This  cynical attitude of the police, acting as they pleased without regard  for the law and standard operating procedures, could not have thrived  had senior police officers and the Home Minister not been quick to  constantly protect the police at all cost and dismissing complaints when  there is evidence of trigger happy shooting, brutality and fabrication  of evidence.
By N. Surendran (Lawyers for Liberty)
Lawyers  for Liberty is troubled that many politicians and others have been too  quick to praise the police for solving the gruesome murder of Datuk  Sosilawati Lawiya and three other associates. What this incident has  shown – far from an effective, competent and professional police force  that Malaysia deserves – is that the police only acted decisively when  the case involved the disappearance of a prominent and wealthy “Datuk”  while ignoring or dragging its feet over numerous other  disappearance/murder and commercial crime cases. It has further been  reported that up to 20 people could have been murdered by the same  perpetrators.
How  can these suspected perpetrators including two infamous disbarred  lawyers have been allowed to commit these crimes for so long with so  much impunity without any police action? Questions have rightly been  raised by the press that perhaps, the police may have been “bought”.
Is  the police lacking resources or has it simply been too busy  investigating and harassing opposition politicians and dissidents over  frivolous issues to take real  crimes seriously? Are we  therefore surprised that public confidence of the police remains  extremely low and the view that the police is corrupt and acts as the  protector of the rich and powerful remains firmly intact?
Lawyers  for Liberty welcomes the new IGP's promise that the police will be  taking immediate action on all missing persons reports and that those  caught slacking will be severely reprimanded unlike the Selangor CPO's  defensive posturing when questioned on these issues. It is unbecoming of  the CPO to brush off these legitimate questions when possible police  negligence or corruption has led to the perpetration of more crimes and  we demand that an inquiry be held on these failures.
This  recalls the case of Norizan Salleh who was needlessly shot five times  by the police. When concerns were raised by the victim and others, the  police and the Home Minister totally dismissed the complaint and  affirmed that the police had acted correctly. Had her case been taken  seriously, 15-year-old Aminulrasyid would not have died in a hail of  bullets under similar circumstances.
This  cynical attitude of the police, acting as they pleased without regard  for the law and standard operating procedures, could not have thrived  had senior police officers and the Home Minister not been quick to  constantly protect the police at all cost and dismissing complaints when  there is evidence of trigger happy shooting, brutality and fabrication  of evidence.
Similarly  in the current case, Sosilawati and her associates would not have been  killed had the police investigated all the prior missing persons and the  commercial crime cases connected to the suspects.
We  further call on the Home Minister to take immediate steps to redress  the failing professionalism and competence of the police force – among  the most imperative, the setting up of the Independent Police Complaints  and Misconduct Commission (IPCMC) as recommended by the Royal  Commission to Enhance the Operation and Management of the Royal Malaysia  Police in 2004 – and to take every genuine criminal case seriously and  not only act when prominent and wealthy Datuks are affected.
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment