IPOH: Kindergarten teacher M. Indira Gandhi has defended the non-governmental organisation that was assisting her in her search for her still missing daughter.
Indira Gandhi said the NGO, Indira Gandhi Action Team (Ingat), was only helping her to deal with the police. The matter is related to my daughter. It is my right to ask about her. The NGO was only helping me, she said on Friday (April 30). There were times that the NGO was willing to assist the police. That was why it was formed, she added.
Outgoing IGP Tan Sri Abdul Hamid Bador had said that an NGO has hampered efforts to reunite Indira Gandhi with Prasana Diksa, who was taken away by her father Muhammad Riduan in 2011.
KUALA LUMPUR: The Inspector-General of Police (IGP) and three others have filed to strike out a lawsuit by kindergarten teacher M. Indira Gandhi (pic) who sued them over her missing child.
Indira’s lawyer Rajesh Nagarajan said the defendants - the IGP, the Royal Malaysia Police, Home Ministry and government - filed the striking out application on Thursday (Jan 14).
The court was informed of the matter when it was brought up during case management via e-Review before High Court deputy registrar Idamasliza Maarof.
“The court had then ordered the plaintiff (Indira) to file her affidavit in reply by Jan 29 and for the first defendant (IGP) to file his by Feb 2, ” he said when contacted.
12 Jan 2021 / 21:59 H.
KUALA LUMPUR: Kindergarten teacher, M. Indira Gandhi (
pix) is seeking answers from the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) to 48 questions pertaining to investigations on her Muslim convert ex-husband, Muhammad Riduan Abdullah, in a suit filed against the Royal Malaysia Police (PDRM).
The suit was filed pursuant to her claims that PDRM failed to execute the committal warrant to arrest Muhammad Riduan and bring back their 13-year-old daughter, who was abducted by the man, 12 years ago.
Indira filed the interrogatories application yesterday through the law firm Messrs Raj & Sach to obtain a court order for the IGP, as the first defendant, to answer the questions in written form via affidavit under Order 26 of the Rules of Court 2012.
Friday, 01 Jan 2021 07:00 AM MYT
BY YISWAREE PALANSAMY
M. Indira Gandhi speaks at a press conference in Kuala Lumpur October 9, 2020. Picture by Shafwan Zaidon
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KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 1 ― M. Indira Gandhi’s resolution for 2021 remains the same as the one she made 11 years ago when she was forcefully separated from her youngest child Prasana Diksa.
To see and hold her little girl once more.
“It s getting very frustrating because we are waiting for an end to this and that a solution will come, but nothing is happening.