Kuala Lumpur, 30 Jan – Jenayah dadah akan diperangi habis-habisan apabila Polis Diraja Malaysia (PDRM) menubuhkan sebuah pasukan elite yang dipanggil 'Special Tactical Intelligence Narcotics Group (STING)'secara rasminya dilancarkan di Pusat Latihan Polis (PULAPOL), Kuala Lumpur, pagi tadi.
Seramai 61 pegawai dan 138 anggota yang diketuai oleh dua orang Timbalan Komander berpangkat Senior Assistant Commisionner (SAC) di mana mereka telah melalui sesi pemilihan yang ketat bagi menjaga kualiti tugas yang dilihat akan memberi impak jauh lebih positif daripada sebelum ini.
'STING' di bawah kendalian Jabatan Siasatan Jenayah Narkotik (JSJN) ini ditubuhkan untuk menangani kes-kes jenayah yang membabitkan sindiket pengedaran dadah yang sering melibatkan kumpulan kongsi gelap.
Selain itu, pasukan elite STING juga akan mengenal pasti,mengesan,menyekat dan membongkar segala aktiviti dadah termasuk makmal haram memproses dadah.
Kemodenan jenayah narkotik masa kini yang semakin canggih bukan lagi masalah kepada pasukan ini di mana turut dilengkapi senjata serta gajet dalam memberi amaran kepada penjenayah-penjenayah dadah tegar yang merasakan diri mereka kebal dari tindakan undang-undang. "Justeru itu diharapkan penubuhan skuad ini mampu menangkis tanggapan negatif masyarakat bahawa PDRM hanya mengambil tindakan kepada ahli-ahli sindiket sedangkan dalang kepada masalah ini masih bebas," ucap Menteri Dalam Negeri.
Sepanjang tahun 2013 JSJN telah berjaya mengesan dan menangkap 33 ketua sindiket pengedaran dadah serta membongkar 34 lokasi makmal haram memproses dadah serta merampas pelbagai jenis dadah dianggarkan bernilai RM402.73 juta.
JSJN juga menyita pelbagai jenis harta yang disyaki hasil daripada aktiviti pengedaran dadah berjumlah RM94.96 Juta dan menangkap seramai 175,198 orang atas pelbagai kesalahan jenayah narkotik.
Majlis pelancaran tersebut telah disempurnakan oleh Dato' Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, Menteri Dalam Negeri.
Turut hadir di majlis tersebut ialah Tan Sri Dato' Sri Khalid bin Abu Bakar, Ketua Polis Negara, Dato' Mohamad Khalid bin Hj. Shariff, Ketua Setiausaha Kementerian Dalam Negeri, Datuk Noor Rashid bin Ibrahim, Pengarah Jabatan Siasatan Jenayah Narkotik, barisan pengarah PDRM dan tetamu jemputan.
So Jabatan Siasatan Jenayah (JSJ) dah ada STAFOC, Jabatan Siasatan Jenayah Narkotik (JSJN) pun dah ada STING, Imigresen dah ada GTK, so, apa pulak lepas ni?
This post has been edited by wanvadder: Jan 30 2014, 09:58 PM
PUTD Helicopter Carrying Four Military Personnel Crashes
JOHOR BAHARU, Jan 31 (Bernama) An Army Air Corps (PUTD) helicopter, an Augusta A-109 LUH, crashed in the jungle near the Bekok Dam between 9pm and 10pm Thursday night, according to sources Friday.
However, all the four people on board the helicopter, which was on a training flight, were safe and had been taken to the Kluang District Hospital.
"The helicopter was on a night training flight before it crashed in the jungle near Bekok Dam in Segamat," said the sources.
The sources said that a PUTD rescue team had been despatched to the crash site and succeeded in taking the victims out before sending them to the Kluang Hospital at about 1am.
The four victims, including a foreign military officer with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel who was the flight instructor, did not suffer serious injuries, the sources added.
Bernama learnt that the foreign military officer was from France, while the other three people on board were locals holding the ranks of Major, Captain and a Sergeant.
The sources said the impact of the crash resulted in the tail and the rotor blades of the helicopter to break into two and the wheels of the aircraft were damaged badly.
"The helicopter was described as a total loss," the sources said.
According to the sources, night flight training involved high risks as the pilot had to rely on the 'night vision goggle' and other flight instruments in flying the helicopter.
Meanwhile, Batu Pahat OCPD ACP Din Ahmad, when contacted, confirmed receiving the report on the incident from the military this morning.
However, he said he was informed that the helicopter did not crash but had made an emergency landing due to problems faced by the aircraft.
He said no serious injury was reported on the four victims.
CUTTING THEM OFF: We were ordered to prevent escape of Sulu gunmen, says police commando
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KOTA KINABALU: A VAT69 senior officer yesterday told the High Court here that his team was involved in a gun battle with Sulu gunmen while conducting a "cut-off" operation around the Tanjung Batu area last year.
Deputy Superintendent Anwar Rosli said battles occurred at two coastal villages in the Felda Sahabat oil palm settlement, including the one in which he and his team was involved.
He said the other was the first battle, which occurred in Kampung Tanduo on March 1.
Anwar, who led Team C in a close reconnaissance mission, said then Federal Internal Security and Public Order director Datuk Abdul Rashid Harun had ordered him to conduct the "cut-off" operation.
The order came on March 6 after Anwar returned to the VAT69 tactical base in Felda Sahabat 16 from a close reconnaissance mission in Kampung Tanduo on March 2.
Anwar was testifying as the sixth prosecution witness before judge Stephen Chung Hian Guan in the trial of 30 people charged with offences linked to the Kampung Tanduo incursion and Simunul attack in Semporna last year.
He said this to questions by Attorney-General Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail, who is leading the prosecution team, at the trial being held at the central prison here.
"The cut-off operation was conducted to prevent intruders from escaping the area (Tanjung Batu) following a mopping-up operation," explained Anwar.
He said Deputy Superintendent Abdul Rani Alias, the Team D leader, was assisting the military in the mopping up operation on March 6.
GANI: Did you hear anything (during the operation in Tanjung Batu)?
ANWAR: I heard shooting and I believed DSP Rani had engaged the armed intruders.
GANI: About 3pm while you were in your position, what happened?
ANWAR: I saw five to six armed intruders approaching our area, about 30m away.
Anwar said upon seeing the gunmen, he and his team members fired at the armed intruders, who retaliated.
"The exchange of fire lasted between five and 10 minutes and we remained in our position after the shooting ended.
"Two hours later, I ordered my men to inspect the area and we discovered the bodies of two gunmen," he said, adding that he returned to the tactical base on March 9.
On March 12, Anwar was instructed by another VAT69 officer, Superintendent Mancha Laga, to be in charge of a sniper group until March 23.
Earlier, he told the court that his team member, Inspector Zulkifli Mamat, was killed while two others, Corporal Azman Ampong and Corporal Mohd Tarmizi Hashim, were injured in a battle during the close reconnaissance mission in Kampung Tanduo on March 1.
Hearing continues today.
Security personnel standing guard around the Kota Kinabalu central prison complex yesterday where the trial of 30 people charged with offences related to the Lahad Datu intrusion last year is being held. Pic by Malai Rosmah Tuah
SIAP SEDIA… Pasukan keselamatan sentiasa siap sedia menghadapi ancaman musuh siang dan malam di Kampung Tanduo yang kini telah dijadikan markas tentera.
Malaysian armed forces patrolling the area in Kampung Tanduo in this file photo.
It was the scene where armed Sulu gunmen were involved in deadly gunbattles with Malaysian security forces. Today, it is a highly secure place and safe.
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ON Wednesday, a small army (enough probably to invade Kajang) escorted the media, who were in three pick-up trucks, to Kampung Tanduo in Lahad Datu where Sulu gunmen landed by boat on Feb 12 last year.
For security reasons, I can’t reveal how many soldiers guarded us to the scene where Malaysian security forces were engaged in gunbattles with the armed intruders.
If I did, they would have to kill me.
“Tanduo is safe. But we have organised a military escort just in case,” an officer told us at an Eastern Sabah Security Command (Esscom) base about 17km from Kampung Tanduo.
The journey to Tanduo passed through thousands of oil palm trees in Felda Sahabat, an oil palm plantation the size of Singapore.
The bullet-riddled wooden houses in Kampung Tanduo have been abandoned, as villagers were not allowed to return to their homes. Some of the houses have been destroyed.
Esscom has set up base in the seaside village. The commanding officer in the security zone, spanning about 60km of coastline, is Lt-Kol Mat Noh Ngadiman, a seasoned soldier who was in duty in war zones such as Lebanon and Nepal.
“This is a highly secured place,” said the commanding officer.
“So this is the last place the Sulu gunmen would go if they wanted to invade Sabah again?” I asked.
“Yes,” he said.
Scratch Tanduo, I told myself, from my list of possible repeat Sulu gunmen intrusion targets.
Sabah’s coastline close to the Philippines is long; there are other potential targets such as Kudat, Sandakan, Lahad Datu, Kunak, Semporna and Tawau (which are under Esscom).
We were brought to a makeshift information centre that displayed 3D maps of the area, photographs of the gun battles and paraphernalia found on the dead gunmen.
Two things interested me.
One was a photograph of a rather hot female Sulu sniper.
If “Tanduo, the Invasion” was a movie, the sniper’s role would have been played by tough chick Michelle Rodriguez.
The Sulu army, I was told, preferred female snipers.
“Women have sharper eyesight than men,” an officer told me.
“What happened to her?” I asked.
“She was captured. But she died in captivity after she refused to eat for five days,” he said.
The other thing that interested me was a Sulu gunman “feng shui” calendar on when was the best time to go for a kill or die in battle.
Probably there was some accuracy to the killing timetable.
There was a symbol of a “mayat” (corpse) from 8am to 11am on Friday. If I deciphered the calendar correctly, it meant that there would be death before Friday’s noon prayers.
On Friday morning on March 1 last year, two Malaysian police officers and 12 Sulu gunmen were killed in a gun battle in Tanduo, triggering the military offensive against the invaders.
Esscom also brought us to visit the shallow river mouth where the armed intruders had entered, the surau (facing the Celebes sea where Tawi Tawi in the Philippines is about 65km away) where they were first spotted and to the abandoned house of the late Ahmad Bom, whose son was among the 30 people charged for various security offences in connection with the Sulu gunmen intrusion.
It was an insightful visit as when I covered the Lahad Datu attack last year, the war zone was off limits to civilians. I got an understanding of the terrain our security forces had to contend with.
“What’s that blue flag doing there?” I asked an officer, pointing to two oil palm trees in a field where the trees have been felled.
“That is where the two police officers were shot,” he said, referring to the March 1 incident involving Sulu gunmen carrying a white flag.
“They were killed by snipers,” I said, thinking of the female sniper who looked like Rodriguez.
“Yes,” he said.
During my Lahad Datu visit, my colleagues, Muguntan Vanar and Dina Murad, and I met with several contacts familiar with the security situation in Sabah.
Some told us that the shooting spree where six men used air guns and had targeted 46 establishments in Kota Kinabalu was a warning.
“They wanted to tell us that they could have used real bullets. And that we should not hang the 30 people on trial,” he said.
They also told us that there were several armed attempts (including kidnapping in Pulau Mabul) to enter Sabah.
The next day, in a trip to Pulau Adal that lies on the smuggling route from southern Philippines to Sabah, Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar confirmed that Malaysian security forces thwarted a second attempt in two months by armed groups to enter Sabah.
A respected 60-something Sabahan of Tausug origin, who is in touch with militants in southern Philippines, related: “A Tausug woman, whose husband was killed in the Philippines 10 years ago, told her 15-year-old son, ‘That is the man who killed your father’ when she saw him in the Lahad Datu market.”
“The son went home, took a knife and stabbed the man to death,” he said.
“The Tausugs (who led the Tanduo invasion) will never forget. They will avenge the death of those who were killed in Tanduo.”
Despite having lost her husband ASP Zulkifli Mamat to Sulu gunmen in Lahad Datu last year, Noor Aziah has been courageously continuing on with her life.
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She is trying to do the best she can as a single mother of three children.
Aziah, 29, appeared a strong figure when met at the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Medical Centre in Kuala Lumpur, where her three-month-old son was warded in the High Dependency Unit for breathing complications.
On March 2, 2013, VAT 69 commando Zulkifli, 29, was killed in a shootout with Sulu intruders in Kampung Tanduo, Lahad Datu, Sabah.
Aziah described her late husband as a very patient man.
“He was very friendly with everyone, and not the sort to pick and choose his friends,” she said, adding that while Zulkifli was soft spoken, he could also be firm when he needed to be.
Aziah said her husband was a very active person, and when not working, would always find something to occupy his time, such as jogging, motor biking, or mountain climbing.
“I used to sometimes ask him, ‘You are always working, can’t you sit still?’ He never felt tired!” recalled Aziah, who lives in Perak.
Upon hearing of his deployment to Lahad Datu, Aziah was initially hesitant about allowing him to go but relented when told how important the mission was.
“When he was sent to Sabah, he had just returned from Sarawak on another assignment. I asked him not to go to Lahad Datu as I was unwell. I did not know I was pregnant then,” she said.
Although Zulkifli looked heavy-hearted to leave, Aziah could also tell that her husband was determined to assisting his comrades in combat.
“He told me that it was not easy to get assigned for the mission because everyone was fighting for a chance to go. He said he was lucky to have been chosen,” she said.
“When I asked him to take a break from work, he said that he would take a rest after his mission. He told me that we would go on a holiday after he came back,” said the secondary school teacher.
When her husband’s team was deployed to respond to information that Sulu gunmen were hiding in Kampung Simunul, Semporna, Jabah Mingku Voon was not too worried.
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“As the wife of a policeman, I trusted my husband’s ability to carry out his duties even though I was also aware that his job was not an easy one,” said the widow of Semporna Special Branch chief ASP Michael Padel.
ASP Michael was one of six policemen gunned down during an operation at Kampung Siminul, Semporna.
Michael, 35, was born and raised in Sarawak. He was promoted as the head of the Semporna Special Branch a few months before his last assignment.
Although it had been more than a decade since ASP Michael and she were married, the 34-year-old Jabah vividly remembers the first time she met her husband.
“It was in 1998. At that time, he had not yet joined the police force and was still a teacher in Kuching. I was working part-time in a restaurant while studying. When he first approached me, I was a bit hard-hearted and ‘jual mahal’ (played hard to get),” recalled a smiling Jabah. “A few months before his death, we celebrated our 13th wedding anniversary by renewing our vows. He asked me to marry him again in church. We exchanged rings and wore wedding attire. It was a very romantic moment; he was a very romantic man,” she said.
“A while back, while I was cleaning out boxes, I found a Valentine’s card from him from 1998. Rasa sedih pun ada, lucu pun ada (It was sad, but it was amusing as well).”
Jabah said that she had opted to become a housewife because her husband wished for her to be at home with their son, Macluie.
Although Michael was by nature a cheerful man, he behaved strangely very soon after his 35th birthday.
“At first, I didn’t take much heed of it. During our anniversary in September, he kept mentioning his old schoolmates and went about repairing whatever was broken in the house,” said Jabah, her expression visibly more solemn.
“He brought our son out to the movies very often, sometimes three times a week. He even called his family every day in Sarawak. He usually calls often, but never like this.”
On the day he left Tawau for Semporna at 5am, Michael’s change of behaviour was at its peak, she said.
“He was uncharacteristically sad. He kept getting in and out of the car. He looked anxious as if something was troubling him deeply but he assured us that he would return home.
“When he gave me a goodbye hug, I saw that my husband was crying. If my husband was shedding tears, what more my reaction as his wife?” said Jabah.
While in Semporna, Michael would call home five to six times a day and sent messages frequently.
“There were always texts asking how we were. It was unusual, it felt like we were dating again, the amount of times he contacted me.
“On Friday, when (ASP) Zulkifli (Mamat) was shot (in a gun battle with Sulu gunmen in Kampung Tanduo, Lahad Datu), my husband asked about our son and told me he would not be coming home that day.
“The last call I received was at 3pm on the day he passed away. He told me not to worry and asked one of our friends to accompany and check on me at home. A few hours later, he was shot and all attempts to reach his phone failed,” said Jabah, adding that she had no idea what was happening at the time.
“I felt very alone as I was away from my hometown (in Simunjan, Sarawak) and only had my son with me. Throughout the night, I kept wondering what happened to Michael and praying that he was all right.”
The officers who came to inform Jabah of her husband’s passing had difficulty delivering the news.
“On Sunday midnight, a large group of officers arrived at my house and told me that my husband was injured and warded at the hospital. I felt uncomfortable, and my instinct as a wife told me something was amiss,” she said.
“The officer who delivered the news of my husband was crying. The wives of the policemen also cried, as they did not know how to break the news to me. There were many of them, I can’t remember how many now. All I know is that I fainted when they told me of his injury. Deep down, I knew that if he was only injured, there would not be that many officers at my doorstep.”
Her son was the one who consoled her.
“He told me ‘Daddy is only hurt, don’t worry’,” she recalled.
A year after his passing, Jabah said that not much has changed in her and her son’s lives.
“My friends say it has been a year and I must move on, but perhaps it is hard for me because I was not redha (at peace) with his passing,” she said.
Jabah’s son is her rock during these difficult times, always reminding his mother to continue on with life despite their sorrow.
“He is a very strong boy. He always tells me that we cannot continue to be sad,” she said.
“My son and I have our own ways of dealing with grief. When he sees me sad, he asks if anything is wrong. I always answer ‘nothing’. When I see him sad, I ask him the same question. He gives me the same answer.
“He hides it well, but I know he is troubled. After all, we are both going through the same thing together,” said Jabah.
Even though the family has lost a father and a husband, Jabah feels proud of Michael’s sacrifice and believes that his death was not in vain.
“I tell myself that God will not test us if we are not strong enough to bear it. He will not test us if He does not love us,” she said.
PETALING JAYA: On the day Sergeant Salam Togiran was deployed to in Kampung Simunul, Semporna against Sulu gunmen, his wife Marlinah Utan felt something troubling her.
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“I texted him, asking ‘How are you? Are you ok?’ He replied at 3pm, ‘Alhamdulillah, I am fine’. An hour or so later he called me and asked that I pray for his safety,” recalled the 40-year-old Sabahan.
“I told him I was worried about him and to always remember that there are loved ones at home waiting for him to return. That was the last conversation I had with my husband.”
Salam was among six police officers killed by Sulu gunmen during an ambush in Kampung Simunul, Semporna, Sabah on March 2, 2013.
On the night of the ambush, Marlinah was at a surau in Tawau with other members of Perkep (Association of Policemen’s Families).
“We were having special hajat prayers to ask for the safety of those stationed in Sabah and tahlil prayers for the late Insp Zulkifli Mamat and Kpl Sabaruddin Daud (VAT 69 commandos killed in Kampung Tanduo on March 1, 2013),” said the homemaker.
After prayers, Perkep members received word that policemen were attacked in the Kampung Simunul operation.
“It was then that I started getting frantic as I knew my husband was in Semporna. I shouted, ‘Help! My husband is there, my husband is there!’” she recalled.
Coincidentally, one of the officers’ wives, who had family in Semporna received a call from where the policemen were fighting with the gunmen.
The call was put through loudspeaker and gunshots echoed throughout the room.
“As they tried to calm me, more news arrived that a few of our men had fallen. I kept on asking for their names, in between tears,” recalled Marlinah.
“When they answered ‘Tuan Michael (Padel),’ it was as if I lost control of myself.
“I knew my husband was one of the fallen even though no one explicitly told me. I knew because wherever Tuan Michael was, my husband was sure to be beside him. They were very close friends,” she said.
Looking back at the past year, Marlinah hopes to never again experience what she did that night.
“It was torture, waiting and waiting for news about my husband. I contacted the police station, I called everyone but not a single person could tell me that my husband was no longer with us,” she said.
At 3pm the next day, Marlinah received a call from an officer from the Special Branch. He told her to wait for him at her home.
“By then, I had lost all strength. When he finally arrived, the officer brought my husband’s clothes from Semporna. It was then that I lost all hope of finding my husband alive.
“When I received the news that he had passed away but his body could not be brought home at the time, my heart broke. I hugged my children and tried to give them strength as best I could but my children had difficulty accepting it.”
Marlinah’s eldest son took the news especially badly because the 16-year-old boy had promised to be the one to lead his father’s funeral rites.
“My husband told my son that when he died, he would like my son to be the one to give him his last bath, to do the jenazah prayers and to lay him to rest in the grave. My son was sad, because he could never fulfill that promise. How could he, in that condition?" she asked.
A day before Salam’s death, the family had been watching news on television when there was a report that Zulkifli was killed in Kampung Tanduo.
“My husband told me, ‘Kalau macam ini, saya pun nak!’ (If this is what it is like there, I also want to be a part of it)," she recalled.
At the time, Salam was not yet assigned to Semporna and Marlinah had no notion of what was to happen.
“I was angry then. I said, ‘Don’t speak carelessly. If anything were to happen to you, what is to become of the family?’ He simply smiled and said, ‘This is mati syahid (It is a martyr’s death)’," she said.
When her husband received instructions to go to Semporna, Marlinah noted a change in Salam’s behaviour.
“He told me the invaders were dangerous people and that the mission might take longer than usual. He avoided looking at me the whole time but asked that I take good care of the family,” she said.
The most challenging obstacle for Marlinah now is in trying to fill her husband’s role in the family.
“The hardest thing for me is when the children look for their father. If they say, ‘if dad were here ...’ it really shatters me, but I try to be strong for my children,” said the mother of four.
To keep her going, Marlinah turns to the memories she shared with her late husband.
“All my memories of him are beautiful. To me, he was the best person I know. But sometimes I think, as much as he loved his children and me, he had more love for his country,” she said.
“Sometimes it makes me sad, but it also makes me a stronger person. It makes me proud of him.”
A year after Police Sergeant Azis Sarikon was gunned down in Semporna’s Kg Simunul during the March 2 ambush by Sulu gunmen, his family have yet to come to terms with his tragic death.
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In fact, life has become a nightmare for his widow Siti Bandora and her four children, Mohd Faridzel Helmi, 20, Liyana Abd Aziz, 17, Nurul Sazwani Aziz, 14, Mohd Aiman Hakimi, 9.
“As the days passed, our feelings of loss and helplessness increased. We miss him more each day and being a mother, I try my best to hide my feelings and try to be stronger for them,” said Siti.
“I am worried for (my children). I fear they will never recover from the shock and sadness of their father’s sudden death,” she said.
She said this was reflected in the children’s school exam results.
“They used to come home with good results and were among the top in their respective classes. Now, it is all bad results,” said the housewife.
“I really don’t know how to help them apart from pretending that I have moved on. I constantly remind them to do so,” said a tearful Siti.
Siti said she had little emotional support from others.
“Sometimes, I have to remind myself that he really is gone and will never return. I have to make myself happy,” she said, adding that at times, her youngest child often asks when his father was coming home.
Siti says she tells him that he would only be able to see his father when he gets to heaven himself.
“To make us feel better, I take Liyana and Aiman, who are living with me to visit their father’s grave,” she said.
Siti says her two other children – Mohd Faridzel, who is studying in Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS), and Nurul, who is at boarding school – are coping better.
“I really wish to see (all my children) grow up happy people, and remember that their father died a hero,” she said.
For now, all Siti can do is pray and hope that her family will learn to let go and move on with their lives.
For 12-year-old Nur Izzaty Syafiqah, her father’s clothing has a calming effect whenever she feels depressed.
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The Year Six student of SRK St Agnes in Kota Kinabalu still misses her father, Sergeant Major Baharin Hamit who was killed by Sulu gunmen in Kampung Simunul in Semporna on March 2 last year.
“The only way she could soothe her aching heart was by hugging her father’s old clothes,” explained her 52-year-old mother, Sumiati Suarah, during an interview at their home in Kampung Laut Inanam, near Kota Kinabalu.
The family’s three-bedroom terrace house is decorated with the late sergeant’s sports trophies, service medals and commendations.
“I still keep some of his clothes especially his badminton outfit, because there’s still his scent on them,” said the widow of the former Special Branch policemen from the state police headquarters.
Sumiati said that her daughter regularly dreamt of her father and there were even times when she dreamt that her father was baking a chocolate cake for her even though he could never bake.
“These dreams make her feel happier,” Sumiati said, adding that she wanted her daughter to focus on the forthcoming UPSR exams, later this year.
Her older son, 17-year-old Muhd Izzat Syafiq, who studies in SMK Kolombong is coping better. According to Sumiati, he is better at dealing with his feelings of loss.
For Sumiati, the events before her husband left their home for Semporna will always remain in her memory.
“I will never forget the day he was left for Semporna. My daughter cried so hard,” she said.
Sumiati says she misses her husband dearly, especially for the little things he did when he was alive.
“When I cooked, he was always with me in the kitchen, just keeping me company, bothering me, and “entertaining” me. Even when I was tired, I did’t feel it as he was always there, making life more wonderful for me,” she said.
Immigration officers involved in standoff with 100 thugs
MALACCA: About 30 immigration officers were holed up for two hours at an entertainment outlet in Melaka Raya on Wednesday after they were surrounded by about 100 thugs.
They eventually managed to take 35 foreigners, including 34 women, with them out of the three-storey building under tight police cordon at about 7pm, said Malacca Immigration Department acting director Abu Bakar Sidek Hassan.
He said the immigration officers, including 23 members of the Special Tactical Group could not leave the building until 15 policemen from the Bandar Hilir station arrived at the scene.
"Several thugs were seen taking the registration numbers of vehicles belonging to the immigration officers during the stand-off.
“I feared that they have an ulterior motive," he told reporters at the Home Ministry Complex on Thursday.
He said several drunk clients also questioned the immigration officers for detaining the guest relation officers (GROs) aged between 18 and 35 comprising 33 Vietnamese women and a Chinese woman.
The Chinese woman in her 30s is married to a local while a 35-year-old Vietnamese woman acted as a pimp, he said, adding that a 26-year-old Bangladeshi who worked at the premises was also arrested.
Abu Bakar said the GROs were brought to the entertainment outlet in small groups to avoid detection and they could leave with clients who hired their services.
He said 13 of the Vietnamese women and the Chinese woman allegedly had violated their working permits, visit passes or boundary passes while 20 Vietnamese women and the Bangladeshi man entered the country illegally.
They were taken to the Machap Umboo Immigration Detention Depot, he said.
Abu Bakar said the raid, which started at about 3pm culminated after a three-day surveillance. - Bernama