The Borneo Post

Work to discard public negative perception, Malaysian cops urged

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KUALA LUMPUR: Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi has urged the Royal Malaysia Police to take steps to discard the negative perception of the public towards the force so that the people could enjoy peaceof-mind.

He said the police should get closer to the public and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons ( NGOs) through people-friendly approaches so that the general perception about them would be more positive.

“The police can be fierce, stern but keep smiling and be friendly to people, be community-friendly,” he said in his speech at the Addressing Perception on Safety and Security Forum organised by the Performanc­e Management and Delivery Unit ( Pemandu) of the Prime Minister’s Department here yesterday.

Ahmad Zahid said the public still

The police can be fierce, stern but keep smiling and be friendly to people, be community-friendly. Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, Deputy Prime Minister

saw the crime rate in this country as being high, even though the crime index rate had dropped by 47 per cent since the Government Transforma­tion Programme was implemente­d in 2009.

In fact, he said, the police had been acknowledg­ed as being the best security agency in Asean through various efforts to combat crime.

“This is the reality but the public perception does not agree with it because our mind often sees only negative things,” he said.

Ahmad Zahid, who is also Home Minister, said his ministry had also taken various steps to combat crime including helping former inmates to stay away from criminal activities.

He said according to statistics, only 0.6 per cent of inmates in the country who completed their sentences returned to crime.

This was much lower than the 65 per cent rate seen in California, United States who returned to crime, he said.

He added that the National AntiDrug Agency had also worked hard to rehabilita­te 3,794 patients at the cure and care rehabilita­tion centres throughout the country to prevent them from returning to a life of drugs.

He said drug addiction contribute­d to crime with 57.2 per cent of prison inmates committing drug-related crimes. — Bernama

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