The Sun (Malaysia)

Dog abuse: Man to be charged

> AG says suspect will face court this week for animal cruelty against Furby

- BY AMAR SHAH MOHSEN

PETALING JAYA: Tan Sri Mohamed Apandi Ali has ordered the abuser of a dog named Furby in Puchong to be charged by the end of this week for animal cruelty.

The attorney-general said the order has been given for the suspect, Terry Yee Kok Chew, who was caught on closed-circuit television footage violently hitting the dog in a residentia­l area in April, to be brought to book for his deed.

“I managed to check on the Furby case. The abuser is going to be charged very soon. Directions have been given. He (Yee) will be charged within this week,” he replied in a brief message to theSun yesterday from overseas.

Selangor prosecutio­n director Muhammad Iskandar Ahmad, when contacted, said the suspect would be charged under the Animals Act 1953.

“The order is for the Selangor Veterinary Services Department to charge the suspect under Section 44 of the Act,” he said, adding that the investigat­ion paper into the case had been submitted earlier.

Under Section 44, any person who cruelly beats, tortures or terrifies any animal, or causes any unnecessar­y pain or suffering to the animal, shall be guilty of an offence of cruelty and is liable to a fine of RM200 or imprisonme­nt for a term of six months or both.

The Department of Veterinary Services (DVS) was not available for comments.

The decision to charge Yee under the Animals Act 1953 and not under the newly minted Animal Welfare Act 2015 which offers more severe penalties has raised eyebrows.

However, Bar Council member Syahredzan Johan explained this is because the case happened before the new Animal Welfare Act came into force in July.

The video of Yee attacking the dog, which went viral in April, showed the Singaporea­n falling off his bicycle while riding to the guardhouse after Furby ran up to him.

In a fit of rage, Yee then got up and charged at the dog, grabbing it by its neck, hitting it repeatedly, and even used a crash helmet.

Meanwhile, Malaysian Dogs Deserve Better founder Wani Muthiah commended the move to charge the suspect, saying they were glad that justice would finally be served.

“It’s a good move, although it took some time. Nobody should harm an animal the way he did, and get away with it. And this should be a lesson to the public that animal harm cannot be condoned,” she told theSun.

Wani added that the DVS must explore all avenues to ensure it does not lose the case, and whatever punishment is meted out at the trial must reflect the gravity of Yee’s action.

 ??  ?? Furby and Yee.
Furby and Yee.

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