According to The Star, the suit was filed in December 2020 by three students – Rusiah Sabdarin, Nur Natasha Allisya Hamali and Calvina Angayung – who were aged 16 when the teacher failed to turn up for classes.
The suit by the trio, now 22, is among two lawsuits against the same teacher brought by former students of the school.
The first was reportedly filed by former student Siti Nafirah Siman in October 2018. The trial is scheduled to resume on Aug 16.
The suits came about with a campaign started by Sabah-based non-governmental organisation (NGO) Tiada.Guru which has been pushing for students’ right to quality education and awareness of teacher absenteeism, especially in rural Sabah, according to The Star.
Meanwhile, the NGO is calling on the Malaysian government to protect whistleblower Nurhaizah Ejab who has allegedly received death threats, had her car tyres slashed and lost her school’s support.
Ms Nurhaizah, who is also a teacher, had testified against the absentee teacher. According to the New Straits Times (NST), Tiada.Guru revealed several disturbing incidents on Twitter involving teachers and administrators against Ms Nurhaizah.
The NGO is also reportedly calling on politicians, police, the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) and the education ministry to investigate any criminal actions shared by Ms Nurhaizah through her testimony, documents and audio-video recordings that were revealed in court.
The group alleged that Ms Nurhaizah had sent a report on the teacher’s absenteeism in 2015 but was dismissed by the then-principal.
According to NST, Ms Nurhaizah then chose to record the absentee teacher’s classes by discreetly placing a GoPro camera in his classroom to gather “more believable evidence” in 2017. This was revealed in court.
Through 80 time-stamped recordings, she reportedly revealed that the teacher consistently failed to attend class, leaving the students without proper instruction.