Mas
Selamat:
The faces get redder...
As 21 days of disruptive nationwide search produce no clues
where the escapee could be. By Seah Chiang Nee.
Mar 22, 2008
A FIRST-TIME
visitor who is taking the sights in northern and north-eastern
Singapore these days would have thought some sort of war
is going on.
It covers
a wide arc of territory from centre-south, moving north
and north-east leading to – and including –
the Causeway.
The
beaches facing Malaysia and Indonesia are, of course, special
targets.
The
visitor wandering around part of the forested Mandai area
and its quiet neighbourhood would probably be able to see
some of the 1,000-strong special and land police and troops
searching for an escaped detainee.
The
hunt for the leader of the Jemaah Islamiah (JI) terror network
in Singapore, Mas Selamat Kastari, was launched 21 days
ago after he escaped from the Whitley Detention Centre.
Whitley
Road is in south-central Singapore but the search spread
out as the days increased. Today no one has any firm idea
where he is.
Nearer
the heavily used Causeway, the artery linking Malaysia,
the situation is grimmer – long delays, angry drivers
and disruption of two-way trade and short-term visits.
From
there the tourist who ventures out east and south after
sunset may stumble across a scene straight out of the Emergency
Days in northern Malaya when forces were tracking the men
of then Malayan Communist Party leader Chin Peng.
The
tourist may see uniformed men stationed on the road facing
the thick forests – one every 10m – in an attempt
to box the fugitive in while other men carefully comb the
interior.
Then
at daybreak, he might even see plainclothes men knocking
on doors to warn residents and distribute posters of Mas
Selamat. Singapore may be a small island, but it sure is
large in this sort of work.
The
biggest manhunt started on Feb 27 when the wily off-and-on
mechanic escaped through a toilet at the visitors’
meeting place of the Detention Centre near Thompson Road.
The
daring escape has delivered a blow to Singapore’s
reputation of efficiency and ironclad security when it comes
to fighting terrorism.
Authorities
believe he acted alone and is still on the island and not
– as popularly believed – carried out with outside
help. When he walks fast, Mas Selamat hobbles a little.
A lone
prisoner limping away unaided from a well-guarded institution
shocked Singaporeans, who had believed this sort of thing
could happen only in Indonesia or the Philippines.
For
this big blow to Singapore’s international image,
a number of people yelled for the resignation of Home Affairs
Minister Wong Kan Seng, who is also Deputy Prime Minister.
As the
First Assistant Secretary-General of the ruling People’s
Action Party, Wong is – at least on paper –
considered a contender to succeed Prime Minister Lee Hsien
Loong.
Even
if that had been true before, it is no longer so now. In
fact, Singaporeans are speculating, if and when the fallout
comes, how he will be affected.
At the
moment, the public blame, although fierce, is taking second
place to the urgency of finding Mas Selamat before he can
flee to Indonesia to plan a hit on Singapore.
He was
detained in Indonesia three years ago and handed over to
Singapore for leading the island’s terrorist network
that allegedly planned to steal a plane and crash it into
Changi International Airport as well as bombing US and Western
embassies.
Many
people think he may already be in Indonesia with his Indonesian
JI colleagues. Both Jakarta and Kuala Lumpur say he’s
not in their land.
Minister
Mentor Lee Kuan Yew isn’t absolutely sure. Blaming
it on complacency, he said that if Mas Selamat was still
here he would be caught eventually, but if he had run off
to Indonesia it would be harder to catch him.
When
that happens Singapore could expect him to organise a hit
on Singapore, Lee added.
Meanwhile,
every day that he remains free is a further test on Singapore’s
well-heeled system.
Can
all its top scholarly brains and high-tech systems succeed
in catching a limping man, alone and unaided, in this island
state?
The
manhunt has produced many leads that led to nowhere. People
reported seeing him here and there.
One
blogger said that at an MRT 7-Eleven shop two employees
actually served Mas Selamat.
“When
he came into the store, they suspected it was him but acted
naturally to avoid confrontation whatsoever, but called
the police soon after he left,” the blogger said.
When
the police came, he was gone.
Earlier,
a mother of three wrote to The Straits Times that she saw
the refugee an hour after he had escaped on Feb 27 walking
along Thomson Road.
She
was on Mount Pleasant Road, a short distance from the detention
centre, when she saw him approach a stranger. She had just
finished work that day and was heading back to her home
in Bishan.
“I
saw a Malay man on the other side of Thomson Road, walking
on the pavement against the flow of traffic on that side.
He looked very disoriented, very dishevelled, like he was
in a daze.
“He
didn’t look like he knew where he was going or like
he was looking for someone,” said the lecturer in
communication skills.
“He
had a limp in his left leg. He was dressed in some sort
of brown or beige outfit, which looked like a T-shirt.”
There
was a Chinese woman dressed all in white walking on the
pavement towards him and she was talking on her mobile phone,
said the unidentified woman.
When
they came towards each other, the man held out his hand,
looking like he was asking for money, but she ignored him,
she said. Nothing came out of the report.
The
agonising, nail-biting search continues with no let-up.
(This
was published first in The Star, Malaysia on Mar 22, 2008)