Ketua Polis Daerah Subang Jaya, Asisten Komisioner Yahaya Ramli berkata, ia berdasarkan pengecaman dibuat kedua ibu bapa mangsa, Goh Ying Ying dan Yau Kok Kang di Hospital Tengku Ampuan Rahimah (HTAR) pagi tadi.
Bagaimanapun, menurutnya pihak polis masih menunggu ujian DNA, yang dijangka diperoleh dalam tiga hari lagi untuk pengesahan lanjut.
Yahaya berkata, ibu bapa William sahkan seluar pendek, seluar dalam, parut di dahi serta di bahagian belakang kepala mayat mirip anak mereka.
Jelas Yahaya, pegawai perubatan tidak dapat menentukan sebab-sebab kematian kerana mayat reput dan percaya ia sudah meninggal sejak seminggu lalu.
Katanya, sampel tulang dan rambut diambil untuk ujian DNA mangsa kerana organ dalaman lain sudah reput.
Tiada kecederaan luar di tubuh mayat itu. Cuma bekas gigitan binatang yang menjamah mayat ketika berada di air.
“Polis yakin 75 peratus mayat ditemui adalah kanak-kanak yang hilang itu, apapun tunggu laporan ujian DNA sama ada wujud pertalian antara mayat ditemui dengan William. Kalau benar mangsa adalah mayat yang ditemui, kita akan hentikan pencarian dan tumpukan kepada sebab-sebab kematian pula,” katanya.
Yahaya berkata, setakat ini pihaknya mengklasifikasikan kes sebagai mati mengejut.
Sehingga kini katanya, belum ada suspek atau maklumat konkrit untuk kaitkan kes itu dengan sesiapa.
Abang William yang berusia tujuh tahun akan dipanggil untuk diambil keterangan semula.
Polis katanya, akan melakukan siasatan dari setiap sudut.
“Tiada parit monsoon besar di lokasi William dilaporkan hilang, kalau ada pun sungai terletak tiga kilometer dari Putra Heights. Tempat mayat kanak-kanak ditemui semalam pula terletak kira-kira 30 kilometer dari tempat William dilaporkan hilang,” katanya.- sinar harian
Mother: Dead boy is my William...
Goh Ying Ying identified the body of a boy found in Port Klang yesterday as her son. The mother of six-year-old William Yau confirmed that the body of a boy found in Port Klang yesterday is her son.
Berita Harian reported that Goh Ying Ying identified Yau based on the shorts and underwear worn by the corpse, which appeared to be the same as the last clothes worn by the boy.
However, Subang Jaya district police chief Yahaya Ramli said he would wait for the DNA test to be concluded before confirming the matter.
On Jan 16, Yau went missing after his parents left him and his siblings in the car to purchase a washing machine at Putra Heights.
It was said that he went looking for his parents after his younger sister started crying in the car.
Yesterday, police found the body of boy at Sungai Sireh and sent it to the Klang Hospital for identification.
Yau’s disappearance had generated widespread media coverage, with the public also lending a hand in locating his whereabouts.
However, Nottingham University communication professor Zaharom Nain did not blame the media exposure.
He instead questioned the police’s role in solving the case.
“What measures have the police taken? The Nur line is full of rubbish,” he said, referring to the hotline managed by the Women, Family and Community Development Ministry with the cooperation of the police.
The line was established after the kidnapping and murder of six-year-old Nurin Jazlin Jazimin in 2007.
“The moment the identity of the missing boy was known everyone tried to help,” he said.
He added that the kidnappers probably panicked over the publicity that Yau had received because kidnapping was an offence punishable by death.-FMT
My deepest Condolence to the family...
cheers.
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