Monday, 23 April 2018 11:56am | |
The Malaysian Bar is appalled that two more men have died while in police custody, within the space of merely a few weeks.
Nizam
Idris, 39, was found hanged in the Selama police station lock-up on 17
March 2018. Selama district police chief Deputy Superintendent Loo Lian
Lay said that the Royal Malaysia Police’s Integrity and Standards
Compliance Department (Jabatan Integriti dan Pematuhan Standard, “JIPS”)
was investigating Nizam Idris’s death to establish if the police
officers on duty had been negligent, and that the Enforcement Agency
Integrity Commission (“EAIC”) was also conducting an investigation.
In
the second case, Thanabalan Subramaniam, 38, was pronounced dead at
Shah Alam Hospital on 17 April 2018 after having been found unconscious
at the Shah Alam central lock-up — where he had been detained for some
20 days — earlier that evening. The Director-General of Health in the
Ministry of Health, Datuk Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah, stated that
Thanabalan Subramaniam had shown symptoms of fever, abdominal pain,
diarrhoea and lack of appetite for four days before he died. It appears
that Thanabalan Subramaniam might not have received adequate medical
attention at the onset of his illness.
These
deaths may well have been prevented if the police officers on duty had
been more diligent in their duty to ensure the safety and well-being of
the detainees entrusted to their care.
The
Malaysian Bar is deeply concerned that the case of Nizam Idris is being
investigated by JIPS, which — by virtue of being a department within
the Royal Malaysia Police — is not independent; and by the EAIC, a
commission that is not dedicated to oversight of the police force,
under-resourced, under-staffed and unable to take any action or bring
any wrongdoer to book. We are not aware of any reported results of
investigation by JIPS or by the EAIC, which lends to the perception that
acts of misconduct and negligence in these cases may well go
unaddressed and/or unpunished.
The
Malaysian Bar reiterates our call on the Government to implement the
recommendation of the Royal Commission to Enhance the Operation and
Management of the Royal Malaysia Police (“Royal Commission”), in its
report published in May 2005, to set up the Independent Police
Complaints and Misconduct Commission (“IPCMC”) to function as an
independent and external oversight body to investigate complaints about
police personnel and to make the police accountable for their conduct,
including acts of negligence. Although 13 years have passed since this
report was published, the need to set up the IPCMC remains as relevant,
and even more pressing, today. The deaths of Nizam Idris and Thanabalan
Subramaniam are an urgent wake-up call that the Government must no
longer ignore.
George Varughese
President
Malaysian Bar
23 April 2018
Source: Malaysian Bar Website
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