
Nearly 3,000 Malaysian government employees caught taking bribes in a decade
Malaysian government employees had been caught taking bribes over the last decade, lawmakers heard on Friday, topping the list of receivers of under the table payments over the past decade and nearly three times more than in the private sector.
Advertisement
Bribery remains entrenched in Malaysian society despite strong public sentiments for its eradication. High-profile corruption scandals, including those involving several former prime ministers, has done little to dampen the public appetite for an end to what many say is a pay-to-play system that covers everything from passing vehicle inspections to winning a government contract.
Malaysia ranks 57th out of 180 countries in the latest Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), second to neighbouring
Singapore among Southeast Asian nations.
In a written reply to parliament on the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission data, Law Minister Azalina Othman Said noted that 6,585 cases of soliciting and giving bribes were recorded between 2015 and June 30 this year.
Of those caught accepting bribes, 2,965 were public servants, compared with 1,101 private sector employees.
Advertisement
The ethnic breakdown revealed Malays accounted for 75 per cent of bribe-soliciting cases – 3,690 out of the total – followed by Chinese and then Indians. Yet in contrast, those most likely to pay bribes were ethnically Chinese.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China rises up ‘elite quality' league table as AI investment booms
Thanks to its combined strengths in artificial intelligence and manufacturing, China rose two places to rank 19th out of 151 countries in the 2025 Elite Quality Index – a Swiss study that assesses the extent to which national elites create sustainable value for their nations. Advertisement Singapore topped this year's rankings, followed by the United States and Switzerland, in the annual report produced by the Foundation for Value Creation Activities in partnership with the University of St. Gallen. Asian economies performed strongly overall, with Japan maintaining fourth place and South Korea rising to fifth. In contrast, several European countries including the Netherlands, Denmark and Finland fell down the rankings this year. 'China ranks at 19th in the index, up two places from last year, maintaining its upward trend in Elite Quality and an outcome that is particularly commendable given the dramatic changes in the global economic order,' the report said. The index assessed 151 countries based on 149 indicators, which are designed to gauge the overall impact of elite business models in terms of creating positive value or engaging in negative rent-seeking behaviour. Advertisement China scored particularly highly in the AI value creation sub-index, placing fourth behind the US, Singapore and South Korea. This year's report increased the number of AI indicators from two to seven based on the industry's growing importance as a source of value creation. Zhang Jun, dean of the School of Economics at Shanghai's Fudan University, said China's rise in the rankings showed that its elite-led model of governance had been effective in promoting the country's economic development.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
On WWII anniversary, China's PLA says Japan never abandoned dream of military power
China's military mouthpiece has accused Japan of hollowing out its pacifist constitution and 'embarking on the dangerous path of military expansion'. As Japan marked the 80th anniversary of its surrender in World War II on Friday, the PLA Daily warned in a commentary that 'the spectre of militarism has never left the Japanese archipelago', and that right-wing forces had 'never abandoned the dream of becoming a military power'. It accused Tokyo of using American support to steadily roll back post-war restrictions and trigger 'deep concern in the international community over the revival of militarism'. 09:49 Japan weighs bold era of militarisation as Tokyo races to meet defence spending goals Japan weighs bold era of militarisation as Tokyo races to meet defence spending goals The commentary coincided with Japanese Agriculture Minister Shinjiro Koizumi's visit to the controversial Yasukuni Shrine on the anniversary, the first confirmed visit by a cabinet member from Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's administration. Such visits have consistently drawn sharp criticism from China and other Asian neighbours, which view the shrine as glorifying Japanese militarism and insulting the victims of Japan's wartime aggression. The commentary in the People's Liberation Army's newspaper also warned against Tokyo's expanding defence partnerships, citing deeper US-Japan military integration, reciprocal access agreements with Australia, Britain and the Philippines, and growing engagement with Nato. 'Under the pretext of cooperation and exchange, Japan is using military linkages to build momentum for its own military development,' it said.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong worker dies after being pinned against wall at MTR Corp depot
A 20-year-old worker has died after being pinned against a wall by a railway motor car at a depot of the MTR Corporation in an industrial accident that is being investigated by the Labour Department. Sources said on Friday that the department had received a report at 12.16pm about a worker who was killed by the 56-metre-long railway motor car at the Siu Ho Wan depot at North Lantau. They said the man was walking past the rear of the motor car, but it suddenly slipped backwards and pressed him against a wall. Other workers rushed to rescue him, according to the insiders. The man was unconscious when sent to Princess Margaret Hospital in Lai Chi Kok, where he was certified dead. The rail giant said it was highly concerned and would offer more details soon.