Posts Tagged ‘Crime’

PI Balasubramaniam was Hindraf supporter

July 12th, 2008
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Balasubramaniam, the investigator who created history and place in Malaysian Book of Records for making two statutory declarations in the space of 24 hours was quite involved in the Hindraf movement, and subsequently in the opposition parties, writes a guest columnist in the Star. This makes us think if Bala, being inclined towards the opposition, could have been manipulated. Secondly, its highlighted that Bala was in under financial strain after testifying, so there’s insinuiation that money could have played a role in his record making efforts.

However, since its under investigation, let’s wait for more details.

The former policeman is a small fry caught in the eye of a raging political storm and the Hindraf movement.

FORMER Special Branch detective Balasubramaniam Perumal left the police force in a cloud and despite early success as a private investigator had recently struggled in his business, relatives, friends and former colleagues say.

“He was a man of few words,” says friend Raja Sundram Pillay, 43.

Bala, as he is fondly called, left the force some years back after an incident involving his service revolver, his former colleagues said. It is unclear what the issue was but he resigned.

As a private investigator, Bala mostly collected evidence for divorce cases and started at RM50 an hour.

Mostly apolitical, Bala had an awakening after the Hindraf rally. He attended out of curiosity, and was immediately hooked to the cause, his friends said.

Raja first met Bala at the Jalan Duta court complex in January when the habeas corpus application of the five Hindraf leaders held under the ISA was being heard. “That’s where I first met him and we hit off immediately. He did not talk much but was a gem of a guy,” says Raja, a marketing trainer for Amway Malaysia. “Bala was a strong supporter of Hindraf and agreed with the grievances they raised but he was only that – a supporter,” says Raja. “He never pushed any political agenda but donated to and supported the cause strongly.

“There were about a dozen of us. We were all strangers who met either at the rally or during the many court cases involving the Hindraf leaders. “After that we met often and discussed how to help ? we were all excited and hooked on politics,” adds Raja. “All of us like Bala had been at the Nov 25 Hindraf rally.”

In the course of supporting Hindraf, Bala and friends developed links with PKR and the DAP. During the March 8 general election the group decided to split and actively campaign for different candidates from these parties.

Bala and a few friends ended up spending two weeks actively campaigning for DAP leader A. Sivanesan, now a Perak state executive councillor, who was contesting in the Sungkai state seat. “Bala and his group turned up on nomination day and offered their services for free,” says Sivanesan.

“He was a hard worker and a good organiser. He came across as someone sincere and dedicated. He even slept on the floor. “He was there cheering on polling night when the results were announced,” says Sivanesan. “I owe him and his team a lot.”

After retracting his explosive statutory declaration at a hotel here on Sunday, Bala disappeared with his wife and three children aged nine, 10 and 11.

All his friends are still in shock not only over the fact that Bala had overnight become a “big player” but also over the sudden retraction.

“He was hero one day and zero the next,” says another Hindraf friend.

Bala left hurriedly, leaving his Honda CRV parked in the porch of his house and two Rottweilers, named Monty and interestingly, Shaariibuu, locked in their cages.

“I called him on Sunday morning after reading the newspapers and he sounded like a hounded man,” says A. Thanaletchumi, a friend from Sungkai. “He was so reluctant to speak.”

As a private investigator, friends say Bala was earning enough to buy a new Honda CRV, a second-hand Proton Saga for his wife and a big bike for himself and extensively renovated his house in Rawang, but strangely his business began to dry up after he testified at the Altantuya Shaariibuu murder trial last year.

His friends don’t know why but by March Bala was “very nearly broke” and made the rounds at law firms looking for investigative jobs. “He asked me to put the word out that he needed jobs,” says a lawyer who declined to be named. “I recommended him to my colleagues. I don’t know what jobs he got.”

In April, despite his financial situation, Bala stood for and was elected chairman of the Rawang Tamil School’s Parent- Teacher Association. “He was very proud of it and was full of plans to raise money to add more classrooms as the school was crowded with over 1,000 students,” says a teacher friend.

On June 28, Bala took his family to Sungkai for a 15-table election victory dinner with Sivanesan. “He paid for one table and enjoyed himself with his family and a few close friends,” says Sivanesan. “He was very happy and did not show or give any inkling of the dramatic revelations he was to make on July 1.”

Bala seemed normal to all his close friends right up to the explosive press conference with PKR de facto leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.

“On Friday I heard rumours of a bombshell event involving Bala. “I sent him an SMS text enquiring about it and he just replied: ‘Read Anwar’s website’. “We are all in a state of shock,” says Raja. “Only Bala can clear the air.”

sujatha’s death anniversary

July 10th, 2008
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I have a habit of going through the obituary section in the papers lately. A friend said its a sign of times. Getting old…. 😯

I saw that the late Sujatha’s memorial prayers will be held on Saturday 12th July 2008. She passed away after falling down from a high rise building on 25th June 2007.

Who is she? Well, google and you’ll know.

Hindraf candlelight vigil for Balasubramaniam

July 9th, 2008
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Hindraf have joined the Balasubramaniam bandwagon by organising a candlelight vigil tonight at Brickfields. Bala’s nephew revealed that Bala had made contact with him (Kumaresan) late last night via a short telephone call.

For about 20-minutes, some 40 individuals who took part in the gathering chanted “Where is Bala?”, “We want Bala”, “IGP, free Bala” and “Najib, don’t hide Bala” among other slogans. Two PKR MPs – S Manickavasagam and R Sivarasa – were also at the vigil to lend support to the gathering.

Manickavasagam warned that Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) would hold a demonstration if the missing private eye was not found by this weekend.

Elangesvaran fond of Lord Ganesha

July 9th, 2008
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Selvam told Malaysiakini that Elangesvaran was never a Muslim and had always been a practicing Hindu.

 

My stepbrother has special affection towards Lord Ganesha (the Elephant God)

However the judge ruled that:

 

the High Court has no jurisdiction to decide over an earlier Syariah Court ruling

This despite the fact that no proper proof was submitted on the conversion.

Their family’s lawyer, Karpal Singh will however go ahead with an appeal to the higher court to seek a landmark decision “to once for all end controversies arising from cases of this nature.”

He believed the grounds for Balia’s decision could be challenged since Syariah Court’s jurisdiction covers only Muslims and it could only make rulings on Islamic apostasy, “not when it involves a person’s religious identity.” “Only civil courts can rule on whether a person is a Muslim or not,” he told journalists outside the chambers.

Karpal said it was wrong for the Perak Islamic religious authority to file for a decision at the Syariah Court when the case was pending at the Penang High Court, thus putting “unwarranted and undesired” pressure on judge Balia.

“It was a direct interference by the Syariah Court into the judicial powers of the civil court.”

Meanwhile HINDRAF representatives expressed shock over the ruling:

 

Describing the decision as shocking, Hindraf national coordinator RS Thanenthiran suggested that “Syariah Court seems more powerful and prevailing over civil courts when the federal constitution says otherwise. This is injustice to Elangesvaran family and the Hindu community at large. “I urge the Appeals Court to make an ultimate and fair decision to put to rest this persisting controversy,” he said.

Hindraf Perak coordinator A Vethamurthy said the decision today implied that “it was waste of energy, time and resources for non-Muslims to seek justice through the civil courts.”

I think there’s something more sinister to this story. Who is Elangesvaran? Why is he important until the religious people want to snatch his body without providing any proof? Why did Elangesvaran continue living with his non-Muslim wife if indeed he converted? Why did he commit suicide knowing that suicide is a big sin in Islam? Will the religious hooligans try to snatch the children as well citing that Elangesvaran already converted them? His wife better send the kids overseas as a precaution.

MHS on Elangesvaran body snatching case

July 8th, 2008
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Earlier, I wrote that MHS, among others, did not respond to the body snatching case involving the deceased Elangesvaran. It has been pointed out that MHS made a press statement on the 24th (reproduced below) hoping that the religious department does not pursue the case in syariah court. Which is exactly what those people did.

MHS, as the recognised representatives of the Hindu community, were duly ignored.

The statement:

 

MAIP should respect the Federal Constitution and Federal Court

PRESS STATEMENT – 24 June 2008

Majlis Agama Islam Perak should respect the Federal Constitution and the Federal Court.

We refer to the report in the Malaysia Nanban on Tuesday, 24th June 2008 (page 3) regarding the turmoil faced by the family of the late Elangesvaran.

We understand that the late Elangesvaran allegedly converted to Islam at some point. He has now committed suicide, and his body is at the hospital. The Islamic authorities say he died a Muslim, but his family members and friends say that Elangesvaran continued to profess and practise Hinduism all the way through until his untimely death.

The Malaysia Hindu Sangam extends our deepest condolences to his family in their time of grief on the untimely and early demise of Elangesvaran.. We are also saddened that yet again a grieving family is being put through torment because Islamic religious authorities are threatening to snatch away the body of their loved one away.

We have today written to the Menteri Besar of Perak urging him to ensure that the civil courts are allowed to determine the religious status of the late Elangesvaran. Therefore, we urge the Islamic authorities not to prosecute claims in the Syariah court for the bodies of the dead who are in the custody of non Muslim next of kin. If a non-Muslim is a party to the dispute, the Syariah courts should not deal with the matter.

We also urge the Perak State Government to recognise the constitutional right of a non Muslim who may have converted to Islam for some reason to revert to his original religion, or to some other religion. A person’s right to profess and practice the religion of his choice should not be unnecessarily interfered with by the State.

It is our view that the issue of whether the late Elangesvaran was a “person professing the religion of Islam” (quoting the words used by the Federal Constitution) must be determined by the civil courts.

We point out in our letter that it is clear from the unanimous decision of the Federal Court in the case of Latifah bte Mat Zin v Rosmawati bte Sharibun & Anor [2007] 5 MLJ 101, FC that the Syariah courts do not have jurisdiction at all to determine any dispute where a party to the dispute does not profess Islam. The comments of the learned Federal Court judges in latest case of Subashini a/p Rajasingam v Saravanan a/l Thangathoray (2007) also reinforce this proposition already entrenched in Item 1, List II, 9th Schedule to the Federal Constitution.

In our letter, we state our expectation that as a statutory body responsible to advise His Royal Highness the Ruler of Perak on Islamic affairs, MAIP has a responsibility to respect the Federal Constitution as the supreme law of this country and these decisions of our highest court.

The non Muslim family members of the Elangesvaran must have an opportunity for proper access to justice. The crucial question is whether at the time of his death, Elangesvaran professed (or acknowledged) himself to be a Muslim. This must be determined based on the civil law, and the Hindu family members of Elangevaran must be given full access to justice in order to determine this question.

Dated 24th June 2008

Datuk A Vaithilingam
President
Malaysia Hindu Sangam