Tag: charged

  • Two 16-Years-Old Teenagers Charged With 23 Counts Of Murder For Horrific School Fire

    Two 16-Years-Old Teenagers Charged With 23 Counts Of Murder For Horrific School Fire

    A Malaysian court on Thursday charged two teenagers with 23 counts of murder for allegedly causing a fire that killed 21 students and two teachers at an Islamic school in Kuala Lumpur two weeks ago.

    The two 16-year-old suspects haven’t entered a plea in the blaze that engulfed the third-floor dormitory of the Darul Quran Ittifaqiyah School on Sept. 14, prosecutors said.

    The two boys and four other teenage suspects were also charged with drug-related offenses at the Kuala Lumpur Magistrate’s Court. A seventh suspect was released from custody without charge due to a lack of evidence against him.

    Thursday’s proceedings took place behind closed doors and only family members of the accused were allowed inside the courtroom.

    In Malaysia, a murder charge carries a death sentence, but in cases involving juveniles, the maximum penalty is life imprisonment.

    Magistrate Siti Radziah Kamaruddin set Nov. 28 for sentencing, while the court awaited reports from the state’s chemistry and welfare departments.

    Malaysian police earlier said that the seven boys had deliberately set fire at the school, which is classified as a “tahfiz” center where students learn to memorize the Quran.

    Thirty-six students and six teachers were staying at the school when the fire broke out. The victims, boys aged 16 years or younger, and two school staff members were trapped behind barred windows and a locked door, fire officials said. They said the school did not have a fire safety permit and occupational certificate.

    The father of one of the survivors, Sharifuddin Musa, said he wanted to see the court proceedings on Thursday, but was not allowed in by court officials.

    “I can forgive, but I am also sad about what had happened. Other family members and I can only hope for fair sentences being passed on these suspects,” he told reporters.

    The mother of 12-year-old Nik Mohd Ridzuan, who died in the blaze, also tried to enter the courtroom.

    “I just want to see the faces of those who are responsible for the incident,” she said.

    ‘I feel nothing at the moment’

    After hearing the murder charges read out, Mas Aliza Ali Bapoo, a cousin of three orphans who were killed in the fire – Muhammad Shafiq Haikal, 13, Muhammad Hafiz Iskandar, 11, and Muhammad Harris Ikhwan, 10 – said she felt numb.

    “I feel nothing at the moment. I feel empty,” she told reporters.

    Six of the seven suspects tested positive for drugs after their arrests on Sept. 15, police said.

    Investigators said the suspects had been involved in a “misunderstanding” with students at the school. The boys were allegedly caught on closed-circuit TV recordings loitering outside the school before the early morning fire started.

    The two murder suspects pleaded guilty to drug-related charges. Three others pled not guilty, while another suspect admitted guilt to the same drug charges.

    On Wednesday, Noor Rashid Ibrahim, the police deputy inspector-general, told reporters that not all suspects were directly involved in the alleged arson.

    The fire prompted calls for a nationwide investigation of tahfiz schools after Malaysian newspapers reported that more than 200 fires had been reported at private religious schools across the country during the past two years.

    The Star newspaper said there were 519 private tahfiz schools registered nationwide as of April, but many more are believed to be unregistered.

    Malaysia’s Fire and Rescue Department concluded two weeks ago that arson caused the fire. It said firefighters had found two cooking gas cylinders which were placed at the door of the school’s dormitory and prevented the victims from escaping.

    As the fire engulfed the dormitory, witnesses reported being awoken by cries for help. Firefighters said they found the charred bodies piled on top of each other, indicating that the victims tried to flee, but were trapped by metal window grills.

    “From our investigations, we believe it was due to taunting between the suspects and several of the tahfiz students a few days before the fire,” Kuala Lumpur Police Chief Amar Singh Ishar Singh told reporters.

     

    Source: http://www.benarnews.org

  • Two Charged For Wrecking Porridge Restaurant At Upper Serangoon Road

    Two Charged For Wrecking Porridge Restaurant At Upper Serangoon Road

    Two of the three people arrested for wrecking a porridge stall along Upper Serangoon Road last Saturday (May 27) were charged in court on Wednesday.

    Both allegedly threw bowls, tables and chairs in Heng Long Teochew Porridge, reportedly after a dispute over their bill.

    Tan Sung Meng, 46, faces a charge of committing a rash act endangering the safety of others, while Pang Pei Pei, 40, faces a charge of committing mischief.

    The two are accused of acting together with Ang Sim Poh, who has not yet been charged. The trio were arrested on Monday and Tuesday, police said.

    Pang was brought to court on Wednesday in handcuffs. Police prosecutors sought to remand her for two weeks at the Institute of Mental Health (IMH), but defence lawyer K Ravendran objected. He said Pang has a five-month-old baby and had not made care arrangements for the child.

    The district judge granted Pang bail of S$5,000 to arrange for childcare before being remanded at IMH for psychiatric assessment.

    Pang has a history of psychiatric treatment, the court heard, but has not been attending follow-up appointments or taking her medication. She will next appear in court on Jun 7.

    Tan was also offered bail of S$5,000 and will next appear in court on Jun 21. He did not have a lawyer.

    The police said on Tuesday they received a report on Saturday about a group of people who threw and damaged items at 1012 Upper Serangoon Road. The suspects were also captured on closed-circuit TV overturning a table at the eatery.

    If convicted for committing a rash act, the suspects can be jailed for up to six months, fined up to S$2,500, or both.

    If convicted for mischief causing damages of S$500 or more, the suspects can be jailed for up to two years, fined, or both.

     

    Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Mount Kinabalu Nudists Charged In Sabah Court

    Mount Kinabalu Nudists Charged In Sabah Court

    Four Western tourists accused of being part of a group who posed nude at the top of Malaysia’s Mount Kinabalu have appeared in court in Sabah state.

    Authorities said the two Canadians, a Briton and a Dutchman may be charged with causing public nuisance.

    Mt Kinabalu was hit by a magnitude 6.0 earthquake last Friday which left 18 people dead, including children.

    A senior minister last week said the tourists had angered the spirits of the mountain, which is considered sacred.

    Six people sought

    Ranau district police chief Mohd Farhan Lee Abdullah confirmed to the BBC that the authorities had arrested a British woman at Tawau airport in Sabah on Tuesday.

    The two Canadians, who are siblings, and the Dutchman turned themselves in to police on the same day.

    Their lawyer, Ronny Cham, told the BBC’s Jennifer Pak that he had requested the four be held apart from other detainees in order to ensure their safety.

    Malaysian lights up candles at a candlelight vigil for the victims of the earthquake in Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia on Monday, 8 June 2015
    A candle-lit vigil was held on Tuesday for the victims of the Mount Kinabalu earthquake

    The group appeared in court on Wednesday to have their remand extended, according to Malaysian newspaper The Star. They will now be held until Saturday while police continue their investigation.

    Jalaluddin Abdul Rahman, Sabah’s police commissioner, was quoted by AFP news agency as saying that the authorities may charge them with causing a public nuisance.

    He said they were still looking for six other tourists from the same group “and we will catch them”.

    The father of the British tourist who has been arrested, Eleanor Hawkins from the English city of Derby, said he was extremely worried about her. “I have got every faith in [Malaysia’s] judicial system. I just hope they don’t make an example of them,” Tim Hawkins told the Guardian newspaper.

    ‘Disrespect’

    The group of 10 foreigners had allegedly stripped naked and posed for pictures on 30 May. They were also said to have urinated on the mountain.

    The Muslim-majority country is socially conservative, and Mount Kinabalu is also considered sacred by Sabah’s Kadazan Dusun tribe.

    Pictures posted on social media angered many in Malaysia, but public sentiment intensified after the quake.

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    Why is Kinabalu sacred?

    Malaysias Mount Kinabalu is seen among mists from the Timpohon gate check point a day after the earthquake in Kundasang, a town in the district of Ranau on 6 June 2015
    • Sabah’s Kadazan Dusun tribe believe the mountain houses the spirits of their dead ancestors.
    • The name Kinabalu is derived from the tribe’s phrase “Aki Nabalu”, which means resting place of the dead.
    • Climbers are told by guides, many of whom are Kadazan Dusun, to treat the mountain with respect and to refrain from shouting, screaming or cursing at it.
    • Every December the tribe conducts a ritual called the Monolob to appease the spirits and allow climbers to continue visiting the mountain.
    • A priestess, called a Bobolian, makes an offering of seven white chickens accompanied by seven chicken eggs, betel nuts, tobacco, limestone powder, and betel plant leaves. The Bobolian leads a chant and the chickens are then slaughtered, cooked, and given to the ceremony participants.
    • In the past, this ceremony was conducted before every ascent, and climbers used the cooked meat as rations for their journey.
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    Last weekend, Sabah’s deputy chief minister, Joseph Pairin Kitingan, had linked the earthquake to the tourists’ act. He said the tragedy was a “confirmation” that they had showed “disrespect” to the mountain.

    Sabah’s tourism minister, Masidi Manjun, said later that this idea was “misconstrued”, but added that the tourists’ actions “were against the people of the largest tribe in Sabah”.

    Some officials have demanded that the foreigners be tried in a native court for flouting local customs.

    Mr Masidi said on Wednesday that searchers had found the bodies of the last two missing people.

    People look at bouquets of flowers in memory of the victims from an earthquake on Malaysia"s Mount Kinabalu, placed on a table at the Tanjong Katong Primary School in Singapore on 7 June 2015
    Mourners left tributes to primary school victims in Singapore over the weekend

    Singapore’s education ministry identified the two bodies as pupil Navdeep Singh Jaryal Raj Kumar and teacher Mohammad Ghazi Bin Mohamed.

    They were part of a group from Tanjong Katong Primary School who were climbing the mountain with guides when the earthquake struck. Seven pupils, two teachers and a guide were killed.

    Others killed included Malaysians and citizens from China, Japan and the Philippines.

     

    Source: www.bbc.com

  • Nine Men charged over insurance scam using Rentokil van

    Sallahudin Ehram
    Juraimi Raham
    Rudyanto Sarmani
    Mohammad Eunos Zakaria
    Shahifulah Mohamed Yusof
    Afghani Eusope
    Kamis Bakar
    Ariffin MD Rais
    Azroy Mazli

    Nine men were charged with cheating yesterday over an alleged staged road accident, which saw them claim more than $83,000 in insurance.

    The group is said to have conspired to fraudulently tell insurers that a Rentokil van had been involved in a crash with three cars along Sembawang Drive in July 2009, before claiming for injuries and damage to their vehicles.

    The day after the accident, the van’s driver, Rudyanto Sarmani, 32, reported it to his employer, Rentokil Initial Singapore, which paid out $1,563 to cover repairs to the Toyota van in January 2010. He faces one charge of cheating.

    The Straits Times understands that the three cars involved were a Proton Gen 2, a Hyundai Matrix and a Honda Fit.

    Source: The Straits Times