The second suspect detained over Sunday’s acid-splashing attack on Malaysian national footballer, Faisal Halim, has been remanded for five days.
Faisal, 26, a winger at the Selangor Football Club suffered second-degree burns after he was splashed with acid in an attack at a shopping mall, a sports official has said.
Faisal Halim was burned on the neck, shoulder, hands and chest during the attack Sunday in Petaling Jaya district outside the capital Kuala Lumpur, according to Najwan Halimi, a sports official in Selangor state.
Selangor police chief Comm Datuk Hussein Omar Khan said the suspect, in his late 30s, has been remanded until Saturday (11 May).
“We have obtained a five-day remand order on the suspect.
“We are still investigating further,” he said when contacted on Tuesday (7 May).
He also confirmed that the case had been taken over by Bukit Aman CID Special Investigation Unit (USJT).
It was reported that the suspect was arrested in Bandar Baru Bangi on Monday (6 May).
Comm Hussein had said the motive behind the attack is still under investigation.
It was also reported that a man in his 20s had been arrested in Pandan Indah on Sunday night in connection with the acid attack.
“I strongly condemn this violence and urge the police to bring the perpetrator to justice”, Najwan said in a statement late Sunday.
Selangor Police Chief, Hussein Omar Khan was quoted by private television station, Astro Awani as saying on Monday that a male suspect had been arrested, though he did not disclose a motive.
A photo that went viral online showed a visibly shocked Faisal in brown pants seated on a bench with burn marks on his body.
The attack came three days after another national player, Akhyar Rashid, was injured in a robbery outside his home in the eastern state of Terengganu.
Akhyar, 25, was struck with an iron rod by two unidentified suspects and suffered injuries to his head and leg that required stitches, local media reported.
Local police chief Azli Noor said the suspects fled after taking Akhyar’s money.
Football Association of Malaysia president Hamidin Mohamad Amin said he was “upset and sad” over both attacks.
“The people of Malaysia pray that Akhyar and Faisal recover quickly and get back to action”, he said in a statement on Sunday.
Attacks on football players on and off the pitch are not an unknown phenomenon in the sporting world.
In March, tension escalated at the end of Fenerbahce’s 3-2 victory over Trabzonspor in the Turkish Super Lig.
The disciplinary hearing of the Turkish Football Federation following a bust-up with Trabzonspor fans, the TFF is ongoing.
Home supporters invaded the pitch at Trabzonspor’s stadium after the final whistle of the Super Lig match on March 17 that Fenerbahce won 3-2.
The attacks took place after the Fenerbahce players and coaching staff celebrated their victory, goalkeeper Dominik Livakovic being punched in the face.