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IGP and top police leadership must explain why crime and fear of crime situation are worse than pre-Royal Police Commission period before 2004 although police pay rise has increased up to 42%?

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Media Conference       
by Lim Kit Siang  
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(Ipoh, Monday): Two common threads of the three public hearings of the Parliamentary Caucus on Human Rights and Good Governance on “Fight Rising Crime” held in Johor Baru the previous Sunday, Petaling Jaya on Wednesday and Bukit Mertajam yesterday are:

• Drastic shortfall in the two major objectives of effective policing, firstly, to prevent, reduce and detect crime; and secondly, to provide safety and security for law-abiding citizens and their families.

• Worsening crime situation and a palpable fear of crime which have gripped Malaysians in the hot spots of crime in the country, like Johor Baru, Kuala Lumpur, Petaling Jaya, Klang, Penang and Ipoh even worse than before the establishment of the Royal Police Commission 42 months ago.

The Inspector-General of Police, Tan Sri Musa Hassa and the top police leadership must explain why crime and the fear of crime situation are worse than pre-Royal Police Commission period before 2004 although police pay rise has increased up to 42%?

That the crime situation gotten worse rather than better is illustrated by the latest batch of crime statistics given by Musa on Saturday, where he announced that the crime index in the country had shot up by 5.11 per cent in the first six months of this year as compared to the same period last year.

The crime index for the first six months of 2007 as compared to the same period of 2006 is as follows:

 

Statistics of Crime Index According to States ( Jan - Jun 2006 / 2007)

 

Year 2006 (Jan - Jun)

Year 2007 (Jan - Jun)

+ / -

%

Selangor

25,366

29,662

4,296

16.93

Perak

6,016

6,932

916

15.22

Sarawak

5,644

6,386

742

13.14

Kelantan

2,777

3,064

287

10.33

Melaka

2,814

3,104

290

10.31

Perlis

385

420

35

9.09

Kedah

5,550

5,886

336

6.05

Terengganu

2,735

2,866

131

4.79

Pahang

3,439

3,583

144

4.19

P.Pinang

8,423

8,599

176

2.09

Kuala Lumpur

16,111

15,835

-276

-1.71

Johor

14,587

13,471

-1,116

-7.65

Sabah

3,394

3,068

-326

-9.61

N.Sembilan

3,832

3,340

-492

-12.84

Total

101,073

106,236

5,163

5.11


From these statistics, ten states recorded an increase in crimes, ranging from 2% to 16.9%, with Selangor, Perak and Sarawak as the three worst states.

Should Malaysians be satisfied with this crime index, even without taking into account the huge number of unreported crimes?

The answer must be a million “No”, for the Police must be reminded that the country expects the Police to have a better control of the crime situation, especially after the report and recommendations of the Royal Police Commission, which has resulted in a police pay rise of up to 42%.

Both the Police and Malaysians must revisit the Royal Police Commission Report, for it is not just its key proposal for the establishment of the Independent Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission (IPCMC) which had been ignored, its other important recommendations for an efficient, incorruptible, professional world-class police service to keep crime low, fight corruption and respect human rights have also been forgotten.

Chapter 4 of the Royal Commission Report on “Challenges Confronting the Royal Malaysia Police” listed nine challenges. Challenge Two on “The High Incidence of Crime” said:

“3.1 The incidence of crime increased dramatically in the last few years from 121,176 cases in 1997 to 156,455 cases in 2004, an increase of 29 per cent. The increase seriously dented Malaysia’s reputation as a safe country. Malaysians in general, the business sector and foreign investors grew increasingly concerned with the situation. The fear was that, if the trend continues, there would be major social and economic consequences for Malaysia. A survey of 575 respondents from the public carried out by the Commission clearly demonstrates the extremely widespread concern among all ethnic groups and foreign residents. Between 82.2 per cent and 90 per cent of the respondents, or 8 to 9 persons in every 10, were concerned with the occurrence of crime”.

“3.2 There was an alarming increase in violent crime during the period. Violent crimes grew from 16,919 cases in 1997 to 21,859 cases in 2004, an increase of 29.2 per cent in 8 years.

“3.3 There was also a significant increase in property crimes during the period from 104,257 cases in 1997 to 134,595 cases in 2004, an increase of 29 per cent.”

Because of this high incidence of crime, the Royal Police said it was “urgent” for a concerted police drive against crime.

It dedicated Chapter 7 to “Launch A Sustained Nation-Wide Drive Against Crime” and said:

“The Commission recommends that PDRM allot the highest priority to the campaign against crime, along with eradication of corruption and making policing more compliant with human rights and prescribed laws. The prioritization should remain until crime levels have reached a point considered no longer alarming.”

The Royal Police Commission recommended that the police formulate and implement annual and month crime reduction plans, and proposed the following target: “As an immediate measure, PDRM should target a minimum of 20 per cent decrease in the number of crimes committed for each category within 12 months of this Report’s acceptance and implementation”.

It is now more than two years since the publication of the Royal Police Commission. What has the Police to show for its “sustained nation-wide drive against crime”, the proposed “annual and monthly crime reduction plans” and in particular “a minimum 20 per cent decrease in crimes within 12 months”?

If the Royal Police Commission’s recommendation of a minimum 20 per cent decrease in crimes within 12 months had been achieved, then the 156,455 crime incidence in 2004 should have declined to 125,164 cases in 2005. Instead, the traditional crime index had shot up another 9.7 per cent to 171,604 in 2005, and a further 15.7 per cent to 198,622 in 2006. If there is an annual 5.11 per cent increase for 2007 as reflected for the first six months of the year, then the total crime index would reach a record-high of 208,772 cases!

The Police had its own target of reducing the crime index by five per cent a year. If this more modest target had been reached, then from 156,455 crime incidence in 2004, there should be a drop to 148,632 cases in 2005, 141,200 cases in 2006 and 134,140 cases in 2007.

It is clear therefore that both the Royal Police Commission’s recommendation of a minimum of 20% decline of crime index in first 12 months or the police’s more modest target of 5% decline per year had not been achieved, and the Police is fighting a losing battle against crime with the traditional crime index set to break the 200,000 mark this year.

This would see the crime index increasing by 30% from 2004 instead of being reduced to “a point considered no longer alarming” as proposed by the Royal Police Commission when recommending an immediate target of 20% reduction of the crime index in the first 12 months of its Report.

The Royal Police Commission described as “alarming increase in violent crime” when referring to the increase from 16,919 cases in 1997 to 21,859 cases in 2004. In 2006, violent crimes have almost doubled to 42,343, a hefty jump of 94%. What has happened to the Royal Police Commission’s proposed annual and monthly crime reduction plan?

One clear conclusion from the three public hearings of the Parliamentary Caucus on Human Rights and Good Governance is the prevalence of “the fear of crime” among the people.

Fifteen years ago, there was crime but “the fear of crime” had not surfaced in the country.

Today, in Johor Baru, Kuala Lumpur, Petaling Jaya, Klang, Penang, Ipoh, the “fear of crime” have come into the lives of Malaysians making them ever fearful about their own safety and those of their loved ones in the streets, public places and even when at home, gravely degrading the quality of life of Malaysians.

Up to now, the Police have only admitted to the problem of crime but not the “fear of crime” haunting and hounding the lives of Malaysians in the hot-spots of crime. If the police is not even prepared to admit that “the fear of crime” is as real and big as the problem of crime in the hot spots of crime in the country – inter-related but separate problems - how can the police successfully reduce and wipe out the “fear of crime”?

As a first step to effectively fight crime and the fear of crime, the Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Musa Hassan should openly admit that the “fear of crime” is a new threat which the police must target to wipe out in the battle against crime, with regular monitoring of the success of police performance on two separate measures - to reduce crime and the fear of crime.

The police should realize from the three public hearings of the Parliamentary Caucus on Human Rights and Good Governance that there is no public animosity against the police but all-round goodwill and support. Criticisms raised at the public hearings were made not to run down the police force but to make it more effective and efficient to achieve its objective to maintain a safe and secure environment by reducing crime and the fear of crime.

The preparedness of the police to face public scrutiny and criticisms before the nation’s media, whether at the public hearing of the Parliamentary Caucus on Human Rights and Good Governance or other forums, is an acid test, firstly as to whether the Police is prepared to end its denial syndrome that it had been fighting a losing battle against crime and the fear of crime; and secondly, that it is serious in wanting to regain public confidence and work with all Malaysian stakeholders to establish a low-crime Malaysia where the people do not live in “fear of crime”!
 

(16/7/2007)  


* Lim Kit Siang, Parliamentary Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic Planning Commission Chairman

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