PETALING JAYA: When he used to send his daughter Esther to work every day, Pastor Raymond Koh would hug her and tell her that he loved her.

He would make breakfast every day as well, a combination of oats with eggs, which Esther said was weird but tasted very good.

“Those are the things that I would always remember.

“He would do the same thing every day without fail,” the 33-year-old said tearfully.

It has been exactly two years or 730 days since Koh went missing.

Koh is believed to have been abducted by a group of men along Jalan SS4B/10 in Petaling Jaya on Feb 13, 2017, while on his way to a friend’s house.

“After he was abducted, a very important part of me was taken away and it is mental torture not knowing how he is,” said Esther, who quit her full-time job after the abduction.

Koh’s other daughter, Elizabeth, said both she and her father had the same interest in music.

The 23-year-old student said that she missed his random humming during the day and his strumming of their “baby-sized” guitar at home.

“It’s still a very terrifying journey not knowing what happened and how he is,” she said.

Koh’s wife Susanna Liew, 62, said that her husband, who used to help those in need through his social initiatives, would want her to be strong and not give up.

“We are counting the days to be reconciled with him, but we are also prepared for anything.

“There’s the hope we hold on to that he is still alive,” she said, adding that various parties also helped the family out.

CCTV footage believed to be of the incident showed at least 15 men and three black SUVs involved in the abduction, which was done in “professional” style.

Koh’s silver-coloured car bearing the number plate ST5515D has yet to be found.

An inquiry was carried out by the Human Rights Commission of Ma­lay­­sia (Suhakam) into the dis­appearance of Koh and was concluded in December last year.

Suhakam is expected to present its findings and recommendations to the Parliament this year.