NKRA target: Enforcement agencies in Sabah worried
Kota Kinabalu, Jan 22, 2010: Enforcement agencies in Sabah are worried
that the shortage of manpower will seriously undermine efforts to reduce
crime, one of the nation's six NKRAs, in the State.
State Criminal Investigation Department Chief, SAC II Zainal Abidin Kasim,
said agencies like the police were not only shortchanged in that
department in Sabah but also lack the equipment to investigate cases in
locations with less accommodating landscapes in the State.
Explaining his views during the Question and Answer session during the
Government Transformation Programme (GTP) Open Day at Magellan Sutera
here, Thursday, he pointed out the targets of the Crime Lab initiatives
under the Performance Management and Delivery Unit (Pemandu) were not
impossible but that the obstacles in Sabah were different to that of the
peninsula.
"Jangan samakan Sabah dengan semenanjung (do not equate Sabah with the
peninsula)," he said, to loud applause from the participants.
"(For instance) I only have about 400 men (CID personnel) in Sabah with a
population of about four million while in the city (police force) there
are only 44 CID policemen.
"Like previously, there was a murder in Kinabatangan but it took us 12
hours just to reach the place because we didn't have proper transport and
we also don't have a forensic team for that area," Zainal said.
"If we could, we want to be better than CSI Miami," he said, to laughter
from the floor.
Although the State police force managed to solve about 41 per cent of the
crime and reduce the crime rate by five per cent last year, he said, the
manpower shortage would take its toll.
"Some of my men go home at 5am and have to come back to work at 8am," he
said, adding the ratio of a policeman to the population in Sabah was
1:700.
A representative from the State Department of Environment also voiced the
same frustration, saying they only had 15 people to contend with about 300
Environment Impact Assessments (EIA).
"Although I'm talking based on environmental protection, it is impossible
to undertake the (Crime Lab) initiatives with low manpower and logistics,"
she said.
Backing Zainal, Papar Police Chief, DSP Nek Zaidi Zakaria hoped the
logistical problem in Sabah would be addressed properly.
"It's not appropriate to go investigate a case in remote areas using a
Kancil.
Every time the Public Service Department (JPA) comes over, they promise to
give a four-wheel-drive vehicle, but the 'will' also never arrives."
Others also expressed views on other points of the initiatives, with Kota
Belud Management Chief, ASP Wan Kim Guan, touching on how the Criminal
Procedure Code has been amended in such a way that it works to the
advantage of wrong-doers instead of the enforcement authorities.
Lawyer Muammar Julkarnain proposed the extensive use of intelligence-led
policing through the use of forensic technology such as DNA databank and
also CCTV systems like those implemented in Western countries.
But he also pointed out the need to have a law governing CCTVs to prevent
abuse.
Meanwhile, Nek Zaidi suggested heavier punishment on addicts of designer
drugs, pointing out the existing penalties were not sufficient to deter
such addicts who are the culprits behind most snatch-thefts in the
country.
The talk on the 55 initiatives of the Crime Lab were presented by team
leader Abd Aziz Md Noor and his two team members, Mohd Jamil Ahmad and Wan
Samsudin Ahmad.
The Crime Lab recommended the initiatives for implementation to reduce the
nation's overall crime index by five per cent by December 2010, reduce
street crime by 20 per cent by the year end, reduce fear among the public
of becoming a crime victim, increase public satisfaction on police
performance and bring an additional 1,000 violent crime offenders to trial
by December 2010.
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