Media Statement – 6/7/2026
Taiping Prison – Only 5(or 6) Charged When 60 Tortured 100 Detainees ABSURD And Unacceptable – NO ‘Representative’ Or ‘Selective’ Prosecution, All Should Be Charged
No charges yet for Public Officers who destroyed CCTV evidence, made false reports and even ‘LIED’ during SUHAKAM Inquiry
It is deeply concerning that ONLY Five prison officers were charged in the Magistrate's Court with injuring three inmates at Taiping Prison in separate incidents last January. (Malay Mail, 3/7/2026). The SUHAKAM Inquiry revealed that there were about 60 Prison officers that were involved in inflicting violence on about 100 inmates, who were already subdued and handcuffed, when the said officers assaulted, beat them with batons and even sprayed pepper spray on their eyes. Justice will not be served if only a few, and not all, are charged and tried for their crimes.
Thus, MADPET (Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture) urges that ALL prison officers that inflicted torture and violence of these detainees ought to be Charged and Tried in Court, and the Court only, after a fair trial, will decide on guilt, and if convicted be punished according to law.
Note that following orders is NO defense for crimes committed, as no prison officer should commit crimes, and any Public Officer has the right to disobey orders requiring him/her to break the law.
With the charging of the 5, now 6 in total, noting that one was charged earlier for the crime under Section 304(b) of the Penal Code (NST, 15/6/2026). The 5 now have only been charged for crimes under Section 323 (voluntarily causing hurt) or section 324(Voluntarily causing hurt by dangerous weapons or means). Why have all the other prison officers that beat, kicked, used pepper spray and tortured the detainees not been charged? Did they not break the law? Even, if they were ‘bystanders’ who did not personally inflict torture, they would still have committed crimes, more so since they were public officers responsible for the safety of all detainees under their care.
What About The CRIME Of Lies, False Reports And Destruction Of Evidence?
The alleged perpetrators of these crimes are PUBLIC Officers and the fact that evidence was destroyed, that they made FALSE reports and even LIED during also the SUHAKAM Public Inquiry are very SERIOUS offences, for which they must also be charged and tried in Court.
This was also raised by Kepong MP Lim Lip Eng, where he was reported as saying, “The question is, why haven't those suspected of filing false reports, approving false information, falsifying medical records, and attempting to cover up the truth been publicly charged yet?” Oriental Daily News reported him saying. (Vibes, 4/7/2026) ‘…Lim stressed that accountability must extend across the entire chain of command, not only to lower-ranking officers directly involved in the alleged abuse. “Those who commit violence must face the law. Those who file false reports, falsify records, and those who cover up or condone such acts will also not escape responsibility,” he said…’
If public officers, who did destroy evidence and LIED, are not now charged in Court, then it creates a public perception that this MADANI government and the Home Minister is once again protecting the criminally liable, and worse it impacts of the INTEGRITY and character of all Public Officers in Malaysia.
MADPET and most Malaysians want honest and good PUBLIC Officers – and now, there is growing DISTRUST. How can we ever believe a government and/or its public officers, when it seems that destroying or tampering with evidence and LIES are deemed alright when perpetrators for such crimes are not charged and tried in Court?
MADPET urges that all those Public Officers, which may also include superiors and even the Minister, who may have been involved in the crimes of tampering/destroying evidence, making of false reports and LIES be charged. Those who ORDERED, INSTRUCTED or CONDONED such actions must never be allowed to escape criminal liability.
What About Those Who DELAYED Access to Healthcare, Which Could Have Saved a Life?
SUHAKAM’s Inquiry Report revealed that the deceased, Gan Chin Ying, who died on January 17, 2025, was left unattended by the doctor and/or medical personal for about 40 minutes. He was then transported to the Taiping Hospital (just about 2Km away), in a prison van(not an ambulance) and again unattended during transportation by any medical personal. If the said now deceased Gan was speedily send to the nearby government hospital, there is a possibility that he would not have DIED.
Surely, the failure to immediately transport the patient to that very near hospital, and the conduct if the attending medical personal is a CRIME that also led to his death. They could be charged for at the very least for a Section 304A (Causing death by negligence) offence, which carries the sentence of ‘…imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years or with fine or with both…’
For Prisons and Detention – NO Outsourcing Healthcare to Private Doctors/Clinics
The recent Taiping Prison incident also raises an important question, as to whether the Government has OUTSOURCED healthcare for detainees in prisons and other government detention facilities to the private sector – private doctors, clinics and hospitals?
MADPET urges that healthcare of detainees in government detention facilities should NEVER be outsourced, and should always be under the Ministry of Health. In fact, all Detention facilities housing more than a 100 should have a permanent government clinic operating 24 hours within the premises with relevant medical staff.
Why did the Taiping Prison authorities NOT immediately call the Taiping Hospital to dispatch ambulances and medical staff when about 100 detainees were injured or seriously injured after that incident of torture and violence? For detention facilities far from government hospitals, there should also be an ambulance on 24 hour stand-by. Lives can be saved with speedy proper medical care.
The use of private doctors also raises another RISK – will they also LIE or file false reports just to protect their ‘contracts’ – which may have also happened here, based on SUHAKAM’s Inquiry Report. Medical Reports/Documents were ‘fabricated’ to protect the perpetrator. According to a medical document that SUHAKAM highlighted, Gan Chin Ying’s injuries was caused allegedly because a fall in the toilet – NOT because of the torture and violence inflicted by prison officers.
Public Officer Doctors, who do not have to protect any ‘contractual relationship’, may be more ethical and honest.
MADPET also is appalled in the DELAY in the charging of the 5 for crimes that occurred in January 2025. When a crime happens in a government facility, and the perpetrators are Public Officers, a speedy investigation and prosecution is best;
MADPET also demands that all Prison Officers to be mandatorily required to wear Body-Cams whilst on duty;
MADPET also demands that all CCTV recordings of places of detention be immediately transmitted to a central documentation center as this will prevent destruction of crucial evidence. On site recordings, as proven yet again, can be tampered/destroyed easily to protect perpetrators of the crime. The crime of tampering/destroying CCTV or Body-Cam recordings must carry a deterrent sentence;
MADPET believes that it is MOST important that SUHAKAM (Malaysian Human Rights Commission) and/or its delegated representative be given the right to be able to immediately access to places where there may be an alleged human rights violation. Now, the law allows for ‘red-tape’ delays by the authorities in charge of such places. This give time for destruction/tampering of evidence;
Thus, Section 4(2)(d) of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia Act 1999 need to be amended to allow SUHAKAM and its delegated representative to have immediate access without any ‘red tape’ that can delay access and possibly undermine Justice being done;
MADPET also calls for the criminalizing the act of lying or providing false testimony by any witness, who does so, after taking the oath to speak the truth during a SUHAKAM Inquiry. It must be an offence in the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia Act 1999, that stipulates also a deterrent sentence. Likewise, the refusal of a witness summoned but refuses to attend should be criminalized;
MADPET also calls for the repeal of Section 15(2) of the Human Rights Commission Of Malaysia Act 1999, which says, ‘(2) No person shall, in respect of any evidence written or oral given by that person to or before the Commission, be liable to any action or proceeding, civil or criminal in any court except when the person is charged with giving or fabricating false evidence.’ If one breaks the law, he/she should be liable to be charged for any applicable criminal offence, and also disciplinary action. Likewise, the evidence that emerges in any inquiry, should not be prevented to be used in civil suits commenced by victim (or families of the deceased victims) against said perpetrator in their quest for Justice.;
MADPET also calls for the enactment of laws specifically for offences of Public Officers where Torture, Causing Hurt or Death and law breaking happens during the course of the public service duties; and
MADPET reiterates that Malaysia should enact laws criminalizing TORTURE, enforced disappearance and extra-judicial killings, whereby a failure can lead to a perception that the government is not against such crimes.
JUSTICE MUST NOT ONLY BE DONE, BUT MUST ALSO BE SEEN TO BE DONE
Charles Hector
For and on behalf of MADPET (Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture)
Five Taiping Prison officers charged over alleged baton attacks on inmates
TAIPING, July 3 — Five prison officers were charged in the Magistrate's Court here today with injuring three inmates at Taiping Prison in separate incidents last January.
All of the accused — Mohd Hairie Jumri, 40; Saiful Azman Mohamad Ibrahim, 44; Ahmad Rizal Razali, 37; Muhamad Mustakhim Abdul Rahim, 40; and Nor Hafiz Izwan Muhammad Jajam, 31 — pleaded not guilty to the charges.
In the court before Magistrate R. Prabakaran, Mohd Hairie and Saiful Azman are jointly charged with intentionally causing hurt to P. Jason Immanuel, 25, using a baton at Hall B, Taiping Prison, Jalan Taming Sari here, between 3pm and 4pm on Jan 17, 2025.
The charge was brought under Section 324 of the Penal Code, read together with Section 34 of the same Act, which provides for a maximum prison sentence of 10 years, a fine, or whipping, or any two of the punishments, upon conviction.
The two prison officers, an inspector and a sergeant, respectively, were allowed bail of RM4,000 each with two sureties and ordered to report to a nearby police station on the first day of every month pending the disposal of the case.
The court set Sept 7 for mention and the submission of documents.
In the same court, Ahmad Rizal, also a prison inspector, was charged with voluntarily causing hurt to V. Naveen Kumar, 32, at the same location between 3pm and 4.15pm on the same date.
The charge was brought under Section 323 of the Penal Code, which carries a maximum penalty of one year in prison, a fine of up to RM2,000, or both, upon conviction.
He was allowed bail of RM3,000 with two sureties. The court set Sept 7 for the submission of documents.
The accused were represented by lawyer Aqmarul Aqil Ismail, while Deputy Public Prosecutor Farihah Adilah Fazial prosecuted.
In the court before Magistrate Ahmad Hamdi Mustafar, Muhamad Mustakhim and Nor Hafiz Izwan were jointly charged under Section 323 of the Penal Code, read together with Section 34 of the same law, with voluntarily causing hurt to G. Yugarajan, 30, between 3pm and 4pm at the same location and date.
Magistrate Ahmad Hamdi allowed them bail of RM2,000 with one surety each and fixed Sept 8 for mention for the submission of documents.
Deputy Public Prosecutor Nazura Azman prosecuted, while lawyers Amirul Fairuzzeen Jamaluddin and Mohd Aidil Arsad represented Muhamad Mustakhim, and Nor Hafiz Izwan was represented by lawyer Aqmarul Aqil Ismail. — Bernama - Malay Mail, 3/7/2026






