KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 4 — Dr Pornthip Rojanasunand has agreed to perform a
second autopsy on security guard C. Sugumaran who allegedly died from a
police beating, Sugumaran’s family lawyers said today.
Dr Pornthip is the Thai forensic pathologist who had observed Teoh
Beng Hock’s second post-mortem and testified at a royal inquiry that
foul play was likely involved in the DAP aide’s mysterious death at the
Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission’s Selangor headquarters in 2009.
“On behalf of the family, we have urgently written to the prime
minister, health minister and the director-general of the Health
Ministry to issue the necessary authorisations for Dr Pornthip
Rojanasunand (picture) to conduct the second
post-mortem on Sugumaran’s remains,” said Sugumaran’s family lawyers N.
Surendran and Latheefa Koya in a joint press statement.
“We have no objection to a government pathologist being allowed to
observe the procedure. We call upon Prime Minister (Datuk Seri) Najib
Razak and the other relevant authorities to respond immediately to this
request, as the family are unable to carry out the last rites until the
second post-mortem is concluded,” they added.
Najib ordered a forensic report last Thursday on Sugumaran after the latter’s death was raised at a Cabinet meeting.
Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai was directed to oversee the
forensic report after MIC president Datuk Seri G. Palanivel, who is
also a minister in the PM’s Department, had raised the security guard’s
death during the Cabinet meeting.
Several witnesses who saw Sugumaran collapse on a street near his
home in Batu 12, Hulu Langat on January 23 have accused the policemen
who arrested him of beating up the man after he was handcuffed.
The police have denied the allegations.
Sugumaran’s death joins a list of other alleged police killings like
the custodial deaths of Chang Chin Te earlier this year; A. Kugan and R.
Gunasegaran in 2009; the deadly police shooting of 14-year-old
schoolboy Aminulrasyid Amzah in 2010, and various other fatal police
shootings in the past two years.
A United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention 2010 visit to
Malaysian prisons and detention centres reported in 2011 that between
2003 and 2007, “over 1,500 people died while being held by authorities.”
The Bar Council, civil society and several politicians from both
sides of the divide have called for an Independent Police Complaints and
Misconduct Commission (IPCMC) to reform the police force since 2006.
Source : The Malaysian Insider
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