Selasa, 14 September 2010

Pembunuhan paling kejam



Pendedahan terbaru berhubung kes pembunuhan kejam jutawan kosmetik terkenal, Sosilawati Lawiya, 47, lebih menyentap perasaan apabila hasil siasatan tidak menolak kemungkinan mangsa bersama tiga lelaki lain disembelih menggunakan senjata tajam.

Sumber yang rapat dengan siasatan kes terbabit berkata, berdasarkan siasatan dilakukan, mangsa dikelar di leher sebelum dibakar oleh kumpulan penjenayah terbabit hingga menjadi debu.

Hasil maklumat dikumpul setakat ini, polis mendapati pembunuhan itu adalah tindakan jenayah sadis yang dirancang dengan begitu rapi. Lebih mengerikan apabila semua mangsa seolah-olah dilayan seperti binatang tanpa perikemanusiaan.

Polis turut percaya, abu dan sisa tulang semua mangsa yang dibakar terbabit bukan hanya dibuang di dalam Sungai Panchau, malah turut dibuang ke dalam beberapa parit kecil berhampiran yang arusnya mengalir ke laut.

Polis juga menemui pisau yang digunakan untuk tujuan pembunuhan terbabit selepas melakukan pemeriksaan rapi di kawasan sungai dan parit berhampiran tapak ladang berkenaan malam Ahad lalu,

Berdasarkan maklumat dikumpul, pisau terbabit dibuang ke dalam sungai bersama abu mayat mangsa bagi menghilangkan bukti jenayah kejam dilakukan.

Difahamkan polis turut menemui sisa pembakaran antaranya tulang dan tisu tubuh yang boleh dikaitkan dengan identiti mangsa yang hilang.

Mangsa diseksa, dibelasah, selain ditikam menggunakan senjata tajam hingga mati berlumuran darah. Mencurahkan petrol sebelum membakar mayat mangsa sehingga menjadi abu.

Saudagar batu permata hilang

Polis juga menyiasat kemungkinan kehilangan empat ahli perniagaan termasuk seorang saudagar batu permata warga India turut mempunyai kaitan dengan tertuduh.

Tiga rakyat tempatan yang hilang itu membabitkan seorang lelaki Melayu manakala dua lagi lelaki berketurunan India.
USHARANI bersama Muthu Raja dan anak mereka yang berusia tiga tahun.



Saudagar batu permata bernama Alla Kantan Muthu Raja, 34, dari Chennai, India dipercayai hilang semasa dia melakukan urusniaga di Banting. Kehilangan empat mangsa itu dilaporkan secara berasingan antara April dan Mei lalu.


New Straits Times

Usharani alleged that her husband was lured to Malaysia by the lawyers purportedly for an urgent business deal.

"They called him in Chennai on Jan 16 and he took a flight to Kuala Lumpur the next day."

Usharani said her husband called her after arriving at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport on Jan 18 to inform her that he had arrived safely and was on his way to Banting with both lawyers.

"We know both the lawyer brothers. Their families had visited us in Chennai many times and we, too, had visited them in Banting," said the woman.

Allal has various business ventures including jewellery shops, plantations, hotels and restaurants.

"My husband had been partners with the brothers for almost 10 years. So when they called on Jan 16 and asked him to bring along cash, he did not hesitate," she said, adding that Allal had almost 18kg of jewellery and at least RM10,000 on him.

On Jan 19, however, Usharani tried calling her husband and he could not be reached. That was when her troubles started.

"I contacted the lawyers and they told me my husband was caught by police for attempting to smuggle drugs into the country," she said.

She then contacted the Indian High Commission but they, too, could not get any information on him.

Two weeks later, Usharani started receiving telephone calls from two men who claimed they were police officers from Bukit Aman who could secure her husband's release if she paid them RM1 million.

"They insisted I come personally with the money so that they would release my husband to me.

"Afraid, I contacted the lawyers and they advised me to pay the 'police officers' and to stop calling them.

"That was when I became suspicious and I came down to Malaysia. I went to Banting and lodged a missing person's report. However, I did not meet the lawyers."

In May, Allal's younger brother, Kasiviswanathan, 31, came down and met the lawyers.

"They told him that my husband was still under arrest. They also advised him to return quickly to India, saying that the police would arrest him as well. They even returned my husband's luggage to him," she said.

Usharani kept silent for several months, hoping that her husband would return soon.

However, her fears of not seeing him again increased when she got news from a relative here that the lawyers were implicated in the quadruple murders.

"I returned to Malaysia on Sept 8 and lodged a second report at the Banting police station, hoping this time, police would take my complaint seriously. I'm just keeping my fingers crossed."

Usharani, who married Allal in 2006, has a 3-year-old daughter.

On Sunday, police had revealed that the two lawyers were also linked to four other businessmen reported missing over the past year.

Allal was one of them while the three others were said to be local Indians.