Two students expelled for forcing 77 other pupils eat human faeces at a Catholic school in Indonesia

Two students are expelled for forcing 77 other pupils to eat human faeces at a Catholic school in Indonesia

  • Younger pupils were force-fed with spoon in the province of East Nusa Tenggara
  • The vile event took place at the Mother of All Nations Catholic seminary school
  • The school has apologised and confirmed both students have been expelled

Two senior students at a Catholic school in Indonesia have been expelled after they force-fed 77 younger pupils human faeces with a spoon.

The degrading act took place at the Mother of All Nations Catholic seminary school in the southern Indonesian province of East Nusa Tenggara.

Most of the younger group were only 12-years-old.

An unnamed senior student found a plastic bag filled with excrement in the year-seven students’ changing rooms.

When none of the younger pupils would answer how the bag got there he reportedly picked up a spoon and made the entire class eat faeces against their will. 

Two senior students at a seminary school in Indonesia have been expelled after they made 77 younger pupils eat human faeces they found in a bag in the year-seven students’ changing rooms

One unnamed boy said: ‘We just gave in and accepted it. It was disgusting, but we weren’t able to resist.’

Local media reports said that the faeces belonged to a year-seven student who was unable to make it to the toilet in time and relieved himself in the plastic bag instead.

The class was told to keep quiet about the incident but one student reported the bullies to his parents who then complained to school leaders.

A boy called Arnold claimed the older students had physically abused them in the past.

School head Father Deodatus Du’u said the seminary had issued an apology to the parents while confirming that both students responsible for the incident have been expelled.

The commissioner of the Indonesian Children's Protection Commission urged the victims' parents to make the case a police matter

The commissioner of the Indonesian Children’s Protection Commission urged the victims’ parents to make the case a police matter

However, he did also appear to justify their actions.

‘The term ‘eat’ used by the media is inaccurate. What actually happened was one of the seniors touched the lips and tongues of the year-seven students with a faeces-filled spoon,’ he said.

The commissioner of the Indonesian Children’s Protection Commission (KPAI), Retno Listyarti, suggested that the two students may even face legal trouble under child protection laws, and urged the victims’ parents to make it a police matter.

‘The KPAI expresses its concern for the 77 students who were forced to eat faeces,’ said Listyarti.

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