Malaysia Probes Links Between Detained Man and Israeli Crime Group

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Malaysia Probes Links Between Detained Man and Israeli Crime Group
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) – Malaysian police are looking into reports that an armed man detained in the country’s capital last week had links to an Israeli crime syndicate, its top official said on Tuesday, amid a widening probe.

Inspector-General of Police Razarudin Husain identified the suspect – who was arrested at a Kuala Lumpur hotel on March 27 carrying six guns and 200 bullets – as 36-year-old Shalom Avitan and said police were seeking more suspects to assist in the investigation.

The Times of Israel, citing Hebrew-language media, reported on Saturday that Avitan was an associate of an Israeli criminal syndicate who had been en route to assassinate a member of a rival crime family.

Razarudin confirmed that Avitan told Malaysian authorities that he was in Malaysia to hunt down another Israeli citizen, but said police remained doubtful and did not rule out the possibility that the suspect could have had other plans.

War in Israel and Gaza

“We are seeking to identify a motive… we are wondering why he’s looking for one person with six guns,” Razarudin told reporters.

Authorities were preparing charges against Avitan, who has been remanded until April 7, for illegal trafficking of firearms, which carries penalties that could include whipping, life imprisonment or a death sentence.

Razarudin said Avitan had paid a married Malaysian couple about 10,000 ringgit ($2,104.82) for each of the six guns, which were smuggled from neighbouring Thailand. The couple and another Malaysian suspected of acting as Avitan’s driver were also arrested.

Malaysia is working to tighten border security following the arrests, Razarudin said, given the country’s criticism of Israel’s actions in the Gaza war. Malaysia and Israel do not have diplomatic relations.

In 2018, a Palestinian scientist was shot dead in Kuala Lumpur in a killing that the Hamas militant group suggested was carried out by Israel’s Mossad intelligence service. Israel denied the allegations.

(This story has been corrected to say Avitan was accused of paying 10,000 ringgit per gun, not for all six guns, in paragraph 7)

(Reporting by Mandy Leong and Rozanna Latiff; Editing by Bernadette Baum)

Copyright 2024 Thomson Reuters.

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