Suspect in fatal Maxwell Food Centre stabbing taken back to scene of crime

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Chinese national Wu Tao, who is accused of killing Ms Tan Kamonwan, was brought back to the site at Maxwell Food Centre by the police on Oct 15.

Chinese national Wu Tao, who is accused of killing Ms Tan Kamonwan at Maxwell Food Centre, was taken back to the site by the police on Oct 15.

ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY

Follow topic:

SINGAPORE – A man who allegedly stabbed his colleague to death was taken back to the scene of the crime on Oct 15.

Flanked by six police officers, Chinese national Wu Tao returned at around 9am to the stall he was reportedly working at in Maxwell Food Centre.

Wu, 41, allegedly killed a Thai national, Ms Tan Kamonwan, 48, on Sept 6 inside a stall at the hawker centre in Kadayanallur Street between 10.25pm and 10.55pm that day.

He was

charged with murder

on Sept 8.

In an earlier statement, the police said Wu, a Singapore permanent resident, was arrested at Bukit Merah East Neighbourhood Police Centre shortly after 1.30am on Sept 7, after telling officers there that he had stabbed a woman.

Dressed in a red shirt, black shorts and slippers, and shackled at his wrists and ankles, Wu was taken into Dao Xiang Ju – a Chinese and Thai food outlet located in the middle of the hawker centre – on Oct 15.

A police cordon had been set up across five stalls in the food centre.

Wu, who wore a face mask, spent about 10 minutes inside the stall with the officers before he was led out. Officers placed placards with arrow signs within the premises. One officer made notes in a binder.

Another took photos inside the stall, while a colleague packed items into a large brown bag.

Wu sat quietly at a table in front of the shop with a blank expression on his face, occasionally answering questions posed to him by the officers.

By 9.30am, a crowd of more than 20 people had gathered to watch the proceedings.

Officers ended the visit at 9.45am and closed the shop’s shutters. Wu was then led back to a police vehicle.

He faces the death penalty if convicted of murder.

Chinese national Wu Tao at Maxwell Food Centre in Kadayanallur Street on Oct 15.

ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY

Mr Md Fauzi, 40, who owns the stall opposite Dao Xiang Ju, said Wu and the alleged victim had started working together when the shop first opened about a year ago.

“They were very quiet and did not communicate much with the other hawkers. Maybe it was the language barrier, because they didn’t seem like locals,” said Mr Fauzi.

He told The Straits Times the pair later split up, with Ms Tan taking over another space two units down from Wu’s stall. He pointed out a shuttered store selling Thai food.

Mr Fauzi said: “I think it was only opened for a couple of months before the incident happened.”

Checks of the Singapore business registry show Ms Tan was the sole business owner of a Thai food store, incorporated in August, at Maxwell Food Centre.

Officers ended the visit at 9.45am and closed the shop’s shutters. Wu was then led back to a police vehicle. He faces the death penalty if convicted of murder.

ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY

So far, there have been

six cases of murder or alleged murder in Singapore in 2024

, with the most recent case reported on Sept 22 in the Jalan Besar area.

Muhammad Sajid Saleem, 22,

allegedly murdered

Mr Dhinessh Vasie, 25, during a brawl near Kim San Leng Eating House in Verdun Road.

Three other men and two women were charged with rioting with a deadly weapon while being members of an unlawful assembly, in connection with the case.

See more on