The Borneo Post

IGP: Police to help investigat­e meat cartel case

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LANGKAWI: Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Tan Sri Abdul Hamid Bador said the police would assist the Ministry of Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs (KPDNHEP) with investigat­ions into the meat import cartel case.

He said the department had also opened several investigat­ion papers over the issue based on reports lodged by several individual­s and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons.

“This issue is related to trade, so the most relevant (authority) to investigat­e it is KPDNHEP, but in the meantime, the police will investigat­e reports claiming that there are cartels that commit irregulari­ties with regard to imported meat.

“If it is proven that such activities exist and it causes concern to the public, we will enforce the law,” he said at a press conference after the Khazanah Integrated Operations Meeting (OBK) here yesterday.

He said, however, no arrest had been made by the police so far in connection to the case.

The issue over the imported meat with questionab­le halal status recently heated up after the media managed to unravel the case, causing public outrage.

On the OBK meeting chaired by the Royal Malaysian Customs Department (Customs), Abdul Hamid said among the issues raised was about action against employers who had ‘kongsi’ houses at the edge of the forest, which allowed their foreign workers to carry out wildlife trapping activities. “Some foreign workers take the opportunit­y to trap animals in the forest near the ‘kongsi’ house, but we will take stern action against the employer because they are responsibl­e to ensure that the workers do not commit such offences.”

Meanwhile, Wildlife and National Parks Department (Perhilitan) director-general Datuk Abdul Kadir Abu Hashim said by 2021, OBK enforcemen­t activities would be concentrat­ed on hunting areas in forest reserves, including in the Titiwangsa Range National Park, which had been identified as a protected area and natural habitat for the Malayan Tiger.

He said there were hunters who set traps for wild boars, for example, but other protected wildlife were also affected by them.

“So we want to focus on destroying the traps, especially wire traps, mostly located on the edges of the forest, especially those close to ‘kongsi’ houses,” he said. Customs director-general Datuk Seri Abdul Latif Abdul Kadir was also present at the press conference.

 ??  ?? Tan Sri Abdul Hamid Bador
Tan Sri Abdul Hamid Bador

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