LPSK: Permohonan Restitusi Korban Kekerasan Seksual Anak Naik di 2025
JAKARTA - The Witness and Victim Protection Agency (LPSK) notes that the application for restitution for victims of sexual violence against children continues to increase until this year 2025.
LPSK Chairman Achmadi said the increase in the number of cases was consistent since 2023. The number of applicants increased from 122 people in 2023 to 646 people in 2024, and continued to increase to 916 people in 2025.
"This reflects the increasing awareness of the public in reporting cases and fighting for the right to restitution for child victims," said Achmadi in Jakarta, Antara, Thursday, December 18.
In general, however, data on restitution applications during the 2023-2025 period show diverse dynamics. Overall, the number of restitution applicants was recorded at 4,407 people in 2023, increasing to 7,450 people in 2024, and decreasing to 5,162 people in 2025.
In the category of Criminal Trafficking in Persons (TPPO), he said the number of applicants was recorded as 915 people in 2023, then 466 people in 2024, and 375 people in 2025.
In addition, the application for restitution in the category of sexual violence cases against adults was recorded at 525 people in 2023, 128 people in 2024, and 202 people in 2025.
The application for restitution for the category of Money Laundering (TPPU) Criminal Cases was recorded as many as 2,739 people in 2023, 6,035 people in 2024, and 3,461 people in 2025.
From all the applications, he revealed that the value of the restitution decided by the judge was recorded at Rp30.99 billion in 2023, Rp6.18 billion in 2024, and Rp10.25 billion in 2025.
"The realization of restitution payments by the perpetrators shows an increase year by year, with a value of Rp799.19 million in 2023, Rp1.04 billion in 2024, and Rp3.16 billion in 2025," he said.
Overall, according to him, these figures illustrate the ongoing need to strengthen the protection and recovery of the rights of victims of criminal acts through the restitution mechanism, with special emphasis on increasing the realization of restitution payments as an indicator of the success of victim recovery.
He assessed that the condition showed that there were still challenges in the implementation of restitution. The challenges faced, he said, include the limited ability of the perpetrators to pay, the non-optimal seizure of assets, the difference in the standard of restitution assessment, and obstacles in the execution of the decision.
"In addition, there are special challenges, such as TPPU cases with mass victims, restitution for underpayment, and the optimal implementation of restitution collateral confiscation," he said.