KUALA LUMPUR (Bernama): Bukit Aman's Integrity and Standards Compliance Department (JIPS) will probe an allegation that two Nepali security guards were victimised by the police after a burglary at a housing estate near Seremban, Negri Sembilan.

Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Abdul Hamid Bador (pic) said if this was found to be the case, action would be taken against the police personnel involved.

"If it is true, I will surely punish the men involved... I have instructed JIPS Bukit Aman to investigate immediately," he told Bernama.

The incident involving the two Nepalis, aged 37 and 40, was highlighted by journalist R. Nadeswaran in an article on the Malaysiakini news portal.

He narrated that when a police team arrested them on Oct 21, their employer was away but the manager turned up at the guardhouse and was told that the two security guards were being held on "suspicion of being accessories to a burglary".

Nadeswaran wrote that the alleged burglary took place on Oct 16 but a police report was only made three days later on Oct 19.

He added that there were no signs of a burglary and no doors or windows were broken.

"The only 'error' the guards seem to have committed is not accurately recording the name and identity card numbers of two strangers who entered the housing estate, now the prime suspects in the case.

"That surely does not constitute an offence, just a procedural error for which the employer would deal with the problem," he said.

Nadeswaran said the employer and a Nepali embassy official went to the Nilai police station on Oct 24 to hand over the guards' passports, and were told that they were being held at a police lock-up in another location.

"The investigating officer said that he would only decide on their fate the following Tuesday as Monday (Oct 28) was a public holiday," he wrote.

Nadeswaran said the two guards ended up spending eight nights, including Deepavali, in the police lock-up for no reason, and were released on Wednesday 'tanpa syarat' (unconditionally).

He said: "Eight nights in the lock-up for an offence they had nothing to do with is unjustifiable."

"They were neither involved in the burglary nor committed any immigration offence. The police will have a lot of explaining to do," he added. – Bernama