MACC nabs nine enforcement officials over bribery

The nine accused had allegedly solicited, taken kickbacks from fishing vessel owners, runners

11:04 PM MYT

 

ALOR STAR – Nine enforcement agency officials have been arrested by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) today over allegedly soliciting and accepting bribes from fishing vessel owners and runners from 2018 to 2021.

According to an MACC source, the enforcement officials were suspected to have received bribes as a reward for protecting and not taking legal action against fishing vessels in violation of the Fisheries Act 1985.

Two civilians were also detained for providing bribes between RM300 and RM7,000 to the nine enforcement officials who served in Kuala Kedah, Batu Uban and Langkawi.

“All 11 suspects, in their 30s to 50s, were arrested between 10am to noon today after being asked to provide their statements at the Alor Star MACC office.

“All the enforcement officials involved are believed to have committed the offences from 2018 to 2021 and were arrested for accepting bribes that were deposited into personal accounts,” the source said.

Meanwhile, MACC intelligence division director Datuk Azmi Kamaruzaman confirmed the arrests when contacted, adding that the case is being investigated under Section 17(a) of the MACC Act 2009.

He said five enforcement officials will be taken for remand application at the Alor Star magistrates’ court tomorrow while the rest have been released on MACC bail after their statements were recorded. – September 11, 2023

Topics

 

Popular

Influencer who recited Quran at Batu Caves accused of sexual misconduct in Netherlands

Abdellatif Ouisa has targeted recently converted, underage Muslim women, alleges Dutch publication

Ramli Ngah Talib next Governor of Penang?

Former Perak Mentri Besar expected to succeed Tun Ahmad Fuzi Abdul Razak in May, with the latter only having served one term

New MM2H rules: reduced deposits and age limits for special economic zone applicants

They must only be 21 years old, deposit US$65,000 in Malaysian bank, half of which can be withdrawn under certain conditions after approval

Related