I cannot help, but feel pity for this lady and the ordeal she has to go through. A once in a lifetime story I assume it ought to be.
Hepi reading... s
From: The Star
Sunday September 7, 2008
Malaysian spends 11 months at depot for illegals
By C.S. NATHAN
SEREMBAN: Young mother M. Rajeshvari spent 11 agonising months at the Lenggeng Immigration depot for illegals – all because she could not recall her identity card number and was not fluent in Bahasa Malaysia.
The 22-year-old, who was six months pregnant then, was waiting for a relative at a coffeeshop in Brickfields, Kuala Lumpur, when a raiding police party asked to see her identification card. She could not because she had lost it. Worse, she also forgot the IC number.
With only primary school education and speaking a smattering of Bahasa Malaysia, she failed to convince the authorities she was Malaysian. They suspected her to be a Sri Lankan immigrant.
Recalling bad memories: Rajeshvari talking about her experience at the Lenggeng Immigration depot. With her is her son Logekali and Raju.
Making matters worse, she could only give the officers sketchy details of her background.
Rajeshvari, who is from Penang and was jobless when she was detained, was later produced in court and eventually sent to the depot in Lenggeng in October last year.
She was unable to seek help from relatives because of estranged family ties. Her family members also did not attempt to look for her.
She was finally released from the detention camp on Friday evening, carrying her 10-month-old son Logekali.
Rajeshvari’s lucky release happened because a staff member at a clinic where Logekali was treated for food poisoning last week had alerted Malaysian Indian Youth Council vice-president Andrew Raju.
“After my arrest, I kept telling the authorities I was Malaysian but no one believed me,” said a tearful Rajeshvari.
Raju, when met outside the depot, said the officers did not pursue her case further as Rajeshvari could not give the right IC number or her parents’ address.
“In the beginning, I also had a hard time checking her out because the information she gave turned out to be dead ends, until she recalled her primary school,” he said.
Raju then contacted the school’s principal in Kampar in Perak, who managed to trace Rajeshvari’s birth certificate number.
Raju then went to the National Registration Department in Putrajaya to get a letter confirming Rajeshvari’s citizenship.
“It has been stressful running around to the various departments. But it is worth it when both mother and son are finally free,” he said.
Rajeshvari said she wanted to put the nightmare behind and start afresh with her baby.
Safe and sound: Rajeshvari, 22, holding her son Logekali after she was released from the Lenggeng Immigration depot on Friday.
Tuesday September 9, 2008
Family wants Rajeshvari home
By C.S. NATHAN
SEREMBAN: M. Rajeshvari, who was freed last Friday after being wrongfully detained in an immigration depot for 11 months, caused a scare when her family could not locate her over the weekend.
However, Malaysian Indian Youth Council vice-president Andrew Raju, who helped free Rajeshvari, finally got hold of her yesterday.
Rajeshvari, he said, told him she was staying with friends but stressed that she was not ready to meet anyone, even her family.
Her family members have been looking for the 22-year-old after her story appeared in Sunday Star.
Her father, who only wanted to be identified as Murugiah, had been worried about her whereabouts.
When contacted in Kampar yesterday, Murugiah, a driver for Perak Unity and National Integration and Consumer Affairs Committee chairman and Keranji assemblyman Chen Fook Chye, said: “I just want to find my daughter. She has been missing for so long.”
His wife Parameswari, 47, and daughter Vigneswari, 26, are in Kuala Lumpur to look for Rajeshvari.
Sunday Star reported that Rajeshvari spent 11 months at the Lenggeng immigration depot for illegals because she could not remember her identity card number when police raided a coffee shop in Kuala Lumpur last October.
Rajeshvari, who was also not fluent in Bahasa Malaysia, was detained on suspicion of being a Sri Lankan illegal.
She was six months’ pregnant at the time and gave birth to a boy while in detention.
Earlier, Vigneswari said her sister left home two years ago and the family believed that she had been living in Sungei Besi.
She said her sister stopped schooling at 13 while in the Remove Class.
“We heard she got married in Kuala Lumpur but we were shocked to read her story.”
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