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SRI LANKAN KIDNAPPING SYNDICATE BUSTED IN MALAYSIA


An international syndicate, believed to be headed by expatriate Sri Lankan Tamils, are targeting their countrymen in Malaysia to make a fast buck has been busted.

Making use of local thugs, the syndicate abducts their targets — mostly in the Klang Valley— and demand ransom from family members either in Sri Lanka or in other countries.

It is believed the syndicate’s ring leaders — who live in Paris, France— would be the ones contacting the victim’s family members to collect the ransom money.

This apparently lucrative “venture” came to a halt on Saturday when a police team from the Kuala Lumpur Serious Crimes Branch raided a house in Setapak and arrested six local men.

Police also rescued two Sri Lankan men in their 20s, who were believed to have been confined at the house since they were kidnapped several days before the police raid.

Both men told police that they had been tortured by their kidnappers. It has not been determined whether their family members have been contacted or if ransoms had been paid.

The break in the case came following the release of a 16-year-old on Friday night — after his father, who is living in France, paid a RM25,000 ransom to the syndicate ring leaders in Paris.

Federal CID chief Datuk Seri Bakri Zinin said the Sri Lankan police contacted Bukit Aman after the boy’s father reported to them about his son’s kidnapping and the ransom demand. It is believed that the boy was kidnapped on Oct 26.

Following the arrest of the six men, Bakri said police counterparts in Paris had arrested four Sri Lankan men in connection with the case.

The four, in their 30s, are believed to be directly connected with the syndicate. He said police have not ruled out further arrests both locally or overseas. Bakri said the victims had all entered Malaysia with valid documents.

Malay Mail was informed that the police have yet to determine how many victims the syndicate had kidnapped.

The suspects arrested in Setapak have been remanded to facilitate investigations. When asked about the possibility that the syndicate was set-up by members of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam (Tamil Tigers), the main rebel organisation which fought the Sri Lankan government for almost 25 years, Bakri said they were not looking into that possibility.

Malay Mail

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