ON HUMAN RIGHTS, JUSTICE AND PEACE ISSUES, LABOUR RIGHTS, MIGRANT RIGHTS, FOR THE ABOLITION OF THE DEATH PENALTY, TOWARDS AN END OF TORTURE, POLICE ABUSES, DISCRIMINATION...
1.Mohd Dusuki may be the Attorney General/Public Prosecutor - but his independence, credibility and trustiworthiness is an issue? Immediately after he became AG/PP, he withdrew the prosecution appeal against Zahid Hamidi's acquittal when many were waiting to see whether the Court of Appeal would AFFIRM that 'contentious' High Court decision that led to Zahid's acquittal. Did the High Judge make an error on judgment or NOT - this was important BUT Dusuki withdraw that appeal. [In the Zahid Hamidi DNAA case, Dusuki replaced the lead prosecution officer that changed 'mysteriously', and then Zahid Hamidi was the AG/PP that made, what I considered an unnecessary announcement of NFA on another Zahid Hamidi case - this was ODD because Zahid now is facing NO CHARGES - but that announcement now used by Zahid to get an ACQUITTAL before another Judge..- Zahid
and ACQUITTAL - Why b4 new Judge - not previous trial judge Collin
sequerah? Whenever PP/AG says 'NFA' - can everyone, even those not
facing any charges, apply for Acquittal?
2.Remember who becomes the AG/PP, or when a AG/PP is removed is up to the Prime Minister now. Hopefully, if and when the reforms to separate the PP and AG comes, one of the things that will change will also be who picks the AG and/or PP > best it is no more the Prime Minister > best it be some independent body, and Parliament approval be required of any appointee. Most likely, the Treasury Secretary General is also picked by the Finance Minister Anwar Ibrahim, and maybe also the Public Service Director General too. And, who are the investigating - AZAM BAKI, who also is picked by the Prime Minister. In short, this NO INDEPENDENT Special Committee - they are all linked to the Prime Minister. [Remember also earlier Bloomberg Report contained allegations that PM ANWAR directed to stop investigation on his former aide, and asked MACC to investigate Mahathir, Daim, etc...]
3.Why is there even a SPECIAL INVESTIGATION COMMITTEE - we already have a RELEVANT DISCIPLINARY Board (or Disciplinary Authority} - and the holding of shares of value more than RM100,000 at present is only a Public Officer Employment Misconduct (not yet a CRIME) - thus, the one who should be investigating is the already existing DISCIPLINARY AUTHORITY.
"The committee will carry out a thorough investigation to ensure that due process is observed and justice is served," he added. "The findings and recommendations of the investigation will be
presented to the Prime Minister and the Disciplinary Authority for
further consideration in accordance with the applicable laws."
4. The investigation of shareholder ownership is SIMPLE - the Registrar of Company would be able to confirm whether Azam Baki had at any time committed the misconduct - by having shares more than RM100,000. In fact, Azam himself is NOT CLEARLY denying the fact - he said that he has always openly declared his shares - 'Azam told the New Straits Times that he had nothing to hide regarding
the RM800,000 worth of shares, noting that the transaction had been
properly declared."I made the declaration on this, including sources of my income
through the Human Resource Management Information System (HRMIS) to the
Public Service Department. All transparent," he said.' - So, is this a case, where the public officer committed a MISCONDUCT and the Disciplinary Authority failed to act on the Misconduct as required, or a case where the Minister(or PM) who is the BOSS of Azam gave Azam an 'exemption' or decided not to take Disciplinary action against Azam. In some reports, Azam says now no more - but that does not change the FACT that a misconduct is committed at any time a public officer's shareholding exceeds RM100,000????
5.VERY ODD - Why investigate only Azam's shareholding - when BLOOMBERG reports have raised so much more serious allegations about MACC, its officers, and even our Prime Minister...Is this PROBE into Azam Baki's Shareholding have the intention of DISTRACTING THE PUBLIC - and focusing on a minor misconduct issue of shares held by a Public Officers.
6. WE recall a similar situation in that FIFA-FAM Scandal, where the issue in Malaysia was whether the granting of citizenship to foreigners to play football for Malaysia was in accordance to Constitution and law(where the requirement are very strict, and requires foreigners to relinquish other citizenships - as Malaysia does not recognize DUAL Citizenship), and the other issue was whether Malaysian government generated FALSE DOCUMENTS to prove that some parent/grandparent of said footballers were born in Malaysia - being a requirement of FIFA - it was a MAJOR ISSUE - and despite FIFA and the FIFA's appeal Board finding about FORGED DOCUMENTS, etc nothing is happening. in that case a Special Commitee was set up (but not by the Government or any Ministry BUT by FAM(the possible criminal)) - and even after that Committee came out with its findings...no investigation or criminal prosecution on those responsible for GENERATING and/or using FORGED DOCUMENTS - No investigation on the CITIZENSHIP too...
7.SUHAKAM came out with a finding of ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCE where the perpetrators were police - and again no investigation or prosecution of the police involved. The government response was to set up a TASK FORCE to investigate SUHAKAM's findings - and then the government kept the Government's Task Force findings SECRET - and part of it was finally revealed when the Court ordered it to be...and the findings did not really say that SUHAKAM's findings was false - but then, to date still no investigation or prosecutions..
8. THUS, whenever the government sets up TASK FORCE, Special Committees, and even some cases a Royal Commission of Inquiry(like the 2019 Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) report on the discovery of human
trafficking death camps and graves at Wang Kelian, Perlis State,
Malaysia in 2015 where the public only got access to the report years later in 2022), I wonder whether it is of any USE if it is NOT INDEPENFDENT, and then the findings are kept 'SECRET" - Here, that Special Committee will report to ANWAR IBRAHIM and the Disciplinary Authority - will the Malaysian Public ever see it....SO, WHAT USE, unless the process is TRANSPARENT and the findings are IMMEDIATELY made public, and also disclosed to Parliament????
On August 10, 2022, Fortify Rights discovered the online publication of
the long-awaited 2019 Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) report on the
discovery of human trafficking death camps and graves at Wang Kelian,
Perlis State, Malaysia in 2015. Fortify Rights previously advocated for
the Malaysian government to publish the RCI report following the
conclusion of the commission’s investigation. Although the chair of the
RCI claimed the report was “a state secret,” the report quietly appeared
on the Ministry of Home Affairs website. - Fortify Rights, 10/8/2022)
KOTA
BARU: The special committee tasked with investigating shareholding
allegations against Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) chief
commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki has started its probe.
Attorney-General Tan Sri Mohd Dusuki Mokhtar, who is heading the
committee, told the New Straits Times investigation has started by
compiling relevant information and background details related to the
case.
"It is in its initial stage. As a first step, we are gathering information related to this case," he said.
The cabinet had agreed to establish a special committee, headed by Dusuki, to investigate allegations against Azam.
The findings and recommendations of the investigation will be
presented to the prime minister and the cabinet for further
consideration in accordance with the applicable laws."
Meanwhile the group of prominent retired civil servants called for a speedy investigation into the affairs surrounding Azam.
The G25 group said persistent questions involving shareholdings and
compliance with civil service regulations regarding Azam have placed the
country's top anti-graft institution under intense public scrutiny.
"The MACC chief commissioner occupies a uniquely sensitive role. He
must not only comply with the law but must be seen to uphold the highest
standards beyond reproach," it said in a statement.
Previously, a Bloomberg report alleged that a number of MACC officers
were linked to a network of businesspersons accused of colluding and
using intimidation tactics against company executives.
The claims surfaced amid recent scrutiny over Azam's past
shareholdings in companies reportedly valued at RM800,000 and more than
RM1 million.
Azam, in response, said he is ready to be investigated by any
committee set up by the government to examine matters relating to his
shareholding.
G25 added that public confidence would be better served if the task
force were chaired by a retired senior judge or another respected
independent figure with no direct reporting line within the current
administrative structure.
"In matters of integrity at the highest levels, independence must be
beyond question. Even the perception of internal oversight may undermine
trust in the process and its findings," it added.
G25 also urged the government to place Azam on garden leave while investigations are underway.
"It is only prudent to do so to demonstrate that the government is
taking the allegations seriously and that no one is above the rule of
law," the statement read.
Meanwhile, Subang member of parliament Wong Chen thanked Prime
Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim for establishing a special committee
to investigate Azam, but proposed that the inquiry be broadened.
"The scope of the probe (should) be expanded to include the issue of a
'corporate mafia', which is a much bigger issue compared to the issue
of shares."
Wong also called for the committee's composition to be enlarged to
five members, recommending the inclusion of "a respected retired judge",
specifically proposing former chief justice Tengku Tun Maimun Tuan Mat,
as well as "a respected person from civil society" which should be
proposed by civil society organisations.
He said such measures would strengthen public confidence in the
investigation and ensure that the process is seen as credible and
independent. - NST, 14/2/2026
AG to lead special committee probing Azam Baki's shareholding
Attorney-General Tan Sri Mohd Dusuki Mokhtar.- FILE PIC
KUALA
LUMPUR: Attorney-General Tan Sri Mohd Dusuki Mokhtar will head the
special committee tasked with investigating shareholding allegations
against Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) chief commissioner
Tan Sri Azam Baki.
In a statement, Chief Secretary Tan Sri Shamsul Azri Abu Bakar said
the committee will also include Treasury secretary-general Datuk Johan
Mahmood Merican and Public Services director-general Tan Sri Wan Ahmad
Dahlan Abdul Aziz.
"The committee will carry out a thorough investigation to ensure that due process is observed and justice is served," he added.
"The findings and recommendations of the investigation will be
presented to the Prime Minister and the Disciplinary Authority for
further consideration in accordance with the applicable laws."
Azam had earlier said that he was fully open to scrutiny and had
nothing to hide, stressing that all his financial and asset declarations
were made in accordance with prevailing public service regulations and
through prescribed official channels.
"I am fully open to being investigated by any independent committee
established by the government to specifically examine matters relating
to my shareholding.
"I have nothing to hide. All financial and asset declarations have
been made in accordance with the prevailing public service regulations
and through the prescribed official channels, as required of every
public officer," he said in a statement today.
Yesterday, the cabinet agreed to establish a special committee,
headed by Attorney-General Tan Sri Mohd Dusuki Mokhtar, to investigate
allegations against Azam.
Azam told the New Straits Times that he had nothing to hide regarding
the RM800,000 worth of shares, noting that the transaction had been
properly declared.
"I made the declaration on this, including sources of my income
through the Human Resource Management Information System (HRMIS) to the
Public Service Department. All transparent," he said.- NST. 13/2/2026
Of great concern is NOT whether AZAM BAKI had more that RM100,000 worth of shares - that at present is just an EMPLOYMENT MISCONDUCT - not a CRIME.
The great concern is whether MACC has ABUSED ITS POWERS - according to a recent Bloomberg REPORT. Is the MACC(or just some officers in MACC) using MACC powers of arrest, investigation, detention, prosecution, freezing accounts ...to help others destroy 'competitor companies', to force owners to sell shares to someone, to help people 'control' some businesses... This is what was revealed in a recent Bloomberg Report... NOW, this needs to be INVESTIGATED but who is going to investigate - certainly it cannot be the MACC, since it is implicated in the CRIME or wrongdoing ...as possible ACCOMPLICES to the crime...[Sadly, the MACC and/or the MCMC at present is NOT under the jurisdiction of EAIC (Enforcement Agency Integrity Commission (EAIC)] - so they cannot investigate complaints of abuse of power of MACC or any of its Commissioners or officers... maybe, they should be placed under EAIC. ROYAL COMMISSION OF INQUIRY..
Serious allegations have been raised, and looking at the BLOOMBERG report - suggest that they did some serious investigative journalism here.
the attempted takeover of a $12 million company sounds like no big deal. But when it’s carried out by a man brandishing a gun, and allegedly backed by the government agency that’s supposed to prevent graft, it shows that corruption persists in Malaysia — often upending people’s lives....The documents and interviews, including first-hand accounts from seven
eyewitnesses, all of whom requested anonymity for fear of reprisals,
contain allegations that the businessmen have a surprising partner: the
Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, known as the MACC. Officials at
the agency are allegedly being used to support the interests of private
citizens by threatening, arresting and detaining executives, sometimes
recommending charges against them... In two
cases, anti-corruption officials took instructions from the businessmen
or people associated with them while interviewing executives, according
to three of the people. Sometimes the officials proposed that the
executives sell their shares to the businessmen at knockdown prices in
return for investigations being stopped...
The reborn
commission has many of the trappings of good governance, including
oversight by five bodies. But critics say it lacks autonomy because its
chief commissioner is chosen on the advice of the prime minister. The
MACC has mostly pursued low-level officials, its annual reports show.
Many are road transport, immigration and customs officers accused of
taking petty bribes. When the agency does go after bigger targets,
they’re usually in the political opposition or out of power...One exception was the embezzlement of at least $4.5 billion from 1MDB.
The MACC started investigating a sitting prime minister, Najib Razak, ....
Remember Bloomberg also in the past raised allegations of possible ABUSE OF POWER by PM Anwar Ibrahim...and were the allegations even investigated? Was Anwar even called in to give a statement to the investigators... The response, was to again take action against Bloomberg - but later, Parliament was informed that this will be a NFA(No further action) case. Was it because investigations showed that Bloomberg told the TRUTH(a Defence for the crime of criminal defamation). Anwar also never sued Bloomberg for defamation...WHY?
On Thursday, Bloomberg cited three informed sources
as saying that Anwar had instructed Malaysian Anti-Corruption
Commission (MACC) chief, Azam Baki, not to investigate his former
political secretary Farhash Wafa Salvador over the controversial
purchase of shares in a company linked to the development of a new
billion-ringgit immigration system.
The report also claimed that Azam had told MACC officials that the
investigations into former leader Dr Mahathir Mohamad, his three sons
and former finance minister Daim Zainuddin were launched on Anwar's
instructions. - Malaysia Now, 29/9/2024
MACC - there has been other scandals linked to it to
Teoh Beng Hock, an aide to a state assemblyman, was found dead
on a fifth-floor landing of an MACC building in 2009 after falling from
a window on the 14th floor, where he was being questioned.
In 2011, a customs official being questioned in an investigation was found dead on
a badminton court on the first floor of an MACC building in Kuala
Lumpur. He had fallen from a window overlooking the court, according to a
forensic pathology report.
And last year, a woman named Pamela Ling was kidnapped on
her way to MACC headquarters...
Then, we have AZAM BAKI - this is not the first time the issue of him having shares more than RM100,000 was raised...In that case, Azam sued the 'whistle-blower' - I consider it a SLAPP action. Again, he is threatening to sue Bloomberg - another SLAPP action...
Bloomberg reported this week that he held 17.7 million shares in money lender Velocity Capital Partner Bhd.
as of last year, according to a filing to the Companies Commission of
Malaysia, the state agency responsible for corporate records. The stake
would currently be worth almost 800,000 ringgit, well above the limit
allowed for public officials under Malaysian regulations.
WHY the limit was set preventing public officers from holding too much shares in any company? WELL, the reason is simple - it is to prevent 'conflict of interest', more so, when you are supposed to ENFORCE the law...as this requires you to enforce the law against anyone or any company that breaks the LAW - and the fact you own shares or interest in certain companies may lead to a decision not to take any action against such persons/company - for worry that it will affect that companies' business or profits, and it will affect your investment/interest in said companies > I believe no PUBLIC officer and/or members of the Cabinet too should be holding ANY SHARES or interest in any company(listed or otherwise) because this may compromise your national duties...
2nd reason - Public Officers and/or even Cabinet Members sometimes are privy to 'confidential information' - I know that company is going to get a BIG government contract, so I will buy shares and it will surely rise. It happens also with LAND - sometime back, government was considering moving the capital to Janda Baik - and so many rushed to buy that land >> but government must have changed its mind and moved to Putrajaya - were there public officers, Ministers who had that prior knowledge buy or get their family to buy land in Putrajaya? I wonder.
Of course, it may be OK to invest in unit trusts,etc - which is different from shares/equity in particular companies. I think this owning of shares in companies SHOULD be made a CRIME - and not just a Employment Misconduct, and when this misconduct is committed - there must be no EXEMPTION provided by your superiors. Who is Azam Baki's boss - Home Minister Saifuddin or is it PM Anwar Ibrahim - did they give Azam permission to buy more that RM100,000 worth of shares? WAS SPECIAL EXEMPTIONS OR PERMISSION GIVEN TO AZAM?
Anyway, now many are distracted by the shares issue > what about the OTHER much more serious issue. Investigation should also be done on the earlier allegations implicating PM Anwar Ibrahim....
As Prime Minister - if he wants to report some corruption - then make a police or MACC report - to ask or direct MACC because you are Prime Minister to investigate this or not investigate that is an abuse of power, in my opinion...
WELL, there is also that Sabah Scandal - where the Whistle-blower highlighted the wrongd0ing/crimes of about 10 or more politicians - why only about 2 charged now? What about the REST - is this a case preferential NON-INVESTIGATION, preferential NON-PROSECUTION - was this linked with potential 'withdrawal of support from PM Anwar and the MADANI government? Was it a 'don't charge us and you get our LOYAL support' kind of deal?
PUBLIC PERCEPTION is that this may be happening a lot in Malaysia, more so under PM Anwar Ibrahim and his PH [PKR,DAP,Amanah] led government - the PARDON for Najib, the Withdrawal of appeal to the Court of Appeal against Zahid Hamidi's acquittal, the sudden 'discontinuation of the criminal trial against Zahid Hamidi after prosecution already proved PRIMA FACIE case' that forced the court to give a DNAA > now for no good reason our AG/PP says NFA - and Zahid goes to court b4 a different judge for an ACQUITTAL???
Anwar and PH may believe it is OK to compromise principles and values (including to protect some corrupt from being investigated, charged or even a COMPLETE FAIR TRIAL until the end - to prevent conviction and sentence) - ALL for the sake of GETTING POWER TO RULE MALAYSIA > I cannot accept such LOGIC or justifications...[MORE IMPORTANT THAN GETTING POWER IS STICKING AND ACTING ACCORDING TO PRINCIPLES AND VALUES]
WORSE, after getting the POWER - the PH and/or the MADANI government failed to even fulfill its promises - all the BAD laws are still there, and worse the government is using them. REFORMASI was what the people wanted - but PH has disappointed the people. [One wonder whether all that Anwar wanted was just to be Prime Minister ....full stop? Was that the 'reformasi' that Anwar wanted?]
ANYWAY, do not be DISTRACTED by Azam's share issue, there is that bigger issue NOW about Azam, MACC, other government bodies and even the Malaysian Government, and also PM Anwar Ibrahim > has MACC been ABUSING ITS POWERS, has our PM been abusing MACC because he has the ultimate power to decide who be Chief and when he can be removed?
CAREFUL with Anwar and this MADANI GOVERNMENT - they have the skill to 'distract' and even 'cover-up' issues >> see the FIFA-FOOTBALL issue, ...and many others ... MANY issues have not been resolved - just 'forgotten' by government???
Should ANWAR IBRAHIM resign as Prime Minister NOW - after all, he is ultimately responsible for all wrongdoings of government...He picked AZAM BAKI...He picked his political secretary - now facing corruption charges..
A commission set up to fight graft is allegedly helping a group of businessmen seize control of companies. Questions about its conduct go all the way to the top.
In the country of 1MDB, where billions of dollars were looted from a state fund and spent on a luxury yacht and Hollywood movies, the attempted takeover of a $12 million company sounds like no big deal. But when it’s carried out by a man brandishing a gun, and allegedly backed by the government agency that’s supposed to prevent graft, it shows that corruption persists in Malaysia — often upending people’s lives.
For Tai Boon Wee, who founded the small rubber products maker, things took a dark turn on a June afternoon in 2023. He had just been questioned by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, which was investigating accounting issues at his company, when he got an unexpected message. Andy Lim, a new shareholder, wanted to meet later that day at the Social, a restaurant in a Kuala Lumpur suburb that shows soccer matches on big TVs and serves fried noodles and chicken wings. Sitting at a table in a section in the back, Lim made his demand: He wanted two board seats at Tai’s GIIB Holdings Bhd.
As he talked, Lim raised his arms above his head and leaned back, revealing the pistol tucked in his trousers, CCTV footage seen by Bloomberg News shows. He said Tai was lucky he hadn’t already shot him dead, according to a report Tai filed to the police.
Lim, who has described the incident as an introductory meeting, is one of a number of businessmen, most of them ethnic Chinese, who have attempted to oust founders of Malaysian companies and sometimes seize control, according to court filings, police records, confidential documents and interviews with more than 20 people who have seen or learned about aspects of their operations. Their tactics, including alleged intimidation of executives, have earned the men the nickname “the corporate mafia,” a characterization many of them strongly deny. (Lim didn’t respond to requests for comment. Tai declined to comment.)
The documents and interviews, including first-hand accounts from seven eyewitnesses, all of whom requested anonymity for fear of reprisals, contain allegations that the businessmen have a surprising partner: the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, known as the MACC. Officials at the agency are allegedly being used to support the interests of private citizens by threatening, arresting and detaining executives, sometimes recommending charges against them.
A loosely knit group of about half a dozen men work from the same playbook. They operate independently but sometimes join forces. One or more of them appear on the scene, often buying a stake in the target company. Then, the MACC starts an investigation of the founders. Their bank accounts are frozen. Often, the executives are suspended from management positions and removed from the board. In some cases, they just quit and sell their shares.
24:09
Watch: Corruption as Cancer
MACC
officials worked with the businessmen with little fear of consequences,
according to the eyewitnesses, including two agency employees. They
alleged that some of the men, or their associates, were present inside
MACC headquarters when executives were taken in for questioning. In two
cases, anti-corruption officials took instructions from the businessmen
or people associated with them while interviewing executives, according
to three of the people. Sometimes the officials proposed that the
executives sell their shares to the businessmen at knockdown prices in
return for investigations being stopped. In one case, the associates met
executives in an interrogation room to discuss a settlement.
“MACC
rejects any suggestion that its investigations are influenced by
private interests,” a spokesman for the agency said in an email. “All
investigations are conducted in accordance with the law, guided by
evidence, and subject to prosecutorial discretion and judicial
oversight.” The spokesman, who said he was responding on behalf of the
agency and its officers, didn’t respond to a list of questions about
specific allegations raised in this story. Azam Baki, the MACC’s chief commissioner, didn’t respond to requests for an interview.
Malaysia, a country of about 34 million people, is known for its Petronas Twin Towers, a vibrant mix of cultures and cuisines and one of the biggest corruption scandals in history, the plundering of state investment fund 1Malaysia Development Bhd.,
known as 1MDB. The case shocked people around the world when it was
exposed in 2015, brought down a government that had ruled for six
decades and ultimately ushered into power a prime minister, Anwar Ibrahim, who said he would wage war against Malaysia’s ubiquitous graft.
Three years later, Anwar has come under fire
from civil-society and opposition groups for allegedly exonerating his
friends and using the anti-corruption agency against his political foes.
Bloomberg’s reporting shows the allegations of MACC impropriety go
beyond politics. Some details of the agency’s alleged ties with the
businessmen have appeared in Malay-language blogs. But this is the first
in-depth account of how that relationship played out in recent cases.
It depicts a stock market tainted by complaints of criminal behavior and
an agency that, instead of probing for wrongdoing, has allegedly taken
part in it. The companies are typically penny stocks, and the amounts of
money aren’t huge. But the consequences are significant.
“It’s really problematic, because then there is no recourse,” said Meredith Weiss,
a professor of political science at the University at Albany, State
University of New York, whose work focuses on Malaysia. “The agency that
you would turn to, if that becomes known to be itself so much part of
the problem, then that encourages brain drain. It certainly encourages
investor flight.”
Also problematic: Questions about the agency’s conduct go all the way to the top.
The Anti-Corruption Agency
Corruption
has been around for millennia. Anti-corruption agencies are a more
recent development. In Asia, they emerged after World War II as some
countries came to see bribery, cronyism and abuse of power as hindrances
to economic growth. Some of the agencies are independent forces with
the power to investigate anyone, including government ministers and even
the police.
When
they function well, they can transform societies. Singapore’s Corrupt
Practices Investigation Bureau helped turn a shady port city into what
Transparency International ranks as one of the least corrupt nations in
the world. Hong Kong’s Independent Commission Against Corruption cracked
down on widespread graft in the then-British colony’s police force. But
when they don’t work, their unchecked powers can make them prone to the
very corruption they’re supposed to fight.
Malaysia set up
its Anti-Corruption Agency in 1967, a decade after it won independence
from Britain. It got its current name in a 2009 overhaul. The reborn
commission has many of the trappings of good governance, including
oversight by five bodies. But critics say it lacks autonomy because its
chief commissioner is chosen on the advice of the prime minister. The
MACC has mostly pursued low-level officials, its annual reports show.
Many are road transport, immigration and customs officers accused of
taking petty bribes. When the agency does go after bigger targets,
they’re usually in the political opposition or out of power.
Former
Prime Minister Najib Razak outside a courthouse in Kuala Lumpur in
October 2018 after being charged in connection with the 1MDB scandal.Photographer: Joshua Paul/Bloomberg
One exception was the embezzlement of at least $4.5 billion from 1MDB. The MACC started investigating a sitting prime minister, Najib Razak,
as allegations of his involvement mounted. But in August 2015 the
agency announced that the $681 million that ended up in Najib’s personal
bank account was a donation, which the attorney general later said came
from the Saudi royal family. No charges were filed against Najib until
he lost power in 2018. (He was convicted and sent to prison. In
December, he was sentenced to an additional 15 years and fined about $2.8 billion on other 1MDB-related charges. He has denied doing anything wrong.)
The agency has made headlines for other reasons. Teoh Beng Hock, an aide to a state assemblyman, was found dead
on a fifth-floor landing of an MACC building in 2009 after falling from
a window on the 14th floor, where he was being questioned. An appeals
court, overturning a finding by the coroner, said that Teoh’s death was
caused by unknown people including MACC officers. Nobody was charged,
but his family received damages as part of the settlement of a civil
suit in 2015. The MACC apologized last year and offered to give money to
support his child. His family refused.
Illustration: Chris W. Kim
In 2011, a customs official being questioned in an investigation was found dead on
a badminton court on the first floor of an MACC building in Kuala
Lumpur. He had fallen from a window overlooking the court, according to a
forensic pathology report. A coroner’s inquest ruled the death an
accident. His family was awarded damages after a civil suit found it was
the result of MACC negligence.
And last year, a woman named Pamela Ling was kidnapped on
her way to MACC headquarters by people wearing what appeared to be
police gear two days after she filed a lawsuit accusing the agency of
colluding with her husband to pressure her into settling a messy
divorce. The MACC has denied it was involved in her disappearance.
“There is a clear reputational problem and a trust deficit,” said Aira Azhari,
chief executive officer of the Institute for Democracy and Economic
Affairs, a Kuala Lumpur research organization that focuses on public
policy issues. “There are all these issues that have happened that have
been unresolved.”
The
MACC is headquartered in Putrajaya, the seat of government, where
witnesses are now interviewed on the ground floor — a move the agency
has said was in response to Teoh’s death. The building features three
curved glass towers on stilt-like columns. It was inaugurated in 2017 by
Najib, who said it was a manifestation of Malaysia’s fight against
corruption. Today, the agency employs more than 3,000 people, about
2,400 of them enforcement officers.
The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission headquarters in Putrajaya.Photographer: Ian Teh/Bloomberg
A
penthouse office on the 22nd floor of the tallest tower is occupied by
Azam, the chief commissioner. A graduate in electrical engineering, he
joined the MACC’s predecessor institution in 1984, when many young
Malays saw the civil service as their best shot at upward mobility. Azam
steadily climbed the ranks, making his name in the 2000s pioneering
undercover operations. He became director of the intelligence division
in 2013 and deputy chief commissioner in 2016. People who know him say
he’s politically savvy, a smooth talker with a penchant for doing deals.
Azam
got the top job in 2020. He has stayed in the role, serving under three
prime ministers, despite protests calling for his arrest in 2022 after
reports alleged he had shareholdings that breached stock-ownership rules
for public officials. Anwar extended his term in 2023, when Azam
reached the mandatory retirement age of 60, and then twice more. His
current term is set to expire in May.
Azam
Baki, chief commissioner of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission,
left, and Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim at an MACC dinner in February
2025.Photographer: Zulfadhli Zulkifli/Bernama
Under Azam, the MACC has started investigations
of at least four of Anwar’s adversaries, including three former prime
ministers. Anwar’s office, which didn’t respond to requests for comment
for this story, and the MACC have denied that Anwar issued directives or
interfered in MACC investigations.
Azam “loves being in the MACC — I think that’s all that he knows,” Latheefa Koya,
Azam’s predecessor as chief commissioner, said in an interview. But
“the person you give responsibility or power cannot hold on or love the
position too much. That’s the beginning of a problem.”
Latheefa Koya, former head of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, in Petaling Jaya, Malaysia, in October 2025.Photographer: Ian Teh/Bloomberg
The ‘Corporate Mafia’
The
term “corporate mafia” first appeared in a Malay-language blog, the
Corporate Secret, in early 2023. The blog described a network of
businessmen, including investor Victor Chin, that targeted companies for
takeover. It said the men worked with MACC officials who would carry
out investigations when asked. “The modus operandi is the same,” the
anonymous blogger or bloggers wrote. It is “to make a report to the
Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission and other authorities before taking
over the companies.”
The
Royal Malaysia Police issued a statement four days later that referred
to the blog post’s headline, which included the phrase “corporate
mafia.” Malaysian television stations picked it up, drawing national
attention to Chin and his associates.
“I
am not the leader of any group, nor do I control or coordinate the
individuals referred to, all of whom are independent businessmen and
corporate leaders in their own right,” Chin said in an email to
Bloomberg. “They do not work for me, and I do not direct their actions.”
He also denied any connection to the MACC, other than making complaints
through formal channels, which any person can do.
The
characterization by the Corporate Secret blog, which says it has been
blocked repeatedly by authorities in Malaysia, was misleading. The
businessmen aren’t mafia in the traditional sense. Those who’ve seen
them in action say there’s no rigid hierarchy as in Italian or American
crime groups, no code of conduct, no godfather at the top issuing orders
to lieutenants. Each person operates independently, according to four
people familiar with their operations, and sometimes they work together
when it suits their interests.
While
Chin denies being the leader, he is the common link with the others.
Now 57, he made his money at Plaza Low Yat, a Kuala Lumpur electronics
mall where he controlled several businesses, according to a person who
knows him and requested anonymity for fear of reprisals. He later
shifted focus to the stock market, the person and several others
familiar with Chin’s career said.
Chin
has a home in a leafy gated community of mock Tudor mansions near a
golf course outside Kuala Lumpur, according to three people who have
been to the house in recent years. On one floor was a wine cellar,
coffee bar and kitchen area with full-time chefs serving Chinese and
Indian food. On another floor was a room with about 15 traders. There
was also an area where Chin conducts business, often holding several
meetings at the same time. The cars parked under porches outside
included a Ferrari and a bulletproof Toyota SUV.
A 2021 Malaysian tax agency letter seen by Bloomberg linked Chin, whose Chinese name is Chin Boon Long, to money laundering. The letter, addressed to Chin, said an audit of him and a company called MMAG Holdings Bhd.
found he created special purpose vehicles to launder money and invest
it in Malaysian shares. The entities were registered under the name of a
former Chin employee, and more than 500 million ringgit ($127 million)
linked to organized crime and other “dubious financial sources” was
deposited into their bank accounts, the letter said, mentioning it
detected “at least four money laundering schemes.”
An
official at the Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia who asked not to be
identified discussing confidential matters confirmed the letter’s
authenticity. An agreement was reached to pay back taxes, the official
said, and the agency, which had frozen the money, released most of it to
Chin. No charges were filed against him.
Chin
said in his email that the allegations about creating special purpose
vehicles to launder money are “untrue and incorrect.” He said he had
“addressed and explained each of the alleged points or matters raised in
that letter to the IRB, and the explanations provided were accepted by
the authorities.” The agency declined to comment, saying it is bound by
secrecy provisions.
Unusual
aspects of Chin’s business practices surfaced in a trial of five police
officers accused of stealing 6.5 million ringgit from his office in a
luxury condominium in Kuala Lumpur. A 2024 judgment in the case cited
Chin’s testimony that he received the money — packed in five letter-size
boxes — from a Chinese investor to deploy in the stock market. Chin,
who was the complainant in the case and not accused of wrongdoing, told
the court he had no written agreement with the Chinese investor, and a
police official testified that Chin had declined to fully identify the
investor. Testimony from another police official that Chin was a stock
manipulator was dismissed as irrelevant by the judge. Some of the money
was returned to him. The officers were acquitted after the prosecution
failed to secure the attendance of a witness.
Chin
and other businessmen in the group sometimes engaged the services or
worked with a former prosecutor and Securities Commission officer named
Chong Loong Men. A LinkedIn
profile describes him as providing legal counsel in securities and
commercial disputes, as well as for “capital market manipulation,
insider trading, corruption and breach of trust.” He attended meetings
with executives and has allegedly communicated demands, according to
accounts in court documents and police reports.
Chong
was present when Tai met Andy Lim at the Social, according to Tai’s
police report. A lawyer for Chong said allegations that he’s part of a
group of businessmen enlisting the MACC to help take over companies are
“entirely false.” The lawyer said Chong couldn’t comment about the
meeting with Tai because it’s the subject of legal proceedings.
The Social, a restaurant and bar in an upscale shopping mall in Kuala Lumpur, where Tai Boon Wee met with Andy Lim in June 2023.Photographer: Ian Teh/Bloomberg
Francis
Leong is another one of the businessmen. He worked at an electronics
retailer where Chin was managing director and rose to become group chief
operating officer, according to an online biography. Leong, whose
Chinese name is Leong Seng Wui, was a shareholder or director of at
least three companies that were allegedly targeted. In a statement to
Bloomberg, Leong said he’s not aware of the existence of a so-called
corporate mafia and allegations of his involvement are “wholly false.”
And then there’s Andy Lim, who allegedly flashed the gun at the Social.
Close Friends
An
internal MACC memo seen by Bloomberg describes Lim, whose Chinese name
is Lim Kok Han, as a close friend of the agency’s chief commissioner, as
well as other current and former senior agency officials. The memo was
written around 2020 by officials in the MACC intelligence division,
according to a person who shared the document and asked not to be
identified to avoid retaliation. That person and an MACC official say
Lim’s history with the agency dates to at least 2007, when he was
running a driving school and complained about corruption in Malaysia’s
Road Transport Department.
Lim
became a regular visitor to the MACC, offering to help officials and
taking them to karaoke bars, the person who shared the internal MACC
memo and the agency official said. He got to know some of Azam’s
predecessors first, according to the people, who asked to remain
anonymous discussing agency matters.
It’s
unclear when Lim became friends with Azam, but by 2015 the two were
investing in the same companies. That came to light in reports by
Malaysian journalist Lalitha Kunaratnam published on the Independent
News Service website in 2021. Her reporting, based on public securities
filings, showed that in 2015 Azam owned shares worth more than 700,000
ringgit in a listed company that was then a bus operator known as Gets
Global Bhd. Lim also had a stake in the company. In Malaysia, public
officials are prohibited from holding shares in a company that are worth
more than 100,000 ringgit.
The
reports caused an outcry, but the bodies overseeing the MACC took no
public action. An opposition lawmaker’s request for a discussion in
parliament was rejected.
At
a January 2022 press conference, Azam said one of his brothers had used
his trading account to buy shares. The Securities Commission undertook
an inquiry that ultimately cleared Azam, saying it found no evidence
anyone else had used his account. A bigger issue remained: If Azam’s
brother hadn’t used the account, Azam’s explanation was untrue — and he
still hadn’t accounted for the stock holdings.
Asked
recently about this, a spokesperson for the Securities Commission
repeated that Azam had controlled the account, meaning he didn’t
violate a law on the use of securities accounts by people other than the
registered holder. The spokesperson didn’t comment further.
Azam sued Lalitha for defamation. The case was settled
before trial, with neither side admitting fault. No terms were
disclosed. Lalitha declined to comment. The MACC spokesman didn’t
respond to questions about Azam’s relationship with Lim or his stock
holdings. Nor did Lim and attorneys who have represented him.
Protesters
with placards displaying Azam Baki’s face during a demonstration in
January 2022 calling for him to step down over a share-ownership
scandal.Photographer: Fazry Ismail/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
In
January 2022, protesters marched in Kuala Lumpur, calling for Azam to
resign. Also that month, Anwar, then leader of the opposition, posed for
photographs with members of the youth wing of his political party
outside parliament, surrounded by placards of dollar bills inscribed
with the words “The Republic of Azam.” Anwar tweeted that he would
report the matter to the prime minister. But after taking power that
year, he kept Azam in place.
“Lalitha actually opened a Pandora’s Box,” said Edmund Terence Gomez,
an emeritus professor of political economy at Universiti Malaya, who
resigned from an MACC advisory panel following the allegations against
Azam. “But the lid has been shut.”
Lim’s
relationship with Azam brought him closer to Chin. In 2021, when the
tax agency suspected Chin of money laundering, it asked the MACC to help
investigate, people familiar with the matter said. Chin reached out to a
contact in the Malaysian Chinese community to see if anyone could
broker a deal with the MACC, according to two people familiar with the
matter, both of whom requested anonymity for fear of reprisals. He was
told to speak with Lim, the people said. It’s not clear what, if
anything, Lim did on Chin’s behalf. But three current agency officials
said a settlement was reached with the MACC.
In
return, Chin helped Lim invest in the stock market, two people who know
both men said. Stock exchange filings show that in October 2022 Lim
bought a 29% stake in MMAG — the company the tax agency mentioned
alongside Chin in its 2021 letter. That month, he also purchased 18% of
broadband-device maker Green Packet Bhd.,
one of six companies allegedly targeted by the businessmen. Not anyone
could have bought the Green Packet shares: It was a private placement
for select investors.
In
May 2023, Lim sold Green Packet shares and bought the GIIB stake,
filings show. That’s how he ended up at the Social, meeting Tai.
Section D
A
few months before Tai told police he’d been threatened at the Social,
the restaurant was the scene of a meeting that featured a similar
demand, according to allegations made in a lawsuit and a police report.
Brian Ng, one of the founders of Revenue Group Bhd.,
an electronic-payments company, was summoned to a meeting at the
restaurant, he said in a March 2023 police report. He was under
investigation by the MACC at the time for allegedly faking invoices. At
the restaurant were Leong, who previously worked with Chin, and Chong,
the attorney who has allegedly communicated the group’s demands. They
said Ng and his brother Dino, who was also under investigation, should
resign from all positions and not exercise voting rights for two years,
Dino testified, in return for which the MACC would drop the probes.
“I
am scared and worried because Chong and Francis in no uncertain terms
were implying the MACC was under their control and will follow their
orders,” Brian Ng said in the police report.
“There
is no truth whatsoever to the allegations,” Chong’s lawyer said in his
response to Bloomberg. He provided screenshots of messages between Chong
and Ng that were submitted as evidence in court. The messages don’t
contain any mention of the MACC and say there are no hidden conditions.
A
similar tale unfolded at the cargo airline now called MJets Air Sdn.
Bhd. Aviation executives Gunasekar Mariappan and Philip Phang had agreed
to acquire and operate the company as a joint venture with Chin,
according to an account given by the executives in a July 2023 lawsuit
against Chin, MMAG and others. Chin would invest through MMAG, which
would hold the majority stake, and the executives would run the
business, according to their account of events. Chin has disputed this
in court documents, saying he acted only as a business broker
introducing the men to MMAG.
The
lawsuit said that a complaint alleging wrongdoing at MJets was lodged
with the MACC in an attempt to oust the two executives. Agency officers
raided the company’s offices and the executives’ homes in February 2023.
The officers arranged a meeting at MACC headquarters when Gunasekar and
Phang were brought in for questioning, two current MACC officers said.
They were led to an interrogation room, where an MMAG executive director
tried to persuade them to sell their stake at a discount, the officers
said. The MJets executives refused to negotiate, and a shouting match
ensued.
Illustration: Chris W. Kim
Gunasekar
and Phang, who declined to comment for this story, claimed in their
lawsuit that Chin controls MMAG and was behind the efforts to remove
them from MJets. “MMAG is Victor’s corporate vehicle,” the two said, an
allegation Chin has denied. They introduced as evidence screenshots of
alleged WhatsApp conversations between Gunasekar and Chin about the
cargo airline. In one of them, Gunasekar informed Chin that MJets had
obtained licenses for ground handling and operating commercial flights.
Chin asked if these developments could be announced. “Need to make up
the story line to raise 500mil bro,” he wrote. The case is ongoing.
While
the takeovers followed the same playbook, the motivations differed.
Chin wanted to use MJets partly to obtain warehousing space at Kuala
Lumpur International Airport and other aviation hubs, and he asked
Gunasekar and Phang to lease more than they needed, according to the
lawsuit. At other companies, the goals were more financial. Two of the
six companies allegedly targeted by the group got money-lending licenses
and started making loans.
Charge
sheets, arrest notices and other documents seen by Bloomberg show that
at least three of the complaints and arrests were handled by the MACC
investigation division’s Section D, the unit that covers listed
companies, market-related corruption and insider trading. It was headed
by Wong Yun Fui until he was promoted to his current role as deputy
director of investigations. Wong is valued by Azam for his understanding
of a business world where Chinese-Malaysians, who make up about a
quarter of the country’s population, often hold sway, people familiar
with the agency said.
Section
D officials offered a range of services, according to two current MACC
officers who requested anonymity to talk about the agency. The most
basic is intimidation, such as a raid on an office, the officers said.
Then, there are add-ons to pressure executives to resign or sell their
shares. One is holding them for questioning. Another is recommending
charges to public prosecutors. Each service has a price, the officers
said, more for high-profile targets or if senior MACC officials get
involved. One of the officers said he heard both payers and recipients
describe amounts that reached millions of ringgit. Neither the MACC nor
Wong responded to questions sent by Bloomberg about Section D.
Illustration: Chris W. Kim
Some
lower-level officers who don’t get paid for their involvement are
disgruntled, according to five people who say they discussed cases with
them. When executives were arrested, they say, the officers showed
little interest in questioning them, instead spending hours on TikTok,
vaping and sleeping in interrogation rooms.
A
few even warned executives about what was happening. They told them
there was a coordinated attempt to take over their companies,
instructing them to look into events at Revenue Group, four people
familiar with the matter said. They apologized for arresting them,
saying they were just following orders.
Section
D isn’t a rogue faction within the MACC, according to three people with
knowledge of how it relates to the rest of the agency. Senior
management is aware of its activities, the people said. And, on three
occasions, Azam, the agency’s top official, acted in ways that supported
members of the group or those who worked with them, people familiar
with the incidents said.
When
Section D was having trouble persuading MACC prosecutors to press
charges against Gunasekar and Phang, Azam asked them to proceed,
according to two prosecutors briefed on the incident. The person in
charge refused and asked to be removed from the case, the two said,
requesting anonymity for fear of reprisals. His replacement complied.
Azam
also approved the promotion of Wong, the former head of Section D,
after allegations of Wong’s ties to Chin emerged in the Corporate Secret
blog, according to two current MACC officials who say they were told
about it by their managers. The agency denied the blog’s allegations at
the time. Without mentioning Wong’s name, it said two senior officials
lodged police reports against the blog. “The MACC is certain that these
irresponsible and wild accusations hurled at the MACC officials are
meant to generate negative perceptions against the commission,” the
agency said in a March 2023 statement.
A
third intervention involved Lim. Soon after Tai reported the incident
at the Social, police arrested Lim, confiscated his gun and took CCTV
footage from the restaurant, according to three police officials with
knowledge of the matter. Local media reported on the incident, a big deal in a country with strict gun ownership laws. It didn’t look good for him.
But
a couple of weeks later, staff in the Firearms Licence Enforcement Unit
at federal police headquarters received a call, the officials said. The
caller identified himself and made his request: Return Lim’s gun and
drop the case. Shortly after that, Lim got the weapon back, the
officials said, and there has been no further action. The caller, they
said, was Azam Baki.
Neither the Royal Malaysia Police nor the MACC responded to questions about whether Azam had intervened.
The Aftermath
Those
who have said they were targeted by the businessmen enjoyed no such
support. Some fell into depression. Others hired bodyguards or fought
back with lawsuits. They share an ability to see some comedy in the
absurdity of their situations. But beyond the laughter lies anger.
“I’ve
lost faith in the system,” one of the executives said. “If you have
money, you have connections, you have power, you can just fix up anybody
in this country. So I don’t feel safe.”
The
Ng brothers, who declined to comment for this story, relinquished their
positions at Revenue Group and sold their shares. Criminal trials
against them relating to ownership of a Toyota minivan won in a lottery,
and against Brian for allegedly issuing fictitious invoices, are
underway. The brothers pleaded not guilty. Lawsuits they and the company
filed against each other were withdrawn last year. Revenue Group’s market value has fallen to less than $10 million from more than $250 million in 2021.
“We
founded this group and expanded a lot of effort and time in building it
up,” Dino Ng wrote in a court document. “Given all the events that
transpired, we can no longer remain in the group. We were treated
oppressively.”
Gunasekar
and Phang have been ousted from MJets. Their criminal trial for
dishonest misappropriation of property, including approving payments for
renovations and buying and installing CCTV and other security systems,
is ongoing. In October, the Companies Commission of Malaysia charged
them with agreeing to salary increases for each other without getting
shareholder approval. They pleaded not guilty. Their lawsuit alleges
that Chin, MMAG and others took “a series of calculated steps” to
undermine MJets. A suit filed by MJets alleges Gunasekar and Phang
breached their fiduciary duties as directors. Those cases are also
underway.
Tai Boon Wee, former chairman of rubber products company GIIB Holdings, in court in Kuala Lumpur in May 2024.Photographer: Muhammad Hazim Izam/Bernama
Tai
Boon Wee and his partner were acquitted in 2023 of providing falsified
documents to an auditor. The next year, prosecutors withdrew a charge
against him of forging a financial report. His sons now run GIIB. Lim
remains a shareholder, but he sold some of his shares and never got the
board seats. Lim sued Tai for defamation over the police report. He
confirmed in an affidavit that the meeting happened but portrayed it as
an introductory business discussion and said the mention of a gun was
defamatory. A judge dismissed the suit. Lim’s appeal is pending.
GIIB, MJets, Revenue Group and MMAG didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Meanwhile, Azam has returned to the stock market. Bloomberg reported this week that he held 17.7 million shares in money lender Velocity Capital Partner Bhd.
as of last year, according to a filing to the Companies Commission of
Malaysia, the state agency responsible for corporate records. The stake
would currently be worth almost 800,000 ringgit, well above the limit
allowed for public officials under Malaysian regulations. Chong, the
former Securities Commission officer, Chin’s wife and MMAG are or have
been shareholders.
The
MACC spokesman didn’t respond to Bloomberg’s questions about Velocity
Capital, but after the story was published, Azam told the New Straits Times,
a local media outlet, that the shares had been sold, the transaction
had been properly declared and he had nothing to hide. In a statement,
the MACC said any portrayal suggesting Azam didn’t declare assets was
factually incorrect and misleading. Later, Azam told reporters that he
no longer owns any shares. Velocity Capital didn’t respond to requests
for comment.
Edmund Terence Gomez, professor emeritus of political economy at Universiti Malaya, at his home in October 2025.Photographer: Ian Teh/Bloomberg
Longtime
MACC watcher Gomez said the agency must be made accountable to
parliament rather than the prime minister, a position Anwar’s coalition
adopted before the 2022 election. All it requires is a few legal tweaks,
he said: making the main oversight board independent, allowing it to
choose the chief commissioner and having parliament approve the choice.
But he acknowledged that any prime minister would find it difficult to
make such changes. “It’s a question of political will,” Gomez said. “You
keep all the tools you have with you to help keep you in power. And
that’s when political will goes out the window.”
For
Tommy Thomas, the former attorney general who led the 1MDB
prosecutions, change will only come through public pressure. The
agency’s role in Malaysian society must be investigated, he said, and it
must become truly independent and accountable. Thomas compared the
anti-corruption agency to the Praetorian Guard in ancient Rome, an elite
army unit that protected emperors but sometimes assassinated them and
ultimately became so powerful it had to be disbanded.
Royal commission needed to probe Bloomberg’s allegations against MACC
Aliran calls for independent inquiry into serious allegations
Aliran
is encouraged to note that the government has finally grasped the
gravity of the allegations that have surfaced against the Malaysian
Anti-Corruption Commission’s chief commissioner and some of its
officers.
These unsettling allegations have increasingly become a matter of public concern.
However,
given the magnitude of the allegations that have emerged from recent
Bloomberg reporting, we call for the establishment of a royal commission
of inquiry rather than a task force.
While the questionable
acquisition of shares by MACC Chief Commissioner Azam Baki warrants
investigation, Bloomberg has made a far more serious allegation. This
concerns the alleged use of MACC officers by a certain group of business
people to intimidate senior officials of targeted companies with the
ultimate objective of taking over these companies at suppressed
valuations.
This allegation, if true, represents an existential
threat to our capital markets and our credibility as an investment
destination. Such alleged machinations would severely compromise the
independence and integrity of the commission, whose fundamental purpose
is the combating of corruption.
More critically, these allegations
point to the potential capture of state institutions by a certain
group. If true, this would strike at the very foundation of our
regulatory framework and economic governance.
The implications
extend far beyond individual misconduct. These allegations, if
substantiated, would shatter our regulatory credibility and our ability
to demonstrate predictable and rational economic investment behaviour in
the eyes of international markets.
They
could undermine domestic and international investor confidence at a
time when Malaysia seeks to strengthen its position as a competitive
investment destination.
To ensure that investigations can be
carried out effectively without any internal interference or hindrance,
we call for Azam and all other implicated MACC officers (if any) to be
relieved of their duties and placed on garden leave until investigations
are completed.
The
government’s plan to set up a task force that would submit a report to
the cabinet is simply not enough. This would be widely perceived as
merely an internal probe that lacks the credibility and public trust
necessary to address allegations of this magnitude.
Only a royal
commission of inquiry, with full investigative powers, independent
membership and public transparency, can adequately examine these serious
allegations and restore confidence in our institutions. This royal
commission must comprise individuals who are independent of and not
members of the current administration. Its report should be made
available in the public domain for maximum transparency.
We
therefore urge the government to demonstrate its commitment to
accountability and institutional integrity by establishing a royal
commission immediately
Beyond this immediate crisis, we call for key structural reforms to safeguard the MACC’s independence and integrity.
First,
the MACC must be removed from the Prime Minister’s Department and
placed under parliamentary oversight. This would eliminate potential
conflicts of interest and ensure the commission operates free from
executive interference.
Second, the appointment of the MACC chief
commissioner must be subject to vetting and approval by a bipartisan
parliamentary select committee. This would ensure transparency,
accountability and broad-based confidence in the leadership of this
critical institution.
These structural reforms are essential to
prevent future compromises of the MACC’s integrity and to restore public
trust in Malaysia’s anti-corruption framework.
Aliran executive committee 14 February 2026 - ALIRAN WEBSITE
The true cost of your RM20 T-shirt
-
Fast fashion's hidden toll on people and planet.
The post The true cost of your RM20 T-shirt appeared first on Aliran.
A multi-billion ringgit scandal that dwarfs 1MDB?
-
Check out this story in The Edge about the MBI pyramid scheme which emerged
about a decade ago: The Ponzi scheme that rocked Penang (I remember back
then t...
APA PADA NAMA
-
1. Sejarah Malaysia dikait rapat dengan UMNO, Parti Kebangsaan Melayu
Bersatu. Parti UMNO pula dikenali dengan pemimpinnya. 2. Demikian di
peringkat permul...
China and HK may be barred from Asia Team meet
-
PETALING JAYA: The status of next week’s Asia Team Champion-ships in
Manila, the Philippines, is in quandary as two badminton nations – China
and Hong Kong...
PRU14 - Keputusan TEMERLOH - Parlimen dan DUN
-
Keputusan di Temerloh, harus kita analisa
1- Parlimen dimenangi Pakatan Harapan, yang juga menang DUN Mentakab,
tetapi BN menang DUN Lancang dan DUN Kuala ...
Thank you, Malaysians
-
Before the lights go out on The Malaysian Insider at midnight, we say
"Thank You" to our readers. TMI started on February 25, 2008. Today, after
eight year...
I believe in the freedom of expression - and everyone is free to use, reproduce, quote, copy and circulate, etc... materials published here. Please credit the source: http://charleshector.blogspot.com/.
For those of you who do have Blogs/Websites, it would be good if you could add a link to CHARLES HECTOR Blog. Please do promote the BLOG.
Anonymous comments or those containing profanities and obscenities (or irrelevant matters) will be rejected. Note that all comments made in post are personal opinions.
Number of Visits
Over 4 million visits. On an average, we have about 700-750 visits per day.Thank you all for your support and encouragement..