Sarawak NCR defender’s attacker walks free


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“How could the content of the police report lodged and the testimonies of the victim be blatantly ignored and overlooked by the police officer in charge of the investigation?” 

Keruah Usit

Iban native customary rights (NCR) defender Surik anak Muntai, 66, has expressed his anger and concern that the oil palm “company executive” he identified to police as one of his assailants has been freed on police bail, after three days in remand.

Surik, a farmer from Melikin in Serian, suffered horrific injuries on his right forearm and both knees as a result of a ruthless assault by four men on March 15.

Serian police have declared that police are unable to identify any of his assailants. District police chief DSP Mohd Jamali Umi told local daily The Borneo Post on March 21 that the four attackers wore masks and Surik could not identify them.

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“What we have so far is that the four attackers were in a white Proton Perdana and the car did not have a number plate. As they were wearing masks, no one could tell their races,” The Borneo Postquotes Jamali as saying.

“The victim does not know the attackers. He could not identify them. He however did mention the name of a plantation company. So, we held a staff member of the company to assist us in the investigation.”

A reliable police source, and Surik himself, said the man identified to the police was a top “executive” and spokesperson for a prominent Sarawak oil palm producer.

This company and its partner are battling 16 Iban communities for 7,300 hectares of land awarded to the companies by Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud’s government under a ‘provisional lease’. The villagers hold claim to the land under the NCR.

Companies Commission of Malaysia records show that the company is closely linked to members of the ruling state cabinet, according to whistleblower website Sarawak Report.

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Surik: I definitely saw assailant’s face

In an interview, Surik insisted that he had clearly identified to the police the company executive who assaulted him. and is withholding the name of this executive.

The thugs attacked Surik, an elderly father or apai, as he waited for his seven-year -old son outside Sekolah Sungai Menyan at 11.30 on the morning of March 15.

“I definitely saw his face,” Surik said, speaking in Malay. “(He) was not wearing a mask when he got out of his car outside the school. There were four of them, they were carrying parang and sticks.

“Some of them wore masks, some did not. They tried to cut my throat,but I put up my arm to stop them, so they cut my arm. There were other witnesses there.”

Surik recalled that earlier the same morning, that very person waved him down and stopped him when he was on his way to a mill to deliver oil palm fruits.

“He said his car had broken down and he was standing in front of his car, with his hands on his car battery. I didn’t stop because there were other people in his car, and the car had no (number) plates. These people are definitely bad, they have brought evil to the (Melikin) villagers,” Surik said.

As he drove off, he said, the man got into his white Proton car and followed him. “If I had got down before reaching the mill, I would surely have died there, for there was nobody around to help me.”

The case investigating officer is Inspector Mohd Azlan Ab Wahab of the Serian police station. The Melikin NCR plaintiffs are wary and uneasy about Azlan after he barged into the homes of five villagers in a late night raid last October and arrested them.

The villagers were handcuffed, locked in cells and charged with “criminal intimidation”, an accusation levelled at them by Surik’s attacker and other employees of the oil palm company. The deputy public prosecutor’s office eventually dropped the charges, without explanation.

Read more at: http://hornbillunleashed.wordpress.com/2013/03/26/43845/ 

 



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