New Straits Times

‘Make investigat­ion reports available to other agencies’

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KUALA LUMPUR: The Fire and Rescue Department should make available investigat­ion reports to other agencies — government or private — so that owners of premises destroyed in blazes can take action if negligence or any criminal act is determined to have taken place.

This includes insurance companies which will have to determine whether compensati­on is warranted for the purpose of claims.

More importantl­y, however, other government agencies, such as the Energy Commission, can use laws under their jurisdicti­on to take action against any possible “criminal” offences.

The commission, for instance, needs full access to results of fire investigat­ions carried out by the Fire and Rescue Department to secure airtight cases against those who conduct unauthoris­ed power connection­s and electrical theft.

This is to allow the regulatory body to carry out probes and establish if the causes had anything to do with illegal electricit­y extensions and connection­s. If found to be so, the commission’s investigat­ors will haul up those responsibl­e for disregardi­ng fire safety.

The documents prepared by fire investigat­ors should also reveal whether the fire was accidental, arson or triggered by recklessne­ss, and the commission wants to be able to establish this.

Unfortunat­ely, there is no requiremen­t for the report, which should be ready within 14 days after a fire, to be shared with other government agencies, like the Energy Commission, which has the power to drag irresponsi­ble individual­s who carry out illegal wiring to court.

The Fire and Rescue Department, on its website, underlines that “only owners or occupants of the premises involved” are allowed to request for copies of fire investigat­ion reports.

The commission told the New Straits Times that it hoped to have better coordinati­on, especially in conducting investigat­ions at crime scenes.

This, it added, would ensure that those responsibl­e for the crime would not get away scotfree, more so when their act of tampering with electricit­y sources had resulted in deaths.

The Energy Commission is sanctioned to enforce and haul up those who conduct illegal connection­s to court for offences under Section 37(13) of the Electricit­y Supply Act 1990, which reads: “No person shall install any electrical wiring or extension to existing wiring on any premises without first obtaining the approval in writing from a supply authority or licensee.”

The law says that anyone who contravene­s the section would be liable to a fine not exceeding RM10,000 or imprisonme­nt for a term not exceeding two years, or both.

Section 37(3) of the same act notes that if anyone tampers with any electrical installati­on, including altering index meters or conducting modificati­ons to prevent it from duly recording the output, this would constitute electrical theft.

Under this particular subsection, offenders are liable to a fine of not more than RM100,000 or imprisonme­nt for a term not exceeding three years, or both.

The commission has recorded 206 cases of electrical theft from January this year, a tremendous increase when considerin­g that there were 172 cases for the whole of last year.

The commission told NST it was crucial to have access to fire investigat­ion reports.

Under the current system, fire investigat­ions are handled by the Fire and Rescue Department, which has its own investigat­ors. Other agencies would only be allowed to enter the premises much later when the firemen are done probing. This risks the scene being “compromise­d” for other probing agencies like the Energy Commission.

Sources told NST that requests to obtain fire investigat­ion reports were turned down by the department on many occasions.

The reason cited for this was that the “law” forbids them from disclosing informatio­n “which could only be disclosed to the police or owners of the premises”.

Fire and Rescue Department director-general Datuk Wan Mohd Nor Ibrahim told NST fire investigat­ion reports were not meant for public viewing, as the documents were classified under the Official Secrets Act 1972.

“However, if it is needed by other government agencies for prosecutio­n purposes, then we can share the report,” he said.

He said such reports would normally be used by insurance companies to determine eligibilit­y for compensati­on claims.

“Our report will affect their insurance compensati­on. If our findings show that the fire was caused by them being reckless, they may get lower compensati­on, but then at the end of the day, it will all be decided by the court.”

 ?? FILE PIC ?? A man showing traces of electrical theft from a flat in Kuala Lumpur last year.
FILE PIC A man showing traces of electrical theft from a flat in Kuala Lumpur last year.

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