Babies among those tied up and allegedly abused in Indonesia childcare centre
So it came as a shock last Friday when the civil servant got a frantic phone call from a friend.
Police were raiding the daycare centre, his friend said, go pick up your children right now.
He added that the majority of the victims were under two years old.
On Saturday, police detained and questioned around 30 people from the childcare centre.
Thirteen of them have since been arrested and accused of mistreatment and neglect.
Authorities have confirmed that Little Aresha did not have an operating permit.
Trauma healing services will also be available to the parents of victims, authorities said.
Anger and guilt It has been a nightmare discovery for parents like Noorman, who enrolled his daughter there in 2022 when she was two years old.
"That's why we were drawn to Little Aresha because, frankly, the branding is excellent. "
In 2024, when his son turned three months old, Noorman enrolled him in the centre too.
"We felt it was normal, as small children might fight," he said.
But it was not just the mysterious injuries that had struck parents as odd.
It also seemed to Noorman that his children were perpetually hungry.
His young son also struggled to gain weight.
"It turns out we didn't notice the signs that something was wrong. "
During a recent check-up, Noorman said his son was diagnosed with pneumonia.
We've been entrusting him to the centre," Noorman said.
"Not only my own child, but there were dozens of toddlers who were treated in such inhumane ways. "
Erika asked her child in the video, which has been viewed more than 300,000 times.
So Mummy wouldn't hear me crying," the young girl replied.
"Oh Allah, my child, forgive me," Erika wrote in video's caption.
"No wonder every day when you left for school you always cried hysterically, and when you came home you were silent and spaced out, like you had been hypnotised. "
Many are calling for tighter oversight in childcare facilities.
"Daycare centres should be required to install security cameras that parents can monitor from their phones at all times, so things like this don't happen again," reads one comment on Facebook. "You already know that working with kids means dealing with tantrums - they don't always understand or listen when you talk to them," another person wrote on Facebook, in a comment addressing the staff of Little Aresha.
"But that's the job you chose.
If you can't handle how kids naturally act, then don't work there. "
Additional reporting by Andri Prasetiyo and Furqon Yaya Ulya Himawan
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