The Magistrate’s Court here was told yesterday that the
actions of a woman in tossing and dropping yellow balloons from the fifth floor
of a shopping complex during an event attended by the prime minister and his
wife, was rude.
Investigating officer Inspector Izwan Paijan, 35, said the
rude act by Bilqis Hijjas, 37, was also an insult to the country, as well as
the organiser of the event.
“The rude act by Bilqis in tossing the balloons during the
event was an insult to the country because it was attended by Najib Razak and
wife, Rosmah Mansor, as well as ambassadors from 24 countries,” he added.
Izwan, who is the eighth prosecution witness, said Bilqis’s
act drew the ire of the master of ceremony of the ‘DiverseCity 2015: Kuala Lumpur
International Arts Festival’, R Sunita Mei-Lin, 47, as it diverted the public’s
attention away from the event.
He was testifying on the sixth day of the trial involving
Bilqis, a dancer and the daughter of prominent architect Hijjas Kasturi, who
has been charged with insulting behaviour at the Pavilion shopping mall in
Jalan Bukit Bintang at 3.15pm on Aug 31 last year.
She is charged under Section 14 of the Minor Offences Act
1955 and faces a maximum RM100 fine if found guilty.
Izwan said footage from the closed-circuit television camera
(CCTV) at the shopping complex showed Bilqis blowing and tossing the yellow
balloons, with the words ‘Democracy’, ‘Free media’ and ‘Justice’ written in
black on them, from the fifth floor of a shopping mall to the back of a screen
on the second floor.
“Apart from the CCTV, recordings of statements of seven
witnesses, including an auxiliary policeman, the organiser and a special
officer to the prime minister also found Bilqis doing the act which could have
disrupted peace in the country.
“We were also afraid and worried that the balloons that were
tossed by Bilqis could contain hazardous materials, like poison or (could cause
an) explosion,” he added.
During examination-in-chief by deputy public prosecutor
Mohamad Fadhly Mohd Zamry, Izwan said the balloons tossed and dropped by Bilqis
had connection with the Bersih 4 rally that was held in the Bukit Bintang area
a day earlier.
He said that on Aug 28, 2015, the government issued a ban on
the wearing of yellow shirts with the word ‘Bersih 4′ on it
and other printed materials and pamphlets linked to the assembly.
Cross-examined by Bilqis’ lawyer, Eric Paulsen, Izwan agreed
with him that the words ‘Democracy’, ‘Free media’ and ‘Justice’ which were
written in black , were not insulting words and the event was not disrupted by
the balloons.
Magistrate Mohd Faizal Ismail set June 24 to decide on the
case and June 17 for both parties to submit their written submission.
– BERNAMA
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