IT is ridiculous for Putrajaya to set up a special task force on enforced disappearances when it is made up of serving police officers or those linked to it, said Klang MP and DAP’s Charles Santiago.
In a statement today, he said the decision to include police officers is an insult to the family who have suffered for years.
“In April this year, Malaysia’s national human rights commission or Suhakam said the police played a role in the enforced disappearances of Pastor Raymond Koh and activist Amri Che Mat.
“Therefore, it’s ridiculous that the government task force to investigate these enforced disappearances is made up of police officers or those who have worked with the police.
“It’s a conflict of interest and insults the family members who have suffered for years.”
Santiago then panned Home Minister Muhyiddin Yassin’s remarks that there was no conflict of interest in the appointments of police in the task force as disturbing.
“Didn’t we, the lawmakers and cabinet members who were once the opposition, vehemently condemn such atrocities under the former Umno-led government? Has the cat gotten our tongue now?
“For instance: Mokhtar Mohd Noor, the former police legal division head, had a direct interest in the Suhakam probe and even made submissions on behalf of the police during the public inquiry held by commission.
“Zamri Yahya is Bukit Aman’s Integrity and Standard Compliance department director. Both men sit on the task force.”
Yesterday, Muhyiddin said there is nothing wrong with the inclusion of Mokhtar in the task force, investigating the disappearances of Koh and Amri.
He said the former police legal unit chief’s neutrality is not compromised, as claimed by Koh’s family.
Santiago said the task force should have representative from the Malaysian Bar, the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) and from a non-governmental organisation.
“Anything else will only raise questions if the government is really interested in getting to the truth.”
Members of the special task force were announced by Muhyiddin last week.
Led by former high court judge Abdul Rahim Uda, they are Mokhtar, Zamri, Enforcement Agency Integrity Commission operations director Muhammad Bukhari Ab Hamid, Attorney-General’s Chambers officer Mohd Sophia Zakaria and police commission secretary Mohd Russaini Idrus.
However, the wives of Koh and Amri had questioned the absence of women and non-Malays in the task force.
The Suhakam inquiry had concluded that Koh and Amri were victims of enforced disappearance abducted by, on balance of probability, state agents, namely the police’s Special Branch.
Koh and Amri’s families also questioned Putrajaya’s failure to heed their suggestions to include in the task force representatives of the Malaysian Bar, MACC and a civil society group.
Amri, who was the founder of the welfare group Perlis Hope, left his home in Kangar at 11.30pm on November 25, 2016, in his SUV.
Koh, who founded Harapan Komuniti, was abducted by a group of men on Jalan SS4B/10 in Petaling Jaya on February 13, 2017, while on his way to a friend’s house. – June 30, 2019.
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