The whirlwind journey of PI Bala
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As for his expenses, Balasubramaniam said he has been living with RM750,000 in funds he received from Deepak for over a year since July 2008. “I flew here (London) with Deepak’s money,” he said.
Danny Lim, Malaysiakini
The following piece is taken from Malaysiakini without their permission
On July 7, 2008, private eye P Balasubramaniam marked his wedding anniversary as he was interviewed by police officers for about six to seven hours at the Malaysian embassy in Bangkok.
Last Tuesday, he celebrated his anniversary, this time being interviewed at a press conference in the United Kingdom capital London, this time under far more relaxed circumstances. The supporting cast and the location may have changed, but the focus remained the same.
Yet what has often been relegated to a footnote has been the tribulations of the man himself.
“Everybody’s focusing on the murder of Altantuya Shaariibuu and who’s behind it,” said Balasubramaniam’s lawyer, Americk Sidhu.
“There’s another issue here which is equally important, and that is the way Balasubramaniam was treated after he released his first statutory declaration on the July 3, 2008. He was immediately apprehended, bribed, cajoled, threatened and removed from Malaysia.”
The video of Balasubramaniam’s interview in Singapore last November, conducted by three of his lawyers, gave lengthy details about his experience starting from July 3, 2008.
Among the chilling allegations made by Balasubramaniam were the words said to him by Nazim Abdul Razak, a younger brother of Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak, during a meeting near The Curve in Damansara on the night after he released his first statutory declaration (SD): “If you love your family, just follow what Deepak (Jaikishan) tells you to do.”
This kicked off a whirlwind journey for Balasubramaniam that had him hurriedly retracting his first SD with a second SD, his children getting new passports, a van shipping him and his family straight to Singapore’s Changi Airport where he boarded a plane to Bangkok – all within 24 hours.
Expenses paid by businessman
After the interview by, oddly enough, commercial crime police officers, he flew to Kathmandu with his family, then to New Delhi and finally settling in Chennai, India, where he stayed for over a year. His expenses were said to be funded by the shadowy and politically well-connected businessman, Deepak Jaikishan.
Balasubramaniam now believes that the likelihood of him returning to Malaysia is slim.
“If I go back to Malaysia, I’ll have a room in Kamunting waiting for me,” he said. “I can’t go back. They will silence me, or they will put me in Kamunting for nine to 10 years.”
Balasubramaniam feels his only hope for a return to the normal life he enjoyed back home is with a change in government. “I don’t want these corrupt Umnoputras to be in Malaysia. I need the government to change.”
In the Singapore interview, Balasubramaniam claimed that “Deepak said I can come back to Malaysia after Najib becomes PM.” This became untenable when Balasubramaniam insisted he wanted the truth of his testimony as a witness in the Altantuya murder case to be revealed.
Back in Malaysia
How he and his family emerged from an imposed silence in Chennai to a public (and globe-trotting) reaffirmation of his first SD depended on one moment of providence.
“The turning point was Deepak giving me back my passport (in February 2009),” Balasubramaniam told Malaysiakini after Tuesday’s press conference in London.
As his visa in India had expired, Balasubramaniam threatened to kick a fuss at the Malaysian High Commission in India. Deepak relented, and with his passport in hand, Balasubramaniam had a plan in mind.
On July 19, 2009, he called Americk, who was in Wales, UK, at the time. On Americk’s advice, Balasubramaniam went to Kuala Lumpur on July 28 to meet the lawyer.
This he achieved through a long route – flying from Chennai to Bangkok and then to Hat Yai. From there, motorbike ride took him through Bukit Kayu Hitam, one of Malaysia’s many notoriously porous northern border checkpoints, where one can zip through without immigration scrutiny.
He made his way to Kuala Lumpur where he called Dinesh Jaikishan, brother of Deepak, to say that he was in Malaysia purely to meet his family, who had returned home earlier.
Balasubramaniam’s tactic here in being open about his visit was as a way to assure the Jaikishan brothers that he did not have any ulterior motive. He spent 10 days in Kuala Lumpur, conferring with Americk before returning to Chennai through the same route he had used to get to Kuala Lumpur.
Stopped at KLIA
In October 2009, Balasubramaniam came back to Malaysia again, this time with the intention of taking his family to Chennai. On the advice of Americk, he flew straight to KL International Airport (KLIA), because he wanted to “test” if his passport would be flagged. It was.
“SB (Special Branch) officers came running towards me,” said Balasubramaniam. “They took me to their office (at KLIA). I thought they would put me in Kamunting.” But he made a call to Deepak, and when the Special Branch officers called their superiors, they were told to let him go.
After about another 10 days in Kuala Lumpur, Balasubramaniam left Malaysia for India. His family followed him on another flight a few days later.
While he admits that the danger of being ‘silenced’ is ever present, Balasubramaniam feels safe in Chennai where, his lawyers joke, “half the people there look like him”. But he rubbishes claims he is in hiding. “I don’t consider myself as a fugitive. What wrong have I done?”
As for his expenses, Balasubramaniam said he has been living with RM750,000 in funds he received from Deepak for over a year since July 2008. “I flew here (London) with Deepak’s money,” he said.
The cost of holding the press conference and his hotel stay was paid for by donations from supporters. Americk said there wasn’t one single personality or party financing the London exercise.
Balasubramaniam insists that his actions, immediately after he issued the first SD, were guided by a concern for his family. “I can’t be bought,” he said.
Now that he feels more assured about the safety of his family, Balasubramaniam is motivated by another concern: “I want the truth to come out… MACC not turning up shows that it does not want the truth to prevail.”
DANNY LIM is a freelance writer and photographer currently based in the UK.