New Straits Times

SELF-DEFENCE

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advance. He prepares himself, he arms himself, he chooses the time and place to commit the crime.

The victim, on the other hand, plans nothing against the criminal. He defends himself to the best of his ability. In the process, he may get killed, injured or maimed.

In how many such cases have the thieves or intruders been charged with murder?

Survival instinct takes over when one is in danger. How do you tell your instinct to defuse an act of crime without causing harm, or using excessive force that might cause the death of the criminal?

One victim may just freeze and be helpless, another may hide or escape, and another may confront the intruder with anything that comes to his hand quickly.

There is no time to consider the option that will not cause more than “reasonable” harm to the intruders.

So, legalistic talk about “fine line between committing murder and acting in self-defence” is absurd.

The “fine-line” argument can apply only in cases of crime victims whose reflexes have been trained to react in particular ways under particular circumstan­ces.

The minds and reflexes of these people have been trained, and undergo regular “revisions”, to know what is “excessive force” and how much and what kind of force to apply in a given situation.

Even policemen are not capable of this, as can be seen in the case of Aminulrasy­id Amzah, 14, who was shot to death by policemen in Shah Alam in 2010, and a few others where they used excessive force.

So, how can the public be expected to know and exercise “sufficient or reasonable” force?

The law should be amended to give full protection to people exercising self-defence. This is one way of fighting crime.

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