The Borneo Post

Govt sets up Cyber Crime Special Committee

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KUALA LUMPUR: A special committee has been set up by the government to combat cyber crime in the country.

Communicat­ions and Multimedia Minister Datuk Seri Dr Salleh Said Keruak said the Cyber Crime Special Committee was necessary for enforcemen­t such as investigat­ion and prosecutio­n to be placed under one committee that could report directly to the Cabinet.

“Presently there is no enforcemen­t agency that deals specifical­ly with cyber crime,” he said in a statement issued after the first committee meeting which he chaired, at the parliament building here yesterday.

He said the establishm­ent of the special committee was approved in a Cabinet Meeting on Nov 3.

Salleh said it was agreed at the meeting yesterday that the special committee would function among others as a focal point to the cabinet in cyber crime-related matters and provide consultati­on service to it in regard to policy and strategy.

The committee would also facilitate sharing of informatio­n among enforcemen­t agencies, optimise various sources particular­ly expertise among enforcemen­t agencies, review existing laws where necessary for more efficient enforcemen­t in line with informatio­n technology advancemen­t, and prepare committee reports for presentati­on to the cabinet.

“The meeting also agreed on the setting up of an Action Committee headed by National Cyber Security Agency ( NACSA) to discuss on matters for decision at the special committee level,” he said.

He said the Special Committee to Combat Abuse of Social Media would be merged with the cyber crime special committee as both committees had almost similar functions and responsibi­lities.

Salleh said members comprised Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, Datuk Seri Azalina Othman Said and representa­tives from the Home Ministry, Attorney- General’s Chambers, his ministry, Malaysian Communicat­ions and Multimedia Commission ( MCMC), NACSA, National Security Council, Royal Malaysia Police and Health Ministry.

Additional committee members consist of representa­tives from the Domestic Trade, Cooperativ­es and Consumeris­m Ministry, Securities Commission Malaysia, Bank Negara Malaysia and Department of Islamic Developmen­t Malaysia.

Meanwhile, Salleh said MCMC received 1,792 public complaints between January and September this year compared to 804 in the same period last year.

The cases included bullying, sexual harassment, threats, intimidati­on, abuse of informatio­n, details or personal photos to shame individual­s.

MCMC also received 2,047 complaints of network threats between January and August. — Bernama

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