RM100 is not enough to penalise cyberbullying, says Home Minister


KUALA LUMPUR: Harsher legal actions are needed for cyberbullying, said Home Minister Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail.

“Harsher legal actions are needed to convey the government's serious stance on cyberbullying,” he said.

Saifuddin added that legislators must look beyond the Minor Offences Act and consider stricter laws.

"Lenient penalties send the wrong message to the public and hurt the victims' families.

“We will announce further steps soon in tomorrow’s (Friday’s) Cabinet discussion,” he said.

Saifuddin said that he recently met with Prime Minister’s Department (Law and Institutional Reform) Datuk Seri Azalina Othman Said, Digital Minister Gobind Singh Deo and Communications Minister Fahmi Fadzil. to discuss the matter.

A mere RM100 penalty was imposed on private nursing home owner Shalini Periasamy who committed communication offences linked to the death of Hindu rights activist Esha.

This was after she pleaded guilty in a Magistrate’s Court for deliberately uttering vulgarities with the intention to incite anger and disturb the peace through her TikTok account, an offence under the Minor Offences Act.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Nation

Terengganu first state for Madani Tuition programme, says Anwar
Motivational event organiser linked to immoral acts summoned by Mais before in 2022
Two syndicates selling fake work permits busted by Immigration Dept
10,049 candidates to repeat SPM exams from July 15-17
Rise in vaping among youth an alarming trend, says Health Ministry
ECRL project hits new milestone with record-breaking Genting Tunnel breakthrough
Former top state oil official disputes Masidi’s claims on SMJ Energy’s role
Kenyir’s clean energy projects will boost investments in Terengganu, says Anwar
NGO faces upstream battle to remove invasive fish species in local rivers
MetMalaysia issues storm warning for 11 states

Others Also Read