A wake-up call for child protection services amid GISB controversy

The horrific sexual and physical abuse that has been reported in the past 24 hours is a major wake-up call.

13 Sep 2024 08:32am
SEREMBAN, Sept 11 - A quiet scene at the Baitul Mahabbah Care Centre in Seremban 2, following the arrest of 171 individuals in a police raid on 20 charitable homes across Selangor and Negeri Sembilan. (BERNAMA PHOTO)
SEREMBAN, Sept 11 - A quiet scene at the Baitul Mahabbah Care Centre in Seremban 2, following the arrest of 171 individuals in a police raid on 20 charitable homes across Selangor and Negeri Sembilan. (BERNAMA PHOTO)
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OVER the years we have had numerous wake-up calls for improving our child protection services. Children dying in child care centres (pengasuh), children abused in government and religious schools, children abused in government run welfare homes, and so much more.

Now we hear of the travesty of 402 children abused in 20 Global Ikhwan Services and Business Holdings (GISB) welfare homes in Selangor and Negeri Sembilan. This is not just a failure by the staff in the homes but also of our child protection services. The horrific sexual and physical abuse that has been reported in the past 24 hours is a major wake-up call. It demands that we re-evaluate the quality and scope of our child protection services.

As civil society and advocates for child protection we need to ask the important questions and we need answers – honest and real ones. Some of the critical questions that need to be answered are listed below.

Question 1:

How many of these GISB centres are registered and known to the Welfare Department?

Has there been a regular time-based registration renewal after an evaluation for those centres registered?

Question 2:

For the GISB centres registered or known to the Welfare Department, how many of them have received visits for an inspection and monitoring? Knowing how many visits were paid to these centres over the years would be useful.

Question 3:

The Police statement notes that 41 police reports have been lodged against GISB from 2011 to 2024. How many of these were related to child care and/or abuse? What action was taken? Did the Police notify the Welfare Department if any child care issues or abuse was suspected (as is a mandated requirement under the Child Act 2001)?

Question 4:

What is the capacity of the Welfare Department to support these 402 children who are abused, in terms of providing them a safe location and the extensive psychological support they need? Note that the children's homes run by our Welfare Department (RKK) are overloaded and understaffed, with poor psychosocial support.

Question 5:

The horrific abuse is just coming to light now but these GISB homes have been operating for years. How many hundreds of other children have gone through their hands over time? What is being done to identify and support them? How many other GISB homes in the country need to be evaluated?

Question 6:

In working with the Welfare Department, we noticed a reluctance to monitor and enforce child protection policies in religious institutions. Is religion an excuse to not enforce the Child Act? Are child care facilities registered under Jabatan Agama and the Ministry of Education exempt from the Child Act and Welfare Department purview? The Child Act is clear – it covers all children and the Welfare Department are the designated protectors of all children in the country.

Question 7:

We are aware that the Welfare Department is short staffed. Why is the Welfare Department reluctant to use Civil Society Organisations to support child protection services?

We are distressed with the lack of significant growth in the child protection services under the Welfare Department over many years. How many abused children will it take before we act? The time must come when we draw a line in the sand and say enough is enough. The time is long overdue for an extensive revamp of the Welfare Department.

We cannot keep running child protection services with staff who are learning on the job. Would you like your children to go to school and be taught by people who are learning on the job? Would you like to go to a hospital and be treated by staff who have no formal training in healthcare?

We need professionals, trained social workers, to take over and run qualified and effective child protection services - where children are given real protection and child care facilities monitored effectively.

We urgently need answers to these questions to be made public.

There is a serious trust deficit and we cannot continue to deny our children the child protection services they require. We appeal to our elected representatives, our Members of Parliament, to help us obtain these answers and inform the public of the situation.

Remember that this is the tip of the iceberg.

There are numerous children’s homes in the country, some registered and most poorly monitored if at all. There are confinement centres, child minders, schools and resident care homes that also need to be registered and monitored. We have barely begun.

Unless the legally designated child protectors admit to failure and their limitations, we cannot acknowledge the crisis of services. We recognise that the Welfare Department is grossly understaffed but the solution is not to take in more untrained individuals but to push very hard to employ trained social workers.

This also means making a concerted effort to grow our social worker training in the country. We need ‘Minimum Standards of Care’ for all children in care situations.

Finally, we need mandatory licensing and monitoring of all child care facilities.

Signatories

1. Dato' Dr Amar-Singh HSS, Consultant Paediatrician, Child-Disability Activist.

2. Yayasan Chow Kit.

3. Ramesh Patel, Pusat Jagaan Kanak Kanak Vivekananda Rembau.

4. Yap Sook Yee, Child-disability Advocate, Mother to a child with disability.

5. Jeannie Low, Chief Operations Director, Play Unlimited.

6. Childline Foundation.

7. Toy Libraries Malaysia.

8. Aisha Zanariah Abdullah, Child Advocate.

9. Anisa binti Ahmad, Child Activist.

10. National Early Childhood Intervention Council (NECIC).

11. HOST International Foundation Malaysia.

12. Lim Mei Yek, President, Kuching Association of Talent Development and Welfare of Special Needs (KATSN).

13. Asha Singh, Social Worker.

14. Dr Wong Woan Yiing, Consultant Paediatrician.

15. Wong Hui Min, President, National Early Childhood Intervention Council.

16. Sin Tiew Cheo, Chairperson, SPICES Early Intervention Centre.

17. Dr Ng Su Fang, Consultant Paediatrician.

18. Gill Raja, Social Work Lecturer.

19. Department of Education, University of Swinburne Sarawak.

20. Prof. Dr Toh Teck Hock, Consultant Paediatrician.

21. Sarawak Women for Women Society.

22. Asia Community Service.

23. World Vision Malaysia.

24. Amy Bala, Malaysian Association of Social Workers.

25. Ng Lai-Thin, Project Lead, National Early Childhood Intervention Council (NECIC).

26. Kong Lan Lee, Director, Persatuan Kanak-Kanak Istimewa Kajang.

27. Dr Mastura binti Ibrahim, Consultant Paediatrician.

28. Dr Norhafizah Ahmad, Consultant Paediatrician.

29. Michelle Lai, Chairperson New Horizons Society.

30. Women's Centre for Change (WCC).

31. Dr Ling How Kee, Social Work Educator and Child Rights Activist.

32. Agnes Suganthi, Consultant Paediatrician.

33. Global Shepherds.

34. Vanguards4Change.

35. Purple Lily Social Association Kuching.

36. Persatuan Sahabat Wanita Selangor.

37. Wilhelmina Mowe.

38. Azira Aziz, Lawyer.

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