KUALA LUMPUR: Six students of Universiti Pertahanan Nasional Malaysia (UPNM) escaped the gallows but were sentenced to 18-year jail by the High Court here today after they were found guilty of culpable homicide not amounting to the murder of UPNM cadet officer Zulfarhan Osman Zulkarnain four years ago.
They are Muhammad Akmal Zuhairi Azmal, Muhammad Azamuddin Mad Sofi, Muhammad Najib Mohd Razi, Muhammad Afif Najmudin Azahat, Mohamad Shobirin Sabri and Abdoul Hakeem Mohd Ali.
Justice Datuk Azman Abdullah also ordered them to serve the sentence from the date of their arrests on June 1, 2017.
Of the six accused, five were charged with murder of Zulfarhan Osman under Section 302 of the Penal Code which carries the mandatory death penalty upon conviction, while Abdoul Hakeem was charged with abetting the murder under Section 109 of the same act, which carries a similar sentence.
The judge, in his decision, however, said that the court found that all of the accused guilty under Section 304 (a) of the Penal Code of causing injuries to the deceased (Zulfarhan Osman) with no intent of murder, which carries imprisonment for a term of up to 30 years, and shall also liable to fine, upon conviction.
The court also sentenced five of the accused, except Mohamad Shobirin, and their 12 friends after finding them guilty of injuring Zulfarhan Osman. Mohamad Shobirin was previously charged with the same offence but was acquitted of the charge at the end of the prosecution’s case.
The 12 others are Mohd Hafiz Fauzan Ismail, Mohamad Lukhmanul Hakim Mohd Zain, Ahmad Shafwan Berdal, Muhammad Amirul Asraff Mala, Luqman Hakim Shamsuri, Muhammad Sufi Mohd Mustapha, Noriznan Izzairi Noor Azhar, Muhamad Ashraf Abdullah, Muhammad Danial Firdaus Azmir, Muhammad Hasif, Muhammad Adib Iman and Mohamad Syazwan.
They were found guilty of deliberately injuring the victim to coerce a confession from him that he had stolen a laptop, as charged under Section 330 of the Penal Code.
Justice Azman ordered the sentence for Muhammad Akmal, Muhammad Azamuddin, Muhammad Najib, Muhammad Afif dan Abdoul Hakeem for both the culpable homicide and injuring charges to run concurrently.
“Meanwhile, for the other 12 accused, the court hereby sentences them to three years’ jail starting today,” he said.
The judge, however, allowed a stay of execution of the jail sentence for the 12 accused pending appeal.
In mitigation, lawyer Amer Hamzah Arshad representing the first and second accused - Muhammad Akmal Zuhairi and Muhammad Azamuddin - applied for a lenient sentence for his clients, saying that both of them were excellent students and based on the report from the Sungai Buloh Prison, they had also mastered the basic knowledge of Al-Quran and Fardu Ain.
“The first accused had also represented the prison in a Quran memorisation competition,” he said, adding that the crime committed was their first and that they truly regretted it.
Lawyer Azizul Shariman Mat Yusoff representing several other accused applied for his clients to be punished with a good behaviour bond on grounds that they were young and only 21 when the crime was committed.
Kuala Lumpur Prosecution director Datin Kalmizah Salleh, on the other hand, pressed for punishment that was appropriate and proportional to the gravity of the offence committed so as to deter others from committing the same crime.
All the accused committed the offence in room 03-05, Jebat dormitory block, UPNM between 2.30 am and 5.30 am on May 21, 2017, and in room 04-10 of the same dormitory block between 4.45 am and 5.45 am on May 22 the same year.
Zulfarhan succumbed to his injuries at Serdang Hospital on June 1, 2017.
His mother, Hawa Osman, 58, when reading the victim impact statement from the witness box before the court passed the sentence, said the death of her first and beloved son had a huge impact on her and the entire family to the extent of causing her health to deteriorate due to persistent stress and grief.
“The incident traumatised me especially in letting my other children be independent and to continue their tertiary education far from home. I was also traumatised to allow them to enter uniformed bodies and the death of my son had really given me a negative perception of such uniformed bodies.
“I want an appropriate punishment to be handed down to the accused who had caused me to lose my eldest son, the love of my life. It is hoped that the punishment will also open the eyes and minds of the public to prevent it from recurring so that other parents will never have to feel how it was to lose their son, the hope of the family,” she said.
When met outside the courtroom, Zulfarhan’s father, Zulkarnain Idros, 57, said he personally had forgiven all the accused, who were his son’s coursemates at UPNM.-Bernama