COMMENT: RCI necessary to restore confidence in child protection services

· Borneo Post Online
Of serious concern is the lack of oversight and action by the very agencies that we have hoped to be child protectors – the Welfare Department and the police. – Bernama photo

THE ongoing child sexual abuse scandal has shocked the nation, and it has shaken many of us working in child protection under civil society organisations (CSOs).

The duration and scale of the abuse by Global Ikhwan Services and Business Holdings (GISBH) is horrendous. It will take many months to uncover the full scope of the abuse and the possibly 1,000s of children who have been severely traumatised over decades.

We hope attempts will also be made to identify children who have previously been in their facilities and offer them the support they need.

Of serious concern is the lack of oversight and action by the very agencies that we have hoped to be child protectors – the Welfare Department and the police.

We now hear that such a vast business infrastructure has not even paid taxes, raising concerns about the Inland Revenue Board (IRB)’s abilities. It is as though government agencies have had a decades-long blind spot when it came to GISBH.

A blind spot that placed thousands of children into a deep dark hell. This may also be true for other organisations in the country.

This child sexual abuse scandal, and other incidents before this, highlight the large deficits in our child protection services.

Although this scandal involves a religious body, the issue is primarily one of child protection.

As CSOs, we have often been expressing our concerns about our weak and inadequate child protection services. This scandal has shown that they cannot be allowed to continue as it is, and need a complete overhaul.

We support the call from Dr Farah Nini Dusuki, Children’s Commissioner of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia (Suhakam) for the establishment of a Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI).

Only the RCI can restore confidence in our child protection services. Such an RCI should look not just at the disaster involving our services in relation to GISBH, but all aspects of child protection.

Our child protection services require an independent audit, a transparent assessment of weaknesses and limitations, suggestions for reform with a workable way forward.

The RCI should involve civil societies and be fully available to the public.

Upon completion of the RCI, the findings must be tabled and debated in the next meeting of Parliament, because the care and protection of children must be depoliticised and requires an ‘all-of-society’ approach.

The GISBH child sexual abuse scandal is a ‘line in the sand’. This is not a two-week media cycle issue.

Our child protection services cannot continue as they are. The fact that the Welfare Department and the police have yet to take any responsibility, is disheartening.

If there is no meaningful action and reform, then we will continue to fail our children – endlessly.

We appeal to our members of Parliament to support the RCI and be advocates for our children.

The government has overlooked the calls for establishing an independent Children’s Commission accountable to Parliament.

Creating a Children’s Department under the Welfare Department does not address any of the existing challenges or concerns. Essentially, this is merely a rebranding of an inadequate and inefficient service, while children continue to endure hardship.

We also ask that the government urgently relook at the Child Commission Bill.

Any and every space that a child is in must be a safe space.

We must restore public confidence in our child protection agencies.

Only an independent RCI, with comprehensive reform, will do this.

* The opinions expressed in this article are the writers’ own and do not reflect the view of the newspaper.

Signatories:

  1. Dato Dr Amar-Singh HSS, consultant paediatrician, child-disability activist
  2. Sharmila Sekaran, Voice of the Children
  3. CRIB Foundation (Child Rights Innovation and Betterment)
  4. The Talisman Project
  5. Yayasan Chow Kit
  6. Malaysian Association of Social Workers
  7. Association of Women Lawyers (AWL)
  8. Women’s Centre for Change, Penang
  9. Anisa Ahmad, child activist
  10. Pusat Jagaan Kanak Kanak Vivekananda Rembau NS
  11. Johor Women’s League (JEWEL)
  12. Voice of the Children (VoC)
  13. End CSEC Network
  14. Protect and Save the Children
  15. Federation of Reproductive Health Associations Malaysia
  16. Childline Foundation
  17. Toy Libraries Malaysia
  18. Persatuan Untuk Anak Kita (PUAKPayong)
  19. Pertubuhan Amal Rumah Melor (Meru, Klang)
  20. Purple Lily Social Association Kuching
  21. World Vision Malaysia
  22. Montessori Association Malaysia
  23. Play Unlimited
  24. Malaysian Hindu Dharma Association
  25. Kasthuri Krishnan, lawyer
  26. Women’s Aid Org (WAO)
  27. Vanguards4Change
  28. ReHAK (Reproductive Health Association of Kelantan)
  29. Sarawak Women for Women Society (SWWS)
  30. Lawyer Kamek
  31. The OKU Rights Matter Project
  32. Wong Hui Min, president of National Early Childhood Intervention Council (NECIC)
  33. San Yuenwah, The OKU Rights Matter Project
  34. Azira Aziz, lawyer
  35. Wilhelmina Mowe, individual
  36. Dr Wong Woan Yiing, consultant paediatrician
  37. Sabah Women’s Action-Resource Group (SAWO)
  38. Kong Lan Lee, director of Persuatuan Kanak-Kanak Istimewa Kajang Selangor
  39. HOST International Foundation, Malaysia
  40. NGOhub
  41. Asia Community Service
  42. Kuching Association of Talent Development and Welfare of Special Needs
  43. Associate Professor Dr Wan Puspa Melati Wan Halim, clinical sociologist
  44. Malaysian Collaborative Practice Group (MCPG)
  45. Michelle Lai, chairperson of New Horizons Society Ipoh
  46. HumanKind
  47. Murugeswaran Veerasamy, Damai Disabled Person Association Malaysia
  48. Malaysian Rare Disorders Society (MRDS)
  49. Persatuan WeCareJourney
  50. Association for Children with Special Needs Sibu
  51. Prof Dr Toh Teck Hock, consultant paediatrician
  52. Maizan Mohd Salleh, founder and president of Kuala Lumpur and Selangor Albinism Association
  53. Ng Lai-Thin, project lead of National Early Childhood Intervention Council (NECIC)
  54. Sisters in Islam
  55. Deaf Advocacy and Wellbeing National Organisation Malaysia
  56. Dr Anthony Chong, deaf individual and advocate
  57. Cassandra Sii, director of SPICES Early Intervention Centre
  58. Family Frontiers