AFP/Jakarta

A Canadian man went on trial yesterday accused of sexually assaulting children at one of Indonesia’s most prestigious international schools, the most high-profile court case yet in a long-running scandal.

Scores of banner-waving supporters were outside court as Neil Bantleman arrived to face accusations he committed abuse at the Jakarta International School, an offence punishable by up to 15 years in jail. “We are innocent,” the 46-year-old school administrator told journalists from a holding cell at the Jakarta court before his trial started behind closed doors.

An Indonesian teaching assistant at the school, Ferdinand Tjiong, is scheduled to go on trial later at the same court accused of child abuse.

Both men, who have been in police custody since mid-July, deny the allegations. The crisis at the school, which began in April with claims that cleaning staff raped a nursery school boy, has rocked an institution favoured by expatriates and wealthy Indonesians in the capital for more than 60 years.

Since the first allegation, the scandal has snowballed, with more parents making abuse claims and the revelation that a suspected serial paedophile sought by the FBI had taught at the school for a decade.

The school has vehemently denied that Bantleman or Tjiong have committed any crimes, and the case has sparked anger among the expatriate community who send their children to the school, many of whom believe the accusations are false.

“They are the victims of slander, we are 1,000% sure. If they were really paedophiles, we would be the first to know,” said Maya Lestari, who has two children at the school and was co-ordinating the rally outside court.

“It’s hard to believe that this case has managed to get this far,” the Canadian’s wife, Tracy Bantleman, said outside court, adding that the allegations against her husband were “ridiculous” and “illogical”.

The family of one nursery school boy allegedly abused are suing the school and seeking $125mn in damages. The first trials in the scandal began in August, when five cleaners faced charges of child sex abuse.

However several of the cleaners who originally confessed have since recanted, claiming they were beaten by police.

 

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