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Baldgate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Baldgate (also known as botakgate and bald 11) is a Malaysian scandal that began on January 30, 2006, when Malaysian police detained eleven senior citizens for playing mahjong, a gambling game, and shaved their heads. Gambling with chips is common among Malaysian Chinese, but gambling for money is illegal without a license. The incident came only a few days after the independent commission reviewing the Malaysian lock-up detainee abuse scandal of 2005 released its findings.

The suspects, Chee Kit Sing, 65, Chi Kong Eng, 31, Tee Boon Kiah, 55, Lee Chu Heng, 63, Lim Kee Swee, 64, Lee Swee Fong, 49, and Lim Yew Bee, 54, were arrested at a coffee shop in Kajang, Selangor, on the second day of the Chinese New Year. All of the 103 detainees in the same lock-up had their heads shaved. The eleven men were released the day after their arrest.[1][2]

A spokesman for the Kajang police defended the head-shaving as "standard procedure," the same rationale provided for the scandal of 2005. He also stated it was in accordance with Section 9a of the Lock Up Rules.[3] Malaysian Parliamentary opposition leader Lim Kit Siang of the Democratic Action Party (DAP) gave the incident the moniker of "botakgate".[4]

Notes and references

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  1. ^ Sagayam, Andrew (February 3, 2006). "A bald experience". The Star.
  2. ^ "It’s their right to file suit: Kajang OCPD" Archived 2006-02-09 at the Wayback Machine. (February 7, 2006). Malay Mail.
  3. ^ "Kajang OCPD: It’s normal procedure". (February 4, 2006). The Star.
  4. ^ Lim, Kit Siang (2006). "Botakgate: Shaving bald 11 mostly senior citizens in Kajang – “new police respect” for human rights?". Retrieved February 9, 2006.

See also

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