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Like parking fee: Group says luxury car owners rather pay RM300 fine than insure vehicles
Like parking fee: Group says luxury car owners rather pay RM300 fine than insure vehicles

Malay Mail

time4 days ago

  • Automotive
  • Malay Mail

Like parking fee: Group says luxury car owners rather pay RM300 fine than insure vehicles

KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 6 — Luxury vehicle owners are exploiting the outdated Road Transport Act by treating the minimal RM300 fine as a parking fee, willingly paying penalties rather than renewing their road tax and insurance, transport experts warned. The Road Safety Expert Association (PPKJR) said that the current minimum fine of RM300 fails as a deterrent and has not successfully curbed this growing offence among wealthy drivers, Berita Harian reported. Jamil Manan Supri, founder and road safety advisor for PPKJR, argued that tougher penalties would create genuine fear among luxury vehicle owners about breaking traffic laws. The practice of some luxury vehicle owners paying the RM300 compound to continue driving without proper documentation must be completely eliminated, according to Manan. While enforcement agencies face constraints due to focusing on commercial vehicle collisions and seatbelt compliance, this issue deserves priority attention as it affects other road users' safety. The Road Transport Department (JPJ) must take proactive measures to detect violations and issue firm warnings to luxury vehicle owners who break these regulations, Manan said. Lawyer Muhammad Hasif Hasan exposed the practice after encountering a product founder with a luxury vehicle who was prepared to appear in court to settle summons for driving without road tax and insurance. The failure of luxury vehicle owners to maintain proper road tax and insurance creates severe complications for accident victims who cannot make insurance claims, potentially involving lengthy legal processes and compensation disputes when human lives are at stake.

Luxury car owners skip road tax, insurance for cheap fines
Luxury car owners skip road tax, insurance for cheap fines

New Straits Times

time5 days ago

  • Automotive
  • New Straits Times

Luxury car owners skip road tax, insurance for cheap fines

KUALA LUMPUR: A senior lawyer has revealed that some owners of high-powered luxury vehicles are allegedly choosing not to renew their road tax and insurance because the fines are cheaper. Muhammad Hasif Hasan said a product founder told him it was more cost-effective to pay a maximum fine of RM3,000 for not having the required documents than to pay the thousands of ringgit needed to renew them. The lawyer was speaking on the Road Transport Department's (RTD) Ops Luxury 2025, which has so far seized 53 luxury vehicles without road tax and insurance. "When I met the individual who has become an 'orang kena saman' (OKS), I asked why they came to court, and the answer was to pay a fine on road tax and insurance," Muhammad Hasif told Berita Harian. "The person explained that it was better to pay the RM300 fine, as it was cheaper and more worthwhile compared to paying over RM5,000 for road tax and more than RM10,000 for insurance for his continental car." The individual, who does not drive the car daily but uses it for product promotions, said that to get road tax, he must first get insurance. "If he just continues driving without road tax and insurance and gets fined, the maximum is only RM300. It's more worth it," Muhammad Hasif said. The lawyer added that this attitude not only breaks the law but also endangers other people's lives. "If he were to get into an accident and hit a member of the public while having no vehicle insurance coverage, the victim or their family would not be able to make any claims," he said. "In the end, they would have to bear all court and medical costs themselves." Muhammad Hasif said that once a victim's family is involved in a serious accident or death due to a driver's negligence, they will face a complicated and costly legal process. "Legal costs can reach up to RM10,000 to RM40,000, excluding medical and other court costs," he said. "In fact, even if they win the case, there's no guarantee they will receive the compensation money." He added that if the defendant has no insurance, the plaintiff would then have to file bankruptcy proceedings to enforce the court's decision, which would also cost thousands of ringgit.

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