
THE detention and remand of senior figures within the Department of Environment have pushed Malaysia’s long-simmering electronic waste problem into sharper focus, exposing potential cracks at the highest levels of regulatory oversight.
In Putrajaya, a magistrates’ court today ordered the director-general, deputy director-general and an assistant officer of the Department of Environment to be remanded for seven days, until next Thursday, to assist investigations into alleged misconduct linked to e-waste management.
A fourth suspect, a civilian, was separately remanded for three days until Sunday in connection with the same probe.
The remand orders were issued by Magistrate Ezrene Zakariah at the Putrajaya Magistrates’ Court following applications by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission.
Earlier in the day, all four suspects were brought to the court complex under escort by MACC officers, dressed in orange detention attire and handcuffed, arriving at about 9am.
The arrests mark a significant escalation in investigations into alleged abuse of power and corruption tied to the handling and regulation of electronic waste, an industry that has drawn increasing concern over environmental damage and illegal operations in recent years.
The director-general and deputy director-general were detained at around 6.30pm yesterday after presenting themselves to give statements at MACC headquarters in Putrajaya.
Their detention was later confirmed by MACC chief commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki, who said both senior officials are being investigated under provisions of the MACC Act 2009.
Investigators are understood to be examining claims that improper practices linked to e-waste management may have taken place over several years, potentially implicating enforcement decisions, approvals and oversight failures within the department.
The case has heightened public unease over whether regulatory institutions tasked with protecting the environment have instead become vulnerable to influence and corruption.
As the investigation unfolds, it is expected to test not only individual accountability but also the credibility of Malaysia’s environmental governance framework at a time when illegal e-waste activities pose mounting risks to public health and sustainability.
For now, the remand signals that the inquiry has entered a critical phase, with investigators seeking to establish whether systemic failures, rather than isolated misconduct, lie at the heart of the allegations. - January 30, 2026
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