FACTS OF THE CASE

 Nurin Jazlin Jazimin was an 8-year-old girl from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, whose disappearance and tragic death shook the nation. On August 20, 2007, she went to a nearby night market in Wangsa Maju to buy a hairclip. Unfortunately, its became the last time she was seen and never returned home. Her disappearance sparked a desperate search by her family and authorities, but nearly a month later, on September 17, 2007, a  lifeless body was discovered in a sports bag outside a shop lot in Petaling Jaya.

 It shocked the public when DNA testing confirmed the lifeless body was Nurin Jazlin, and an autopsy revealed the details of her death were horrifying. She had been subjected to unimaginable abuse, and the nation recoiled in collective grief and anger. The innocence of a child had been stolen in a manner so brutal that it left even seasoned investigators shaken.

Nurin’s tragic murder captured the attention of Malaysians like few others. The sight of Nurin’s smiling face on missing posters, juxtaposed with the cold facts of her murder, became an enduring image of heartbreak. Vigils were held, and calls for justice echoed across the country. Yet, despite intensive police investigations and the questioning of multiple suspects, the case went cold. Each passing year without answers deepened the wound in the nation's collective psyche.


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Introduction

CONCLUSION

LESSONS LEARNED