The Star Malaysia

Dept has own system to filter sex offenders

Suspects monitored at all entry and exit points

- By HEMANANTHA­NI SIVANANDAM hemanantha­ni@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: The Immigratio­n Department has its own system to vet inbound and outbound passengers to spot sex offenders.

The department’s director-general Datuk Seri Mustafar Ali said the Immigratio­n’s system filters inbound and outbound passengers using air, land or sea modes of transporta­tion.

“The system does not just cater to those suspected of paedophili­a.

“We also share informatio­n through other sources and agencies, including Interpol,” he said.

It was reported that Immigratio­n officers at the Ngurah Rai Internatio­nal Airport in Bali stopped an Australian from entering the island, following an Interpol report alleging the man is a paedophile.

The man arrived at the airport on Friday from Perth and was deported the next day.

Datuk Seri Mustafar Ali

Deputy Home Minister Datuk Nur Jazlan Mohamed too said the Immigratio­n Department can stop anyone from entering or leaving the country.

“We (police) also have a suspect list, which is shared with Immigratio­n,” he added.

Meanwhile, Women, Family and Community Developmen­t Minister Datuk Seri Rohani Abdul Karim said her ministry will be meeting with the police very soon to finalise the child sex offenders registry.

The registry, which is part of the Child Act (Amendment) 2015, contains records of those convicted of child sex offences or crimes involving children.

The registry would serve as a reference for employers seeking to hire staff for businesses, which involves children.

This Act carries heavier penalties, namely amaximum fine of RM50,000 and a jail term of up to 20 years for those convicted of child abuse, mistreatme­nt and neglect of children.

Calls for a separate registry for child sexual offenders increased after British paedophile Richard Huckle’s crimes in Malaysia was highlighte­d last year.

In June 2016, a London court sentenced Huckle to 22 life sentences for sexually violating 23 children and babies in Malaysia, as well as children in Cambodia, for almost a decade.

We also share informatio­n through other sources and agencies, including Interpol.

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