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Prosecution: Azilah and Sirul had access to UTK ordnance |
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Thursday, 04 September 2008 08:00am |
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©The
Star (Used by permission)
SHAH ALAM: Evidence in the Altantuya Shaariibuu murder trial has pointed towards
the Unit Tindakan Khas as being the source of the explosives used to blow her
up, a High Court here heard.
Lead prosecutor DPP Tun Abd Majid Tun Hamzah, continuing his submissions at the
end of the prosecution's case, first pointed out that there was no record of
explosives that were used up during the elite squad's training.
“It was on a trust basis and no inspections are done in the homes of officers
and rank and file in respect of ammunitions, firearms and explosives,” he said,
adding that both C/Insp Azilah Hadri and Kpl Sirul Azhar Umar had undergone
basic training on explosives.
DPP Tun Abd Majid said that although UTK training officer Deputy Supt M.V. Sri
Kumar had testified that it was the responsibility of the officer or personnel
whom the explosives were issued to return them to the store, he could not speak
for others.
“Clearly, DSP Sri Kumar was not the one responsible to collect and return the
explosives from the store. He was only the officer-in-charge,” he said.
Arguing further, DPP Tun Abd Majid said several other police witnesses had
confirmed that the explosives residue recovered from the crime scene was of the
same type used by the UTK.
“Thus it is submitted that there is sufficient evidence to show that the
explosive substances found at the scene came from UTK and that C/Insp Azilah and
Kpl Sirul Azhar had access to them and had the opportunity to smuggle them out,”
the prosecutor argued.
Rebutting a contention that there was no explosion on the night Altantuya was
murdered, DPP Tun Abd Majid referred to the testimony of former post-blast
investigations head Deputy Supt Muhammad Koey Abdullah that the surrounding
trees at the scene must have absorbed the sound from the explosion.
The prosecutor pointed out that Mustaffa Umat, the auxiliary policeman stationed
at a dam near the scene who claimed he heard firecrackers that night, had also
testified that he had never heard a bomb go off before.
“That explains why he could not tell whether what he heard was an explosion from
a bomb,” he submitted.
On the presence of the two UTK operatives at Hotel Malaya as captured by
closed-circuit television cameras, DPP Tun Abd Majid said the most probable
inference would be that they were carrying out surveillance on the deceased.
This, he said, was because a note bearing political analyst Abdul Razak
Baginda's handwriting of Altantuya's name and where she was staying was found in
a bag in C/Insp Azilah's cubicle in Bukit Aman.
The hearing continues today.
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