Do Not Appoint Rubber Stamps to the TBH Royal Commission!
January 11, 2011
Do Not Appoint Rubber Stamps to the Teoh Beng Hock Royal Commission
by Din Merican
In the 2008 general elections, the Barisan Nasional lost 2/3rd majority in Parliament and 5 states (later recovered Perak) to the opposition Pakatan Rakyat.Then Prime Minister, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi came under severe attacks from within and outside UMNO. A mutiny was fomenting from within UMNO and from the other BN component parties. BN appeared to be at its weakest.
Abdullah Ahmad Badawi steps down as Prime Minister
On July 10 , 2008, Badawi announced he would step down as UMNO President and Prime Minister in 2009. In the meantime, to shore up his sagging popularity, Abdullah implemented some of the reforms that he had promised the rakyat in the 2004 elections.
One was the reduction of crimes, which had seen an all time high under former IGP Musa Hassan, otherwise more famous for his “Mattress Carrying” antics in the trial of Anwar Ibrahim in Sodomy I.
The other was the eradication of corruption which was also perceived to be on the rise despite Badawi’s ulamak (religious) cleric outlook. People made fun of his poem “Aku Mencari Ketenangan Abadi” (I Seek Eternal Peace) which had a verse about seeking AlGhazali’s ascetic conduct whereas talk was rife of increased cronyism and corruption during his administration.
MACC was created to replace discredited Anti-Corruption Agency
On January 1, 2009, Abdullah abolished the Anti Corruption Agency (ACA) and replaced it
with a supposedly independent and potent commission called the Malaysian Anti Corruption Commission (MACC) under an act of its own name. The MACC will be Badawi’s lasting legacy – a nightmare that Malaysians will have to live it. Barely 7 months into its establishment, the MACC had shown the monster it has become.
Teoh Beng Hock found dead
On July 15, 2009, Teoh Beng Hock, a former reporter and political secretary to state exco member and Seri Kembangan assemblyman Ean Yong Hian Wah, was subjected to a marathon questioning session by the Selangor MACC at its office on the 14th floor of Plaza Masalam. The investigation was about abuse of the opposition assemblymen’s allocation of only RM2,400. According to the MACC, Teoh was questioned until 3.45 am but was already released at 6.00am.
The fact is that at about noon the next day July 16, 2009, Teoh’s dead body was found on the fifth floor building landing right under the window of the MACC office, Plaza Masalam in Shah Alam, Selangor. It was clear that Teoh had been thrown out of that window. There was public uproar including demands for a Royal Commission Inquiry (RCI).
Coroner’s Inquest, not RCI
To cool off public furor, Prime Minister, Dato’ Seri Najib Tun Razak, promised a thorough investigation to ascertain the cause of death and the parties responsible for it. Upon advice from the Attorney General (A-G) Tan Sri Gani Patail, a Coroner’s Inquest was initiated instead of a RCI.
The public was sceptical and considered the Coroner’s Inquest as just an attempt to pacify public anger. The public was concerned that the Coroner’s Inquest would just be an attempt at a cover up.
The Coroner’s Inquest began on July 29, 2009, during which 37 witnesses including 12 expert witnesses were called to testify. On January 5, 2011, the Coroner delivered his verdict.
Most Malaysians consider January 5 as a shameful day for Malaysia when Coroner Azmil Muntapha Abas failed in his public duty to ascertain the cause of death of Teoh Beng Hock. This was the very reason for the Coroner’s Inquest, and the Coroner failed.
No Suicide, No Homicide, only Open Verdict
The two possibilities that the Coroner had to determine was suicide or homicide. The other
possibilities of death by natural cause or misadventure were never suggested throughout the Inquest. With just these two options available, the Coroner took the convenient route of ruling out both, that is, it was neither suicide or homicide! It’s like a kindergarten kid being asked to tick (a) or (b) and he still gets it wrong. What do you do with such a kid? Send him to detention class?
After almost a year and a half since it began, the Coroner’s open verdict in the inquest into Teoh Beng Hock’s death was bound to create dissatisfaction. What a waste of time! After all that exercise, the Coroner was saying in effect “ I don’t know”. In other words, the Coroner wanted to play safe. It was bound to revive allegations of a cover-up.
It is clear is that Teoh had died while in the custody of MACC. But the investigators and the government’s counsels who were tasked to assist the Coroner to ascertain how Teoh died and who caused the death have failed to make this discovery. The young man’s death remains a mystery today. The Coroner’s open verdict only makes the mystery official.
There was little wisdom in the verdict. The way the case has been handled reflected badly on the authorities especially the MACC which was represented by its Director of Legal and Prosecutions, Datuk Abdul Razak Musa. His role was to assist in discovering the truth. Instead, Dato Razak Musa was seen attacking an expert witness, forensic expert Dr Pornthip Rojanasunand, in the now infamous “Self Strangulation” demonstration.
All these are officers of the Attorney General’s Chambers. Thus, A-G Gani Patail should be held accountable for this fiasco. This incident has brought further disrepute to the Malaysian legal system.
A-G Gani Patail’s announcement to apply for a revision of the Coroner’s verdict is not helpful when, in the first place, it was on his advice that the government had proceeded with a Coroner’s Inquest instead of a RCI to establish the cause of death.
Ramon Navaratnam clears A-G Patail of Wrongdoing
The public is also sceptical if there was collusion between the MACC and AG Gani Patail
because on January 5, 2011, the same day as the Coroner’s verdict, the MACC Corruption Prevention Panel Chairman Tan Sri Ramon Navaratnam had cleared A-G Gani Patail over allegations of Gani Patail’s connection with former MAS Chairman, Tan Sri Tajuddin’s proxy, one En Shahidan Shafie. It was case of ” You scratch my back, I scratch your back”.
There are already public disquiet that the timing of Ramon’s announcement of clearing A-G Gani during a confidential meeting was calculated to make it to be overshadowed by the Coroner’s verdict in Teoh’s death. That A-G Gani Patail was cleared by the MACC on the same day that the MACC was cleared of homicide allegations by the Coroner further fuelled suspicions of a possible collusion. After all, the Coroner is an officer of the Legal Services headed by A-G Gani Patail.
Teoh Beng Hock RCI announced by Prime Minister Najib
In a further attempt to placate the public, Prime Minister Najib Razak announced that he will form a RCI but the RCI will have limited terms of reference and will “not to look into the cause of death but will just study the MACC’s procedures to determine whether there has been a violation of human rights of Teoh Beng Hock during the investigation,”.
This is far from satisfactory. This is, in fact, counter-productive to the PM’s avowed desire to show full transparency. Clearly that legal advice would have come from the Government’s Top Lawyer, A-G Gani Patail, pursuant to Article 145 of the Federal Constitution. This is the most unwise decision, just like all of AG Gani Patail’s other advice to the government.
It will only show Prime Minister Dato’ Seri Najib Tun Razak as being insensitive to the public’s
expectations. The public will not be satisfied until and unless the killers of Teoh Beng Hock are identified and prosecuted. No half measures will be sufficient. Worst still, if the government is perceived to be complicit in a cover up. Prime Minister Najib must distance from these rogue elements within the government.
Chua Soi Lek plays politics
It is also shameful that the MCA president Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek had accused civil liberties activists as using Teoh’s verdict as a political instrument to discredit the government. Instead of fighting for the Teoh family and instead of joining the calls from civil rights activists for the formation of RCI without setting such limits on its terms of reference, the MCA President is concerned about politics.
This is what happens when you have a porn actor as President of a political party. Moral priorities are thrown out of the window. For so long as the MCA behave this way, it will never earn any credibility as an independent and equal partner in the Barisan Nasional Government. Furthermore, Dr Chua Soi Lek was not even present at the Coroner Courts to observe the proceedings or the verdict. Instead, we have Tan Sri Robert Phang being the consistent Chinese voice for truth and justice.
Need for checks and balances, not collusion
The public sees this as just another cover-up. The public wants to see checks and balances and not collusion by the A-G Chambers, the MACC and the Police. How difficult can it be to zero in on who were the last persons to be with Teoh Beng Hock? For heaven’s sake, you have the scene of crime, you have the names of the last persons with him, you have a dead body, you have a broken window sill. What else would the MACC or the Police need to solve this murder? Do they expect the MACC officers responsible for this crime to own up?
Appoint Eminent Persons to TBH RCI
I wish only to remind the powers that be of the public displeasure of yet another cover up if the RCI is given a limited scope of reference. I wish only to suggest to PM Najib that the panel for the RCI must be of people of eminence known for acting without fear or favour. Already Dato’ Mat Zain Ibrahim had accused the three panel judges who cleared AG Gani Patai land former IGP Musa Hassan of dishonesty and cover-up in the “Black Eye Incident”.
Let Robert Phang be appointed to Teoh Beng Hock RCI . Don’t appoint just mere rubber stamps !

Give me back my son’s LIFE , said the ibu !!
iwc - January 11, 2011 at 4:19 am
Tell us who in MACC killed Teoh Beng Hock and why? Not over rm2,400 surely. The sooner we put this matter behind us the better it will be for Malaysia.
Najib, show us true leadership. Right now, we see you as a political laggard. Taking charge of Malaysia requires a person of intelligence and strong moral and ethical values. Are you such a person?
Another thing, Mr. PM, never let that mamak kutty interfere in your administration. Be your own man. The citizens of Grand Pooba where genuine democracy exists send you their best wishes but they expect you to serve the people of Malaysia.
Abbot of Grand Pooba - January 11, 2011 at 4:38 am
Prime Minister,
Let you be forewarned that your mishandling of the TBH case is going to cost you your political career. Aren’t you interested in the truth?
People are just frustrated and thoroughly fed-up with what is happening to this tragic case, especially Chinese voters. It is clear that Beng Hock was killed under MACC custody. Who is the killer? We know he is being protected by MACC. Why? Flush him out and we can move forward.
Ahmadi Hussein - January 11, 2011 at 4:50 am
Beng Hock: MACC must be held responsible
I am shocked by the coroner’s open verdict yesterday which rules out both suicide and homicide in the death of Teoh Beng Hock.
MCPX
It’s time for the government to set up a Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) into the custodial death of Teoh.
The loss of life, especially while in the custody of government enforcement officials, is always a serious matter of public concern.
There cannot be no answers for this particular case. It’s simply not acceptable that one can die in the MACC’s custody without knowing what had happened.
Teoh voluntarily stepped into the Selangor Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC)’s office to give a statement as a witness.
He failed to come out alive, while under MACC’s custody. His body was found sprawled on a service corridor in Plaza Masalam’s Level 5 on July 16, 2009.
No matter from which point of view or political divide you see the death, it is just unbelievable, unacceptable and illogical that no one knows what happened to Teoh in a place where security is relatively tight.
There was also ample evidence suggesting that Teoh was under tremendous physical and mental stress, having been subjected to long hours of interrogation.
Coroner Azmil Muntapha Abas has delivered his verdict based on a set terms of reference that could have limited the inquiry.
Nevertheless, we will just have to respect the chair and move on to the next level for a justifiable and more acceptable solution.
True, it is indeed unfortunate that Beng Hock’s tragic death has been politicised by certain quarters. The widely perceived lackadaisical probe by the authorities has in a way lent them credence in addition to dismaying the general public.
To all of us, life is precious. Therefore, irrespective of political affiliation, the people responsible for Teoh’s death, directly or indirectly, must be brought to justice.
To me, my view now is nothing new, but an insistence and reiteration of my support for the petition calling for the setting up of the RCI during the deceased’s wake at his parents’ house in July 2009.
I lent the support when I was the MCA president. I am maintaining my stance now in my capacity as the MP for Pandan. The logic is rather simple: Teoh walked into the MACC office alive but failed to emerge the same. That is a fact.
Therefore, the MACC must be held responsible and the government is obliged to sincerely bring to book the culprits responsible for the tragedy that has marred the image and integrity of the MACC.
Ong Tee Keat
.
tourman53 - January 11, 2011 at 5:37 am
This is what happens when you have a porn actor as President of a political party.
– Din Merican
———————–
That’s a little below the belt.
__________
Yap, that was where it happened, Mongkut.–Din Merican
Mr Bean - January 11, 2011 at 6:13 am
Din
Brilliantly presented and straight to the point. I like it.
A great write-up piece. Could not have put it better. Well done.
The only way to tick off our Govt’s lackadaisical attitude to issues of public interest is to say it “in your face”.
Frank - January 11, 2011 at 6:58 am
Always Backdoor Jibby evades…goes for sandiwara … not one concrete positive program in his premiership so far for Malaysia that can withstand scrutiny without revealing self interest, corruption etc.
Similarly this RCI with its limited scope is a waste of time and funds and will not give closure to TBH cause of death.
The most glaring fact from the insulting Open Verdict conclusion was there was PRE-FALL INJURIES…how it happened or what/who causes
the PRE-FALL injuries should easily be established but could not be… and so how to extend to establishing Homicide or Suicide…a very ominous message to Malaysians that the Evil & Corrupted are re-assuring their henchmen that they are condoning their actions and protecting them from the consequences !!!
Hidup Malaysia !!!
fairplay - January 11, 2011 at 7:09 am
Thank you YB Ong Tee Keat for speaking out in Din Merican’s Blog. This shows your sensitivity to issues of public importance. It also shows the credibility of Din’s writings that have attracted much attention lately for the clarity of thought presented for Malaysians to understand. PM Najib should hear the voices of the Rakyat lest he suffers the same fate as Abdullah Badawi.
comrade - January 11, 2011 at 7:31 am
The porn actor had already shown his colours when the MCA gangsters attack some of the TBH family members during the recent bye election in Kelantan. He has no moral authority to comment on the TBH case and all he is doing is to save himself from being investigated.
Jeffrey Lim - January 11, 2011 at 7:50 am
“It is clear is that Teoh had died while in the custody of MACC.” Din Merican
Earlier reports suggested that TBH was seen walking around and was therefore no longer in the custody of his interrogators.
Mr Bean - January 11, 2011 at 8:12 am
“Thank you YB Ong Tee Keat for speaking out in Din Merican’s Blog.” comrade
I believe that was cut and paste by tourman.
Mr Bean - January 11, 2011 at 8:14 am
Let eminent members of the community serve on the Royal Commission??
That does not mean justice is imminent.
Mr Bean - January 11, 2011 at 8:19 am
That does not mean justice is imminent.- Mr Bean
That is true. It is a case of identifying the horse first before getting a cart. Whether the horse is a dead horse, that is another issue.
Frank - January 11, 2011 at 9:32 am
I thought he had repented and his family had forgiven him but he showed his true black hearted self dismissing the poor dead man’s family’s anguish and their demand for justice.
The level this person will stoop to ingratiate himself to his immoral boss is simply disgusting. He is just an actor-a porno one.
Thomas - January 11, 2011 at 10:15 am
Eminent Malaysians are not enough. They need to be unbiased and fair and to have stainless steel balls to stand up to the pressure that will be imposed on them by the MACC, Police, AG’s office and all other law enforcement agencies including RELA.
semper fi - January 11, 2011 at 10:50 am
It clearly showed that Chua has difficulty in trying to give a fair judgment or comment on any sensitive issue because of his morally tainted background.
The case of TBH is like a house of cards with MACC at the bottom, AG, PDRM & gang at the center and the puppet master at the apex. As long as the cards at the bottom stays intact, the house of cards will remain standing.
dragonfly - January 11, 2011 at 10:55 am
Chua Soi Lek is the pack leader of the Chinease lap dogs of UMNO.
Frank - January 11, 2011 at 11:13 am
The only difference is that real dogs can only do it out in the open because they have no access to hotel rooms.
Frank - January 11, 2011 at 11:14 am
Fact No.1 – A crime has been committed.
Fact No.2 – TBH lost his life while under
investigation by MACC Selangor.
Fact No.3 – A letter from MACC officers gave
useful tips and leads that be vital
to zero in to nail the suspect(s).
The letter also revealed leading
information on other matters that
needed needed to be investigated
apart from TBH’s death.
There are many leads revealed during the Coroner’s Inquest. The police with its well trained experts in CSI and forensic investigations can show their mettle to catch the culprits. MACC is another law enforcement outfit like the police but it is not immune or free from criminal acts and abuses by its officers like the case involving Rosli Dahlan. So is in the case of the police like the ‘black eye’ case of Anwar Ibrahim.
We do not need another RCI which does not guarantee to deliver the desired result. Save the agony of TBH’s family who attended the the inquest at every sitting. We need solution and action, not mere lip-service and more drama.
Remember Hishamuddin, the then Deputy Director of MACC Selangor? He could provide the lead and solve the jigsaw puzzle, and if the police do a good job like Dato Zain Ibrahim did, I am sure we can salute the police for a job well done. Is it too much to ask?
man-on-the street - January 11, 2011 at 11:33 am
“After all that exercise, the Coroner was saying in effect “ I don’t know”. In other words, the Coroner wanted to play safe.” Din
The “cari makan” syndrome is so ingrained in the civil service that no amount of shaming and advice will force its members from doing the opposite.
There is this unwritten rule, which is evident in all other services, the armed forces included, that toeing the line is the accepted norm, notwithstanding one’s orientation. It’s part of the Malay psyche borne out years of indoctrination and subjugation of the mind – the elders, meaning the leaders, are always right and they can do no wrong.
“Don’t eat the hands that feed you,” this maxim has remained imbedded in the minds of the subordinates. You can’t pry them apart.
Coroner Azmil is just exercising this paradoxical duty for the benefit of his “bosses”. This is how I conclude.
He’s just another of those timid and no-”teloq” civil servants who will willingly stand in line for the sake of some crumbs or murkus during Hari Raya open house at Jibby’s residence in Putrajaya.
Need I say more?
Tok Cik - January 11, 2011 at 12:06 pm
The Malaysian judiciary, anti-cprruption agency, and all the gomen machineries that you can named, have failed the nation badly. The gomen may set up whatever bodies to investigate, but the final answer always comes to naught. Everything done is just a sandiwara + wasting tax payers money.
concerned citizen - January 11, 2011 at 12:20 pm
Anti-corruption institution is also corrupt?
Who are eminent Malaysians? Name them!
rightways - January 11, 2011 at 12:28 pm
People, the judge!
rightways - January 11, 2011 at 12:30 pm
EMINENT MALAYSIANS ? Who are the eminent Malaysians Din?
Are you referring to Dr Maha Kutty Mohammed or anyone of his children , cronies or in laws ? Maybe you are referring to Chua Soi Lick or Dr. Fong from MCA or maybe samy value or ramon never ratnam or … . You may even be referring to the chief secretary to the government or even the newly appointed state secretary to the government .
They are all eminent Malaysians but they have all FAILED themselves and the people in more ways then one.
So do we still have any eminent ones like Tan Sri Robert Phang left ?
zakiah aman - January 11, 2011 at 12:51 pm
“Who are eminent Malaysians? Name them!”
Righto, rightways.
Luckily, Din didn’t say Pre-eminent, otherwise we’d have Octo and Dopey sitting smugly on the bench. Difficult to find, but not impossible. Maybe we should start with Robert Phang. The question should be, to what end?
Constricted Terms of Reference, are the death of any RCI. They just don’t get it! All deaths in custody must be investigated thoroughly. Cases involving Kugan, Aminulrasyid etc too require closure. All these are basically ‘extra-legal’ assassinations by authorities who eschew the principle of sanctity of life.
If the Establishment can’t respect or honor that, what possibility is there for them to guarantee their citizens the fundamental human-rights to liberty, happiness and property?
While, we may pressure the goons and call them all sorts of unflattering names, the fact remains that the ‘System’ is fundamentally flawed. It needs to be Reformatted (geek language) and Restored, without the cynical and corrupted application of “Rule of Law”. It can’t be done with the present set of feudalistic, Nazi-like imbeciles that make up the Establishment.
Menyalak-er - January 11, 2011 at 12:58 pm
It is good that so many voice their concerns here. But things happen again and again. There is no remorse to wrong doing buy only arrogant. We can post till the cows came home, with this government and the entire civil services under their control nothing is going to change accept making us voters look how foolish we are.
There is only one way. The authority is in the hands of the voters. This country sinks or swims, all are in the voter’s votes. It must be decisive. Just like beheading a human. No two ways about it. One blow and the head is off the shoulder. The voters need such attitude at the ballot box. Their votes must be decisive to finish UMNO and their henchmen, MCA, MIC etc.
vic - January 11, 2011 at 1:26 pm
Eminent Malaysians? Well, we have plenty. Here they are:
a. Khir Toyo.
b. Mohammad aka Mike Tyson.
c. Rais Yatim.
d. Ibrahim Ali.
e. VK Lingam.
Just to name a few. Al Kutty too eminent and moreover he’s not too good at remembering things, especially those that happened during his time. Samy Velu only remembers Miaka and toll gates.
Tok Cik - January 11, 2011 at 1:34 pm
Our Human Rights Commission has AFAIK been derecognized by UN for not meeting the requirements for independence. We are aiming for the world recod in custodial deaths. And you want an independent MACC?
sam ting - January 11, 2011 at 1:37 pm
MACC put Teoh under tremendous duress. Let us assume he could not take the mental punishment and jumped out of the window.
This simply means MACC murdered him. A murder without weapons and no strangulation.
Lawyer - January 11, 2011 at 1:38 pm
1. The public prosecutor could have prosecuted without the inquest, if the police had provided the evidence and the AG’s office had cooperated with the lawyers for the family. The open verdict certainly did not prevent the Public Prosecutor from initiating a case now.
2. The inquest, and now the RCI, seem to be devices to prevent this process of justice.
3. The public prosecuter defending the MACC in the inquest instead of partcipating in uncovering the facts indicates that that there is no hope of justice even if specific MACC staff are prosecuted now.
sam ting - January 11, 2011 at 2:12 pm
Najib protects himself and his partner in trysts abroad, Razak Baginda from any form of culpability in the murder of Altantuya. He is doing the same for MACC in an interogation that went wrong leading to TBH’s death ,as it could reveal a conspiracy involving higher ups .
khem - January 11, 2011 at 2:22 pm
MACC is Najib’s problem. Najib just keep his mouth shut or pretend he is not responsible or a party to the corrupt practices of MACC.
________
Frank,
Someone told me today when I was at the MIER Office in Dayabumi Building that Najib, PDRM, MACC and A-G have checkmated one another. If that is true, then nothing will be done to upset the institutional equilibrium (or balance of power) between them. Fortunately for our country, it is not a Mexican stand-off.–Din Merican
Frank - January 11, 2011 at 3:04 pm
CSL – the soiled poltikus !
What right has he got to talk about this and that, as far as I am concern he is a gonner, done with..now a tool for UMNO and Bn to tickle and play with…just another TOY BOY of the rascals in power!
If TEOH BH is an UMNO/ MCA or Gerakan or MIC member it would have been a different STORY !
Just too bad he comes form a poor family and no connections and worst of all a DAP party member (considered communists party by the BN wallas) !
THIS IS TRULY MALAYSIA AT ITS BEST….I AM REALLY ASHAMED OF ALL THE LEADERS AND THE MALAYS WHO LEAD ( MUSLIMS WHO SAY THEY FEAR ALLAH swt) and yet abused the RAKYAT…macam kita ini semua bodoh macam LEMBU yang tidak ada otak.
pm – Jibby the doors of heaven and hell knows what to do with YOU when you arrive THERE!
THINK BEFORE IT IS TOO DAMN LATE, YOU ARE SAFE FOR NOW ONLY…..BUT REGRETTING LATER IS POINT LESS….
FIKIR LAH WHEI
komando - January 11, 2011 at 3:58 pm
JIBBY IS GOING TO SHOOT HIS OWN 2 FEET!
Lest he comes out clean on this case the CHINA MAN will pangkah the wrong box! How is he going to stay back at putrajaya by next year or after PRU-13?
Maybe inside a hidden box – !
komando - January 11, 2011 at 4:03 pm
i guess for some of us, the pain and possibility that it might happen to ourselves or someone we love, just does not occur in our mind.
as for me, i’d donate some $ if there is any fund set up to finance the persecution of the macc and umno govt, to get to the bottom of this.
macc must be held accountable. period. how much $ is needed to finance a legal team? lawyers and soldiers cannot work on empty stomachs.
4RAKYAT - January 11, 2011 at 4:29 pm
Najib, PDRM, MACC and A-G have checkmated one another. – Din
It is already known those familiar with the corridors of power in Putrajaya, that Najib is lame duck PM as far as MACC, PDRM and AG office are concerned.
In fact, Zaki Azmi the Head of the Malaysian Judiciary is believed to have a file on Najib when Zaki was then heading the Disciplinary Committee of UMNO.
Najib is at the mercy of the bosses of these institutions, Judiciary, MACC, PDRM and AG Office. If Najib makes a wrong move against any one of them, Najib’s skeletons will be flushed out of the cupboard.
There is little Najib can gain by trying to seek a mandate from the people in the coming GE to buttress his power. These chaps in these corrupt institutions will bring him down.
The really bad part of all this for Najib is the senile old man is privy to all of Najib’s personal misadventures when he was trying to rise up in UMNO. That allegation of his involvement with the murdered Mongolian woman and her death will NEVER go away.
And everybody knows Lee Kuan Yew through Sing’s Special Branch has Najib on the balls on the Altantuya case.
Frank - January 11, 2011 at 4:55 pm
Rakyat Diutamakan??? What a farce and load of BS.
Mat - January 11, 2011 at 5:01 pm
There is a slight mistake.
… took the convenient route of ruling out both, that is, it was neither suicide or homicide! …
either or
neither nor
This comment need not appear for public viewing.
Thank you.
ck - January 11, 2011 at 5:18 pm
The Star (January 9) says:
“THE tragic case of Teoh Beng Hock’s untimely demise has meandered through the latest procedures to nobody’s satisfaction. The way the case has been handled so far reflects badly on the authorities.
How exactly the young man died had been a mystery before, and it remains a mystery today. The Coroner’s open verdict after a 17-month inquest only makes the mystery official.
As the political secretary of a state assemblyman, the deceased might not have been a VIP. However, his death is still a serious and tragic matter, particularly given some questionable circumstances.
All parties including the Government are concerned about the substantive lack of progress. The Attorney-General has applied for a revision of the Coroner’s verdict, while the Prime Minister himself has called for a Royal Commission of Inquiry.
These commendable efforts should be followed through with utmost responsibility to the public interest. Teoh’s demise is undeniably a high-profile issue that deserves the most careful attention from all concerned.
At the same time, the temptation to politicise the matter must be resisted. When public passions are running high, some interested parties may find it irresistible to exploit the occasion to injure the image and standing of the authorities.
However, that will be most injurious to the memory of the deceased and his surviving family instead: they deserve far better than such vile opportunism. That said, the best way to neutralise political mischief is to do the case full justice, including not limiting the terms of an inquiry.
Any guilty party or parties must be discovered through proper due process and penalised accordingly. Seldom in this country’s history should justice be done and be seen to be done more, particularly when the nation’s reputation also hangs by it.
Meanwhile, another despicable development involves some extremist voices that object to a Royal Commission of Inquiry. Their arguments that such an investigation would disrespect the judges’ decision and waste public funds are nonsense.
Their very arguments disrespect the authority of the Yang di-Pertuan Agung, the standing of a Royal Commission, the decision of the Prime Minister, the predicament of the family of the deceased, the cause of natural justice and general public sentiment. Since it is in essence an anti-national stand they have adopted, they deserve to be treated accordingly.”
dinobeano - January 11, 2011 at 7:28 pm
Another kind o ‘ leak’
WikiLeaks chief Assange back in court in London
WikiLeaks chief Julian Assange was back in court in London Tuesday for the latest stage in his battle against extradition to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning over sexual assault allegations.
http://news.malaysia.msn.com/top-stories/article.aspx?cp-documentid=4571419
danildaud - January 11, 2011 at 7:30 pm
Its not suicide, its not homicide, the answer is simple. It is MURDER.
A True Nomad - January 11, 2011 at 7:44 pm
Let’s assume for the sake of argument that he died in the custody of his interrogators who then panicked. A decision was made not to charge those responsible after all it happened in the course of their employment. It was a case of over zealous public officers doing their job. He was unfortunate to be a non-Muslim, single unlike his interrogators who are Muslims and have wives and young children. In short he was expendable. A decision was later made not to prosecute those responsible.
No one should be surprised if this came to predominate the thinking of those who view the law as a tool to be used as a means to an end. Who says justice for those unlucky enough to find themselves on the wrong side and the wrong time and at the wrong place, must always be the end? The appearance of justice is what is important.
And so we have a coroner who in the face of strong circumstantial evidence pointing towards foul play found courage to come short of ruling it as homicide. Looking at the trajectory, it is a step in the right direction. Suicide has been ruled out. But it is only the verdict of the coroner who it seems could not make up his mind. If you cannot close the door, leave it open.
The next step would be to form an independent commission to look into those other issues like the rights of a suspect or a person of interest, right to have a counsel present during interrogation. They have a right to know if they are under arrest. Otherwise you can hold them only for twenty four hours – and charge them in forty eight. Perhaps it is time to introduce our own Miranda rights. Persons under arrest must be read their Miranda rights, the purpose being to prevent statements then made from being inadmissible into evidence in court later on. If they are not under arrest then they are free to walk. It is time even a third world country like Malaysia, with all the trimmings of a democracy, spell out the procedures to protect constitutional due process rights including the constitutional rights of the person in police custody.
But who says you must then follow them? Like old Frank says. Find the cart and then find the horse. But who says the horse must then move.
Mr Bean - January 11, 2011 at 8:57 pm
And so we have two standards of justice. One for the ‘non-kafirs’ and one for the ‘kafirs’. What’s new??
Mr Bean - January 11, 2011 at 9:16 pm
Statement from Parti Sosialis Malaysia:
http://www.parti-sosialis.org/articles/1267
Phua Kai Lit - January 11, 2011 at 9:41 pm
Sorry to go off topic:
A voice from our Singaporean cousins
http://yoursdp.org/index.php/the-party/young-democrats/4478-i-am-from-bangsa-singapura
Phua Kai Lit - January 11, 2011 at 10:04 pm
Bean, your analysis is spot on.
I too wouldn’t blame the coroner for making such a ruling for exactly the same reasons. He just left the door open to better possibilities.
The most likely conjecture that was discussed at length in some other blogs is this:
TBH, was dangled out of a window (remember that particular window with the damaged handle?) by the Goons, as a death threat when all else failed to deter him from fingering his boss. He panicked (who wouldn’t) or the Goons lost their grip. Gravity and Newtonian physics took over. Homicide – but difficult to prove, unless someone has the conscience to own up.. The IO was slovenly, debased and helped in the cover-up. We need the investigative skills of Perry Mason or Colombo..
Menyalak-er - January 11, 2011 at 10:22 pm
We need Frank’s horse.
Mr Bean - January 11, 2011 at 10:25 pm
Or Din’s kerbau.
Mr Bean - January 11, 2011 at 10:26 pm
THE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE ALTANTUYA AND TEOH BENG HUAT MURDERS.
-by ManaBolehMalaysia 11 Jan 2011.
This is the biggest cover-up in the political history of Malaysia and we all fell for it four years after the Altantuya Shaaribuu murder on 18 Oct 2006. When the murder was exposed in late 2006, those in UMNO who were opposed to Najib’s impending ascend to the PM throne saw it as an opportunity to get rid of Najib through the ballot box in the 8 March 2008 General Election (GE). Although the ruling party, Barisan National (BN) suffered badly, Najib managed to hold on to his seat by 500 votes through last minute postal vote inclusion. With Altantuya’s murder hanging over his head, Najib’s political career was hanging by a thread and not expected to mount a serious challenge to Badawi’s administration.
But Najib not only managed to force Badawi out of office but retook Perak by force and deception. It is one thing to take over a whole nation by physical force using the country’s corrupt police, administration and judiciary powers, it another to wipe off the minds of the voting population the “guilty image” of a PM involved in a gruesome murder. With the momentum gained in the 2008 GE, a murder tainted PM would definitely lead the ruling government into disastrous poll in 2012 even with massive doses of voting frauds.
If you cannot erase the memories of a gruesome murder like you erase the data files in your computer or even immigration records, what else can you do? The next best strategy is to muddle the pool by creating even more turmoil and rumours so that the truth is hidden together with a pile of trash. Mass Deception is the latest technique in used all over the world now from 911 to the Gulf wars and financial scams.
Teoh Beng Huat mysterious and senseless death on 15 July 2009 at MACC headquarters was meant to provoke anger and hogged the limelight so that Altantuya’s murder pale in comparison and fade into the background; long enough for Najib to establish and stamp his authoritarian rule over a docile population. If Najib is successfully elected with a renewed and re-energised BN, Malaysia can look forward to another 20 years of dictatorial rule. Long enough to drain off Malaysia’s remaining wealth and bring the nation down to her knees become another Myanmar or Zimbabwe.
A comparison of Altantuya and Teoh Beng Huat murders bring out the extremes. Teoh’s murder needed to be so senseless over a few thousand dollars in comparison to the hundreds of millions of dollars in the Sorpene Submarine Scandal associated with the Altantuya’s murder. There was no apparent motive to contrast to the long drawn trysts between Altantuya, Baginda Razak and Najib Razak. The coroner’s inquiry lasted almost a year and the Royal Commision Inquiry will take just as long with an open verdict. In contrast, the trial for Altantuya’s murder was swift and the crime limited to two police officers. The guilty principals were protected and escaped punishment but so far no one at MACC was even accused of Teoh’s murder. Teoh’s suicide letter was a long “after-thought” fabrication compared to Altantuya’s scribbled note.
There was no doubt as to how Altantuya died; by a C4 explosion that blew her to pieces in a hidden part of the jungle. Teoh’s death was meant to be controversial despite the dead body being intentionally “discovered” at MACC headquarters itself; without a shadow of doubt that Teoh had fallen from 14th Floor where he was interrogated. The cctv recording was clearly used to reveal just enough to create ambiguities to confuse the situation. Teoh was going to be happily married with a child along the way and a promising career to look forward to. In contrast, Altantuya was a “problem” to be discarded after a torrid love affair which would have destroyed the career of a deputy Prime Minister. The extremes in the two murders could not be so fortuitous without some deliberation on the second Teoh’s murder to muddle the pool and keep the focus of Altantuya’s murder. It is a Freudian slip and a mind game; designed to move attention to the other end of the light spectrum.
The question is whether the spate senseless police killings and brutalities that followed Teoh’s murder were similarly designed to provoke ill-feelings, public outcry and racial tension. The Malaysian public had been taken on a merry-go-round ride and made dizzy enough to vote back BN. It is human nature to revert back to the status quo amidst all the confusion and turmoil. This message was brought to you at great risk to the writer. Judge for yourself the logic and sensibility of this article. Look beyond the magician’s deceptive hands as the future of Malaysia, your children and children’s children will be made to pay for one man’s folly and the insatiable appetite of his wife.
Manaf - January 11, 2011 at 10:33 pm
Take a break from the morbid news folks.
All of us would be dead and gone just like TBH for sure. While we still have time let’s us take a break or at least a little space to deliver oxygen to our brian.
Here is a song from a singer who already said goodbye.
tean - January 11, 2011 at 11:03 pm
Or Mongkut would prefer to hear from someone who is trying hard to make babies.
tean - January 11, 2011 at 11:17 pm
Making babies does not mean you must have them.
Mr Bean - January 12, 2011 at 12:13 am
Mr Bean - January 12, 2011 at 12:14 am
A little bit of on the spot cha cha is good for the human spirit.
Mr Bean - January 12, 2011 at 12:17 am
Mongkut,
Look at the spirit of the Mongolian.
tean - January 12, 2011 at 12:50 am
Hope the Mongolian eagles catch their musang from Malaysia – the musang who allegedly received the file and photos from the honorary consul of Mongolia to Malaysia and never produced them again. Yes, do send the eagles here…
Sentinel - January 12, 2011 at 1:11 am
“from someone who is trying hard to make babies” tean
Shall I call in the kerbau?
Tok Cik - January 12, 2011 at 1:28 am
Our Tok Cik cannot get this particular pair out of his mind.
Mr Bean - January 12, 2011 at 2:08 am
Neither could the cameraman.
Mr Bean - January 12, 2011 at 2:12 am
I too wouldn’t blame the coroner for making such a ruling for exactly the same reasons.- Menyalak-er
Bad use of the word… You SHOULD BLAME the coroner…
At best, you can say,” I would understand the…”
If you don’t blame, then you agree with his decision.
Frank - January 12, 2011 at 6:41 am
Return me my beloved BROTHER, cried the SISTER !!
iwc - January 12, 2011 at 9:41 am
No Frank, there is too much blaming already. Blame this idiot and that moron, ad infinitum.
The coroner was going by what was available to him. Medico-legal cases are never 100% clear-cut postmortem, in violent deaths, even with DNA and other circumstantial physical evidence. All becomes conjecture, because the ‘real’ motives are difficult to prove. That was the best verdict he could have rendered, due to the ambiguity of the witnesses and timelines. Even Dr. Pornthip was initially incorrect to say that she was 100% sure of homicide, and her revised 70% probability did not factor in. The coroner is the smallest cog in the vast ponderous machine.
The problem is that too many people are ‘blaming’ the wrong person. The onus lies on the investigating team, which as i said was reprehensible and the AG chambers for ‘strangulating’ the evidence, sheer incompetence and hypocrisy. They were more interested in covering their arses, than revealing the truth. They are the ‘logs before our eyes’.
Although we are disappointed, but we must ‘tembak’ at the right level. You are right that the buck should stop at MACC and by extension, the PM. That is where the final ‘blame’ should come to roost. That is where the real finger-licking good ‘Chickens’ are. The rest don’t count.
Menyalak-er - January 12, 2011 at 2:52 pm
Look guys!
The coroner made his choice and like all judges they make their choice, then they look for the legal reasoning to justify their conclusions. They then come out with their judgements — in the interest of justice as they see it.
First, with the cart, decide the direction in which to go and hook it to the horse. In that order. Contrary to popular opinion which is to get on the horse, look for the cart not knowing which direction to go and just go (looking).
Mr Bean - January 12, 2011 at 8:41 pm
Do keep in mind that it is not the coroner’s job to determine civil or criminal liability — just the cause of death.
Mr Bean - January 12, 2011 at 8:49 pm
Apparently, this coroner went outside his job description.
Mr Bean - January 12, 2011 at 8:51 pm
The whole lot of the Malaysian Government include AG, Anti-Corruption Unit, Police are corrupted and without conscience. How can any justice be serve? Get Anwar in and clean up the bloody place of leeches.
VictorChang - January 15, 2011 at 6:07 pm
Anwar? good lucks to him!
rightways - January 15, 2011 at 6:49 pm