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Friday 22 April 2016

Sarawak Report : Anak IGP jual Arms and Ammunitions! Conflict of Interest ma!




IGP's Company Is Flogging Guns In KL!  MAJOR EXCLUSIVE

IGP's Company Is Flogging Guns In KL! MAJOR EXCLUSIVE

She could recommend us a Glock, suggested the assistant at Nilai Arms & Ammunition this week.

The KL company boasts online that it can offer the “best selection” of guns available, and we had explained we were looking for something suitable for our ‘bodyguard’.

Niloh displays an array of weapons for sale, both of the sort used for hunting and of the sort that gangsters use to kill.

Lethal weapons - take your pick

Lethal weapons – take your pick

As its name suggests, Nilai also sells “ammunition”, something else that it elaborates on its website.  “Out of ammo?” it advertises with a catchy American ring, “call NAA”. Displayed are cartridges and deadly bullets.

Shotgun cartridges... as well as deadly bullets!

Shotgun cartridges… as well as deadly bullets!

Need a permit?

In Malaysia, of course, the use and ownership of guns is highly restricted.  In fact, as the site helpfully points out, you need to acquire a permit signed not only by your district police chief, but also the state police chief and indeed the national police chief (the IGP) as well.
It’s quite a lot to organise.

However, Sarawak Report was drawn to Nilai arms by disgruntled people, who got in touch, because it has become a known thing, they said, that if you want to get that permit without excessive fuss and bother, then you had better go through this particular company to buy your weapon.
” Applicants for import / usage license, when they failed to get the permits, they will resort to appoint NAA, which will smooth the application” was how one person contacting Sarawak Report explained the situation.
How come?

Sarawak Report pulled the company records for Nilai Arms & Ammunition Sdn Bhd, which is registered in KL, and found some exceedingly interesting ownership details. The majority of the shares belong to a young woman, born in 1984.

Juwiza Binti Khalid is the second daughter of the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Khalid Abu Bakar.

IGP's 32 year old daughter owns the company set up the year before he was appointed

IGP’s 32 year old daughter is the majority owner of the company, set up in 2012 just before Abu Bakar was appointed

Bigwigs in Malaysia are no strangers to conflict of interest, of course, but this example of it is surely one of the most breath-taking!

That the man who is supposedly in charge of keeping law and order on the streets, to which end a tight control over the issuing of gun permits means that only he can sign them off, actually owns a company that sells these weapons and can assist in “smoothing the application” for his signature, simply defies belief.

Office in KL

Office in KL

It would appear that Abu Bakar spends his day job catching dangerous criminals, only to go home to sign off lucrative permits to allow their weapons (sold by his own private company) to be made available on the streets.

As one KL observer remarked bitterly to Sarawak Report “the police have an interest in the town becoming more dangerous for middle class folk. It means they have to live in compounds and hire former police officers to be their bodyguards”.

One can forgive the cynicism.  Because Khalid stands to get richer the more dangerous the streets become and his retired colleagues will thank him for the increase in bodyguard positions!

This is why it is so supremely important that people in public positions avoid all such conflicts of interest, whether they hold the shares themselves or put them in the names of their young daughter.

When we started to press for further help and information on getting our Glock and permit the shop assistant gave us the phone number for her “boss”, whom she told us was Haji Mohd Isa. He was the one to talk to.

Other shareholder is the village head from IGP's home town, born in the very same year!

Other shareholder is the village head from IGP’s home town, born in the very same year!

The boss she was referring to, of course, is none other than the other shareholder in the company, Mohd Isa bin Hussein.

Mohd Isa is the village chief of Kampung Gebok, Mantin, Negeri Sembilan, the same region as Nilai.

Should we consider it a coincidence that IGP Khalid Abu Baker was born in Kg Gebok, Mantin, Negeri Sembilan in the same year of 1957 as this village chief?

One can only assume that these two village lads went to school together, were probably friends and went hunting together as well!

But we could not check because Mohd Isa wasn’t picking up the phone.

The current IGP was appointed in May 2013, a year after he opened his company, and has proved extremely controversial, having focused his activities on persecuting civil rights activists and freedom of speech in line with the present government’s priority in protecting the reputation of the Prime Minister.

No doubts about it

No doubts about it

Khalid has opened a special five man unit to scour Tweets for ‘seditious tendencies’ and he arrested opposition MP on the steps of Parliament last month, for saying he had read a secret document that showed corruption at 1MDB.

He has also been condemned for supporting the unlawful shooting by a police officer of a 15 year old boy, shot 21 times by pursuing cops.

What’s more, he remains together with the handpicked AG, the most important remaining champion of the current Prime Minister, who is drowning in evidence of corruption over 1MDB.

What chance there will be action taken therefore against this bit of business on the side by IGP Khaled Abu Bakar?
“A country that if free and clear of any governance and policing of money launderers is prone to become a handy trading hub for organised crime and terrorism and this is one example of what is happening on a very big scale in Malaysia” said Pascal Najadi, whose father was gunned down on the streets of KL by a hired assassin whom the police refused to prosecute in 2013.

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