South China Morning Post

Israeli man found with gun cache faces decades in jail

- Joseph Sipalan joseph.sipalan@scmp.com

An Israeli national caught with a cache of semi-automatic weapons faces decades in jail and six lashes if found guilty of arms traffickin­g and illegal possession of firearms, after he was charged yesterday by Malaysian prosecutor­s two weeks since his arrest at an upscale hotel in Kuala Lumpur.

Shalom Avitan, 38, was arrested on March 27, in a case that triggered wild speculatio­n in Malaysia that he could be a spy with Israel’s Mossad intelligen­ce agency.

A handcuffed Avitan – clad in a black T-shirt, cargo pants and a black disposable mask – was brought into the Kuala Lumpur court complex surrounded by a team of heavily armed police officers.

Prosecutor­s accused Avitan of arms traffickin­g after he was found with six semi-automatic handguns in his room at the Four Seasons Hotel.

“Any person traffickin­g in firearms shall be punished with imprisonme­nt for a term of not [fewer] than 30 years … and with whipping with not [fewer]than six strokes,” according to Avitan’s charge sheet.

The Israeli national also faces a separate charge for illegally possessing 158 bullets, which carries a maximum penalty of seven years in jail.

Avitan pleaded not guilty to both charges. Bail was refused.

This was the first time an Israeli national had been charged in a Malaysian court.

Malaysia does not recognise Israel diplomatic­ally and is the most outspoken supporter in Southeast Asia of the Palestinia­n cause.

Avitan had reportedly entered Malaysia via the United Arab Emirates on a valid French passport on March 12, was issued a tourist visa, and then moved between four hotels in the country’s capital.

Israeli media had identified Avitan as a mobster associated with the Israel-based Musli crime family.

During interrogat­ion, he produced a separate Israeli passport and had told police that he was on the hunt for the leader of a rival gang who had purportedl­y taken up residence in Malaysia.

Police said that they believed Avitan had secured the weapons locally and paid for them using cryptocurr­ency.

Prosecutor­s on Tuesday charged a Malaysian couple believed to have sold the firearms to Avitan.

Sharifah Faraha Syed Husin, 41, was charged with possession of a pistol while her husband, Abdul Azim Mohd Yasin, 43, was charged with complicity in his wife’s activities. The couple face up to 14 years in jail.

Abdul Azim could face an additional penalty of no fewer than six strokes of the cane if found guilty.

Police said they had so far arrested 16 people in raids across three states in connection with Avitan’s case, including two Turkish men – one of whom held Polish and American passports – and a Georgian national.

Malaysia has been a leading voice against Israel’s ongoing assault on Gaza which has so far killed more than 33,600 people, mostly women and children, according to the enclave’s Hamas-run health ministry.

Mossad had been accused of being involved in other incidents in Malaysia targeting Palestinia­n nationals.

In 2018, the Israeli intelligen­ce agency was accused of dispatchin­g two operatives to kill purported Hamas member Fadi al-Batsh, a Palestinia­n engineer and academic who was gunned down outside his home on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur.

Israel denied the claim. The two attackers were believed to have left the country shortly after the hit.

 ?? Photo: EPA-EFE ?? Israeli national Shalom Avitan, escorted by Royal Malaysia Police officers, arrives at a Kuala Lumpur court yesterday.
Photo: EPA-EFE Israeli national Shalom Avitan, escorted by Royal Malaysia Police officers, arrives at a Kuala Lumpur court yesterday.

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