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CBSNews /

CBS/ July 1, 2010, 12:34 PM

Smoking Baby Still Smoking, on Tape

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Remember the recent, disturbing video of a two-year-old Indonesian boy chain-smoking?

It went viral, spreading quickly across TV talk shows and newscasts, sparking outrage and disbelief.

Pictures: Smoking Baby

So, reports CBS News Correspondent Jeff Glor, a CBS News team travelled to the Indonesian island of Sumatra in search of the boy.

And just before midnight, our crew found Aldi Suganda, in the quiet fishing village of Musi Bbanyuasin -- lit cigarette in-hand:

At home, Aldi plays with toys and grips a bottle.

But his tiny hands also light cigarettes with the familiarity of a seasoned smoker.

His parents, Rizal and Diana, say he started smoking when he was just eleven-months-old, during daily trips to the market where they sell fish.

"He was being very fussy, always cried when we were there to sell," Diana explained, through an interpreter. "So, we just let him play by himself. … One day, we followed him from behind and found him hanging out at a cigarette stall. … He had a cigarette in his hand, already lit. … He already knew how to do it very well, like an adult. … It was actually his own wish."

Before long, Aldi was smoking more than 40 cigarettes a day. In fact, his mother says he often uses one cigarette to light the next.

And adults at the market are seen in the CBS video lighting them for him, as well.

But in Indonesia, Glor observes, Aldi may not be such a surprising case. Smoking is ingrained in the country's culture; it's the third-largest tobacco consuming nation in the world. A-third of the population smokes -- including many children.

"Over 31 percent of Indonesian children smoke a cigarette before the age of 10," says Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. "Over 80 percent of Indonesians who smoke start as teenagers or younger. The reason is that the Indonesian government has completely failed to educate its public and has allowed the tobacco industry to engage in marketing practices that haven't been permitted in the United States for years.

Nearly 170 nations have signed the World Health Organization's tobacco treaty calling for anti-smoking measures. Though the Indonesian Ministry of Health hasn't conformed, the government now tells CBS News, "Indonesia is prepared to ... ratify the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control," according to Glor.

Since the one of Aldi, more videos have surfaced online of babies blowing smoke rings.

Aldi and his family are now in a rehabilitation program sponsored by Indonesia's National Commission for Child Protection, his parents told our crew.

But a smoke-free future for him is still uncertain. He shows signs of a severe addiction -- throwing tantrums, hitting his head on the floor and becoming sick from withdrawal when he can't smoke.

"A child who's smoking many cigarettes a day," says Dr. Alanna Levine, a pediatrician, "can absolutely be addicted to nicotine … so it's not easy for him to just stop smoking cold turkey."

Says Diana, Aldi's mother, "If he can really quit smoking, he will definitely be a very healthy boy, without any disease. But now, I don't know of what will happen in the future."

"There are numerous long-term effects on children who smoke cigarettes or are exposed to second-hand smoke," Levine notes. "You see an increase in upper-respiratory infections, you see an increase in ear infections, you see permanent lung damage. It damages the capacity for the lungs to function, which will decrease his exercise tolerance and contribute to obesity, and metabolic problems that can come later on. … This boy's lungs are still developing. So anything that's going to damage his lung tissue is going to damage it permanently, and it's really going to decrease his total lung function later on, for his entire life."

"Nowadays," says Diana, "he smokes one pack a day, two packs at most. … We surely hope he will quit, that he will be like any other kid, not smoking. … But I can't stand seeing him hurting himself. What can we do but to accept it is as it is?"


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45 Comments Add a Comment
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SpeedRacer232 says:
Update: that kid is no longer smoking.

On another note, especially because of cases like this, everyone should watch this

http://www.ebaumsworld.com/video/watch/82407476/

and if they still want to smoke, then they can
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vannuys says:
This is exactly why people should be licensed before they are allowed to have children.
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tamatete says:
This is not news that interests us. We have our own problems in this country do we need to spend time and money to bring in "experts" to discuss an issue with a child in another country they know nothing about.
Can we get to the real news please? No one cares about a 2-year old (who is NOT a baby) who smokes.
Give it up.
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inolongercare says:
who cares
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bdifrnt says:
What I find more disgusting about this story is the fact that CBS chose to pursue it. I'm certain that the resources and costs of sending a news team half way around the world could have been better spent here at home. Why can't CBS and other media outlets go back to a little investigative journalism? Or perhaps report a few good things going on in the states. In my opinion and that of many others I've spoken with, the US no longer has reliable news sources. The media is interested in sensationalism only with no originality. It seems all of the media outlets copy from the same wire and then simply puts their own twist on the stories.
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tiredofitall10 says:
I was just watching this loser show-they showed comments on this story-unfortunately, being on the computer here at the same time, I saw no such comments posted here-seems like CBS Early show copy/pasted certain sentences together and created their own posting....
It amazes me how TV News picks and chooses which stories to make "Top Stories". Why don't you concentrate on problems of the US (and get rid of that stupid day counter on the oil spill)-make unemployment top story and get your journalists investigating ways to improve that (just an example). I really don't give a rat's you-know-what about a 2 year old in another country smoking....stop wasting time on such drivel....
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erasmus111 says:
"? But I can't stand seeing him hurting himself. What can we do but to accept it is as it is?"


In another article it said that he was somewhere getting help, but when they stopped him from smoking he would throw tantrums and vomit. That is where the mother said that she "couldn't stand him hurting himself". What does she suppose he is doing when he smokes? He's killing himself. He's 2 years old and doesn't have a clue what he is doing or what the consequences are going to be. Actually it is the parents that are killing him for allowing it to happen. This child should be removed from their care. This is no different than if they allowed him to do drugs.
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rebinsc says:
I don't see what the big deal is...he's smoking less than two packs a day.
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r-u-effin-serious says:
Let the boy smoke. what is it with American's and feeling that everything is their business. We can't even smoke outdoors anymore in america, something is wrong here
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johoud says:
I was appalled when I heard "we sent a crew over to Indonesia" to investigate the smoking toddler. Really? Why spend money on such a ridiculous story when the money spent on this story could have been given to needy Americans, many right there on the streets of NY. Giving media coverage to such ignorance only produces more ignorance from media hungry people, many willing to abuse their children just to get on the news. Poor choice of news coverage.
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kissyhot replies:
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It's just something to get Americans, who have a completely different set of standards by our own choice, fired up over something we'd never be able to stop regardless of what we do. So petty, to worry about wayyyy long-term damage to this kid's body when his real worries are right in front of him and by the time he's old enough to suffer the consequences of smoking he may have already been taken out by some disease or famine. If we are to worry about other countries when we have our own severe crisis' at least worry about something that could actually make a dent.
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