|
Malaysia abstained from voting to activate the Optional
Protocol to the United Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel and
Unusual Treatment 1984. The optional protocol was adopted on 18 December 2002,
with 127 countries voting in favour, 42 abstaining and 4 voting against it. The
optional protocol provides a unique mechanism for international and national
human rights experts to conduct regular visits to places of detention to check
on the condition of detention and detainees, and to make recommendations in
countries that are parties to the optional protocol. In Southeast Asia, only
Indonesia, Cambodia and East Timor voted in favour of the optional protocol.
Moreover, Malaysia has not ratified the Convention Against Torture.
The failure to accept yet another international human
rights norm is perhaps not surprising given the long history and notoriety of
the Malaysian police in using an unacceptable level of violence in apprehending
and investigating alleged criminals.
According to the 2002 Police
Commission Report (Disciplinary Unit), disciplinary actions were initiated
against 754 police personnel, and 98 were relieved of their duties in 2002. The statistics showed an
increase of 177 cases, or 30.7 percent, compared to the previous year. In 2001,
577 police personnel were subjected to disciplinary action. According to the
report, 145 police personnel were punished for “erring in their duties,” but
this was not elaborated upon. It added that 48 others were involved in graft
cases. The report also said one police officer was taken to task for rape,
another for concealing his/her marital status and another for "creating
fear."
Other offences that saw
disciplinary action were inefficiency, irresponsibility and tarnishing the
police force’s image. However, the report stressed that those who were punished
constituted a mere 0.89 percent of the total police personnel in the country. It
attributed the increase in cases to its disciplinary committee, which had acted
more effectively in the past year. Deputy Minister in the Prime
Minister’s Department M. Kayveas said the Home Ministry, which oversees the
police force, topped the list of 22
ministries against which complaints of corruption were received. Deputy Home
Minister Chor Chee Heung confirmed that most of the corruption cases involved
police personnel.
In the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia (SUHAKAM)
forum held on the Malaysian Human Rights Day in September, SUHAKAM chairperson
Abu Talib Othman said some improvements could be seen now in terms of how the
police handle suspected criminals. "They treat detainees better now. We believe
these positive changes were brought about by discussions (with SUHAKAM) and
human rights training for police officers… In fact, they have recently set up a
human rights desk (in Bukit Aman) and have extended their fullest cooperation to
us so far," he said. He added, "We no longer receive complaints of police
brutality. This shows that things with the police have improved
somewhat."
City deputy criminal investigation chief Superintendent
Ramli Mat Arshad, speaking for the police, denied the use of intimidation
tactics such as physical abuse or verbal threats to extract confessions from
crime suspects because the law regarding the treatment of suspects in police
custody is clear. “In my 30 or 40 years in the police force, I’ve not seen that
happen. We don’t do things like that. We always adhere to the law," he replied
to a question from a participant. In his speech, Ramli stated that although the
Federal Constitution guarantees a suspect the right to counsel, it was, however,
silent on the time and manner in which that right was to be granted. "Neither
does it give (the detainee) the right to dictate the time at which he (or she)
can see his lawyer." He said the constitution also does not compel the police to
allow a lawyer to visit the detainee at an "inconvenient" time, or when such a
visit might interfere with the course of justice. In the absence of any specific
direction to that effect, he said the police are entitled to refuse the request
for a visit by the detainee’s counsel.
This position perhaps sums up the level of denial that is
endemic in the police force and in SUHAKAM on the human rights record of the
police. It further illustrates the unbalance concentration of discretion and
power in the hands of the police in interpreting as they like the constitutional
and legal provisions.
Throughout 2003, there were numerous incidents of police
brutality against criminal suspects resulting in serious injuries and deaths. In
many cases, the victims were poor, had little education and lacked the proper
“connections” to ensure proper treatment from the police. The treatment meted
out against these suspects is a stark contrast to that accorded to persons of
different backgrounds—namely professionals, affluent or well-connected people.
The culture of lawlessness has seeped into the day-to-day
conduct of police personnel. The police act as though they are above the law.
Complaints from the public that police are rude, corrupt, violent or high-handed
have become commonplace. Basic civil, political, legal and constitutional rights
are easily and often transgressed, as the police accuse people of some “crime”
due to “suspicion,” even though objectively, one would not think that an offence
has been committed. For example, distributing leaflets and demonstrating is
viewed as suspicious or even criminal behaviour. The impulse of the police in
policing may well be described as “arrest first, investigate later,” as little
effort is made to ensure that the right person has been arrested for a criminal
offence. Mass arrest is common, especially in cases connected to drug
activities. Sometimes hundreds of suspected drug addicts are arrested or raids
on entertainment outlets; often all the patrons of the establishment are
arrested in order to check for substance abuse. Arrest of anyone remotely
connected to the crime or crime victim is equally common, especially in
high-profile cases. In the rape and murder of Noritta Samsudin in December which
made the front pages of newspapers, ten persons who were acquainted with the
deceased, including housemates, former boyfriends or male “friends,” were
arrested and remanded for the crime. In the name of “investigation,” police
personnel easily arrest and apply for remand orders from magistrates who
oftentimes comply. For more serious offences such as murder, rape or drug
trafficking, the situation for the suspect is made even more onerous, as even
less respect is given to their rights, well-being and
dignity.
Human rights and civil and political rights as accorded
to the people by the Federal Constitution seem to mean nothing to the police, as
they routinely trample all over these basic liberties. They often target civil
society groups, opposition parties and any member of the public who dares to
exercise the right to free speech, peaceful assembly and association or other
rights that are construed as forms of dissent. These persons are subjected to
threats, harassment, arrest, detention and, in some cases, violence.
The incidents recorded below are merely representative of
the long list of incidents of abuse of power and lawlessness perpetrated by the
police in 2003. While many complaints were filed, the action taken was sporadic
at best. Despite numerous complaints and police reports lodged by victims,
family members of victims, lawyers and non-governmental organisations (NGOs),
there is still a severe lack of accountability and transparency on the part of
the police in its investigation of allegations of police brutality. In the
normal course of events, complaints go unanswered. When the police do "answer"
complaints, the responses are
usually standard statements that the police followed all proper procedures. For
cases of deaths in custody, the police often claim that the deceased died of
"heart attack," "stomach ulcer" or “natural causes.” In cases where there is a
death by police shooting, the authorities allege that the deceased attacked and
the police acted in self defence. For most complaints, the response is that the
police are investigating or that the matter was investigated internally and the
police are satisfied with the findings that the police personnel acted properly.
These are the claims made despite credible evidence of impropriety and abuse of
police powers. In many cases of death in custody or by police shooting, those
associated with the victims have said that the police obstructed the complaint
process by withholding or suppressing evidence of police brutality and colluded
with hospitals to ensure that no cooperation is given to family members and
lawyers who demanded evidence of abuse and
impropriety.
Although there were some cases of criminal prosecution
and disciplinary action taken, the number remains low in comparison to the
number of complaints. In some cases, the charges brought against the errant
police personnel are not commensurate with the severity of the crime committed.
Oftentimes too charges are made only against the lowest ranking personnel
involved. In the infamous case of the killing of Lee Quat Leong while in police
custody in May 1995, although an inquest implicated the names of eleven police
personnel up to the rank of Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) in the
crime, only the two lowest ranking personnel were
charged.
“Trigger-happy” Police
In the October parliamentary sitting, Deputy Home
Minister Zainal Abidin Zin revealed the numbers of alleged criminals shot to
death by the police: 2000—33 deaths; 2001—14 deaths; 2002—54 deaths; since
January 2003—27 deaths. According to Police Watch and the Human Rights
Committee, there were at least 29 deaths by police shooting in 2003. In most
cases, the claims by the police were similar: the suspects shot at the police,
causing the police to return fire, killing the victims. The victims were then
depicted as highly dangerous and wanted criminals.
Deputy Home Minister Chor Chee Heung said in Parliament
in April 2002 that a total of 579 suspected criminals had been shot
dead by the police over the past 20 years, from 1981 to February 2002, for
alleged involvement in a wide range of crimes such as robbery, theft,
kidnapping, drug offences, firearms trafficking and possession, assault and
trying to escape from police road blocks, firing at police, running amok,
fighting, murder and because of their status as illegal immigrants. Among those
killed were 82 non-nationals. He added that 19 policemen had been killed in the
line of duty during the same period. He denied the rumour of the existence of a
death squad in Malaysia.
The figure quoted was, however, questioned by Democratic
Action Party (DAP) leader Lim Kit Siang, who noted that an earlier statistic
released by then-Deputy Home Minister Abdul Kadir Sheikh Fadzir to Parliament in
April 1999 revealed that 635 people had been shot dead by the police in the past
10 years.
However, in many cases, there were suspicious
circumstances leading to doubts over claims made by the police. One should be
mindful of the reversal by the Kota Bharu High Court in September 2002 of an
inquest finding in which the magistrate had earlier said the police had acted
“reasonably” and in “self-defence” in a case in Tumpat, Kelantan in 1998 in
which six men were shot dead by the police. It was now showed that the claims by
the police that they were fired upon could in fact be false. High Court Judge
Suriyadi found, after scrutinising the evidence, that there was no evidence for
the police’s claim that they were shot at by the men, who were then killed in a
hail of 47 bullets. During the inquest, a pathologist testified that multiple
shot marks were found on the head, forehead and eyes of the six victims. The Star reported the judge as saying: “I
was quite stunned by the Magistrate’s decision as it bordered on the preparation
of the defence of the police over-zealousness” and that “the conclusion went
against the grain of evidence.” It could not be established that gunshots came
from the van as claimed by the police, nor was any forensic investigation ever
carried out on the guns allegedly seized from the deceased persons.
Families of those shot dead have often protested that the
deceased had no history or track record of any criminal activity, again raising
questions about the veracity of police claims. This was certainly the case in
the deaths of V. Vikines, 19, Puvaneswaran, 24, and T. Kathiravan, 25, who were
shot dead in October after the police said they ignored orders to surrender and
opened fire at police personnel in Nilai, Negeri Sembilan. The police claimed
that the trio was responsible for a spate of armed robberies. Vikines sustained
two fatal gunshots to his chest in the alleged shootout with the police. S.
Simon, 19, a friend of the deceased, claimed that the shirt worn by the deceased
bore no bullet holes when he saw the body at the mortuary. He said the police
refused to give him the shirt when the body was taken away and that there were
bruise marks on the deceased’s face, legs and back.
Viknes
| V. Vikines, 19-year-old school boy was fatally gunned
down by the
police. |
vikines_parents
| Viknes’ parents disputed the police’s claim that their
son was a wanted criminal and "marksman and weapons
expert." |
The account presented by police was disputed by Vikines's
family, who claimed that the youth was nothing more than an innocent schoolboy
who still lives with his family. They raised suspicion of foul play. “Where are
the witnesses? Where are the police cars that should be riddled with shots?
Where are the wounded policemen?" asked his distraught father G. Vesvanathan at
a press conference. He also accused Federal Criminal Investigation Department
director Salleh Mat Som of being a “liar” for claiming that his son was a
"marksman and weapons expert." Vikines’s uncle, Silva Govindasamy, questioned
the police’s claim that his nephew was involved in about 20 criminal cases. "If
he was a suspect in so many cases, why didn’t the police approach the school or
family? The boy has never been arrested, never harassed, he doesn’t even have a
(criminal) record!" The family also alleged that the police instructed the
Tengku Ampuan Rahimah Hospital in Klang not to conduct a second post-mortem on
Vikines’s body nor cooperate with them.
The decision of the Kuala
Lumpur High Court to acquit a police constable, Tony Beliang, who shot and killed Dr. Tai Eng Teck in a
car when the latter tried to flee after being “caught” in a compromising
position with a Muslim girl in September 1999, was set aside by the Court of
Appeal in July. Instead, the Court of Appeals affirmed the eight-year jail
sentence imposed by the Sessions Court. Augustine Paul J. in the
High Court had overturned the decision of the Sessions Court, which found the
constable guilty of manslaughter. Paul J. said that the police should be given
every encouragement to book criminals and, if necessary, should have the right
to shoot in order to enforce the administration of law and order. He said if the
police are brought to court for the use of force, then the administration would
be halted, thus causing the police to hesitate in carrying out their duties and
instead “think of other possibilities before using their weapons.”
Earlier in December 2000, Sessions Court Judge Ahmadi Asnawi convicted Tony
and sentenced him to eight years in jail. Ahmad Asnawi said the intention to
cause death was evident, as Tony had fired the shots nonstop without knowing who
or how many people were in the car and what they were doing. During the trial, staff nurse Suhana
Mohamed Nor, who was with the victim during the incident, testified that they
panicked when they heard a loud knock on the windscreen of the car, which was
parked at the LRT station. She said they became even more petrified when they
heard shouts of anger, and the victim decided to drive away fearing that the
people were criminal, robbers or vice officers.
Deaths in Police Custody
According to statistics released in Parliament in October
by the Home Ministry, 23 people died in the country’s police lock-ups between
2002 and July 2003. Out of this
total, 16 died in 2002. During the same period, 425 prisoners died during their
incarceration, 237 of them in 2002; this is an average of 19.75 deaths per
month. The monthly average for the first seven months of 2003 rose to 26.86
deaths per month, with 188 fatalities reported in prisons nationwide. Deputy
Home Minister Chor Chee Hueng refused to specify the cause of the
deaths.
Statistics, however, are sometimes manifestly unreliable
as they often contradict statistics issued by other departments or even the same
department or official. Parliament was told in the October 2002 sitting that a
total of 34 persons had died in police custody since 2000—6 deaths in 2000, 10
deaths in 2001 and 18 deaths from January to September 2002. The number of
deaths reported for the first nine months of 2002 was higher than that reported
in 2003 for the whole of 2002.
Deputy Home Minister Chor Chee Heung denied that methods
of torture were used to obtain information from suspects that led to their
deaths. He claimed rather that the majority of deaths were the result of
attempts to escape from police custody. However, what is evident is that there
is a clear lack of supervision, medical care and concern for the general
well-being and rights of suspects while under police
remand.
The new-found publicity on police brutality in 2002 as
highlighted by civil society, the press and the commencement of two inquests on
deaths in custody did little to rein in the police in their disregard for proper
police procedures and the rights of suspects, as there were more deaths of
suspects while in police custody in 2003. It might be said that the situation
worsened, as the two inquests thought to be “victories” by civil society to
bring to book the perpetrators were plagued with serious inconsistencies and
disinterest.
The inquests into the death of both Tharma Rajen, 20 and
M. Ragupathy, 22 stuttered throughout the year, as magistrates and deputy public
prosecutors seemed uninterested and unaware of the gravity of the situation.
Time after time, the inquests were postponed due to the unavailability of
medical records or hospital authorities to verify these reports as evidence. The
doctors who testified oftentimes appeared to be defensive and not interested in
testifying candidly and truthfully. Counsel for the family members of the
deceased also had a difficult time during cross examination, as the presiding
magistrates were over-zealous in defending the testifying
witnesses.
In June 2002, Tharma Rajen died under mysterious
circumstances while in the custody of the police. He was detained consecutively
for 66 days in four different police stations and was eventually detained under
the Emergency Ordinance (EO). According to the official post-mortem, this
previously healthy young man apparently died of pneumonia, although a different
post-mortem said that he died of tuberculosis. The latter, private post-mortem
also observed that the body was “malnourished and emaciated.” There were
allegations of Tharma Rajen being beaten up while in police custody. There had
also been repeated pleadings made by Tharma Rajen and his family members that he
be taken to the hospital, but they were ignored. He was finally taken to the
hospital when he became critically ill. The deceased's mother claimed that, two
hours before he died, her son was handcuffed to the hospital bed despite being
emaciated and unable to breathe properly. At the inquest, a nurse also testified
that he was handcuffed by both hands to the bed even though he was so weak that
he needed assistance to eat and shower.
Tharma
|
Tharma Rajen, 20, died in the custody of the Putrajaya
Police Station after he was detained consecutively for 66 days in four different
police stations and was eventually detained under the Emergency
Ordinance. |
M. Ragupathy was arrested together with nine other
persons after fleeing from an illegal gaming outlet following a dispute with the
proprietor. The group stumbled onto a police patrol car and were arrested on
suspicion of committing a robbery. All 10 men were taken to the Sepang Police
Station and were later remanded for 12 days, from 18 to 30 July 2002. Ragupathy
had undergone a heart operation several years earlier during which a prosthetic
valve was installed that requires a medical supplement known as waffarin, a type
of anti-coagulant. Due to the operation, he had a visible 8-inch scar running
below his neck across his chest.
According to a statutory declaration affirmed by the
cousin brother of Ragupathy who was detained with the deceased, Ragupathy
started complaining of chest pains and inability to sleep to the police
beginning on 20 July. His condition worsened and he was not able to eat for
three days; he also had bouts of vomiting. Ragupathy and his friends made
repeated pleas for medical attention, and his special circumstances were
conveyed to the police but to no avail. On 26 July, the police finally brought
him to a government clinic, where an assistant treated him, as the doctor was
absent. The assistant said that he was “treated” for asthma, as that was what
the police told him about the victim. He was given some medication, but his
condition further deteriorated. On 27 July, the police took him to Putrajaya
Hospital. He was pronounced dead the next day. The Sepang police denied
any negligence or foul play and said that the deceased could have “died
anywhere,” since he had not taken his medication and did not inform the police
of his condition. He added that the hospital only detected the condition when
they did a chest X-ray.
In September 2002, Deputy Home Minister Chor Chee Heung
said in Parliament that police investigations revealed that there was no
criminality in police conduct in the deaths of the three detainees, Tharma
Rajen, Ragupathy and Vivashanu Pillai (whose decomposed body was found in a
river), and that there was no evidence to link the deaths to the conduct of
police personnel.
VIVASHANU PILAI
|
The semi-decomposed body of Vivashanu was found in a
river after the police claimed that he must have drowned after escaping from the
custody of the Dang Wangi Police Station in Kuala Lumpur. The family alleged
that he was killed while in police custody and his body was thereafter dumped
into the river
|
Many of the reported deaths in police custody were viewed
with suspicion by family members of the deceased. Human rights groups called for
compulsory inquests on all cases of deaths in police custody and demanded a
second and independent post-mortem procedure on the deceased done upon the
requests of family members. However, this has fallen on deaf ears; no inquests
were held in 2003.
Among those who died in police detention
were:
|
Name |
Age |
Date of death |
Place of detention |
|
Syed Fadzil Syed
Ibrahim |
21 |
9 January |
Jasin Police Station,
Melaka |
|
Hasrizal Hamzah |
27 |
9 February |
Kajang Police Station,
Selangor |
|
Prakash Moses |
23 |
18 February |
Hang Tuah Police Station, Kuala
Lumpur |
|
Kannan Kanthan |
45 |
1 March |
Batu Pahat Police Station,
Johor |
|
Ahmad Salleh |
42 |
7 June |
Kuala Krai Police Station,
Kelantan |
|
Ulaganathan Muniandy 19 |
19 |
21 July |
Kajang Police Station,
Selangor |
|
Ho Kwai See |
28 |
5 August |
Sungai Buloh Prison, Kota Damansara Police Station (died
in prison) |
|
Ravichandran Ramayah |
38 |
21 October |
Penang Prison, North East Police Station
|
|
Veerasamy Gopal |
52 |
28 November |
Ampang Police Station,
Selangor |
|
L. Yoges Rao |
22 |
11 December |
Sitiawan Police Station,
Perak. |
Source: Police Watch and Human Rights Committee and
SUARAM monitoring
In January 2003, Syed Fadzil Syed Hamzah, 21, died while
in the custody of the Jasin Police Station in Melaka. According to Melaka Chief
Police Christopher Wan Soo Kee, the deceased died after receiving out-patient
treatment for stomach pains at Jasin Hospital. According to him, the suspected
drug dependent arrested on suspicion of motorcycle theft died of germ
infection—as revealed in an autopsy. He added that the deceased had received
medical treatment on a few occasions after complaints of stomach
pain.
In February, Hasrizal Hamzah, a police detainee suspected
of murder, leapt to his death from the fourth floor of the Kajang Police
Station. Selangor Criminal Investigations Department Chief Senior Assistant
Commissioner Abu Bakar Mustaffa
claimed that the deceased had confessed momentarily before killing himself. He
said: “We are confident we detained the man responsible…the suspect chose to
jump to his death.” According to him, the incident happened when the handcuffed
suspect was being moved. He apparently shoved the accompanying policeman aside
and hurled himself over the balcony. He also claimed that thus far no “foul
play” had been detected in the case. However, Selangor Police Chief Deputy
Commissioner Mohd Noor Hamat said
that he had directed that an internal inquiry be conducted
In February, Prakash Moses collapsed while being detained
at the Jalan Hang Tuah Police Station Detention Centre. Three days later, he
died at the Kuala Lumpur Hospital. His son, Steven Moses, claimed that there was
a gash on his father’s head that was likely to have caused his death. He added
that his father was well the last time he saw him, three days before his death.
The deceased and his son were arrested in an anti-narcotics operation and
subsequently detained at the Jalan Hang Tuah Police Station Detention Centre,
formerly Pudu Prison. It is now a detention centre for suspected drug
dependent-persons who are arrested
en mass in operations. In January, the first batch of 179 suspected drug
dependents arrested in Kuala Lumpur were detained there.
In March, Kannan Kanthan, 45, died in Batu Pahat Police
Station in Johor after being arrested three days earlier by the police. The
deceased’s nephew, Sri Rajesh Kanna Viladan, said that when he saw Kannan in
court a few days earlier, he was in good health. At the mortuary, Sri Rajesh
identified the body and claimed that he found injuries on the deceased—a swollen
neck and injuries on the left eye and right hand. Fourteen persons were arrested
in relation to the death including three police personnel. Seven of them were
later charged with causing the death of Kannan in Cell ‘C’ lockup. In addition,
a police lance corporal Azmi Harun was charged with abetting the five by
transferring the deceased from Cell ‘F’ to Cell ‘C’ and allowing him to be
assaulted by the detainees. The two other police personnel were subjected
disciplinary actions.
In July, Ulaganathan Muniandy, 19, died in the Kajang
Police Station, Selangor after being arrested and detained under the Emergency
Ordinance (EO), which allows the police to hold suspects for up to 60 days.
According to the deceased's mother, she visited her son four times, and on the
last occasion, she saw that he had bruises on his eyes and suffered other
injuries. She also claimed that her son deceased could not sit properly. The
police claimed that Ulaganathan died from asthma, a cause disputed by the mother
as she said that her son was healthy and did not suffer from asthma. Further,
the burial certificate issued by the Kajang Hospital only said that the cause of
death was “undetermined.”
In July, the murder trial of a detainee under police
custody, Wan Deraman Wan Yusof, 44, began with testimonies saying that a police
lance corporal together with two other detainees kicked, stomped on and beat up
the detainee in a police lockup in Setapak Police Station in Kuala Lumpur in
2001.
28-year-old Ho Kwai See died at the Sungai Buloh Prison
in August after earlier being detained for a week by the Kota Damansara police
in Selangor. According to the post-mortem findings, he died from a "perforated
ulcer." Family members suspected foul play after seeing bruises on the body and
sought a second post-mortem. Kwai See's brother wanted the authorities to
explain how his apparently healthy brother had died so suddenly while in
custody. "He did not have any illness and he did not have any stomach pains. We
want to know what happened. I also saw a lot of blue black marks on his body,"
he said. He said that he was unaware of his brother’s arrest until he received
an anonymous telephone call informing him that his brother had died.
Ho kwai see
| 28-year-old Ho Kwai See died after being detained for a
week by the Kota Damansara police in
Selangor. |
howai_see lawyers
|
The deceased’s brother (centre) with his lawyers (left
and far right) from Police Watch and the Human Rights Committee, a
non-governmental organisation which campaigns against police brutality, fatal
shootings and deaths of suspects while in police
custody. |
After initially agreeing to conduct the post-mortem,
University Malaya Medical Centre (UMMC) forensic pathologist K. Nadesan later
declined following a dispute with the family’s lawyers. UMMC then asked the
family to present a magistrate’s order or a police permit before proceeding with
the second post-mortem. The family
members than attempted obtain a court order to compel the UMMC to conduct the
post-mortem on Kwai See to determine the cause of death. However, the
application was rejected by the Kuala Lumpur High Court on grounds that the
requirements under the Special Relief Act 1950, which gives powers to the court
to order officials to carry out certain acts, were not satisfied. In three such
cases earlier, UMMC had performed second post-mortems at the request of the
family members without requiring any official permit. However, the court
decision would mean that all future requests for second post-mortem would only
be performed if authorised by a magistrate or the
police.
In October, Ravichandran Ramayah, 38, died a week after
being arrested and detained by the Penang North East Police Station. Family
members claimed that medical needs were not provided to Ravichandran even though
it was clear that his condition was very poor when he appeared in the
Magistrate's Court for remand proceedings. The deceased then could only walk
with the help of family members, causing the magistrate to order that he be
brought to a hospital for medical attention. However, the police instead took
the deceased to the Penang Prison, where he eventually died. State Police Chief
Deputy Commissioner Othman Talib said that no wrongdoing had been committed on
the part of the police. He said that a post-mortem showed that Ravichandran died
from natural causes and there were no signs of physical abuse or
assault.
In December, Veerasamy Gopal, 52, died in the Ampang
Police Station in Selangor after being detained for four days. Police ruled out
foul play and said that a post-mortem revealed that he had died from an
infection of the pancreas. However, this was contradicted by his family members
who alleged that he had been
assaulted in the lock-up, leading to his death.
Veerasamy
| Veerasamy Gopal, 52, died in the Ampang Police Station in
Selangor after being detained for four
days. |
In December, 22-year-old
L.Yoges Rao died while in the custody of the Sitiawan Police Station in Perak.
Yoges was
arrested on drug-related charges and brought to his home by six police
personnel. His, sister who was at home at the time, said that the policemen
proceeded to assault Yoges by punching him several times his stomach and
abdomen. She said that the
policemen then took Yoges into one of the rooms and locked the room from the
inside. She claimed that she could hear her brother screaming in pain and
pleading with the police to stop assaulting him. When he was brought out of the
room about half an hour later, she saw him vomiting blood. He died in police
custody the next day. Despite evidence of abuse on
Yoges’ body, the burial permit stated that he had died of a stomach
ulcer.
In March, A. Subramaniam died after allegedly being
assaulted by prison officials at the Air Molek Prison in Johor. Lawyer
Uthayakumar lodged a complaint that Subramaniam, his friend S. Sherma Naidu and
two other detainees had been assaulted and tortured by prison officials after
they went on a hunger strike to protest against filthy conditions in the prison.
Subramaniam then allegedly fell ill and died while being rushed to the hospital.
His parents lodged a police report claiming police brutality and lack of care
while under incarceration. However, Johor Police Chief Mukhtar Ismail said
police investigations ruled out foul play in the detainee’s death. The prisons
department also cleared the Ayer Molek authorities of any wrongdoing, as the
findings of a post-mortem report and investigations of an inquiry board said
that the youth had died of Septicaemia
meningitis.
Other Acts of Brutality
In February, police personnel were alleged to have beaten
P. Lingeswaran together with another 19-year-old, P. Poobalan, while the two
were being detained at the Subang Jaya Police Station in Selangor. According to
a police report, the duo was arrested and blindfolded at the police station
before they were beaten with rubber hoses. The complainant said: "I saw that
Poobalan had red bruises of about 6-inches long on his back and his right hand.
There were also swellings on his head, feet and the soles of his feet. As for
Lingeswaran, there were (similar) bruises on both his shoulders." The two youths
were subsequently released by the Petaling Jaya Magistrate’s Court but were
re-arrested the same day by the Subang Jaya police. Lawyer Uthayakumar said the
two were re-arrested while they were seeking medical treatment for their
injuries at the Universiti Hospital. The hospital staff apparently notified the
police, who came and removed the two back to the Subang Jaya Police Station. The
police later suddenly brought the two youth back to the hospital’s police booth
and released them at about 2 a.m. Malaysiakini.com reported that when it
contacted the Subang Jaya Police Station, a police officer who declined to be
named said that there were no records that the two youths were held during the
past two days at the station.
In March, two general operational force policemen, Mohd
Fauzi Yahya and Ahmad Nazri Zainorddin, were charged in court for raping a
13-year-old girl detainee in Menggatal Immigration Detention Camp in Sabah
between 27 July and 12 August 2002. The girl was arrested together with tens of
thousands of suspected undocumented persons in a massive government drive
against them that resulted in misery, deportation and deaths linked to the
prolonged detention. The girl’s rape caused a diplomatic row with the
Philippines as she was initially thought to be Filipino. However, Sessions Court
Judge Nurchaya Arshad acquitted both accused persons after finding that the
prosecution failed to establish a prima
facie case against them.
In May, 17-year-old Lee Kam Choon
claimed he was physically assaulted by several plainclothes policemen in Penang.
He was riding his motorcycle when at about 11:50 p.m. he was chased by about six
unidentified men on motorcycles. He thought they were robbers. The men caught up
with him and proceeded to assault, handcuff and drag him to the Butterworth
Police Station. A medical report stated that Lee sustained "multiple bodily
injuries affecting the back, right and left upper limbs, face and both ankles."
Lee was issued two summonses, one for a “fanciful and tiny” registration number
plate and another for reckless riding. A family member claimed that he was
threatened by a senior police officer and was told not to pursue the case in
court. He said he was warned that the boy could be charged for carrying arms and
that the police would counter-sue if the matter was not settled
amicably.
In May, a woman detainee claimed she was forced by a
police officer to perform oral sex on another male detainee during her detention
at the Gombak Police Station in Selangor. The 42-year-old woman was arrested
along with her 40-year-old husband and 17-year-old daughter. According to the police report lodged
by the victim, she was forced to perform oral sex on another 23-year-old male
detainee who was brought into the room wearing only his underwear. The woman
also claimed the police threatened to rape her daughter. The woman's husband too
lodged a police report, claiming he was assaulted and harassed by the police. In
his report, the man said he was stripped naked, photographed and asked to appear
nude in front of his daughter.
In July, a Chin asylum seeker, was stopped by two
uniformed policemen on a motorcycle. He was questioned, searched and handcuffed.
Later the policemen slapped and kicked him. The policemen also took his
ballpoint pen from his pocket and wrote on his face and used it to poke his
stomach. The victim was later taken into a police patrol car whereupon money was
demanded from him. When he could not produce any money, the policemen beat him
up further, stripped him of his clothes and left him near the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNCHR) office. The policemen also took away RM
3, the only money he had on him.
In March, the police raided apartment blocks in
Brickfield, Kuala Lumpur in search of undocumented Indian nationals. Police
personnel conducted mass block searches, and 191 persons—186 Indian nationals, 4
Pakistanis and a Burmese—were arrested and detained. The detainees, most of whom
were IT specialists, claimed that
they had proper documentation, which most of them provided. However, this failed
to satisfy the authorities, as the they were not familiar with the various types
of visas and worker's passes. Of the 191 persons detained, 155 produced
documentation while 36 were not able to. Many of the documents were scratched or
defaced by the police during the “verification” of these documents. The
detainees complained that the authorities acted in a high-handed manner,
handcuffed most of them and detained them at the police station instead of
checking the documents properly at the apartments. They added that some of those
arrested were roughed up by being kicked and slapped and stripped naked. Some
were detained for up to 12 hours without food or water. The operation started at
7 a.m., and their ordeal only ended at 7 p.m. that day. The immigration
authorities did not participate in the raid, nor was appropriate verification
equipment taken along.
bfield 2 demo
| An Indian national demonstrates how he was mistreated by
the police when they unlawfully detained en mass 191 persons, most of whom had
valid documentation.
|
Culture, Arts and Tourism Minister Abdul Kadir Sheikh
Fadzir apologized to the people of the Southern Thailand after the police
detained 60 Thai nationals for alleged immigration offences while crossing the
border and shopping in Malaysia. In the operation in June, police personnel
randomly arrested shoppers from duty-free zone shops for “lack” of
documentation. Despite protestation, they were detained for 10 days, and it was
only due to intervention from the Thai authorities that they were subsequently
released. The confusion arose because there is a border agreement between
Thailand and Malaysia stating that Thai nationals are not required to produce
travel documents to enter the duty-free zone in Rantau Panjang that the police
were apparently unaware of.
The 100-year old Sri
Kalikamba Kamadeswarar temple that served residents formerly living in the Ebor
palm oil estate in Batu Tiga, Shah Alam, was destroyed and burnt in June by a
group of unidentified individuals and allegedly witnessed by police officers.
According to lawyer and activist Uthayakumar, several unidentified individuals
first tried to burn down the temple earlier but failed because it started to
rain. Devotees from the temple lodged a police report asking for protection, and
they took turns to watch over the temple. However, he alleged that two
days later, another group of people came together with uniformed policemen and
proceeded to destroy the temple. According to several police reports lodged over
the second incident, three
eyewitnesses claimed that some 10 uniformed police personnel had restrained them
while another group of unidentified persons set the temple on fire. One of the
witnesses, K. Chandrasegaran, said that he and two other men posted to watch
over the temple were restrained by the police and forcibly taken out of the
temple. "[The police] dragged us out by pulling our shirts with our hands held
to the back. We were told that if we ran or resisted, we would be handcuffed,"
he said in his police report lodged on the day of the incident. Chandrasegaran
said five men in civilian clothes then pulled out the carpet from the floor of
the temple, placed it on top of the temple roof and set it alight after dousing
it with petrol. Senior Assistant Commissioner (SAC) Abu Bakar met the temple
committee and apologised for the incident, and said that he would send some
policemen to help clean up the place. In return, he asked them not to make an
issue out of the matter.
Meanwhile, the committee
chairperson, P. Thanabalan, said that the temple had been built over a hundred
years ago to serve estate workers living in the area. The workers were later
relocated away from the area after the land was slated for development into a
housing estate by Sime UEP 10 or 12 years ago. However, Thanabalan said the
temple continued to serve the relocated residents, and no provisions had been
made for them to move the temple to another location. Over the course of the
year, several Hindu temples had been threatened with demolition as a result of
encroaching development into former estates or residential areas. There had been
some cases where temples had been demolished by local authorities either because
they are not registered, were not managed by a lawfully recognised committee or
because the land that they occupied had been converted for development.
In August , Constable Razali Pilen, 27, was sentenced to
15 years imprisonment and ordered to be given 17 strokes of the cane for raping
two women in the Ampang Police Station lock-up in Selangor in February 2002. His
victims, a Filipino woman and an Indonesian woman, were both alleged to be
undocumented sex workers. Razali was initially acquitted and discharged without
his defence being called, but the High Court reversed the decision on appeal.
Sessions Court Judge Mohamed Saman Mohd Ramli had earlier held the sexual acts
between the parties to be “voluntary, just like between husband and wife,” and
further undermined the credibility of the victims on the grounds that they were
undocumented persons and married with children. The acquittal caused outrage
among NGOs and women’s groups for the court’s failure to understand the
vulnerability of women, especially undocumented women in police custody.
There were also numerous incidents of police collusion
with influential companies and property developers in evicting and demolishing
the houses of plantation workers or urban pioneers. In many cases, these
unlawful acts were done while the disputes were still pending in court and in
the absence of court orders. The protesters and occupants were generally
threatened with violence and arrest, and in some cases the threats materialised,
resulting in further misery to these vulnerable groups.
Abuse of the Remand Procedure by the Police and
Magistrates
One of the main factors that contributes to the
violations of the human rights of suspects while in police custody is the
readiness of magistrates in granting remand orders to allow the police to
investigate alleged crimes. Although the Criminal Procedure Code (CPC) allows
remand orders to be granted not exceeding 15 days if investigations cannot be
completed within 24 hours of the arrest, the police invariably inform the
magistrate that the suspect is being investigated for an offence and the
magistrate in the majority of cases as a matter of “"due course"” grants a remand order against the suspect
without checking the desirability for such an order. The magistrate normally
performs this task in an administrative manner and fails to scrutinise the
propriety of the arrest, the investigation done in the preceding 24 hours and
the connection between the suspect and the crime. In most cases, no
investigation is carried out at all within the initial 24 hours, and in many
cases there is no logical connection between the length of remand period and the
alleged offence. As an illustration, a person suspected of being a drug
dependent is sometimes remanded for a week or more when the only “investigation”
that was needed was to obtain urine samples for a drug substance test.
Often remand procedures are carried out with neither the
proper participation of the suspect nor the presence of a lawyer if he or she
has one. The situation is made worse as there is a general lack of information
regarding the fate of a suspect. A telephone call is not regarded as a right and
is discretionary. The whereabouts of a suspect and details while under remand
are normally not easily forthcoming from the police. Family members and lawyers
are usually given the runaround concerning the place of detention. Access to the
suspect and details as to when the suspect is to be brought to court for a
remand order or to be charged are also often denied.
There is also the problem of the “chain smoking order”
being made against a suspect. This is where the police inform the magistrate
that the suspect is being investigated for a another offence as well; they thus
call for a further and different remand order. The suspect is then further
detained (in excess of the maximum 15 days) and sometimes taken to different
jurisdictions to “solve” other crimes. In the different jurisdiction, the
suspect is sometimes further remanded, and the presiding magistrate may not have
been informed of the suspect’s history of being consecutively remanded. Even if
the magistrate was duly informed, the cycle of automatic remand orders is
frequently administered without due regard to the constitutional and legal
provisions. There have been cases where suspects have been detained for more
than two months in various police stations in various states, resulting in
severe deterioration of health and even death while in police
custody.
Some suspects in prolonged detention are detained under
the EO, which allows the police to hold suspects for up to 60 days. Under the
ordinance there is no need for a remand order from a magistrate. All that is
required is that a police officer of or above the rank of deputy superintendent
report the circumstances of the arrest. He must show the inspector general of
police or his designated officer that actions were taken with a view to “preventing any
person from acting in a manner prejudicial to public order” or for “suppression
of violence” or for “prevention of crimes involving violence.”.
In December, SUARAM brought to the attention of the Home
Ministry and SUHAKAM the plight of five detainees who were remanded continuously
for between 24 and 28 days. After the abuse of the remand procedure was
highlighted, the police resorted to the EO to justify the continuous detention.
The five have since been imposed with the two-year detention order under the EO
and are serving their detention without trial in Simpang Renggam Detention Camp.
The bleak picture painted above concurs with the SUHAKAM
report entitled “Rights of Remand Prisoners.” The report, dated December 2001
and released in October 2002, disclosed that police and magistrates have grossly
abused the remand procedures. The commission made recommendations for
improvements. Among the abuses highlighted
were:
- Remand persons were barred from contacting family
members
- Medical requirements were not fully
fulfilled
§
Family members and friends of
arrested persons, including juveniles, were sometimes kept in the dark of
details and the reasons for their arrest, whether they would be remanded,
whether they would be brought to court to be remanded or charged, which court
would they would be brought to and when this would happen
- Extortion by police personnel who demanded up to RM 40.00
for a telephone call
- No access to lawyers was provided on the ground that it
would interfere with police investigation
- Remand proceedings were conducted in private between the
police and the magistrate in
chambers while the suspects were kept away
- The readiness of magistrates to grant remand orders
without considering whether it was necessary to further investigation, and
without paying due consideration to the views of the suspect or his
lawyers
- The common practice of “chain smoking order” or repeated
remand orders from one police station to another for suspicion of committing
different alleged crimes resulting in months of
incarceration
- The deplorable condition of lockups; problems included
congestion, absence of bed sheets, dirty blankets, inadequate clothing,
spectacles being taken away, deprivation of privacy, stinking toilets with
little of no water, etc.
Intimidation and Persecution of Lawyer P.
Uthayakumar
In January, lawyer P. Uthayakumar was arrested outside
the Sepang Magistrate’s Court in Selangor after attending an inquest into the
death of S. Tharma Rajen, who died in police custody after being detained by the
police for 66 days. The lawyer was detained for a period in excess of 24 hours
by the police on charges of criminal intimidation of a police officer and of
insulting a magistrate during the hearing of the judicial inquest. He was
initially “released” after his statement was taken in the Sepang Police Station
but re-arrested immediately and brought to the Sentul Police Station in Kuala
Lumpur. Chief Police Officer Dell Akbar Khan denied any police harassment
against the lawyer. He said: “If he is wanted for questioning in several places,
what can we do? The case in Selangor is separate. It has nothing to do with us.
We are investigating him for a total different case.”
The apparent sole reason he was arrested and kept
overnight was to record his section 113 cautioned statement under the Criminal
Procedure Code. SAC Abu Bakar told reporters that he would be released the
following day and not charged immediately. Therefore, there was no need to
detain him overnight (even though, technically, the police were within their
legal rights to do so), as the statement and administrative matters pertaining
to the arrest and bail could have been completed in a few hours; the prolonged
detention must be viewed as punishment and an exercise of police powers in bad
faith.
The arrest was condemned by the Bar Council. In a
statement, it said: “The Bar Council is of the view that to arrest Uthayakumar
at the doorsteps of the Sepang Magistrate's Court by an unnecessarily large team
of around 20 police officers was completely unwarranted.” It was said further
that it was not necessary for the arrest to take place in the full glare of the
public, his clients and journalists. The Bar Council also noted that the police
themselves were the complainant in the case, and voiced concern that the arrest
was a serious abuse of police powers as seen from the calculated timing and
publicity involved. The Bar Council also questioned the denial of Uthayakumar of
legal counsel and the fact that he was not informed of the grounds of his
arrest.
Uthayakumar was later charged under section 506 of the
Penal Code for criminal intimidation when he allegedly said the words: “You
watch out, I will fix you. We fix you.” The charge carries a sentence of up to
seven years’ imprisonment and/or fine upon conviction. He was also charged under
section 228 for intentionally insulting magistrate Norazmi Mohd Narawi when he
ignored the magistrate’s order to be quiet and continued speaking. He was also
charged with interrupting a court proceeding resulting in it being postponed.
The offence carries a jail sentence of up to six months’ imprisonment and/or a
fine of up to RM2,000. However, the
Attorney General’s chambers later withdrew the charge on contempt of court after
intervention from civil society, the Bar Council and UN Special Rapporteur on
the Independence of Judges and Lawyers Param Cumaraswamy, who argued that the
lawyer was immune from prosecution as the alleged offence was committed during
judicial proceedings.
In May, in a revision application by Uthayakumar at the
Shah Alam High Court on the charges of criminal intimidation, Suriyadi Halim
Omar J. declared that the charges as they stood were groundless and discharged
the lawyer from the accusation. The order does not, however, preclude the
prosecution from re-charging Uthayakumar. The judgment was scathing of the
police conduct: “According to Mr. Uthayakumar, at the police station he was
verbally abused by some exceptionally obnoxious police officers, stripped down
to his underpants, pictured and filmed in full view of nine policemen. If these
allegations were true, I see no necessity for him to be humiliated and robbed of
his human dignity in such manner and fashion. They should not have behaved like
lords and masters in their little fiefdom, where others are equivalent to serfs,
open to abuse and directions.”
Suriyadi J. was equally scathing of Magistrate Norazmi
Mohd Nawawi’s conduct in refusing to recuse himself from the proceedings when
Uthayakumar was charged and applied for bail.. The judge said: “Any uninitiated
person could easily have seen or pointed out that the learned Magistrate should
have been the last person to hear the bail matter, for the obvious reason of him
being an interested party. Even if he had considered that the bail amount was
fair, the perception gathered by the public would certainly militate against it.
As far as the public and I were concerned, as justice was not seen to be done,
then it was never done…In similar vein, when Mr. Uthayakumar ventilated that the
charge or charges were groundless, it was inconceivable that any person in their
right frame of mind would have seriously expected that Magistrate to agree to
that view…certainly an aberration of justice has taken place on that fateful
day.”
The International Commission of Jurist and Centre for the
Independence of Judges and Lawyers (ICJ/CIJL) in its report on the matter, while
commending the High Court judge’s decision and intervention, concluded that “the
way this case has been handled gives serious rise for concern. The Malaysian
legal system has been under international scrutiny for its prosecution of
lawyers, particularly through its use of contempt power…It is therefore not
without coincidence that this lawyer was arrested on the steps of a court where
he was representing the family of a youth who died in police custody…ICJ/CIJL
finds the circumstances and timing of Mr. Uthayakumar’s arrest and detention
deeply disturbing.”
In October, Uthayakumar
further complained of harassment, verbal abuse and obstruction of justice by
police officers while he was attending to clients at the Petaling Jaya
Magistrate’s Court. He said that he went to
court to represent one of the suspects in a snatch-theft case in a remand
proceeding, as the police were seeking to extend their remand by another nine
days. Before the proceedings began, Uthayakumar said he tried to establish such
matters as whether an identification parade had been conducted, the age of his
clients, if they had a past record and circumstances of their arrest. He alleged
that, as he started speaking to them in the court room, about 10 plainclothes
and uniformed police officers started shouting at him and acting like "licensed
gangsters" as they obstructed him from speaking to his clients. Uthayakumar then left the court room to
complain about the officers’ conduct to Magistrate Yasmin Abdul Razak, who was
temporarily engaged in another matter elsewhere in the building. When
Uthayakumar tried to re-enter the court room, his way was allegedly blocked for
a while by a plainclothes officer, who "verbally abused and threatened"
him.
The lawyer has been aggressively campaigning against
police brutality, fatal shootings and deaths of suspects while in police custody
since 2002, and lodged numerous police reports, memoranda and complaints against
the police on behalf of the aggrieved family members. During the campaign, there
were a few fierce confrontations between the lawyer, his supporters and the
police.
Posted on 2004-06-24
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