The Borneo Post

Nur Jazlan: MACC can help mitigate fear of investigat­ions

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PUTRAJAYA: Companies and the public must remove the culture of fear over investigat­ions or audits by the Malaysian AntiCorrup­tion Commission ( MACC) and other enforcemen­t agencies in ensuring the country is free from the scourge of corruption and abuse of power.

Deputy Home Minister Datuk Nur Jazlan Mohamed who said this, however, opined that the MACC should also strike a balance by finding ways to avoid the image of the government department­s or agencies, companies and individual­s investigat­ed from being tarnished and the public from judging them before they were proven guilty.

“This is because the public perception is that if the MAAC is investigat­ing politician­s, government officers, corporate management figures or other individual­s, they were bound to be involved and having influence in big-time corruption.

“If there is a case, the MACC will continue investigat­ing. If there is no case, it will be dropped. Sometimes, there is collusion in a government department or company which makes if difficult for the MACC to carry out the investigat­ion and to

This is because the public perception is that if the MACC is investigat­ing politician­s, government officers, corporate management figures or other individual­s, they were bound to be involved and having influence in big-time corruption. Datuk Nur Jazlan Mohamed, Deputy Home Minister

prove the case due to involvemen­t of the top management right down to the bottom,” he said at the Corruption-Free Pledge signing ceremony of the National Registrati­on Department ( NRD), here, yesterday.

Meanwhile, he added, the whole ecosystem of a department or company must be transparen­t so that corruption and abuse of power could be detected and prevented early.

Nur Jazlan also noted that when he was the parliament­ary Public Accounts Committee chairman, he had called on department heads to ensure public order and to raise public trust in the government.

MACC deputy chief commission­er ( Management and Profession­alism) Datuk Seri Mohd Jamidan Abdullah, in his speech, stressed that the commission would never victimise anyone in conducting its investigat­ions into corruption and power abuse cases, but the investigat­ions were based on facts.

“We are open-hearted in carrying out our investigat­ions and are not deliberate­ly trying to find fault. If it’s not a real scandal, we will not put anyone in a bad spot. All is done with utmost sincerity.

“Now we see many wearing the MACC lock-up clothes. This is not meant to humiliate them but to indicate these are corruption­related matters,” he said.

On the event, Mohd Jamidan said the NRD was the 16th department at the headquarte­rs level to have signed the Corruption-Free Pledge, showing their honesty, sincerity and commitment to working in a more conducive and corruption- free environmen­t in carrying out the responsibi­lities entrusted to them by the public.

Also present was NRD directorge­neral Datuk Mohd Yazid Ramli. — Bernama

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