Several serving police personnel have approached Malaysiakini
volunteering to appear before a tribunal against attorney-general Abdul
Gani Patail and former inspector-general of police Musa Hassan over
their alleged misconduct.
Their testimony, they stressed, will go beyond the duo's alleged collusion with an underworld figure.
Malaysiakini has run a series of reports over the past one
week, painting a picture of the police force as allegedly being in
cahoots with underworld figures.
This has apparently encouraged the police officers, who are still serving in the force, to come forward.
The police officers, who declined to reveal their names unless a
tribunal is set up, said that while the force had improved under present
IGP Ismail Omar, AG Abdul Gani's influence still casts a shadow of fear
over many.
This, they said, is bound to continue unless an independent tribunal is set up.
Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein (left) has on Monday called for evidence of such alleged wrongdoing.
His response was prompted by Malaysiakini highlighting former
Commercial Crime Investigation Department director Ramli Yusuff's
birthday's speech in which he had alleged that Gani, along with Musa and
the then Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA), had fixed him and his men up.
The accusation originated from their investigations into Goh Cheng Poh or Tengku Goh, an underworld kingpin from Johor who allegedly had Musa's backing.
Tengku Goh was arrested by Ramli's men on Aug 1, 2007, but he was released four months later.
As allegations mount, Musa was subsequently investigated and cleared by
Abdul Gani and the ACA, and his contract as police chief was renewed
until his retirement in 2010.
However, as Malaysiakini had reported, questions over the duo's innocence linger.
Ramli, Mat Zain willing to step forward
Ramli (right) had earlier this week expressed his readiness to testify against Gani and Musa at a tribunal hearing.
When Hishammuddin was told the evidence that he was seeking for, in what
has been dubbed the Copgate affair, is within his ministry as Ramli's
lawyer had despatched a letter to then Internal Security Deputy Minister
Johari Baharum, the minister had dismissed it, saying since he was
aware of the matter, there was no need for a new probe.
Yesterday former Kuala Lumpur CID chief Mat Zain Ibrahim had in an open letter
to Ismail and PM Najib Razak said he too was willing to set the record
straight on the matter before a tribunal on the allegations of
fabricating evidence in Anwar Ibrahim's black-eye incident.
Whether Ramli and Mat Zain's offer to appear before a tribunal, and who
are now joined by several serving police officers, would exert enough
pressure on Hishammudin and Najib to initiate a probe into the matter
remains to be seen.
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