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Thursday, September 10, 2009

The rape of young Penan girls: Cops want more info - Taken from theStarOnline

Published: Thursday September 10, 2009 MYT 4:04:00 PM
Updated: Thursday September 10, 2009 MYT 4:38:00 PM

The rape of young Penan girls: Cops want more info

By STEPHEN THEN and SHARON LING


MIRI/ KUCHING: Sarawak police say they would not be able to nail the loggers who raped and sexually abused Penan women and girls in timber concession zones despite a government report that confirmed these crimes -- not unless they get detailed information.

The Women and Family Affairs Ministry has confirmed that these crimes -- first uncovered by the Bruno Manser Fund on its website, then highlighted by local media -- had taken place, but police said they need detailed information that can lead them to these rapists.

The head of the Criminal Investigation Department in Sarawak, Senior Asst Comm 2 Huzir Mohamed, told The Star on Thursday that the police need more detailed and specific information like names, dates and places.

“We need the names of specific victims, where they can be found, more accurate information on the dates and places of the incidents and descriptions of the people who had committed these (sexual crimes).

“We need to interview these victims. If the report is too general and not precise, it will be difficult for us to probe effectively.

“The ministry must furnish us with more details,” he said when was asked whether the police could launch an investigation to pinpoint the rapists following the ministry’s public disclosure that there had been numerous cases of rape and sexual abuse against Penan girls and women in Ulu Baram in northern Sarawak.

When they first investigated the case, the police found no evidence of these crimes, Inspector-Gene ral of Police Tan Sri Musa Hassan said in November last year.

However, the continuing public outcry over the horrific crime prompted the Government to study the matter more deeply.

The 111-page report was compiled by a special committee set up by the ministry on Oct 8 last year.

The committee visited numerous Penan settlements in Long Item, Long Kawi, Long Luteng, Long Belok and Niah and said that it had identified several Penan girls and women who had been raped and sexually violated.

The committee members, made up of representatives from several ministries, spoke to these victims in the settlements, as well as two victims who were brought to the Women’s Aid Organisation shelter home in Selangor.

The two victims, aged 17 and 21, had also lodged police reports in Bukit Aman.

“For every case, the committee had difficulties in getting the exact dates of the incidents because the victims could not remember the exact details,” the report said, stressing that these incidents happened years ago.

The report described the testimonies of a 17-year old “Cindy” who said she was raped when she was 12.

She said she was raped by a logging company worker (the name of the company was also disclosed) inside a boarding school, outside the school and when she took a ride on the logger’s vehicle from Long Kawi to Long Lama.

Raping 10yr-old girls
Another girl “Bibi” said she was raped twice by a logger named “Johnny” and she became pregnant in 2005.

The report said the victim told the committee that she did not lodge a police report because she did not know where to go to do so.

She was also uneducated and afraid, said the report, adding that some of the victims had been sexually violated when they were only 10.

The report also said schoolgirls were often molested by lorry drivers while travelling to school in timber company vehicles.

It documented one incident in which a 14-year-old girl’s breasts were touched by a lorry driver. In another incident, a lorry driver tried to molest a group of 10-year-old girls but they managed to escape.

The report highlighted the vulnerability of Penan schoolgirls to such abuse because of their dependence on timber vehicles to transport them to and from school.

“The Penans are overly dependent on timber companies because logging tracks are often the only means of access to their villages,” it said, adding that schools and clinics were four to six hours away by logging track and the Penans were too poor to afford their own transport.

The report said the Penans were also afraid that the authorities may not believe them and would accuse them of trying to create trouble for the logging companies.

The report, however, said that there are Penan women and girls who had admitted to having sexual affairs with some of these loggers, adding that there were some who had married these timber workers.

In the report, the ministry did not recommend what the police should do nor provide exact details of the criminals, where they could be found or if they are still working with the timber company concerned.

Addressing the issue
A copy of the report was released to PKR women’s chief Zuraida Kamaruddin by the ministry on Tuesday and subsequently madeavailable on the Sarawak-based blog Hornbill Unleashed.

On addressing the sexual abuse, the report called for programmes to be conducted to raise the awareness of the Penans on personal safety, sex education and violence against women.

It also recommended the appointment of “trusted” lorry drivers and student management assistants to escort Penan schoolchildren back to their villages.

The report also found that the Penans had little access to registration, healthcare and education due to their poverty and the remoteness of their settlements.

It said many Penans did not have personal documents while their children had a high drop-out rate at school.

“All these issues are closely related to imbalanced development. The lack of infrastructure such as roads and public transport make it difficult for the Penan to communicate with the outside world including government agencies.

“The Penans also feel neglected because of negative perceptions and prejudices against them,” it said.

As such, it said there should be greater involvement of the Penans in the process of making decisions which affect them.

Meanwhile, the Bruno Manser Fund, which first broke the Penans’ allegations of sexual abuse last September, welcomed the release of the task force’s report.

However, it voiced concern that the report apparently did not have any legal consequences for the perpetrators.

“It is high time that those responsible for the crimes described in the report will face the legal consequences of their conduct,” it said in astatement released on the Borneo Project website.

Torture by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission - Taken from theStarOnline

Thursday September 10, 2009

Assistant manager: MACC officers tortured me during questioning

By WANI MUTHIAH


SHAH ALAM: The “mystery witness” accusing Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission of torture during questioning has turned out to be a 23-year-old assistant manager.

T. Sivanesan, who was brought in by the legal team holding a watching brief for the family of political aide Teoh Beng Hock, claimed that he was beaten up by commission officers in September last year.

He testified at the inquest into Teoh’s death that he was hit on his body and buttocks with an iron rod wrapped with a newspaper and blindfolded with a yellow towel when held at the Selangor MACC office in Plaza Masalam from Sept 4 to Sept 9 last year.

Sivanesan, who works with Puncak Rezeki Makmur Sdn Bhd, said three officers - known only as Zulkifli, Ashraf and J - had gone to his house in Jenjarom on Sept 4 and asked him to accompany them to their office to help with some investigations.

“When I was there, an officer called Mohan came in and told me in Tamil that if I didn’t speak the truth, the place would become hell,” he said, adding that the officers later brought in a pair of handcuffs together with documents for him to sign and admit his guilt.

Sivanesan claimed that the beating started after midnight when he was taken to a dark room and accused by a tall, bespectacled officer of being “stubborn”.

“He slapped my cheeks five or six times and told me to sign the documents. When I still refused, he ordered me to strip down to my underwear,” he said.

He claimed there were about 10 to 15 officers in the room then, one of whom - who was known as Ashraf - used a profanity and a racial slur against him and beat his genitals with a cane.

He said he twice blacked out during the interrogation to wake up with a packet of ice cubes shoved down the front portion of his underwear.

He later gave in and admitted his guilt because he could no longer bear the pain.

Sivanesan said he lodged a police report on Sept 11 last year and was treated at the Tengku Ampuan Rahimah Hospital in Klang for injuries on his head, genitals and kidneys.

Teoh, who was the political secretary to Selangor executive councilor Ean Yong Hian Wah, had been summoned to the state MACC office at the 14th Floor Plaza Masalam here for questioning on July 15.

He was found dead on the fifth floor service corridor of the building the following day.

In PETALING JAYA, Attorney-General Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail said the chambers wanted a revision to the coroner’s decision to accept Sivanesan’s statement, which he stated was “totally irrelevant”.

“We feel the inquest has diverted from the original aim and want it to be back on track,” he added.

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