Mat Taram bin Sa'al
(alias Utoh) was an Indonesian mass murderer who killed
eleven people and wounded ten others on a Kuala Lumpur-bound train
and a kongsi near Bangi, Malaysia on October 9, 1947. He was
acquitted by reason of insanity.
Utoh was a Banjarese padi planter hailing from Tunggal Island near
Sumatra. He owned a farm in Parit Six, Bagan Terap, near Teluk
Anson, but when he wanted to return to his birthplace, he sold his
house and land for 200 Straits dollar, and together with his wife
and three children took the train to Singapore, to inquire the
price for the journey. Upon finding that he could not afford the
fee for the ferry, he became depressed, and, according to his
wife, stayed awake for two days, but eventually he decided to
return to Parit Six. On October 9 he and his family went to Labis
by bus, where they boarded the mail train from Singapore to Kuala
Lumpur.
For most of the journey 30-year-old Utoh remained quiet, but at
about 6:10 p.m., when the train had just passed Bangi and was on
its way to Kajang, he entered the restaurant car, drew a pocket
knife with a four-inch blade and attacked four British Other Ranks
of the Malaya Command Signals Regiment, who were having dinner at
one of the tables. He killed sergeant Herbert Victor Marston by
stabbing him in the heart, fatally stabbed J. Cormack in the
abdomen, grievously injured Robert Ralston with a stab in the
chest, and also stabbed a Malay named Mohamed Eusoff, as well as
an Indian named Malimalai, who succumbed to his chest wound on
October 12.
When the train was brought to an emergency halt, Utoh jumped off
and disappeared into the jungle. Under a bridge near the railway
tracks he stabbed a Chinese vagrant to death, and three miles
further on entered a kongsi hut near Sungai Tangkas where he
killed Cheow Hin, as well as two elderly women, and three
children, and wounded nine other people, among them four children,
before fleeing. Police arrived at the hut about one hour later,
whereupon the wounded were brought to hospital. One of them, a
woman, succumbed to her wounds soon thereafter.
While hundreds of police officers were searching for him in the
jungle around Bangi, Utoh went on a 90 mile march to his home in
Parit Six, where he arrived 36 hours later. Upon being asked why
he had returned, since it was thought that he was on his way to
Sumatra, he told that he had no money for the trip and was on his
way back home, but he had lost his wife and children when he was
pushed out of the train after a fight that was incited by a
Chinese boy who had spilt tea on him. Utoh was then brought to
Sabak Bernam Police Station where he related his story, telling
that he couldn't remember anything that happened after he was
pushed off the train. One of the policemen, who had read the story
about the mass murder in a newspaper, suspected that he could be
the sought culprit, and so Utoh was arrested.
Utoh was detained in Teluk Anson, where he was identified by his
wife, and charged with the murder of Herbert Marston on October
13. The case was then transferred to the court in Kajang, where
hearings began on October 14. On October 29 Utoh was sent to the
mental hospital in Tanjong Rambutan to be observed there for a
month. On May 4, 1948 he was found to have been of unsound mind
while committing the murders and was sentenced to be confined at
the mental hospital in Tanjong Rambutan at the pleasure of the
Ruler-in-Council.
Victims
-
Cheow Hin, 40
-
Chong Yit San, 7
-
J. Cormack
-
Liew Kew, 2
-
Liew Ng Tai, 5
-
Malimalai
-
Herbert Victor Marston
-
Three elderly women
-
Chinese vagrant
Those wounded were: Robert Ralston, Mohamed Eusoff, Liew Ngan, 8,
Liew Fah, 14, Liew See Tai, 13, Chong Kew, 13, Ng Lan, 50, Chong
Shuen, Wong Yee and Chin Sam.
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