Bekasi (September 30, 2024)
- Social Affairs Minister Saifullah Yusuf handed over assistance IDR
650,050,643,833 to 2,055 vulnerable communities around the Bantargebang
Integrated Waste Processing Site (TPST), Bekasi City, West Java, Monday
(September 30, 2024).
The value of the assistance is in
the form of 2,055 Social Rehabilitation Assistance (ATENSI) packages of
personal protective equipment such as helmets, boat shoes, flashlights, and
nutrition. There are also 389 ATENSI
packages to fulfill basic needs (such as basic necessities), 44 ATENSI units of
disability aids (wheelchairs, hearing aids, adaptive walking sticks), 14 ATENSI
entrepreneurship packages (grocery stores, livestock, fisheries, and baking),
49 sports and education equipment packages, 135,241 Beneficiary Families (KPM)
of the Family Hope Program (PKH), and Basic Necessities Program assistance for
58,051 KPM.
Gus Ipul symbolically handed over
the assistance to the Bekasi City Government, represented by Alexander
Zulkarnain, Head of the Bekasi City Social Office in the yard of the Sumurbatu Urban
Village office, Bekasi City. "We provide all this assistance to support
the welfare of scavengers in Bantargebang," said the minister, who is
familiarly called Gus Ipul.
Ministry of Social Affairs (MoSA),
said Gus Ipul, is committed to providing access and facilities to meet the
basic needs of the Bekasi City community, especially scavengers at the
Bantargebang TPST who are included in the vulnerable group.
For example, personal protective
equipment assistance can protect the body from nails, glass, and other
dangerous objects. "So that you are safe when looking for a living
here," said Gus Ipul.
On that occasion, Gus Ipul took
more time to have a dialogue with the scavengers to hear their aspirations. One
of the scavenger representatives asked the government to provide BPJS Health for
them.
Gus Ipul said the government
is committed to providing BPJS Health assistance, even BPJS Employment. He
asked scavengers from Bekasi City to apply directly to the local government.
"If there are those outside
Bekasi, they can apply to MoSA through the Health Insurance Contribution
Assistance Beneficiaries (PBI-JK) program," said Gus Ipul.
On that occasion, Param, one of
the scavengers expressed his gratitude to Gus Ipul for the assistance and
facilitating the making of his ID card. "After I get this ID card, I want
to apply for BPJS Health," said Param.
Through the assistance of the Ministry of
Social Affairs' Social Rehabilitation Assistance (ATENSI), scavengers who do
not yet have one will be facilitated to have an ID Card and other required population
administration documents. "So, this ID card can be used as it should be.
If you don't have an ID card, you won't be able to get assistance," said
Gus Ipul when handing over the ID card to Sariani, another scavenger.
Sariani is a scavenger who works
and lives around Bantargebang TPST area. She comes from South Tapanuli, North
Sumatra, and does not yet have an ID card. Based on the results of the field
review, many of the scavengers who work at Bantargebang TPST do not yet have
population documents. Not a few of them are also immigrants from outside Bekasi
City.
Gus Ipul also emphasized the
importance of education for the children of scavengers. Through education can
bring the scavenger's family out of poverty.
To the hundreds of scavengers present,
Gus Ipul asked about their willingness to send their children to school. The scavengers answered in unison that they
wanted to send their children to higher education.
"The principle is that there
is nothing that cannot be done, it must be done," Gus Ipul emphasized when
motivating the scavengers to send their children to higher education.
According to Gus Ipul, three
targets are his focus in assisting scavengers at Bantargebang TPST. "They
are education, health, and empowerment," said Gus Ipul.
These three things are expected to bring a family, especially a scavenger family, to be more prosperous. (*)