http://www.theage.com.au/news/world/indonesia-on-guard-as-crime-rate-surges/2007/08/28/1188067107999.html


Indonesia on guard as crime rate surges 

Mark Forbes, Jakarta
August 29, 2007


KIDNAPPERS wrenched five-year-old Raisya Ali from her nanny outside a Jakarta 
school a fortnight ago, sparking a massive manhunt amid concerns about 
rocketing crime rates.

Raisya was rescued 24 hours after Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono 
issued a plea for her return. She had been moved across several hiding spots 
over nine days, but police eventually traced the kidnappers' mobile phone.

Yesterday, first lady Ani Yudhoyono called on parents to form neighbourhood 
watches "in view of the increasing frequency of kidnappings". Wealthy 
Indonesians and expatriates have already begun hiring security escorts for 
their children.

Raisya's kidnapping, the 14th in two months, has been accompanied by increasing 
robberies, attacks and murders in Jakarta this year. An Indonesian police 
report says aggravated assaults, burglaries and homicides have risen by more 
than 20 per cent.

The rise is driven both by "opportunists" and organised gangs. Numerous 
passengers catching "fake" taxis outside large shopping malls have been mugged 
or abducted.

After obtaining recent crime statistics, security firm Assessments Group 
Indonesia has warned of a long-term trend of rising crime. Founder Brian 
Watters blamed both poverty and a declining fear of the police force for "a 
disturbing worsening of personal security".

"The trend is a reflection of the fact that the post-Soeharto era is more 
conducive to crime - with fear of police decreasing - and the economic climate, 
with more than 40 million people unemployed," he said.

There has also been a spate of robberies by bogus taxi drivers, with two female 
Australian embassy staff among victims.

In an upgraded travel advisory, the embassy warns that abducted taxi passengers 
have been forced to make cash withdrawals before being released. "Petty crime 
is common and robberies are increasing," it states.

Mr Watters said Jakarta remained safer than many other cities in the region, 
including Manila and Bangkok, but warned crime rates were likely to continue to 
increase.

While welcoming Raisya's rescue, authorities are urging greater vigilance to 
halt the increase in kidnappings. The daughter of Said Ali, an executive of the 
Indonesian Young Entrepreneurs Association, Raisya was the 39th Indonesian 
child abducted this year.

Her kidnappers demanded a ransom of $A130,000, but police used sophisticated 
surveillance technology to track the mobile phone they used to call a Jakarta 
service station. An Islamic teacher hired to teach Raisya the Koran was behind 
the plot.

Kirim email ke