Cigarette-smoking toddler who shocked the world with his 40-a-day habit has given up... now he's addicted to food
At the age of two he shocked the world after being pictured chain-smoking cigarettes.
Two years on he's now a normal, cheeky five-year-old - and, while he's managed to kick the habit, he now has another addiction. Food.
Aldi Rizal became an international media sensation when he was discovered in a poor village in Sumatra, Indonesia, puffing on a cigarette while riding his tricycle.
Two years on he's now a normal, cheeky five-year-old - and, while he's managed to kick the habit, he now has another addiction. Food.
Aldi Rizal became an international media sensation when he was discovered in a poor village in Sumatra, Indonesia, puffing on a cigarette while riding his tricycle.
Toddler Aldi Rizal stunned the world when it was revealed he had a 40-a-day smoking habit at just two years old
Destructive: The youngster was discovered in a
poor village in Sumatra, Indonesia, puffing on a cigarette while riding
his tricycle
Now Aldi has picked up a new addiction - to food. His huge appetite has seen him gorge on junk food and fatty snacks
The outcry led to the Indonesian
government launching a campaign to tackle the problem of children
smoking and organising special rehabilitation treatment to help Aldi
quit.
Aldi was taken for
play therapy sessions in the capital Jakarta for two weeks to take his
mind off his 40-a-day habit and learn to be a normal toddler for the
first time.
A new
documentary series revisits the family two years on to find out how Aldi
is getting on and reveals he has managed to stay off the cigarettes,
but is still dangerously unhealthy.
During his rehabilitation
treatment, Aldi saw psychiatrists who encouraged his mother to keep him
busy with playing and taught her about the dangers of smoking.
One
of them - Dr Kak Seto - still sees Aldi and his family at regular
intervals to ensure he is not falling back into old habits.
His
mother Diane Rizal, 28, said: 'There are many people still offering
Aldi cigarettes, but Aldi no. He says "I love Kak Seto. He would be sad
if I started smoking again and made myself ill."
Aldi weighs nearly four stone, double what he
should be for a child his age, and medics have urged his mother to put
her son on a diet
Trying to be normal: Aldi was taken for play
therapy sessions in the capital Jakarta for two weeks to take his mind
off his 40-a-day habit
Aldi's addiction to fatty foods sees him drinking three cans of condensed milk a day (he is pictured centre)
'At first when we were weaning Aldi off the cigarettes he would have terrible tantrums and I would call Dr Seto for help.
'But now he doesn't want them.'
However,
Mrs Rizal is now worried about her son's weight, as he developed food
cravings while quitting smoking, and now has a big appetite.
Mrs Rizal said
the strong-willed little boy now demands food in the same way he used
to beg for cigarettes, and the family struggles not to give in to his
tantrums.
Mrs Rizal said: 'When Aldi first quit smoking he would demand a lot of toys.
Aldi's mother Diane Rizal, 28, says people still offer her son cigarettes even though he has kicked the habit
'He would bang his head on the wall if
he couldn't get what he wanted. That's why I get him cigarettes in the
first place - because of his temper and his crying.
'Now
I don't give him cigarettes, but he eats a lot. With so many people
living in the house it's hard to stop him from getting food.'
Aldi
also helps his mother and father Mohamed out on their market stall,
where his bright bubbly character and cheekiness wins him lots of
attention.
'I feel happy when people want to speak to him because the know him,' admitted Mrs Rizal.
Aldi, with his mother, Diane, 28, and father Mohamed
'But
I feel annoyed when they refer to him as 'the smoking kid'. It makes me
feel like they are accusing me of being a bad parent.'
Mr and Mrs Rizal decided
to take Aldi to a nutritionist for medical checks and now they've been
given advice on how to put him on a healthier diet so he can start to
lose some weight.
'Aldi is
very overweight, his weight doesn't match his age,' said nutritionist
Fransisca Dewi. 'His ideal weight is 17kg to 19kg. He's 24kg already.
'I think it is difficult for them. The mother says Aldi is a spoilt kid. If Diana wants to forbid him eating, it will be hard.
'She
will need the cooperation from the entire household. One obvious thing
is they let him have too much condensed milk. He drinks three cans a day
and eats too many carbohydrates.'
Paediatric
specialist Dr William Nawawi is also concerned that smoking at an early
age has made Aldi more likely to suffer weight issues.
He explained: 'Nicotine can increase the endocrine hormone in the body. This condition can cause resistance to insulin.
'The blood will not be able to break glucose from food. This will make Aldi become bigger and bigger.'
Now,
Aldi is back at home in his fishing village and is on a strict diet
with lots of fresh fruit and vegetables and smaller portions.
Mrs Rizal must
also persuade Aldi's siblings and the rest of the family not to give in
and provide him with junk food when she is not around.
Doctors
hope that if Aldi can lose around half a stone to a stone, his weight
will eventually even out as he starts to grow taller.
It
is thought one-third of children in Indonesia try smoking before the
age of ten. The Government has launched efforts to tackle the problem.
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