
Taiping prison officer admits he hit inmates, apologises at Suhakam inquiry
Published on: Fri, Jul 25, 2025
By: Yee Suet Mun, FMT Text Size: Suhakam is holding an inquiry into the alleged abuse of more than 100 inmates at Taiping prison by about 60 wardens on Jan 17. (Facebook pic) Kuala Lumpur: A prison officer has apologised after admitting to hitting inmates during an incident at Taiping prison on Jan 17, saying he lost control after being provoked by insults and threats. Dzulizwar Bakir, who holds the rank of sergeant, said the inmates had hurled vulgarities and threats against the officers' families, which triggered his emotional outburst. '(For) what happened during that incident, I sincerely apologise. I was angry, but I had no intention of injuring or hurting anyone,' Dzulizwar, who was stationed at the prison's main gate, told the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia's (Suhakam) inquiry into the alleged abuse of more than 100 inmates by about 60 wardens during the incident. The commission is investigating claims of brutality that allegedly led to the death of one inmate and injuries to several others. Asked if it was appropriate to use force on inmates simply because they had insulted the prison officers, Dzulizwar replied: 'It's not appropriate.' Earlier, he admitted that he failed to control his emotions after the inmates provoked him and the other officers with explicit words and threats to rape their wives and children. 'If they insulted us, we could still accept it. But it involved family, I couldn't stay quiet,' he said. Asked by Suhakam chairman Hishamudin Yunus whether his actions could be justified under any circumstances, Dzulizwar agreed they could not. He said the inmates' defiance stemmed from their transfer to Block E, which had poorer living conditions, including dirty cells, and the use of bucket toilets, as well as stricter rules. He said many of the inmates had grown accustomed to more lenient discipline at the Bukit Gajah facility from where they were transferred, making them more resistant and agitated following the relocation order. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available.
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DONETSK REGION (Reuters) -For months, Ukraine has picked off Russian soldiers by the thousand around the frontline city of Pokrovsk, using small drones armed with bombs to tie down a numerically superior force. Now though, Russian troops are creeping forward in a summer offensive that has probed weak spots in Ukraine's defences and last week saw some Russian soldiers enter the city for the first time, according to footage on Ukrainian and Russian Telegram channels and geolocated by Reuters. Ukrainian soldiers' success in stopping their enemy from taking Pokrovsk since last year has long thwarted one of Moscow's central military goals, although the city itself is heavily damaged and all but a few hundred of the 60,000-strong population has fled. Pokrovsk sits atop large coking coal reserves and until Russian forces moved closer was important to Ukraine's military supply lines in the country's east. 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