The Sun (Malaysia)

Compensati­on for body mix-up

> Ministry will make sure such incidents will not be repeated, says Hilmi

- BY IMRAN HILMY AND EDMUND LEE

BALIK PULAU: The family of the late Fong Meng Tuck whose body was involved in a mix-up and released to the wrong family and subsequent­ly cremated will receive an ex-gratia payment, said Datuk Seri Dr Hilmi Yahaya.

The deputy health minister said the ministry is discussing the matter and an announceme­nt will be made soon.

“We regret the incident and will make sure such incident will not happen in future.

“The ministry will also announce what compensati­on will be made. We will convey the DNA result to the family as soon as we have it,” he said at a press conference after the closing ceremony of Kembara Sihat 1Malaysia (KS1M) at Balik Pulau Polytechni­c yesterday.

Penang Hospital Visitors Board chairman Lim Thoon Deong declined to comment further on the DNA aspect of the settlement.

“It is very technical. Let the health authoritie­s deal with it,” he told theSun.

He added he will not hesitate to help them and ensure everything is solved amicably between the family and authoritie­s.

The incident took place when police sent the badly-decomposed body of Ho Swee Kim, in his 50s, to the hospital mortuary after he was found in a house at Paya Terubong on Nov 20 last year.

On Nov 21, the body of Fong Meng Tuck, 60, was sent to the mortuary after he died in an accident at about 2am that day.

A relative of Ho, however, did not make a positive identifica­tion of the body due to the foul smell and allowed undertaker­s to deal with the cremation process.

As a result of failing to make a valid identifica­tion, Meng Tuck’s body was released to Ho’s relative and was subsequent­ly cremated.

Fong’s family only found out what had happened when they went to claim his body.

A DNA test was subsequent­ly carried out by the Chemistry Department to identify the remains upon the request of the Fong family.

Blood samples drawn from Meng Tuck during the post-mortem, prior to the cremation, was reportedly a 99.99% match with the samples obtained from his three children.

The mix-up had prompted mortuary personnel to be suspended from their duty pending disciplina­ry action.

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