MADPET is for the Abolition of Death Penalty, an end of torture and abuse of rights by the police, an end to death in custody, an end to police shoot to kill incidents, for greater safeguards to ensure a fair trial, for a right to one phone call and immediate access to a lawyer upon arrest, for the repeal of all laws that allow for detention without trial and an immediate release of all those who are under such draconian laws.
Suspend
Azam Baki NOW Pending Investigation to Reduce Risk of Tampering of Evidence
Azam Baki, the Chief Commissioner
of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) must be immediately
suspended pending completion of the investigation on the shareholding and the ‘corporate
mafia’ scandal that alleged abuse of power by MACC officers.
It is foolhardy not to immediately
suspend, and deny Azam physical or even remote access to MACC as he is now a
suspect, that may have committed crimes, or maybe involved in crimes. The
capacity and the possibility of tampering with evidence must be eliminated.
Likewise, all other MACC officers who are suspected to be involved in crimes
being investigated must also be immediately suspended temporarily until
investigations are completed.
Suspension pending completion of investigation
is a temporary, neutral action where any suspected wrongdoer or criminal is
removed from the workplace for the purpose of investigation. It is not a
disciplinary action itself or proof of guilt. The purpose is to allow for an impartial/independent
investigation while keeping the workplace safe, evidence secure and/or
preventing any interference with the investigation.
Azam Baki is CHIEF
not a mere employee
Azam Baki is not a mere employee or
a public officer, but the Chief Commissioner of MACC, and as such he has ‘great
power’ and/or influence over all of his subordinates, and access to all matters
within MACC – and will be in a position of being able to tamper or ‘disappear’
any evidence that may implicate him and/or others of crimes.
Initially, it was thought that the
Cabinet was just investigating Azam Baki’s shareholding – to determine whether
at any time he committed an employment misconduct because he owned more that
RM100,000 worth of shares, but this has been recently clarified by the
Minister.
Azam Being
Investigated on both ‘The Corporate Mafia’ Issue, Not Simply About his having
more than RM100,000 Shares
Doubts resolved, when on 1/4/2026,
it was reported in the media that the investigation is not just about Azam’s
shareholding value, but also about the corporate mafia scandal.
‘Communications Minister Datuk
Fahmi Fadzil said the investigation into alleged corporate manipulation
linked to MACC chief commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki, including his
shareholdings and claims of a “corporate mafia”, are ongoing and will be
made public in due course. He emphasised that the inquiry must be thoroughly
completed before any further action can be considered…
“As clarified by the AMLA this past
Monday, the investigation is still ongoing. It is therefore essential to ensure
the inquiry is fully completed before any further action is taken,” he said
during the ministry’s weekly press conference here today…
Fahmi also said following guidance
from the Cabinet, particularly Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, any
announcements will be made once the two aspects of the investigation have been
completed...’ (Malay
Mail, 1/4/2026)
The Minister was probably referring
to the investigations by Bukit Aman Anti-Money Laundering and Anti-Terrorism
Financing (AMLA) investigation unit. “This case involves several people
suspected of committing money laundering offences through various methods,
including the acquisition or ownership of publicly listed companies on Bursa
Malaysia, as well as private companies,” he (AMLA investigation unit chief
Fazlisyam Abd Majid) said at a press conference here today. (FMT,
30/3/2026).
If that be the case, then should
not have Azam and other MACC officers suspected rightly be suspended right from
the start of that AMLA investigations pending the completion of investigation?
The risk of
tampering/destroying evidence is real
The risk of tampering/destroying
evidence even in the custody of law enforcement is REAL – remembering also how the
Malaysian former spy probably got a DNAA because of this.
‘The [3 MACC] officers, who were
detained last week, had allegedly stolen a portion of US$6 million (S$8.1
million) seized from the former director-general of the Malaysian External
Intelligence Organisation (MEIO), Datuk Hasanah Abdul Hamid. Some of the stolen
cash was replaced with counterfeit currency.’ (Straits
Times, 20/9/2021). As a result, the former spy ended up with a discharge
not amounting to an acquittal (DNAA).
In this case, the suspect is the
Chief of MACC, and hence the ability and the risk of tampering with evidence is
so much higher.
Rightly, Azam and/or other MACC
officers suspected who were being investigated should have been suspended, and
their physical and/or virtual access to MACC denied right from the point the
AMLA unit started investigations until investigations are completed, and they
are found to be innocent.
PM Should Not Be
Involved Because of possible ‘Conflict of Interest’?
With regard the Prime Minister,
MADPET (Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture) believes, that since the
MACC comes under the jurisdiction of the Prime Minister’s Department, and the
PM also is the one who chose Azam Baki as the MACC Chief Commissioner, he
should best not be involved in this particular investigation or related
matters, by reason of possible ‘conflict of interest’ issues.
How Can MACC Independently
Investigate Offences Under the MACC Act?
Some offences may come under the
jurisdiction of the MACC, not the police, and thus only the MACC can reasonably
investigate such offences under the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission Act 2009.
As such, MADPET proposes that some
other, preferably not from MACC, be appointed in the interim to carry out the
duties of the MACC Chief Commissioner so that offences under the MACC Act can
also be investigated independently. Other officers, from other law enforcement
bodies, should also be assigned to the MACC for this purpose. When it comes to
the ‘corporate mafia’, there is still uncertainty as to which MACC officers may
have been involved.
Justice must be not only be done,
but must be seen to be done. As such, there must be independent investigation and
prosecutions, and certainly alleged suspects should never be involved in the
investigations.
It is fundamental that only law
enforcement and the prosecution are responsible for acting independently when
laws are broken.
The Prime Minister and/or the
Cabinet should not be in any way be involved in deciding how an alleged crime
is investigated or not investigated. It is also not the role of the Chief
Secretary to the Government. We have laws, that already imposes duties of law
enforcement to investigate when laws are broken.
If others, including the Prime
Minister, Minister and even public officers, are involved, they open themselves
to possible allegations of crimes of interference and/or obstruction of justice
including the Obstruction of investigation (sec. 48 MACC Act) and the crime of obstructing
any public servant in the discharge of his public functions (sec. 186 Penal
Code).
Anyone who breaks the law will be
treated equally, irrespective of the position he/she may hold. This is guaranteed
by Article 8 of the Federal Constitution, when it says ‘(1) All persons are
equal before the law and entitled to the equal protection of the law.’ This
means that no one is above the law, and no one will receive any ‘special
treatment’ liked delayed investigation and/or prosecution’ just because of the
position he/she holds.
Azam Baki’s term ends in about a
month on 5/5/2026, but this should never impact considerations of whether to
suspend him pending investigations or not. He should have been suspended as
soon as AMLA started investigating the ‘corporate media’, and now, he must
be immediately be suspended pending end of investigation. The concern is
tampering with evidence.
Charles
Hector
For
and on behalf of MADPET (Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture)
Fahmi: MACC investigation into Azam Baki’s shareholdings, ‘corporate mafia’ claims to be made public
Communications
Minister Datuk Fahmi Fadzil said the investigation into the
shareholdings of Tan Sri Azam Baki, chief commissioner of the Malaysian
Anti-Corruption Commission, is still ongoing. — Picture by Raymond
Manuel
By Anis Zalani
Wednesday, 01 Apr 2026 6:15 PM MYT
KUALA
LUMPUR, April 1 — Communications Minister Datuk Fahmi Fadzil said the
investigation into alleged corporate manipulation linked to MACC chief
commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki, including his shareholdings and claims
of a “corporate mafia”, are ongoing and will be made public in due
course.
He emphasised that the inquiry must be thoroughly completed before any further action can be considered.
“As
clarified by the AMLA this past Monday, the investigation is still
ongoing. It is therefore essential to ensure the inquiry is fully
completed before any further action is taken,” he said during the
ministry’s weekly press conference here today.
He then said that
updates on the investigation may be disclosed publicly, but any further
steps remain subject to the Cabinet’s decision should they determine at
any point that the investigation has reached a stage where additional
action is necessary.
Fahmi
also said following guidance from the Cabinet, particularly Prime
Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, any announcements will be made once
the two aspects of the investigation have been completed.
“The
matter has been entrusted to the Chief Secretary to the Government Tan
Sri Shamsul Azri Abu Bakar, who will oversee the implementation of the
necessary procedures,” he added.
Yesterday, it was reported that
the Attorney General’s Chambers (AGC) will take action against Bloomberg
over its claims that Anwar Ibrahim interfered in the disclosure of
findings concerning Azam Baki shareholdings.
Shamsul
Azri also dismissed the foreign news agency’s March 30 report, which
alleged that the prime minister had instructed a special committee to
delay the release of the investigation into Azam Baki. - Malay Mail, 1/4/2026
Victor Chin arrested, freed on bail in money laundering probe
FMT Reporters
Bukit Aman’s Amla investigation unit chief Fazlisyam Abd Majid says the businessman 'may be recalled if necessary'.
Bukit
Aman’s Amla investigation unit chief Fazlisyam Abd Majid said Victor
Chin was detained in December last year and has since been released on
police bail. (MMAG pic)
PETALING JAYA:
Police have confirmed that businessman Victor Chin was among 10 people
detained on suspicion of involvement in money laundering activities
under Ops Viking.
The operation was conducted between Oct
last year and Jan 13 this year, said Bukit Aman Anti-Money Laundering
and Anti-Terrorism Financing (Amla) investigation unit chief Fazlisyam
Abd Majid, Bernama reported.
Fazlisyam said Chin was detained in
December last year and has since been released on police bail although
he may be recalled if necessary.
He said the other six men and three
women, believed to be directly linked to the investigation, had also
been released on bail. Another 40 have been called in to provide
statements.
“This case involves several people
suspected of committing money laundering offences through various
methods, including the acquisition or ownership of publicly listed
companies on Bursa Malaysia, as well as private companies,” he said at a
press conference here today.
Fazlisyam highlighted that the operation
resulted in the freezing and seizure of various assets, including eight
properties, 32 vehicles, 1,100 shares in two private limited companies,
Central Depository System (CDS) accounts totalling RM323,588,293,
trading accounts amounting to RM64,246,417, and 404 bank accounts
holding RM85,624,528.
Fazlisyam said the operation was launched
in Oct last year based on intelligence on money laundering activities
dating back to 2018.
A formal investigation opened on Oct 25.
He said all parties suspected of being
directly or indirectly involved in managing funds derived from unlawful
activities are under investigation.
The probe is being carried out under
Section 27B and Section 29B of the Moneylenders Act 1951, Section 176 of
the Capital Markets and Services Act 2007 and Section 221 of the
Companies Act 2016.
On March 16, the police confirmed that
they had raided several premises belonging to Chin, who is alleged to be
involved in corporate manipulation linked to the Malaysian
Anti-Corruption Commission.
Separately, Fazlisyam noted that
authorities have not received any report regarding Chin’s claim that an
MP had demanded RM10 million to assist in resolving the corporate
manipulation issue. - FMT, 30/3/2026
Three Malaysian graft busters detained for allegedly stealing funds in case involving former spy chief
Get insights on the biggest stories in Malaysia
Former
Malaysian spy chief Hasanah Abdul Hamid was charged in 2018 with
criminal breach of trust, but was later granted a discharge not
amounting to an acquittal in the High Court.
Published Sep 20, 2021, 04:54 PM
KUALA
LUMPUR - Three Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) officers
have been arrested for allegedly misappropriating funds connected to a
case involving the country's former spymaster, further tarnishing the
image of the agency.
The officers,
who were detained last week, had allegedly stolen a portion of US$6
million (S$8.1 million) seized from the former director-general of the
Malaysian External Intelligence Organisation (MEIO), Datuk Hasanah Abdul
Hamid. Some of the stolen cash was replaced with counterfeit currency.
But
in April, she was granted a discharge not amounting to an acquittal in
the High Court. This means that she can be hauled up to court again if
fresh evidence arises.
During investigations into her case, the MACC had seized cash and other belongings from her.
A
source told The Straits Times that the three suspects were part of a
"special team" assigned to probe into the allegations of power abuse and
malpractice involving the former MEIO chief.
"They
belong to a very 'exclusive' team. It's a known fact among the agency's
investigating officers that they have a close relationship with the
chief," the source said, referring to MACC chief Azam Baki.
The
arrest of the anti-graft busters came to light after a blog called
Edisi Siasat posted an entry revealing the details on Sept 18.
It
claimed that Madam Hasanah had gone to retrieve the money, only to
discover that a portion had been replaced with fake notes, prompting her
to file a police report.
But
Malaysia's Criminal Investigation Department chief Abd Jalil Hassan on
Monday (Sept 20) said in a statement that he had yet to receive any
police report regarding the alleged abuse of power and misappropriation
of funds.
All three suspects were
said to have been remanded by the commission for six days from Sept 14,
according to the blog, which questioned why their case was being treated
as an internal investigation instead of a police case.
Responding
to the blog's revelations, the commission confirmed that it has
arrested three of its officers to assist in investigations into
allegations of abuse of power and malpractice in the case of a former
department head.
"The three officers
were brought before the Putrajaya Magistrate's Court and remanded under
Section 117 of the Criminal Procedure Code for six days from Sept 14 to
Sept 19, 2021," it said in a statement.
It added that a thorough investigation is under way.
"MACC
would like to emphasise that the commission will not compromise or
protect any of its officers involved in any criminal act and will take
appropriate action if the act is true," the MACC said.
This is not the first time that the MACC has found itself embroiled in a scandal involving its own.
On
June 15, an MACC officer was charged with allegedly conspiring with
another man to receive RM100,000 in cash to shield an individual from
being investigated under the Anti-Money Laundering and Anti-Terrorism
Financing Act 2001.
In April, two
MACC officials were among 12 enforcement officers nabbed by the
Malaysian police for their alleged links with Malaysian fugitive
businessman Nicky Liow Soon Hee.
Deterrent
Sentence YES but NO to Death Penalty for causing death in road accidents
MADPET (Malaysians Against Death
Penalty and Torture) is appalled by the call of Machang MP Wan Ahmad Fayhsal
Wan Ahmad Kamal(formerly of BERSATU) urging the government to study amending ‘the
law to allow for the death penalty to be imposed on drunk drivers who cause
death.’(FMT,
30/3/2026). A deterrent sentence may be required, but not death penalty –
where in Malaysia, a person is hanged to death.
Mandatory Death Penalty Abolished but Courts
still sentencing to Death
Malaysia abolished the mandatory
death penalty – but sadly the death penalty still remains in Malaysia. The Abolition
Of Mandatory Death Penalty Act 2023 (AMDP Act 2023), which came into force
on 4/7/2023, now still gives the court the power to impose the death penalty –
and sadly Malaysian Courts are still continue to use the death penalty.
On 10/3/2026, for example, the
Court of Appeal upheld the death sentences imposed on the Klang Valley couple
involved in the 2020 Sibu ‘suitcase murder’.(Malay
Mail, 10/3/2026)
On 9/1/2026, it was reported that Malaysian-based
Nigerian, Ibekwe Emeka Augustine was sentenced to death by hanging for
murdering a four-year-old boy in 2020. “You are sentenced to death by hanging
until you are dead. However, you have the right to appeal against the sentence
at the Court of Appeal,”, said High Court judge K. Muniandy.(Peoples
Gazette, 9/1/2026).
As a consequence, the numbers on
Death Row is increasing again.
When the mandatory death penalty
was abolished, Malaysia also enacted the Revision of Sentence of Death and
Imprisonment for Natural Life (Temporary Jurisdiction of the Federal Court) Act
2023, which came into force on 12/9/2023, to enable the Federal Court to
review the death sentence of those on death row, and it resulted in most death
sentences being revised to imprisonment and whipping sentences. However, the
Federal Court retained the death sentence for some.
On 21/11/2025, Azalina Othman Said,
the Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Law and Institutional Reform),
said that a total of 863 inmates facing the death penalty have had their
sentences commuted or reducedHowever, 49 remain on death row as of October 2024. Today,
the number on death would have now increased. (Star,
21/11/2025)
NO more mechanism to
revise Death Sentence of Death Row inmates
The major problem now, is that the
ability of the Federal Court to revise death sentences was only a temporary
provision, and now, those on death row still and thereafter, have no longer
this option of applying to the Federal Court to revise their death sentence.
This means the numbers on death row will only increase with time.
MADPET calls for an enactment of a
law that will permanently be available to death row inmates to apply to court
for their death sentence to be revised, and it best be revised to an
alternative sentence avoiding anymore persons being hanged to death.
The new Indonesian Penal Code
(Kitab Undang-Undang Hukum Pidana Baru or KUHP Baru), which should have come into
force on 2/1/2026, with regards to death penalty, now imposes a ten-year
probationary period, during which good behaviour may lead to the death sentence
being reduced to imprisonment.(The
Jakarta Post, 22/12/2025)
Malaysia should totally abolish the
death penalty, and until then enact a law, that ensures death sentence
is not carried out, requiring the court to review death sentence, periodically
maybe once every 2 – 5 years, taking into account good behaviour and
repentance, that may lead to a revision of the death penalty to a sentence of
imprisonment. Forgiveness and 2nd chances are matters that
Malaysians do accept.
Minister Azalina said the
government has formed a task force to reassess the country’s death penalty
policy and long-term direction.“The review is expected to be
completed by January 2026, after which its recommendations, including the
future of the execution moratorium, will be presented to the Cabinet,” (Star,
21/11/2025). It is April 2026, and we have not yet heard anything.
MADPET hopes that Malaysia will
abolish death penalty, and in the interim a law is enacted to speedily deal
with the rising numbers on death row.
Death Caused by Road
Accidents
While, this Malaysian politician
focusses on drunk driving, some of the causes of road accidents that resulted
in deaths in Malaysia have been by reason of the failure of law enforcement and
the government.
“The failure of the bus braking
system, which was contaminated and inconsistent, combined with driving at
speeds exceeding safe limits, led to a loss of vehicle control. Challenging
road conditions, weaknesses in the design and installation of road barriers and
the structural failure of the bus cabin further increased the severity of the
impact and the resulting injuries,” the report (the Transport Ministry report
on the 9/6/2025 bus crash in Gerik, Perak, that killed 15 Universiti Pendidikan
Sultan Idris (UPSI) students) read.(Star,
24/1/2026). If the braking system fails, can any driver be reasonably
blamed for speeding?
Was the regular inspection of
road-worthiness of the bus properly carried out by the relevant law enforcement?
Or did lackadaisical attitude and ‘corruption’ prevent or ‘compromise’ law
enforcement?
‘Apart from that, road markings
have worn out and guardrails are defective.’ (FMT,
31/1/2026)
It is sad that we do not see any
criminal actions taken against the Government and public officers, when their actions
(or failures) may have caused road accidents that caused deaths, and MADPET
calls for enactment of laws that imposes criminal liability on even Ministers(personally),
and public officers, who by their action/omission contributed and/or caused fatal
road traffic accidents and also fatal industrial accidents.
DUI – Alcohol and DRUGS
Driving under influence, is and
must be a crime but it must apply also to drugs, and not just alcohol.
Does Malaysia now have an effective
way of determining whether drivers are under the influence of drugs?
Should laws be enacted barring drug
users from driving until proven that they are no more drug consumers? Focusing
on alcohol only is just not enough in DUI (driving under influence) cases.
Many countries impose the death penalty
for a variety of offences, including corruption, but Malaysia should abolish
the death penalty for all crimes, and never increase death penalty for any new
crimes including driving under the influence that caused death.
JUSTICATION for
abolition of Death Penalty clear
MADPET notes that the death penalty
is cruel, inhumane, violates the right to life, and there is the high possibility
of miscarriage of justice, which cannot ever be reversed if the convicted is
already dead.
Death Penalty goes against the
religious and values of Malaysians, where our faith or beliefs advocate for
compassion, forgiveness and second chances.
Death penalty also inadvertently
makes all Malaysians ‘murderers’ – as it is intentional killing by the State.
MADPET reiterates the call for the
total abolition of the death penalty in Malaysia, and a moratorium on execution
pending abolition; and
MADPET calls on Malaysian political
parties, MPs and peoples’ representatives, to make a clear public commitment
for the abolition of the death penalty.
Charles
Hector
For
and on behalf of MADPET (Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture)
MP moots death penalty for drunk drivers in fatal crashes
FMT Reporters
An MP from PAS meanwhile calls for lifetime driving bans for offenders after the fatal crash in Klang yesterday.
A dashcam video clip believed to be of the accident showed an overtaking car crashing into an oncoming motorcycle.
PETALING JAYA:
An opposition MP has called on the government to consider imposing the
death penalty for convicted drunk drivers after the crash in Klang
yesterday involving a driver under the influence of alcohol and drugs.
Machang MP Wan Ahmad Fayhsal Wan Ahmad
Kamal said the stiffer penalties enacted under the Road Transport Act in
2020 failed to deter offenders from drink driving.
“Therefore, I urge the government to
study amending the law to allow for the death penalty to be imposed on
drunk drivers who cause death.
“When someone under the influence still
chooses to drive, the law should consider that the person has intent to
kill, because their actions clearly have a high risk of killing others,”
the former Bersatu leader said in a Facebook post.
Jerantut MP Khairil Nizam Khirudin
meanwhile called for lifetime driving bans for all drink driving
offenders, saying suspensions are insufficient.
The PAS leader said the government must
take a far tougher line on drink driving given the threat offenders pose
to other road users, making it a matter of public safety rather than
just a traffic offence.
He said the government should strengthen
enforcement under the Road Transport Act and ensure that stiff
punishments are consistently imposed.
“One more life has been lost. One more
family has been destroyed. Justice must be served,” he said in a
statement, urging transport minister Loke Siew Fook to take action.
Under Section 44 of the Road Transport
Act, those convicted of causing death while driving under the influence
may face 10 to 15 years in prison and a fine of between RM50,000 and
RM100,000.
They will also be barred from holding a driving licence for at least 10 years from the date of their conviction.Repeat offenders can face 15 to 20 years’ jail, a RM100,000 to RM150,000 fine, and a 20-year ban from driving.
A motorcyclist was killed in Klang
yesterday morning after being rammed by a car driven by a man in his 20s
who was driving under the influence.
A dashcam video clip posted online showed
an overtaking car in the opposite lane crashing into an oncoming
motorcyclist, sending the victim flying into the air and landing on top
of another vehicle.
The suspect has been remanded until Thursday.
PAS Youth chief Afnan Hamimi Taib
Azamudden has offered free legal aid to the victim’s family to ensure
justice for the deceased. - FMT, 30/3/2026
49 still on death row, says Azalina
A total of 863 inmates facing the death penalty have
had their sentences commuted or reduced, says Datuk Seri Azalina Othman
Said.
However, 49 remain on death row as of October 2024, the
Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Law and Institutional
Reform) said.
“Although the
mandatory death penalty has been abolished, judges still retain the
discretion to impose capital punishment,” she said in a written
parliamentary reply yesterday.
Azalina was replying to a question
from Ramkarpal Singh (PH-Bukit Gelugor), who had asked whether the
government intends to extend the moratorium on executions for prisoners
whose death sentences have been upheld by the Federal Court.r
Under the Review of Death Penalty and Life Imprisonment Act
2023, the mandatory death penalty was abolished and the number of
offences that carry capital punishment was reduced.
Azalina said the government has formed a task force to reassess the country’s death penalty policy and long-term direction.
“The
group will work with the Criminal Law Reform Committee and conduct
holistic stakeholder engagements, including with criminal law experts,
families of death row inmates and families of victims.
“The review is expected to be completed by January 2026, after
which its recommendations, including the future of the execution
moratorium, will be presented to the Cabinet,” she added.
Azalina stressed that the moratorium on executions, which has been in place since 2018, remains.
The
move reflects the government’s commitment to fair trial standards,
human rights considerations, and balancing justice for victims with the
wider public interest. - Star, 21/11/2025
System failure, human error caused Upsi bus tragedy
By JUSTIN ZACK
PETALING JAYA: Speeding, brake failure and human error have been
found in the bus crash in Gerik, Perak, that killed 15 Universiti
Pendidikan Sultan Idris (Upsi) students, say the comprehensive
investigation report commissioned by the government following the June 9
incident last year.
In a 188-page report released by the
Transport Ministry yesterday, the special task force concluded that a
combination of factors, including mechanical, human, environmental and
organisation elements were to blame.
“The
failure of the bus braking system, which was contaminated and
inconsistent, combined with driving at speeds exceeding safe limits, led
to a loss of vehicle control. Challenging road conditions, weaknesses
in the design and installation of road barriers and the structural
failure of the bus cabin further increased the severity of the impact
and the resulting injuries,” the report read.
It also said that all passenger seats, as well as the co-driver seat, were not equipped with seat belts.
The bus also lacked onboard cameras or GPS devices, and no internal footage from the vehicle was obtained.
“The
footage used in the analysis was obtained from another public vehicle
and served as the primary source for the incident’s reconstruction and
kinematic analysis,” said the investigators from various institutions
and agencies, including the Malaysian Institute of Road Safety Research,
Land Public Transport Agency and Road Transport Department.
Investigators
said the braking system lost its integrity, while the bus was being
driven at an inappropriate speed just before the incident.
“Aggressive braking at high speed caused a rapid increase in
brake component temperatures ... progressively reducing braking
effectiveness,” said the investigators.
A simulation using
kinematic analysis, together with footage from another vehicle,
estimated the bus’ speed when entering the curve to be 114.7kph, well
above the 60kph limit for that stretch, and also surpassed the critical
threshold for skidding and rollover, estimated to be between 111.3kph
and 114.5kph.
One of the two bus drivers was also using a licence
that had expired since 1998 when the privately chartered bus collided
with an MPV headed in the same direction along the East-West Highway
near Gerik.
Other than the 15 students who died, the incident also
left 33 others injured, making it the deadliest road accident in
Malaysia since the 2013 Genting Highlands bus crash that killed 37. - Star, 24/1/2026
UPSI bus tragedy was no accident but a system failure
If the mishap is treated as an isolated incident, rather than a warning, the system will fail again.
From Rahman Hussin
The release of the transport ministry’s
final report on the investigation into the fatal UPSI bus crash on the
East-West Highway should mark a turning point in how Malaysia
understands road safety.
Not because the findings are shocking but
because they confirm, with uncomfortable clarity, what transport safety
research has long warned us: fatal crashes are rarely caused by a
single mistake. They happen when multiple weaknesses in the system
align.
This was not simply a case of a bus losing control.
It was a case of a safety system that failed to protect people when things went wrong.
For those who observe transport systems
over time, the patterns revealed in this report are familiar. The
investigation shows that the bus had passed routine inspection, yet
still suffered critical brake failure under real downhill operating
conditions.
This exposes a structural weakness in how we regulate safety, one that prioritises static compliance over dynamic risk.Passing an inspection does not mean a vehicle is safe in all operating environments.
Long-distance, overnight travel and hilly
routes place very different demands on braking systems, maintenance
quality, and driver management. Yet our regulatory framework largely
treats all operations as equal, despite their vastly different risk
profiles.
The road itself also failed.
The crash occurred on a steep, dark,
sharply curved stretch with limited view at a distance. Apart from that,
road markings have worn out and guardrails are defective.
These are not minor details.
Internationally, modern road safety policy is built on a simple
principle: people will make mistakes, but infrastructure should not turn
those mistakes into fatalities.
In this case, roadside barriers that
should have absorbed impact instead penetrated the bus structure,
worsening injuries. Poor delineation and visibility reduced the margin
for recovery. The road did not forgive error, it amplified its
consequences.
Perhaps most troubling is what the report reveals about survivability.
Passengers were not protected by seat
belts. Structural intrusion occurred during the rollover. Several
victims were ejected. These outcomes were not inevitable; they reflect
design and policy decisions made over time. Malaysia regulates buses
primarily to operate but not to withstand crashes.
Globally, the focus has shifted from
crash prevention alone to injury mitigation and survivability,
particularly for high-occupancy vehicles operating in demanding
conditions. Seat belts, rollover protection, interior integrity and
restraint systems are no longer optional considerations. They are
baseline safety expectations.
The investigation also exposes deeper
governance questions. Maintenance occurred outside authorised
frameworks. Licensing compliance slipped through enforcement gaps.
Safety responsibility was distributed across agencies, each performing
its function, yet no single entity owning the system outcome.
This is how systemic failure manifests: everyone complies within their silo, yet people still die.
The lesson from the UPSI tragedy is not
about assigning blame. It is about recognising that road safety is a
system, and systems must be designed to fail safely. This mirrors how
other countries have reduced fatalities, not by perfecting people, but
by strengthening systems.
If Malaysia is serious about reducing
road deaths, the conversation must move beyond enforcement slogans and
inspection checklists. We need risk-based regulation, infrastructure
that forgives error, vehicles designed for survivability, and governance
that treats safety as an integrated outcome, not a shared afterthought.
The report has done its job.
Now the harder task begins — learning from it; honestly, systemically, and without defensiveness.
Because if we treat this as an isolated tragedy, rather than a warning, the system will fail again.
Rahman Hussin is the executive director of MY Mobility Vision, a transport think tank. - FMT, 31/1/2026
Malaysian court sentences Nigerian Ibekwe Augustine to death for murder, sex crime
High Court judge K. Muniandy sentenced Mr Augustine to death after convicting him of murder on Friday.
Ahmed Oluwasanjo • January 9, 2026
Noose used to illustrate the story
A
Malaysian-based Nigerian, Ibekwe Emeka Augustine, has been sentenced to
death by hanging for murdering a four-year-old boy in 2020.
Mr
Augustine has been on trial for murdering his four-year-old
step-grandson by throwing him from the third floor of an apartment and
also sexually assaulting his 25-year-old stepdaughter, Malaysian local
media reported on Friday.
High Court judge K. Muniandy sentenced Mr Augustine to death after convicting him of murder on Friday.
"You
are sentenced to death by hanging until you are dead. However, you have
the right to appeal against the sentence at the Court of Appeal,” Mr
Muniandy said.
The judge also sentenced Mr Augustine to one year
in prison for attempted suicide, five years for sexually assaulting his
then 25-year-old stepdaughter, five years for attempted murder of his
son, then aged 7, and 14 years for causing grievous hurt to his wife.
“All
these inhumane and despicable acts of the accused could have been
stopped, as the accused’s wife attempted to do so, but the accused
persisted even after grievously injuring her.
“The victims were
all traumatised by the entire incident and had to run away from the home
before anything more dreadful was inflicted on them,” Mr Muniandy said.
Before
the judge pronounced judgment, Mr Augustine had pleaded for leniency,
stating, “I regret everything that happened, and it will not happen
again. I remember going swimming and playing football with him. Please
have mercy on me. Everything is in your hands.”
Mr
Augustine’s counsel, Zulkifli Awang, had pleaded for leniency over the
death sentence, arguing that his client threw the child from the third
floor under drug intoxication.
“The facts show that his actions
were due to schizophrenia and that he was of unsound mind, although the
court had ruled that self-intoxication is not a defence,” Mr Awang said.
“But
I want to stress that what occurred was due to his insanity, due to
drug consumption. He has been in remand since his arrest, and he is
repentant. Imprisonment would be a more appropriate sentence. It is not
necessary to take another life.” - Peoples Gazzette, 9/1/2026
Indra Allen and Agnes Wardhana (Partner and Junior Partner at PwC Legal
Indonesia)
Jakarta
Mon, December 22, 2025
(Courtesy of PWC Indonesia)
I
ndonesia is set to implement the New Indonesian Penal Code (Kitab
Undang-Undang Hukum Pidana Baru or KUHP Baru), scheduled to come into
effect on Jan. 2, 2026, enacted through Law No. 1 of 2023. The change
demonstrates the country’s move away from a colonial-era criminal
justice framework and reflects a modernized legal system rooted in
national values and aligned with contemporary international norms.
Overall, the reforms represent a deliberate move toward a more balanced
and humane criminal justice system that prioritizes fairness, reduces
reliance on incarceration and promotes societal healing.
Among the most significant developments in this reform is the expanded
and clarified regime of corporate criminal liability, a development that
signals heightened responsibilities and potential risks for businesses
across Indonesia. Understanding these changes is essential for
corporations, legal practitioners and stakeholders as they navigate the
shifting legal landscape.
Introducing a new philosophy
The shift is the new development highlights restoration over
retribution, a clear distinction from its predecessor of KUHP Lama,
which has long characterized Indonesia’s criminal law. The KUHP Baru
reflects a fundamental reorientation of criminal justice objectives,
endorsing restorative justice as the central sentencing philosophy.
The retributive system that emphasizes punishment, particularly through
incarceration, has contributed to practical challenges such as prison
overcrowding and has often been critiqued for neglecting victim
interests and social reintegration. In contrast, restorative justice
seeks to redress this imbalance by focusing on repairing harm,
rehabilitating offenders and restoring relationships between offenders,
victims and the community.
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Aiming for a greater structural change in the new penal code, KUHP Baru
abolishes the former categorical distinction between “crimes” and
“violations,” consolidating all unlawful acts under a single
classification of “offenses.” Judges now have greater discretion to
apply sanctions tailored to individual circumstances, streamlining
prosecution and enabling a more contextual approach to justice.
Modernized sanctions
KUHP Baru introduces a more nuanced and flexible approach to criminal
sanctions, moving away from rigid frameworks toward proportionality and
fairness. While the code retains the traditional categories of principal
and additional sanctions, it significantly broadens the range of
options available to judges, allowing penalties to be tailored to the
circumstances of each case.
One of the most notable changes is the death penalty. Rather than being a
standard punishment for certain crimes, it is now positioned as an
exceptional measure, applied only as an alternative to life imprisonment
or a lengthy fixed-term sentence. It now comes with an imposition of a
ten-year probationary period, during which good behaviour may lead to a
reduction to life imprisonment through presidential clemency. This
reflects a more cautious and humane approach, consistent with global
human rights trends.
The new code also introduces greater flexibility in its application.
Fixed-term sentences can range from as little as one day to 15 years,
extendable to 20 years under aggravating circumstances, while life
imprisonment remains available for the most serious offences.
Meanwhile, financial penalties varies into eight tiers, ranging from Rp 1
million to Rp 50 billion, enabling courts to impose penalties that are
proportionate to both the gravity of the offence and the offender’s
financial capacity.
The most striking is the emphasis on non-custodial measures, where
community service and supervisory sanctions are now recognised as
principal options, signalling a shift toward rehabilitation and
reintegration rather than mere punishment. These measures can be adapted
to individual circumstances, with community service ranging from 8 to
240 hours.
Additional sanctions include the revocation of certain rights,
confiscation of assets, public announcements of convictions,
compensation to victims and fulfilment of customary obligations. Special
measures such as counselling, rehabilitation and vocational training
are also introduced in the new penal code.
Corporate criminal liability
It is underlined in articles 45 to 50 that the KUHP Baru formally
recognize corporations as autonomous legal subjects capable of engaging
in criminal conduct and being held liable independently of natural
persons.
The new advancement acknowledges that liability extends not only to
corporations but also to executives, directors, commissioners, managers
and other decision makers, including external controlling parties and
beneficial owners. Corporate liability arises when these actors commit
crimes benefiting the corporation or on its behalf.
Beyond individual responsibilities, KUHP Baru emphasises the
corporation’s duty to implement preventive measures. Failure to
establish compliance, oversight or internal controls may negate defences
and trigger liability.
However, KUHP Baru also allows for measures such as compensation to
victims, confiscation of illicit profits, public disclosure of
convictions, license revocation and even operational suspension or
dissolution in extreme cases. In addition, authorities may impose
special controls, including forced takeovers or state supervision, to
prevent repeat offenses.
Implications for businesses and legal practitioners
KUHP Baru signals intensified enforcement against corporate wrongdoing
and aligns Indonesia with global trends in corporate accountability.
Businesses must strengthen governance, compliance programs and internal
controls to mitigate risks. Corporate leadership should foster a culture
of legal and ethical compliance supported by robust training and
monitoring.
Lawyers and inhouse counsels play a critical role in guiding clients
through this complex environment, advising on risk management and
defence strategies. Regulators face the challenge of enforcing these
laws fairly while providing clarity to encourage responsible business
conduct.
In conclusion, KUHP Baru represents a paradigm shift toward fairness,
rehabilitation and corporate accountability. As the effective date
approaches, stakeholders must engage deeply with their provisions to
ensure compliance and integrity.
This transformation does not stand alone. Alongside KUHP Baru, Indonesia
is introducing a new criminal procedural law (KUHAP) to address
procedural inefficiencies and human rights concerns under the current
framework. Together, these reforms mark a modernization of Indonesia’s
criminal justice system.