
In Pahang, woman swept away by strong currents after car plunges into Sungai Triang found drowned
Bera District Police Chief Supt Zulkiflee Nazir said the body of Sakirah Akop, 31, was found floating about 2.5 kilometres from the location where the car had slipped and plunged into the river last Monday.
He said the police were informed about the discovery of the body at 8.12am by passers-by who were jogging in the area.
The body was then taken to the Bera Hospital Forensic Unit for further action, he said in a statement today.
In the incident which occurred at about 1.30pm last Monday, the woman was reported to have accompanied her husband on a fishing trip, but stayed in the car with her one-year and four-month-old daughter, when the vehicle slid and plunged into the river.
The husband was fishing about eight metres away.
It was reported that the victim's husband managed to save their child, who was inside the car, but the woman is believed to have been swept away by the strong current while trying to save herself. — Bernama

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Malay Mail
20 minutes ago
- Malay Mail
MACC: Two more cops remanded in RM635,000 bribery probe linked to illegal gambling activities in Johor
JOHOR BAHRU, Aug 1 — The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) of Johor has detained two more policemen for allegedly soliciting and accepting bribes worth about RM635,000 from an individual in return for not taking action over gambling activities. A six-day remand order until Aug 5 against both suspects was approved by Senior Assistant Registrar Chai Ing Hien after it was submitted by MACC at the Johor Bahru Magistrate's Court yesterday morning. According to sources, both male suspects, in their 30s, were arrested at about 9 pm yesterday when they turned up to give their statements at the Johor MACC office. 'This is following the arrest of two more policemen yesterday in connection with the bribery case involving about RM635,000. So far, the MACC has detained four suspects,' he said. Meanwhile, Johor MACC deputy operations director Hairul Ilham Hamzah, when contacted, confirmed the arrests, saying the case is being investigated under Section 16 (a)(B) of the MACC Act 2009. — Bernama


Malay Mail
20 minutes ago
- Malay Mail
Police to release on bail eight held in alleged fatal beating of snatch thief in Kajang
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 1 — Eight men suspected of beating a snatch thief to death will be released on police bail pending further investigations. The men, aged between 22 and 72, are currently remanded until tomorrow, Kajang district police chief Naazron Abdul Yusof said in a statement today. Prosecutors have instructed police to release the suspects temporarily while awaiting a full post-mortem report and chemical analysis, he said. 'The analysis is important to determine the cause of death and assist the investigation,' Naazron said. A post-mortem was conducted on July 22, but the cause of death is still being examined by a pathologist. Local media earlier reported that the men were arrested after allegedly assaulting a foreign national who had attempted to snatch a woman's belongings.


Malay Mail
20 minutes ago
- Malay Mail
‘I need to know the truth': Zara Qairina's grave to be exhumed as grieving mother seeks first autopsy in daughter's death
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 1 — The grave of a 13-year-old Sabah schoolgirl is set to be exhumed for a post-mortem, two weeks after she died following a fall from a third-floor school hostel — a move initiated by her mother, who says she was never advised to request an autopsy at the time of burial. Zara Qairina Mahathir, a Form One student at Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Agama (SMKA) Tun Datu Mustapha in Papar, Sabah, died on July 17 after being found critically injured beneath her boarding school dormitory in the early hours of the previous day. She was buried that night without a post-mortem. Now, her mother, Noraidah Lamat, 45, says she has instructed two lawyers to initiate legal steps to exhume her daughter's grave so that an autopsy can be conducted — the first since her death. 'I want the questions that have been circling in my mind for the past 14 days about the real cause of Zara Qairina's death to be answered,' she told Berita Harian. 'So I have taken steps to have her grave reopened in order to carry out a post-mortem.' Noraidah said she was in deep shock when her daughter died and agreed to proceed with the burial, unaware that an autopsy could or should have been requested. 'No one advised me to ask for one,' she said, adding that her grief clouded her ability to think clearly at the time. The decision comes amid allegations of bullying at the school. Noraidah said her daughter had previously reported being sexually harassed by a fellow student — a claim she said was addressed by school counsellors — and denied knowing whether bullying played a role in Zara's death. 'There are many stories being spread about what happened to my daughter. They are painful to hear and not from me,' she told Berita Harian. 'I want everyone to stop speculating.' Sabah Police Commissioner Jauteh Dikun said the case is still under investigation and nearing completion, with about 60 witnesses, including students, staff and parents, having had their statements recorded. Zara was discovered around 3am on July 16 in critical condition beneath the hostel block. She was taken to Queen Elizabeth I Hospital in Kota Kinabalu, where she died the next day. Initial reports suggested she had fallen from the third floor. Noraidah said she and her husband rushed to the hospital after being informed of the fall by a school warden. 'At the emergency ward lobby, I was shocked to see so many officials — police, school administrators,' she recalled. She described Zara's face as uninjured when she saw her. 'The doctor and counsellor told me even if she survived, she would never be the same. Her brain was already damaged. I couldn't fully grasp what they were saying,' she was quoted as saying. Police have not ruled out foul play and say the case has been referred to federal police headquarters in Bukit Aman for further analysis. Whatever the outcome of the post-mortem and investigation, Noraidah said, she is prepared to accept it — as long as it brings clarity. 'The pain will never go away,' she said. 'But I need to know the truth.'