures, along with a widespread lack of understanding about legal adoption procedures, has contributed to a lucrative baby trafficking trade in Indonesia.


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'Sophisticated' and ‘thriving in secrecy’: What’s beneath Indonesia’s underground baby trafficking trade?
Lawyers and experts say a complex web of social and economic pressures, along with a widespread lack of understanding about legal adoption procedures, has contributed to a lucrative baby trafficking trade in Indonesia.

BANDUNG, West Java: After four failed fertility programmes at four different hospitals in the Greater Jakarta Area, Indah – not her real name – was in need of a break from doctor’s offices, blood tests and hormone injections.

It was 2023 and she found herself scrolling endlessly through social media, liking photos and videos of babies posted by Indonesian orphanages.

“I wasn’t really looking to adopt one,” the 42-year-old told CNA. “I just liked watching videos of them. They gave me joy.”

Then a little girl named Shinta – also not her real name – appeared on Indah’s feed. In the short clips posted by the girl’s orphanage, Shinta was always smiling wide, occasionally bursting into laughter when someone called her name.


“There was just something about Shinta. She was really smart. She was really confident,” Indah said.

“I could really imagine myself tucking Shinta into bed and reading her stories.”

Indah decided to contact the orphanage behind the posts, a decision she soon regretted. From the very first exchange, she was bombarded with questions about her income.

“The conversation felt cold and transactional,” she recounted.

“They wanted to know what my husband and I do for work, where we work, how much we make. Whenever I ask about Shinta and what her story was, they would redirect the conversation.”


The final straw came when an official asked if she and her husband were prepared to “compensate” the money the orphanage had spent raising Shinta – who at that point had not even turned one.

Indah asked how much. To which the orphanage official replied: “160 million rupiah”, which at the time was worth around US$11,000.

“I thought to myself: ‘This can’t be right’. ‘Is it normal for an orphanage to put a price on a child?’,” she said, adding that she immediately backed down.

Indah was right to be worried.

A complex web of social and economic pressures has contributed to a booming baby trafficking trade in Indonesia, with illegal syndicates often targeting hopeful parents through social media, experts told CNA.

Poverty remains the biggest driver, with many expectant mothers struggling to afford prenatal care, let alone the costs associated with childbirth and raising a child.

Adoption in Indonesia is meant to be free of charge. All orphanages should be registered and accredited with the Indonesian Ministry of Social Affairs.

The deep stigma around abortion, the strict conditions placed on terminating a pregnancy in Indonesia and a widespread lack of understanding about legal adoption procedures only serve to compound the problem, the observers added.


Ai Maryati Solihah, chief of the Indonesian Child Protection Agency. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
In July, police in West Java, West Kalimantan and Jakarta arrested 21 suspected members of a syndicate which allegedly sold at least 25 babies to families in Indonesia and overseas. Police said the syndicate has operated for at least two years and purportedly made at least US$16,000 per baby.

“The crime is becoming more and more lucrative and the tactics employed by these baby traffickers seem to be more and more sophisticated and their targets wider,” Ai Maryati Solihah, chief of the Indonesian Child Protection Commission (KPAI), a government agency, told CNA.

“In the beginning, we saw traffickers recruiting babies from around their respective areas but then we see inter-provincial trafficking and now international trafficking.”

Illegal syndicates often target people looking to adopt babies and parents looking to give up their newborns through postings on social media. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
Police have told CNA that they are in their final stages of their investigation into the July syndicate and all 21 alleged members can stand trial as early as January next year.


KPAI chief Ai said the orphanage which tried to solicit money from Indah is under KPAI’s radar but more evidence is needed before law enforcers can step in.

The child protection agency has dealt with 148 trafficking cases over the last five years. But experts warn that these cases may only scratch the surface and that it is impossible to know the true extent of the crime.

“These syndicates thrive in secrecy and they are very organised. The only way to bring down a syndicate is to find someone from the inside willing to cooperate with law enforcers,” Andi Rohandi from the lawyers’ association IKADIN told CNA.


In 2022, police in the outskirts of Jakarta arrested illegal orphanage owner Suhendra Abdul Halim who briefly gained social media fame for inviting women with unwanted pregnancies to leave their newborns at his Bogor “foundation”, which turned out to be unlicensed.

He was later convicted to four years in prison for selling at least 50 babies for 15 million rupiah (US$900) each.


Two years later, police raided Bali Luih Children’s Foundation on the outskirts of Bali capital Denpasar for buying and selling an unknown number of babies who were trafficked from various places in Java.

Some babies were “recruited” before they were even born, with their parents promised 45 million rupiah. The foundation’s owner I Made Aryadana is now serving a six year prison sentence.

Andi is representing 13 of the 21 suspects in the case cracked by the police in July. He believes tackling the issue goes deeper than just shutting down the networks.

“Even if you get a syndicate member to cooperate and you manage to dismantle one network, another seems to emerge with new tactics,” he said.


The adoption process in Indonesia is often lengthy and complex. To qualify, adopters must be a married couple between the ages of 30 and 55 and they must be able to demonstrate stable economic conditions.

Before anything can proceed, aspiring adopters must obtain written consent from the baby’s biological parent and submit it to the local Social Affairs Agency as part of their application.

If accepted, the agency grants a period of temporary custody, which lasts between six months and one year depending on the child’s age.

During this period, social workers may conduct home visits, interviews, background checks and regular observations to assess whether the child is receiving proper care. Only after these assessments are completed will they issue a recommendation letter for the couple.

All of the documents — from the biological parents’ consent to the social workers’ findings — must then be submitted to a court, which ultimately decides whether the adoption will be legally granted.

The court process – from the time the application is submitted – can take six to 12 months, which roughly mirrors the temporary custody period.

For aspiring parent Fina, who is unmarried, the requirements feel discriminatory.

“I was told from day one that the best I can do is apply for guardianship because adoption is only for straight couples who have been married for more than five years,” the 37-year-old, who asked not to use her full name, told CNA.

In Indonesia, adoption means a child’s biological parents relinquish all parental rights to the adopters, creating a permanent legal parent–child relationship for the adoptive parents.

Guardianship, by contrast, allows an individual to foster a child without altering the child’s legal parentage. The care is temporary, lasting until the child is 18 years old and legally old enough to make his own decision or until the birth parents are deemed fit to reclaim the child.

Fina ultimately decided not to pursue either adoption or guardianship. But that did not stop people from approaching her with offers.

“There were always people who said they could circumvent the regulations or speed things up as long as I paid a few million rupiah here and a few million there,” she said.

Ahmad Sofian, a law expert from Jakarta’s Binus University, said syndicates usually bypass these steps by forging various documents.

“Suddenly, the child has already been handed over to new parents (because) court decrees are issued using incomplete or even illegal documents,” he told CNA.

One of the most common tactics, Sofian explained, is forging a baby’s birth certificate to make it appear as though the adopters are the biological parents. This method is especially effective in rural areas, where home births are common and parents often neglect to register their child’s birth.

“If a baby is unregistered, anyone can claim the child is theirs using forged hospital records,” he said.


Ahmad Sofian, a criminal law lecturer at Indonesia's Binus University. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
“There were cases where the midwives themselves were arranging the transactions and masterminding the whole scheme,” said KPAI chief Ai.

On Jul 31, the Yogyakarta High Court sentenced Jemitri Eka Lestari, a 44-year-old midwife, to seven years in prison. Her accomplice, fellow midwife Dunuk Mudjiasri, 77, received two years for supporting the operation.

Police say the pair, who were arrested in December last year for selling at least 66 babies since 2015, not only assisted with the deliveries but also forged birth records to list the adopters as biological parents.

Each baby was sold for 55 million to 85 million rupiah.

TRAFFICKING IN BROAD DAYLIGHT
Social media is making it easy for crime syndicates to find mothers looking to give up their newborns and people willing to adopt them.

“There are accounts which recruiters use to pose as people looking to adopt,” said Hendra Rochmawan, a spokesman for the West Java police, who have handled a number of trafficking cases in recent years.

Across multiple platforms, countless groups and forums have emerged where mothers openly announce that they are seeking someone to adopt their baby — and where would-be adopters post their own requests.

The exchanges often feel blunt, stripped of emotion and reduced to brief and transactional notices.

“Looking for someone who’s about to give birth, preferably around the areas of Sragen, Solo and Klaten (Central Java),” wrote one user in a Facebook group called Rumah Adopsi Harapanku, which translates to My Hope Adoption Home.

When CNA viewed the now-deleted post in early December, it had 139 comments, including one that read: “Estimated due date November or December, baby is a girl,” and another: “Estimated due date December, Cilacap,” referring to a town near the border of West and Central Java.

Both comments had multiple replies from people expressing interest in adopting and saying they had sent private messages.

The KPAI and the Indonesian national police have said they are monitoring these groups closely.

But such exchanges are not limited to forums designed to connect adopters with expectant mothers. One foundation told CNA it had to lock its comments section because they believed traffickers were monitoring their social media posts.

“We got so many comments that went straight to the point: ‘How much?’ They don’t even say the word ‘adoption’ anymore,” said Irsal Yakhsyallah, owner of Nurul Iman Foundation, a tiny orphanage of just 25 children in West Java capital, Bandung.


Irsal Yakhsyallah, owner of Nurul Iman Foundation, an orphanage in Bandung, West Java. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
“At first, we tried to ignore them, but the comments started attracting people who wanted to give up their child. To stop transactions from happening in our comments section, we decided to lock it.”

Even with the comments disabled, Irsal said the orphanage’s inboxes still receive messages from people asking to “buy” one of their children.

Among those who trawled through social media was Astri Fitrinika, a 26-year-old woman from Bandung who would later be identified by the police as an alleged key member of the syndicate police uncovered in July.

Astri allegedly created multiple personas to blend seamlessly into the online conversations. Sometimes she appeared as Fira or Desi and other times as either Annisa or Aisyah. With each identity came a new profile picture, a curated feed and a believable backstory as a young mother struggling to conceive a child of her own.

“Whenever she saw a mother with an unwanted baby, (Astri) would slide into their direct messages offering to take the baby and give the love and care that the child needs,” Astri’s lawyer, Andi, told CNA.


Andi Rohandi from the Indonesian Lawyers Association (IKADIN). (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
To sweeten the deal, Astri would allegedly offer to pay 15 million rupiah to cover the delivery cost.

Astri, along with 20 other suspects, is now in police custody and has been charged with child trafficking, an offence which carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison.

Such money can be enticing to low-income families in a country where, as of March, 23.8 million people live on less than 20,000 rupiah per day, according to the Indonesian Bureau of Statistics.

“Sometimes they already had four or five children by the time they got pregnant. Sometimes they simply do not have the money to give birth. Several of the women we’ve assisted eventually chose adoption because their child was born as a result of sexual violence,” Sri Mulyati, chairwoman of the women’s rights advocacy group, Sapa Institute, told CNA.

“So we have to look at the broader context that led these women to make such decisions.”


Experts say parents from low-income neighbourhoods, like this one in Bandung, Indonesia are prime targets of baby trafficking syndicates. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
Abortion in Indonesia is only legally permitted in very limited circumstances – for victims of sexual violence or when a pregnancy poses a serious threat to the mother’s life. Even then, the procedure is only allowed up to 14 weeks of gestation.

“These strict conditions, combined with deep social stigma, leave many women with unwanted pregnancies feeling trapped and vulnerable to exploitation by traffickers,” Sri said.

And sometimes women are forced to give up their babies to paying traffickers by their husbands, fathers or brothers who saw the unwanted child as a way to make a quick buck, she added.

“When it comes to decision-making within the family, women are often in a weak or disadvantaged position,” Sri said.

GREED THAT EXPOSED A NETWORK
The syndicate Astri allegedly belonged to was ultimately brought down because one of the fathers who had sold his baby felt cheated by her. The father, a recently unemployed man who already had four children, filed a police complaint against Astri on Apr 23.

“He was promised 15 million rupiah, but what he received was only enough to cover the mother’s medical expenses,” said West Java police spokesman Hendra, adding that the father received around half of the promised money.

“When he asked for the rest of the money, the perpetrator had already disappeared with the baby.”

“It was greed that finally brought down this syndicate.”

Police spent the next three months untangling the group’s operations.

Investigators found that most of the babies were born in and around Bandung, before being moved to safe houses in Jakarta and Pontianak, the capital of West Kalimantan. There, members of the syndicate would advertise them to potential buyers — including clients overseas.

For babies destined for foreign buyers, the syndicate forged birth records to list traffickers as the biological parents, enabling passports and travel documents to be issued.

On Jul 14, police began launching raids across Bandung, Jakarta, and Pontianak. They rescued six infants from various locations and arrested 21 suspects, including alleged recruiters, transporters, brokers, safe-house caretakers and document forgers.

The suspected ringleader, Lie Siu Luan, 69, known to her crew as Lily, was arrested at Soekarno Hatta Airport in Jakarta on Jul 18 as she was returning from overseas. One broker and one recruiter are still on the run.


A photo of some of the suspects involved in the West Java baby-trafficking network on Jul 15, 2025. (File Photo: West Java Police)
Authorities seized documents and records suggesting that the syndicate had trafficked at least 25 children, including 15 who had already been sent to Singapore.

But investigators believe this figure may be just the tip of the iceberg.

Lawyer Andi said one of his clients has admitted to trafficking between 40 and 50 babies since joining the alleged syndicate in 2023, and she was just one of four recruiters.

West Java police spokesman Hendra said investigators have questioned officials from a civil registry’s office in Pontianak which issued birth certificates based on fraudulent documents supplied by the syndicate.

Police have also questioned the owner of a small private clinic where several of the babies were born. The clinic, located in a working class housing complex on the southern edge of Bandung, is just a few minutes walk from Astri’s listed address.

It is also not known if Lily had contacts in Singapore or if the adopters were fully aware that the babies were allegedly trafficked.

“We are hoping all this shall be revealed in court. Whatever the court finds, we will use it to investigate the case further,” Hendra said.
West Java police spokesman, Hendra Rochmawan.


THE PRICE OF A CHILD
The Bandung case revealed just how lucrative the trade can be with ringleaders standing to make millions of dollars a year from selling infants.

The profits are so enticing that some syndicates are now willing to resort to kidnapping to keep up with demand.

On Nov 3, a four-year-old girl was kidnapped from a park in Makassar, South Sulawesi only to be found five days later thousands of kilometres away in the Sumatran province of Jambi.

In that short time, the child had reportedly been sold three times to agents in Jakarta and Jambi, with the final price reaching 80 million rupiah.

Four people have been arrested in connection with the case, including married couple Adit Saputra and Meriana who told police they have allegedly sold a total of 10 children since August.

Such cases not only reveal the sophistication of these trafficking syndicates, but also a deeper, more pervasive problem: Many Indonesians simply do not understand how legal adoption is supposed to work and are unaware that no money should ever change hands.

“There is a reason why the process is lengthy because assessments and careful considerations need to be made to make sure the child’s rights and best interests are protected,” said law expert Sofian.

“But there are criminals who prey on people’s ignorance and impatience.”

As the 2022 and 2024 cases have revealed, these criminals are sometimes the very people who should know the law and uphold the system: Foundation owners.

“Orphanages receive government grants, private donations, and in some cases international support which is enough to cover their operational needs without charging adopters, so there is really no excuse for them to engage in such transactions,” Sofian said.


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Yet there are signs that these practices persist, and KPAI says it continues to receive reports of orphanages soliciting payments.

“When confronted, they always deny it,” KPAI’s Ai told CNA. “But these allegations keep coming, and it creates confusion and mistrust in the community.”

And the consequences ripple far beyond the bad actors accused. Ethically responsible orphanages are also affected.

“We have had prospective adopters backing out because of the recent cases not wanting to take chances. We had to face more scrutiny from benefactors demanding our finances to be audited because of these cases,” said Miska Ramadhani, the owner of Baitul Yatim orphanage on the outskirts of Jakarta.

“I worry that if the trade persists it will affect legitimate orphanages’ ability to operate and provide safe spaces for vulnerable children,” she said.

Experts say Indonesia still has a long way to go before illegal adoption and baby trafficking can be eradicated.

The system for issuing birth certificates needs far tighter oversight to stop it from being manipulated by syndicates looking to obscure a baby’s background and origin, they say.

“Meanwhile regulations surrounding abortion, currently restricted to cases of sexual violence or life-threatening pregnancies, needs to be overhauled because the strict limits often leave women with few safe alternatives,” Sri of the advocacy group, Sapa Institute, said.


Sri Mulyati, chairwoman of the women’s rights advocacy group, Sapa Institute. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
Experts also noted that baby trafficking offenders are rarely punished with the maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.

“There should be no justification or excuse for the actions of those involved in illegal adoption, (particularly) those operating out of orphanages,” law expert Sofian said.

“No matter what their reasoning is, and even if they have done good for some children, engaging in illegal adoption, falsifying documents, and severing a child’s ties to their origins are still crimes.”

For aspiring mother Indah, the investigations, the arrests, and the headlines have been difficult to watch. Each new case brings her back to the smiling little girl she once saw on her social media feed – Shinta.

“I often wonder what would have happened if I had made a different choice,” she said, referring to the orphanage’s request that she “compensate” the money it had spent raising Shinta.

Indah, who is now saving up for her fifth fertility programme, knows she did the right thing by walking away.

In the months after that encounter, Indah checked the orphanage’s social media feed from time to time. But as of mid last year, Shinta was no longer appearing in any of the posts.

“I hope it means someone has adopted her,” Indah said. “I hope she’s safe. I hope she’s happy.”

BANDUNG, West Java: After four failed fertility programmes at four different hospitals in the Greater Jakarta Area, Indah – not her real name – was in need of a break from doctor’s offices, blood tests and hormone injections.

It was 2023 and she found herself scrolling endlessly through social media, liking photos and videos of babies posted by Indonesian orphanages.

“I wasn’t really looking to adopt one,” the 42-year-old told CNA. “I just liked watching videos of them. They gave me joy.”

Then a little girl named Shinta – also not her real name – appeared on Indah’s feed. In the short clips posted by the girl’s orphanage, Shinta was always smiling wide, occasionally bursting into laughter when someone called her name.


“There was just something about Shinta. She was really smart. She was really confident,” Indah said.

“I could really imagine myself tucking Shinta into bed and reading her stories.”

Indah decided to contact the orphanage behind the posts, a decision she soon regretted. From the very first exchange, she was bombarded with questions about her income.

“The conversation felt cold and transactional,” she recounted.

“They wanted to know what my husband and I do for work, where we work, how much we make. Whenever I ask about Shinta and what her story was, they would redirect the conversation.”


The final straw came when an official asked if she and her husband were prepared to “compensate” the money the orphanage had spent raising Shinta – who at that point had not even turned one.

Indah asked how much. To which the orphanage official replied: “160 million rupiah”, which at the time was worth around US$11,000.

“I thought to myself: ‘This can’t be right’. ‘Is it normal for an orphanage to put a price on a child?’,” she said, adding that she immediately backed down.

Indah was right to be worried.

A complex web of social and economic pressures has contributed to a booming baby trafficking trade in Indonesia, with illegal syndicates often targeting hopeful parents through social media, experts told CNA.

Poverty remains the biggest driver, with many expectant mothers struggling to afford prenatal care, let alone the costs associated with childbirth and raising a child.

Adoption in Indonesia is meant to be free of charge. All orphanages should be registered and accredited with the Indonesian Ministry of Social Affairs.

The deep stigma around abortion, the strict conditions placed on terminating a pregnancy in Indonesia and a widespread lack of understanding about legal adoption procedures only serve to compound the problem, the observers added.


Ai Maryati Solihah, chief of the Indonesian Child Protection Agency. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
In July, police in West Java, West Kalimantan and Jakarta arrested 21 suspected members of a syndicate which allegedly sold at least 25 babies to families in Indonesia and overseas. Police said the syndicate has operated for at least two years and purportedly made at least US$16,000 per baby.

“The crime is becoming more and more lucrative and the tactics employed by these baby traffickers seem to be more and more sophisticated and their targets wider,” Ai Maryati Solihah, chief of the Indonesian Child Protection Commission (KPAI), a government agency, told CNA.

“In the beginning, we saw traffickers recruiting babies from around their respective areas but then we see inter-provincial trafficking and now international trafficking.”

Illegal syndicates often target people looking to adopt babies and parents looking to give up their newborns through postings on social media. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
Police have told CNA that they are in their final stages of their investigation into the July syndicate and all 21 alleged members can stand trial as early as January next year.


KPAI chief Ai said the orphanage which tried to solicit money from Indah is under KPAI’s radar but more evidence is needed before law enforcers can step in.

The child protection agency has dealt with 148 trafficking cases over the last five years. But experts warn that these cases may only scratch the surface and that it is impossible to know the true extent of the crime.

“These syndicates thrive in secrecy and they are very organised. The only way to bring down a syndicate is to find someone from the inside willing to cooperate with law enforcers,” Andi Rohandi from the lawyers’ association IKADIN told CNA.


In 2022, police in the outskirts of Jakarta arrested illegal orphanage owner Suhendra Abdul Halim who briefly gained social media fame for inviting women with unwanted pregnancies to leave their newborns at his Bogor “foundation”, which turned out to be unlicensed.

He was later convicted to four years in prison for selling at least 50 babies for 15 million rupiah (US$900) each.


Two years later, police raided Bali Luih Children’s Foundation on the outskirts of Bali capital Denpasar for buying and selling an unknown number of babies who were trafficked from various places in Java.

Some babies were “recruited” before they were even born, with their parents promised 45 million rupiah. The foundation’s owner I Made Aryadana is now serving a six year prison sentence.

Andi is representing 13 of the 21 suspects in the case cracked by the police in July. He believes tackling the issue goes deeper than just shutting down the networks.

“Even if you get a syndicate member to cooperate and you manage to dismantle one network, another seems to emerge with new tactics,” he said.


The adoption process in Indonesia is often lengthy and complex. To qualify, adopters must be a married couple between the ages of 30 and 55 and they must be able to demonstrate stable economic conditions.

Before anything can proceed, aspiring adopters must obtain written consent from the baby’s biological parent and submit it to the local Social Affairs Agency as part of their application.

If accepted, the agency grants a period of temporary custody, which lasts between six months and one year depending on the child’s age.

During this period, social workers may conduct home visits, interviews, background checks and regular observations to assess whether the child is receiving proper care. Only after these assessments are completed will they issue a recommendation letter for the couple.

All of the documents — from the biological parents’ consent to the social workers’ findings — must then be submitted to a court, which ultimately decides whether the adoption will be legally granted.

The court process – from the time the application is submitted – can take six to 12 months, which roughly mirrors the temporary custody period.

For aspiring parent Fina, who is unmarried, the requirements feel discriminatory.

“I was told from day one that the best I can do is apply for guardianship because adoption is only for straight couples who have been married for more than five years,” the 37-year-old, who asked not to use her full name, told CNA.

In Indonesia, adoption means a child’s biological parents relinquish all parental rights to the adopters, creating a permanent legal parent–child relationship for the adoptive parents.

Guardianship, by contrast, allows an individual to foster a child without altering the child’s legal parentage. The care is temporary, lasting until the child is 18 years old and legally old enough to make his own decision or until the birth parents are deemed fit to reclaim the child.

Fina ultimately decided not to pursue either adoption or guardianship. But that did not stop people from approaching her with offers.

“There were always people who said they could circumvent the regulations or speed things up as long as I paid a few million rupiah here and a few million there,” she said.

Ahmad Sofian, a law expert from Jakarta’s Binus University, said syndicates usually bypass these steps by forging various documents.

“Suddenly, the child has already been handed over to new parents (because) court decrees are issued using incomplete or even illegal documents,” he told CNA.

One of the most common tactics, Sofian explained, is forging a baby’s birth certificate to make it appear as though the adopters are the biological parents. This method is especially effective in rural areas, where home births are common and parents often neglect to register their child’s birth.

“If a baby is unregistered, anyone can claim the child is theirs using forged hospital records,” he said.


Ahmad Sofian, a criminal law lecturer at Indonesia's Binus University. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
“There were cases where the midwives themselves were arranging the transactions and masterminding the whole scheme,” said KPAI chief Ai.

On Jul 31, the Yogyakarta High Court sentenced Jemitri Eka Lestari, a 44-year-old midwife, to seven years in prison. Her accomplice, fellow midwife Dunuk Mudjiasri, 77, received two years for supporting the operation.

Police say the pair, who were arrested in December last year for selling at least 66 babies since 2015, not only assisted with the deliveries but also forged birth records to list the adopters as biological parents.

Each baby was sold for 55 million to 85 million rupiah.

TRAFFICKING IN BROAD DAYLIGHT
Social media is making it easy for crime syndicates to find mothers looking to give up their newborns and people willing to adopt them.

“There are accounts which recruiters use to pose as people looking to adopt,” said Hendra Rochmawan, a spokesman for the West Java police, who have handled a number of trafficking cases in recent years.

Across multiple platforms, countless groups and forums have emerged where mothers openly announce that they are seeking someone to adopt their baby — and where would-be adopters post their own requests.

The exchanges often feel blunt, stripped of emotion and reduced to brief and transactional notices.

“Looking for someone who’s about to give birth, preferably around the areas of Sragen, Solo and Klaten (Central Java),” wrote one user in a Facebook group called Rumah Adopsi Harapanku, which translates to My Hope Adoption Home.

When CNA viewed the now-deleted post in early December, it had 139 comments, including one that read: “Estimated due date November or December, baby is a girl,” and another: “Estimated due date December, Cilacap,” referring to a town near the border of West and Central Java.

Both comments had multiple replies from people expressing interest in adopting and saying they had sent private messages.

The KPAI and the Indonesian national police have said they are monitoring these groups closely.

But such exchanges are not limited to forums designed to connect adopters with expectant mothers. One foundation told CNA it had to lock its comments section because they believed traffickers were monitoring their social media posts.

“We got so many comments that went straight to the point: ‘How much?’ They don’t even say the word ‘adoption’ anymore,” said Irsal Yakhsyallah, owner of Nurul Iman Foundation, a tiny orphanage of just 25 children in West Java capital, Bandung.


Irsal Yakhsyallah, owner of Nurul Iman Foundation, an orphanage in Bandung, West Java. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
“At first, we tried to ignore them, but the comments started attracting people who wanted to give up their child. To stop transactions from happening in our comments section, we decided to lock it.”

Even with the comments disabled, Irsal said the orphanage’s inboxes still receive messages from people asking to “buy” one of their children.

Among those who trawled through social media was Astri Fitrinika, a 26-year-old woman from Bandung who would later be identified by the police as an alleged key member of the syndicate police uncovered in July.

Astri allegedly created multiple personas to blend seamlessly into the online conversations. Sometimes she appeared as Fira or Desi and other times as either Annisa or Aisyah. With each identity came a new profile picture, a curated feed and a believable backstory as a young mother struggling to conceive a child of her own.

“Whenever she saw a mother with an unwanted baby, (Astri) would slide into their direct messages offering to take the baby and give the love and care that the child needs,” Astri’s lawyer, Andi, told CNA.


Andi Rohandi from the Indonesian Lawyers Association (IKADIN). (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
To sweeten the deal, Astri would allegedly offer to pay 15 million rupiah to cover the delivery cost.

Astri, along with 20 other suspects, is now in police custody and has been charged with child trafficking, an offence which carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison.

Such money can be enticing to low-income families in a country where, as of March, 23.8 million people live on less than 20,000 rupiah per day, according to the Indonesian Bureau of Statistics.

“Sometimes they already had four or five children by the time they got pregnant. Sometimes they simply do not have the money to give birth. Several of the women we’ve assisted eventually chose adoption because their child was born as a result of sexual violence,” Sri Mulyati, chairwoman of the women’s rights advocacy group, Sapa Institute, told CNA.

“So we have to look at the broader context that led these women to make such decisions.”


Experts say parents from low-income neighbourhoods, like this one in Bandung, Indonesia are prime targets of baby trafficking syndicates. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
Abortion in Indonesia is only legally permitted in very limited circumstances – for victims of sexual violence or when a pregnancy poses a serious threat to the mother’s life. Even then, the procedure is only allowed up to 14 weeks of gestation.

“These strict conditions, combined with deep social stigma, leave many women with unwanted pregnancies feeling trapped and vulnerable to exploitation by traffickers,” Sri said.

And sometimes women are forced to give up their babies to paying traffickers by their husbands, fathers or brothers who saw the unwanted child as a way to make a quick buck, she added.

“When it comes to decision-making within the family, women are often in a weak or disadvantaged position,” Sri said.

GREED THAT EXPOSED A NETWORK
The syndicate Astri allegedly belonged to was ultimately brought down because one of the fathers who had sold his baby felt cheated by her. The father, a recently unemployed man who already had four children, filed a police complaint against Astri on Apr 23.

“He was promised 15 million rupiah, but what he received was only enough to cover the mother’s medical expenses,” said West Java police spokesman Hendra, adding that the father received around half of the promised money.

“When he asked for the rest of the money, the perpetrator had already disappeared with the baby.”

“It was greed that finally brought down this syndicate.”

Police spent the next three months untangling the group’s operations.

Investigators found that most of the babies were born in and around Bandung, before being moved to safe houses in Jakarta and Pontianak, the capital of West Kalimantan. There, members of the syndicate would advertise them to potential buyers — including clients overseas.

For babies destined for foreign buyers, the syndicate forged birth records to list traffickers as the biological parents, enabling passports and travel documents to be issued.

On Jul 14, police began launching raids across Bandung, Jakarta, and Pontianak. They rescued six infants from various locations and arrested 21 suspects, including alleged recruiters, transporters, brokers, safe-house caretakers and document forgers.

The suspected ringleader, Lie Siu Luan, 69, known to her crew as Lily, was arrested at Soekarno Hatta Airport in Jakarta on Jul 18 as she was returning from overseas. One broker and one recruiter are still on the run.


A photo of some of the suspects involved in the West Java baby-trafficking network on Jul 15, 2025. (File Photo: West Java Police)
Authorities seized documents and records suggesting that the syndicate had trafficked at least 25 children, including 15 who had already been sent to Singapore.

But investigators believe this figure may be just the tip of the iceberg.

Lawyer Andi said one of his clients has admitted to trafficking between 40 and 50 babies since joining the alleged syndicate in 2023, and she was just one of four recruiters.

West Java police spokesman Hendra said investigators have questioned officials from a civil registry’s office in Pontianak which issued birth certificates based on fraudulent documents supplied by the syndicate.

Police have also questioned the owner of a small private clinic where several of the babies were born. The clinic, located in a working class housing complex on the southern edge of Bandung, is just a few minutes walk from Astri’s listed address.

It is also not known if Lily had contacts in Singapore or if the adopters were fully aware that the babies were allegedly trafficked.

“We are hoping all this shall be revealed in court. Whatever the court finds, we will use it to investigate the case further,” Hendra said.
West Java police spokesman, Hendra Rochmawan.


THE PRICE OF A CHILD
The Bandung case revealed just how lucrative the trade can be with ringleaders standing to make millions of dollars a year from selling infants.

The profits are so enticing that some syndicates are now willing to resort to kidnapping to keep up with demand.

On Nov 3, a four-year-old girl was kidnapped from a park in Makassar, South Sulawesi only to be found five days later thousands of kilometres away in the Sumatran province of Jambi.

In that short time, the child had reportedly been sold three times to agents in Jakarta and Jambi, with the final price reaching 80 million rupiah.

Four people have been arrested in connection with the case, including married couple Adit Saputra and Meriana who told police they have allegedly sold a total of 10 children since August.

Such cases not only reveal the sophistication of these trafficking syndicates, but also a deeper, more pervasive problem: Many Indonesians simply do not understand how legal adoption is supposed to work and are unaware that no money should ever change hands.

“There is a reason why the process is lengthy because assessments and careful considerations need to be made to make sure the child’s rights and best interests are protected,” said law expert Sofian.

“But there are criminals who prey on people’s ignorance and impatience.”

As the 2022 and 2024 cases have revealed, these criminals are sometimes the very people who should know the law and uphold the system: Foundation owners.

“Orphanages receive government grants, private donations, and in some cases international support which is enough to cover their operational needs without charging adopters, so there is really no excuse for them to engage in such transactions,” Sofian said.


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Yet there are signs that these practices persist, and KPAI says it continues to receive reports of orphanages soliciting payments.

“When confronted, they always deny it,” KPAI’s Ai told CNA. “But these allegations keep coming, and it creates confusion and mistrust in the community.”

And the consequences ripple far beyond the bad actors accused. Ethically responsible orphanages are also affected.

“We have had prospective adopters backing out because of the recent cases not wanting to take chances. We had to face more scrutiny from benefactors demanding our finances to be audited because of these cases,” said Miska Ramadhani, the owner of Baitul Yatim orphanage on the outskirts of Jakarta.

“I worry that if the trade persists it will affect legitimate orphanages’ ability to operate and provide safe spaces for vulnerable children,” she said.

Experts say Indonesia still has a long way to go before illegal adoption and baby trafficking can be eradicated.

The system for issuing birth certificates needs far tighter oversight to stop it from being manipulated by syndicates looking to obscure a baby’s background and origin, they say.

“Meanwhile regulations surrounding abortion, currently restricted to cases of sexual violence or life-threatening pregnancies, needs to be overhauled because the strict limits often leave women with few safe alternatives,” Sri of the advocacy group, Sapa Institute, said.


Sri Mulyati, chairwoman of the women’s rights advocacy group, Sapa Institute. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo)
Experts also noted that baby trafficking offenders are rarely punished with the maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.

“There should be no justification or excuse for the actions of those involved in illegal adoption, (particularly) those operating out of orphanages,” law expert Sofian said.

“No matter what their reasoning is, and even if they have done good for some children, engaging in illegal adoption, falsifying documents, and severing a child’s ties to their origins are still crimes.”

For aspiring mother Indah, the investigations, the arrests, and the headlines have been difficult to watch. Each new case brings her back to the smiling little girl she once saw on her social media feed – Shinta.

“I often wonder what would have happened if I had made a different choice,” she said, referring to the orphanage’s request that she “compensate” the money it had spent raising Shinta.

Indah, who is now saving up for her fifth fertility programme, knows she did the right thing by walking away.

In the months after that encounter, Indah checked the orphanage’s social media feed from time to time. But as of mid last year, Shinta was no longer appearing in any of the posts.

“I hope it means someone has adopted her,” Indah said. “I hope she’s safe. I hope she’s happy.”
 
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Police say babies in Indonesia are being sold for as little as $1,450 — this is why baby trafficking is 'difficult' to eradicate.​


https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-18/selling-babies-remains-a-problem-in-indonesia/104480064

Fri 18 Oct 2024

1768357255003.png


Rusmala Dewi was relieved to be reunited with her 11-month-old baby after they had been separated for more than a month.

He was returned to her safe and well last week after he was allegedly sold by his father on Facebook for 15 million Indonesian rupiah ($1,450) in late August.

According to police, the buyers were a married couple who had been trying to have a child for 10 years.

"[Money] from the sale was used to buy [the father] two mobile phones and fund online gambling," said Ade Ary Syam, Jakarta Metropolitan Police's head of public relations.

Ms Dewi had moved away from the family home for work and discovered her baby had been sold when she went back to Jakarta for a break.

But she couldn't find where her son had ended up.

She reported her husband to police, who charged the 36-year-old earlier this month.

They also arrested the couple who wanted her son, but Ms Dewi asked police to drop legal action against them after discussing it with family and friends.

"I changed my mind because they genuinely took care of my baby," she said during an appearance on the talk show Rosi on Kompas TV last week.

"There's no sign of abuse and my son was returned to me in good health.

"I understand the feeling of how hard it is to wait 10 years without having a child. The way they did it was wrong."

But she can't forgive the father of her child.

"Regarding my husband, I can't [withdraw the police report], because I'm really hurt as a mother," she said, in tears.

"Why would he have to sell a child … I want my husband to be punished because I really can't accept it."
Ms Dewi said if she had not gone to police, she wouldn't have had any idea where her child had been taken.


Struggling mums selling to trafficking gangs
There's no official data on the numbers of babies and kids being sold in Indonesia.

However, the Indonesian Child Protection Commission said they received 64 complaints related to child exploitation and trafficking last year, up from 33 in 2022.

"The numbers fluctuate, but are certainly concerning as they only reflect reported cases — not those that go unreported," commission chair Ai Maryati told the ABC.

Indonesian police last month took action against a syndicate selling children across the islands of Java and Bali, naming eight suspects.


An organisation in Tabanan, Bali, that provided housing and assistance for pregnant women was being used as a front for the operation, police say.

One of the suspects, a 41-year-old man, is accused of buying babies in Java and finding people in Bali who were looking to adopt children to sell them to.

According to police, the babies were sold for between $2,500–$4,500 by the alleged trafficking syndicate.

The syndicate is accused of targeting mothers who had been struggling financially when looking for babies to sell.

Baby sellers caught using Instagram to broker deals in Indonesia
An Instagram post advertising a baby for adoption with a black and white picture of a baby.
Four people are arrested after allegedly selling babies via an Instagram account, local police say.

It's not the first time authorities in Indonesia have uncovered this kind of alleged criminal operation.

Last year, a 32-year-old man from Bogor near Jakarta known as the "father of a million children" was sentenced to four years in prison.

Police said he was involved in "child trafficking through illegal adoption" — selling children of single mothers on social media and using his charitable foundation as a front.


Better support for mothers needed
Ms Maryati, from the Child Protection Commission, said economic incentives for struggling mothers and a lack information about legal adoption helped to explain why baby trafficking remained a problem in Indonesia.

"Clearly, there's demand for it," she said.

She said illegal adoption often stripped children of their faith, cultural identity and familial connections, as many had been told they were orphans.

The stigmatisation of single mothers or children born out of wedlock has also made it "difficult" to eliminate child and baby trafficking, according to the Centre on Child Protection and Wellbeing at the University of Indonesia.

"There is not enough social support from the Indonesian government," Ni Luh Maitra Agastya, the director of the centre, told the ABC.

"For example — there's no assistance for parents giving birth or child care.

"It is time for the Indonesian government to build a continuum of services for vulnerable children and families."


She highlighted the need for improved reproductive health care and options for temporary child care to help families and single mothers.

The Child Protection Commission also said law enforcement was "not optimal" and "weak" when it came to baby trafficking.

However, Ms Dewi has praised Indonesian police for their "quick" actions finding and returning her baby.

Indonesian trains blacklist sexual harassers
Passengers stand on a train platform in Jakarta
Indonesia's public rail operator will blacklist perpetrators of sexual violence after a spate of reported attacks on trains.

Police described the case as "proof of the commitment" to serving the community.

In a statement, the Indonesian police said part of that commitment was to provide "services and protection for vulnerable groups, particularly children".

The statement said new directorates had been established for protecting children and women, as well as other victims of human trafficking.

The ABC has contacted Indonesia's Ministry of Social Affairs for further comment.
 
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https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/7/16/indonesia-arrests-12-for-trafficking-babies-to-singapore

Indonesia arrests 12 for trafficking babies to Singapore

16 Jul 2025

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Police in Indonesia have arrested 12 people after uncovering a human trafficking ring that has sent more than a dozen babies to Singapore for adoption.

The West Java police told reporters on Tuesday that the case was discovered after a parent reported an alleged baby kidnapping, which led them to a suspect who admitted to trading 24 infants.
Surawan, the police’s director of general criminal investigation, who goes by one name, said the perpetrators took most of the infants from their biological parents in West Java province.

They are accused of moving the babies to Pontianak city on Borneo island and then sending more than a dozen of them onwards to Singapore.
“Based on documents, 14 [babies] were sent to Singapore,” he said.
“The age range is clearly under one year old, with some three months old, five months old, and six months old.”

Authorities managed to rescue five babies in Pontianak and one in Tangerang, a city near the Indonesian capital, Jakarta. They also arrested a dozen suspects across Jakarta, Pontianak and the Javan city of Bandung.

“They are a syndicate, a baby trafficking syndicate. They each have their own roles,” said Surawan.
Some of the suspects were allegedly tasked with finding the babies, he said, while others cared for them, sheltered them or prepared civil registration documents, such as family cards and passports.
The police officer added that the infants were to be sold for 11 million Indonesian Rupiah ($676) to 16 million Indonesia
Police said they sought out “parents or mothers who refuse to care for their children” in return for money.
Surawan said the parent who reported a kidnapping “actually had an agreement” with the smugglers before their child’s birth, but reported them when they did not receive payment afterwards.

He added that police in Indonesia intend to coordinate with Interpol to “locate possible trafficked infants in Singapore”.
Human trafficking is also a domestic problem across Southeast Asia’s biggest economy, a sprawling nation of more than 17,000 islands.
In one of the worst cases in recent years, at least 57 people were found caged on a palm oil plantation in North Sumatra in 2022.
 
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Adopted in Singapore, trafficked from Indonesia? Parents caught in cross-border probe

https://theindependent.sg/adopted-i...donesia-parents-caught-in-cross-border-probe/

January 10, 2026

SINGAPORE: The Singapore and Indonesian governments are working together to get to the bottom of troubling allegations that babies were trafficked from Indonesia into Singapore for adoption, officials said on Jan 9. The case has left many adoptive families anxious and raised broader questions about the safety of cross-border adoptions.


In a joint statement, Singapore’s Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF) said local authorities are collaborating closely with their Indonesian counterparts to verify the circumstances surrounding the children involved.

Singapore police and MSF have requested that Indonesia’s police and Ministry of Social Affairs share their investigation findings, while also confirming the situation of each child brought to Singapore.

The continuing inquiries have produced a problematic situation for a few adoptive families in Singapore, with interruptions in citizenship requests for the children involved. MSF and the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority have been in touch with affected parents, providing updates and guidance.


“We understand the worry and uncertainty this situation has caused adoptive families,” said MHA and MSF. “We are doing everything possible to resolve the cases quickly while ensuring the welfare and best interests of the children.”

The ministries also encouraged families who need financial support during this period to reach out to local social service offices.


An earlier AFP report revealed that the case was uncovered after a parent reported a suspected baby kidnapping, which led investigators to a suspect who allegedly admitted to trading 24 infants.

Both Singaporean and Indonesian authorities say their top priority is to uncover the truth, hold those responsible accountable, and, most importantly, protect the children affected by this heartbreaking situation.
 


21JUL2025

Baby Trafficking Syndicate Busted in Indonesia: 15 Infants Allegedly Sent to Singapore
 
https://sg.news.yahoo.com/live/3-si...undetected-singapore-live-news-013113627.html

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3 Singaporeans under probe in cross-border baby-trafficking case; ICA reviews lapses after woman overstayed 28 years undetected: Singapore live news

24SEP2025

Indonesian police have charged 22 suspects in a cross-border baby-trafficking ring that allegedly sent 15 infants to Singapore under falsified adoption papers. Each baby was sold for about $20,000, with profits pocketed by traffickers. Three Singaporeans are under investigation, with the Singapore Police Force (SPF) cooperating through Interpol.

The syndicate, active since 2023, spanned Bandung, Jakarta, Pontianak and Singapore. Six babies were rescued in July and remain under state care in West Java. Legal experts warn that Singaporeans involved could face serious charges under adoption and forgery laws.

A 60-year-old Chinese woman, Yu Zefang, overstayed in Singapore for more than 28 years before surrendering to Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) in December 2024. She was sentenced on 1 Sept, to six months’ jail and fined $2,000. Yu first entered Singapore in 1995 on a student pass but absconded in 1996 after her special pass expired. She remained undetected while caring for her daughter, who later became a PR in 2008.

The case, Singapore’s longest overstay on record, has prompted ICA to review its enforcement processes. Coordinating Minister for National Security and Minister for Home Affairs K Shanmugam told Parliament Yu deliberately avoided detection by living without a fixed address, formal job, or use of public services.
 
https://www.asiaone.com/singapore/s...erral&utm_campaign=a1trendingc&utm_content=x5

09JAN2025

Singapore citizenship applications for adopted Indonesian babies delayed amid trafficking probe: MSF, MHA​


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"These investigations are important. Child trafficking is a serious matter as it exploits young children’s vulnerabilities, violates their rights and separates them from their biological families for others’ personal gain or criminal activities.

"It also affects the children’s long-term well-being and development."

The ministries said that affected families who require financial support in the period of delay in Singapore citizenship applications can approach a social service office for assistance.

"MHA and MSF will continue to provide support to the affected families," they added.
 
No wonder saw many millienals never pregnant then suddenly carry a baby.
 
i can understand sg has long been a pussy trafficking hub, but now a baby trafficking hub? shocking!
 
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