Four siblings offered places in SMK, SK Padang Kala


Zahari Daud (left) passing documents to Aishah on which schools the four siblings were offered.

KOTA BARU: The four children of a Malaysian couple detained by Swedish authorities have been offered places at Sekolah Kebangsaan Padang Kala and Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Padang Kala which are near their aunt's house in Kampung Tok Wali, Peringat, here.

Kelantan Education Department Deputy Director Zahari Daud said the department had made some allowances for the children to continue their education under the Democratisation of the National Education policy.

"We will make allowances for the children to resume their studies at any time and they will enjoy the same privileges as other students.

"Among others, they will receive Early Schooling Aid of RM100 and textbook aid," he said when met by reporters after handing over the School Placement Letter at the home of the aunt, Shaleena Norshal, 43, on Monday.

Zahari said the education department had also instructed the school heads and counsellors to pay attention to these children to help them adjust to their new environment.

Zahari said the school authorities would also help the children who were having language problems because they were not conversant in Bahasa Melayu.

"The aunt (Shaleena) will also help as she is an English language teacher at Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Agama Tok Bachok in Bachok," he said.

Meanwhile, the couple's eldest child, Aishah Azizul Raheem, 14, thanked the Kelantan Education Department who helped her and her siblings to continue their studies.

Aishah promised to study hard and to try to adjust to the new school.

However, she has yet to buy new school clothes and bags since she had just arrived in Malaysia.

Aishah and her siblings - Ammar, 12, Adam, 11, and Arif, 7, arrived at 7.04am last Saturday at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport before being taken to her mother's hometown in Kota Baharu.

They are now under the care of their aunt, Shaleena.

Azizul Raheem Awalludin, a Tourism Malaysia officer in Sweden and his wife, Shalwati Norshal, a teacher who is on unpaid leave, were detained on Dec 18 by Swedish authorities, for allegedly hitting the hand of their son for not praying.

Meanwhile, Aishah told Bernama in an earlier interview that playing video games was one of the ways for her and her siblings to cope with the stress while in the care of a foster family appointed by Swedish authorities before their return to Malaysia.

While waiting for their parents' case to be resolved, the teenager promised to take good care of her siblings.

"I love you mum and dad. I'll try to be a good sister to my adik-adik. I hope you'll be released and come back to Malaysia soon," she said in a sad tone. - Bernama

 

 

 


Get 20% OFF The Star Digital Access

Monthly Plan

RM 13.90/month

RM 11.12/month

Billed as RM 11.12 for the 1st month, RM 13.90 thereafter.

Best Value

Annual Plan

RM 12.33/month

RM 9.87/month

Billed as RM 118.40 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
Sweden , Four siblings , Schools

Next In Nation

(Podcast) Poll position: The frenemy paradox: politics in the age of strategic convenience
MACC warns public against fake social media postings misusing its name
Immigration Dept benches 11 officers nabbed by MACC over corruption
MACC freeze RM1.1mil, seize RM2.5mil in assets in crackdown on syndicate involving enforcement personnel
Immigration Dept detained 36,900 illegal immigrants in first six months of 2026
Youths have the power to decide their future through ballot box, says PM
Voters urged to head to polls early for 16th Johor election, says EC secretary
Claim that govt resolved UEC issue outright false, says Chong
Private college employee claims trial to sexual assault charges against two teens
Barisan elected rep can solve local issues faster, says Vigneswaran

Others Also Read