Jakarta Globe, SP/Yoseph A. Kelen, December 2, 2013
A still from a Lifebuoy commercial highlighting poverty in East Nusa Tenggara. (Screen grab from Youtube) |
Kupang.
East Nusa Tenggara Governor Frans Lebu Raya has lashed out at Unilever
Indonesia, claiming that a television advertisement for its Lifebuoy soap brand
gives a false portrayal of the extent of poverty in the province.
“It makes
it seem that without Lifebuoy soap, the children of NTT will not be able to
celebrate their fifth birthday,” Frans said in Kupang, the provincial capital,
over the weekend, referring to East Nusa Tenggara by its acronym.
“As the
governor, I am offended by this ad. Honestly, [you] may help the people of NTT,
but don’t exploit poverty for business interests,” Frans said, adding that he
had instructed the provincial secretary to tell Lifebuoy to drop the ad.
The
governor said the ad, in which residents of the village of Bitobe are depicted
as not understanding the importance of good hygiene and sanitation, exaggerated
the local level of poverty.
The ad said
poor hygiene resulted in the deaths of one in four children under the age of
five in NTT from diarrhea.
Unilever
says the ad, titled “NTT can do five years,” is a pilot project aimed at
improving the infant mortality rate.
The ad has
also received a negative response from some NTT residents, who have labeled it
demeaning and have launched a petition to have it dropped.
“We are disturbed
by Lifebuoy’s ad, because for us it doesn’t depict the real conditions in NTT,”
said Buche Brikmar, the head of the provincial chapter of Garda Bangsa, a
community empowerment organization.
“We think
it’s a form of poverty exploitation for business interests. The ad makes it
look like if you buy Lifebuoy soap, you automatically save children’s lives and
help them to reach their fifth birthday.
“This is
obviously an image built for a product,” Buche added.
Heribertus
Naif, the provincial director of the Indonesian Forum for the Environment
(Walhi), who was among those who initiated the petition to get the ad dropped,
urged the provincial administration to stop the campaign.
“Is it
really true that all NTT children die before they reach the age of five? Can
Lifebuoy help me celebrate my 33rd birthday? We demand the KPI [Indonesian
Broadcasting Commission] to immediately stop the ad and repair NTT’s sullied
reputation,” Heribertus said.
Adina
Tontey, senior brand manager of Lifebuoy at Unilever, said the company did not
intend to demean the people of NTT.
“The ad
depicted the real conditions in Bitobe village, in Central Amfoang subdistrict
in Kupang,” she said.
“[It] was
intended to prevent the death of infants in NTT in the future. According to
data from the NTT health office, the infant mortality rate was 71 out of 1,000
births and diarrhea was the main cause.”
Adina said
the company had also raised Rp 700 million ($63,300) to be donated to help the
Bitobe villagers.
Adina also
agreed to meet with those calling for the ad campaign to be dropped.
A
nationwide survey carried out by the Health Ministry in 2010 found that 29.4
percent of children aged under five in East Nusa Tenggara were undernourished
and 58.4 percent suffered from stunting due to poor nutrition experienced by
mothers during pregnancy. The figures were the worst in Indonesia.
According
to the Health Ministry survey, 17.9 percent of children under five are
underweight nationwide, a decrease of 31 percent since 1989.
Fifteen
percent is the widely recognized indication of a nutrition emergency.
A separate
study conducted by World Vision International in 2009 found that 44.2 percent
of children in NTT’s North Timor Tengah district were undernourished and 57
percent were stunted.
Dogels
Maradesa, the maternal child health and nutrition coordinator at WVI’s North
Timor Tengah office, said access to proper nutrition had always been a serious
problem in the region.
“Much of
the land is dry, while the soil is rocky and contains limestone,” he said.
With their
land yielding poor harvests, villagers have turned to slash-and-burn forest
clearing to open up new land, in the process damaging the ground’s ability to
retain water and thus aggravating the chronic water crisis in the region.
“There have
been a lot of initiatives here, but what we need is an integrated approach,
because NGOs and the government have been working separately on programs that
often overlap one another,” Dogels said.
A UN report
released in September noted that while the government had made great strides
toward ending malnutrition among children under five, the pace of progress was
slowing and there was a danger that Indonesia could miss the target of slashing
the rate by two-thirds by 2015 under the Millennium Development Goals.
In NTT’s
South Oenenu village, the lack of knowledge about nutrition has led to mothers
often feeding their babies and toddlers only rice porridge and salt.
“Many
mothers in South Oenenu don’t realize that their children are undernourished
because they don’t appear to be sick,” said Fridliukonas, the WVI facilitator
in South Oenenu. “But actually more than 30 percent of children under five
years old in this village are undernourished.”
Changing
bad habits in the village was a tall order, he said, because the villagers
preferred to spend money buying processed foods and snacks rather than
nutritious food for their children.
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