Late Nigerian student Ewansiha given "unknown medicine" by "unknown Malaysian policeman"

Thomas Orhionsefe Ewansiha

Thomas Orhionsefe Ewansiha, the Nigerian who died after a Malaysian Immigration arrest

Thomas Orhionsefe Ewansiha, the Nigerian who died after a Malaysian Immigration arrest

A courtroom in Malaysia has heard that an “unknown policeman” administered an “unknown medicine” on Orhions Ewansiha Thomas, the Nigerian PhD student who died while in police custody in Kuala Lumpur last year.

Thomas’s family had demanded an inquest into his death, which shocked his school, Limkokwing University of Creative Technology, the Nigerian community and Malaysians.

The courtroom heard that a police photographer was made aware that Thomas was given unknown medicine by an unknown police individual, reported Coconuts.co/kl

“I cannot recall who was the immigration personnel’s name who told me about this. But the person was a medical officer,” said photographer Kamarulzaman Jamuie.

According to Free Malaysia Today, a legal representative for Thomas’s family then asked Kamarulzaman if there was any photographic evidence of what he had been given. Instead, he was only asked to take a photo of where the medicines were kept.

A police officer also testified that he was told that Thomas had passed away, and that he received a report in the early hours of July 9, 2019. He was informed by another official that the 34-year-old man was found unresponsive at the Bukit Jalil immigration detention centre. No cause of death was given.

A third witness called weighed in on a series of photos taken during the victim’s postmortem, with a lawyer pointing out that four pictures were missing and that the quality of the images was not very good.

Thomas’s family had called for an inquiry into his unexplained death, as they believed that he may have been the victim of an assault while in custody and denied access to medication that he needed.

His mysterious death in custody made headlines in July, after the 34-year-old reportedly had a seizure while into the second week of a 14-day remand imposed by Immigration authorities, despite the fact that he was a student with valid papers.

At the time, cellmates reported that he was experiencing a seizure in his sleep, though no official conclusions on his cause of death have been made.

The inquest will resume January 7.

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