Tag: Future Music Festival Asia

  • FMFA Death Caused By Drugs, IGP Insists Despite Medical Findings

    FMFA Death Caused By Drugs, IGP Insists Despite Medical Findings

    KUALA LUMPUR, June 2 — Police insisted today that the six youths who collapsed during last year’s Future Music Festival Asia (FMFA) event in Bukit Jalil had died because of drugs, dismissing findings in a toxicology report that suggested that it was heat stroke that killed them.

    Asked to comment today, Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar was quoted in The Malaysian Insider as saying that there was no need to dispute the matter as drugs had undoubtedly been used during the incident.

    “I don’t think I need to comment further. During the incident, we found that drugs were used.

    “If the clinical findings say (something else), we accept whatever the finding.

    “But the fact still remains that it is caused by drugs,” the news portal quoted Khalid as telling a press conference in Bukit Aman.

    English daily The Star reported yesterday that although the public was led to believe that drugs had been the cause of the FMFA deaths, the toxicology report issued two months after the incident revealed something else.

    According to the newspaper, it was heat stroke that caused the deaths, while drugs played a negligible role. Of the 16 party-goers who were taken to the hospital that day, two had no traces of any illegal substances, the report said.

    The report also quoted University Malaya Medical Centre (UMMC) forensic pathology department head Prof Dr K. Nadesan as saying the police showed little interest in the findings, although he sent them several detailed reports to correct their statements to the public on the deaths.

    “Unfortunately, they made statements without proper scientific reasons, which is not the right way,” he was quoted saying.

    Responding to the findings later, FMFA organiser The Livescape Group expressed surprise and demanded that the police come clean on the issue.

    The event planning company accused the authorities of giving them the runaround in their request for the official investigation report on the incident, despite numerous attempts over the past year to seek answers.

    “Our requests for the toxicology report to the police and to the hospitals involved following FMFA 2014 were both turned down with both parties citing an ‘ongoing police investigation’.

    “All information that we have garnered with regards to the investigation has been communicated to us only through media reports,” Livescape said.

    “We are not thinking about the money but what we are seeking for are answers and the truth. It is only fair that we allow the relevant authorities to provide their feedback,” it added.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

  • Future Music Festival Asia 2015 Cancelled

    Future Music Festival Asia 2015 Cancelled

    SINGAPORE – The Future Music Festival Asia 2015 will be officially cancelled and festival-goers will receive refunds, said organisers on Sunday.

    In a post on their Facebook page, the group apologised to festival-goers for the “inconvenience (they) have been put through” and said details on the refund would be made available on Monday.

    Festival organiser Livescape had twice applied for and failed to secure a public entertainment license from the authorities here. Livescape then submitted an appeal to the Minister for Home Affairs on March 3, but that was rejected too.

    About 15,000 tickets have been sold for the event, which was scheduled to be held for the first time in Singapore at the Changi Exhibition Centre on Friday and Saturday, March 13 to 14. Big acts such as Public Enemy and The Prodigy were slated to perform.

    Started in Australia in 2006 and considered one of the biggest dance music festivals in South-east Asia, the event made headlines last year when six of its concert-goers died from drug overdose in Kuala Lumpur.

    Tickets to the festival in Singapore, which cost between $148 and $388, were sold via Sistic, as well as on the festival’s website.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com and www.futuremusicfestival.asia