Mohd Zabri Abdul Hamid

Mohd Zabri Bin Abdul Hamid
Born Mohd Zabri Bin Abdul Hamid
unknown
Tapah, Malaysia
Died 3 September 1975
Grik, Malaysia
Cause of death Booby-trap
Nationality Malaysian
Occupation Police officer
Employer Royal Malaysia Police
Known for Victim of a booby-trap in 1975

Mohd Zabri Abdul Hamid was a police officer most remembered as a member of the deep 69 Commandos of the Pasukan Gerakan Khas.

Background

Mohd Zabri was born in Tapah, Perak and was the second child of his family.

Police career

Mohd Zabri commenced his career as a police officer on 1 June 1963 as a Probationary Inspector. After passed the training at PULAPOL on Semarak Street, he was transferred to the Penang Police Contingent on 18 March 1963 and then he was transferred to the Police Field Force unit (now General Operations Force) on 29 March 1965 as the Platoon commander. In July 1970, Zabri joined the 69 Commandos and he passed the selection after being trained in five months. Later, he was appointed as a Commando Chief Instructor from April to August 1971 to be trained with new officers and men joining the team which is known as the 3rd 69 Commando Platoon, which was located in Legap Fort, Perak.

Zabri also was committed in an operation which was known as the Ops Jemput Tiga, which jointly operated with the Malaysian Special Branch and the Indonesian Army which had special intelligence for hunting down the North Kalimantan Communist Party (PARAKU) which was located at the Sarawak-Kalimantan border. In an operation which was joined by a comprising team which included the 69 Commandos and Kostrad (Strategy Commando Army Proposal) TNI-AD and taken in five months in which both teams had a successful attack on both strongholds of PARAKU's group, the 69 Commandos, which were led by Zabri in the battle, sparked and toppled a few members of the PARAKU on the Indonesian security team.

Besides the Ops Jemput Tiga, Zabri also led the three platoons to Hulu Perak in August 1975 to intercept the communist who was involved in the murder case of four Extra Police Constable members from the Grik Police Station where the four officers were killed. On 3 September 1975, his units succeeded in detecting the enemy camp positions near the Grik and the occurrence of a clash between the 69 Commandos leaderships by Zabri with the communists, which possessed membership of as many as 30 to 40 before the terrorists retreat. In the battle, two officers, Corporal Sheikh Ismail and Corporal Aziz Idris, were wounded during the shootout and the reinforcement to the Tek Tapong Unit from a communications message had been requested. His units then had an outcome of spot-checking on an abandoned communist camp after the battle, in which they seized six filled backpacks of food, clothes, two mortars, 18 explosives, 15 food supply boxes, medicines and a few other goods. Besides, they also re-seized the three service shotguns which were believed that were owned by the four killed Extra Police Constable members.

Death

On 3 September 1975, Zabri killed when he stepped on a booby-trap which was set up by a communist while taking two wounded members to an extraction point area after an operation of hunting down the communist who killed extra policemen who were sent to the hospital. His right leg was broken and suffered serious wounds which made him lose lots of blood. He died while giving a message to the members. He was buried in Tapah, Perak.

As a commemorate, he was promoted as an Assistant Superintendent rank and a 69 Commando training camp in Tasik Banding (now named as Zabri Camp).[1]

In June 2014, Zabri was received the Seri Pahlawan Gagah Perkasa (S.P.), the highest and most distinguished Federal award.[2]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.