The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Special Branch officers at Warisan media events for security only – IGP

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Inspector-General of Police Datuk Seri Abdul Hamid Bador said the presence of Special Branch (SB) officers at Parti Warisan Sabah (Warisan) media conference­s is a normal procedure to ensure order and security.

He said his officers were merely doing their job so that the media conference­s could run smoothly, adding that there was nothing more to it.

“Special Branch or not, if it is the Royal Malaysia Police, then it is to ensure security, irrespecti­ve of whether they are in uniform or not because we have sworn to protect this country,” he told newsmen here yesterday.

SB personnel were recently barred from joining Warisan media conference­s, and Abdul Hamid said he did not even view the ma er as an issue in the first place.

Earlier, former chief minister Yong Teck Lee has questioned whether there has been a breakdown in trust and confidence between Chief Minister Datuk Seri Shafie Apdal and the police following the barring of Special Branch officers from Warisan press conference­s.

“As far as I know, the SB head is a full member of the Sabah State Security Council. Isn’t the SB a key organ in protecting Sabah from security threats?

“If the Chief Minister, who is the chairman of the security council, has lost confidence in the SB, then it does not bode well for the security of Sabah,” the Sabah Progressiv­e Party (SAPP) president said in a statement yesterday.

Yong said he was surprised by the ban because press conference­s are open events where “anything and everything that happens and is said may be reported for public informatio­n”.

“While it is true that journalist­s may pose difficult questions to ministers, it is the duty of the ministers to respond,” he said.

Warisan vice-president Junz Wong had said that Special Branch officers would not be allowed into any press conference if they were there uninvited, adding they should request to a end the event and also identify themselves.

Wong, who is also the state Agricultur­e and Food Industry Minister, said it had been the norm in the past for the police to send SB personnel to cover government and opposition events but Warisan had decided to stop it.

Yong said political events, including press conference­s, can impact security and public order because of the possibilit­y of open incitement.

“The police, as the main custodian of public order, must be able to predict with some degree of certainty whether an event or speech might seriously upset some sections of society to the extent that potential violence might be triggered.

“As the inspector-general of police has rightly pointed out, in the case of closed-door meetings and briefings, unauthoris­ed persons, including the police and media, may be asked to leave.

“As for SAPP, a few years ago at Tenom, we had politely but firmly asked SB officers to leave a closed-door party dialogue session. The officers obliged and le without any fuss,” he said.

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