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Malaysia’s Defence Ministry said it plans to overhaul its anti-corruption framework this year following a series of scandals involving military procurement, including allegations of cartel-style tender fixing and bribery.
Speaking at a press conference on Monday, Defence Minister Khaled Nordin said the military would also review its tender and procurement processes, citing an “erosion of credibility” amid an ongoing graft probe into contracts awarded between 2023 and 2025, according to the state news agency Bernama.
The announcement follows the detention last Thursday of former army chief Muhammad Hafizuddeain Jantan and his two wives over their alleged involvement in a cartel linked to military procurement contracts. The trio were arrested on Jan. 7 by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC), which has also detained 17 company directors suspected of rigging army procurement tenders.
The MACC said it seized 2.4 million ringgit ($759,157) in cash during an attempted transfer on the same day, which investigators believe is linked to bribery involving the contracts. The investigation has since expanded, with the anti-graft agency now probing 26 companies suspected of involvement in the scheme.
The Defence Ministry has faced a string of corruption cases over the past year. In August, five senior military officers were detained as part of an investigation into a smuggling syndicate operating in southern Malaysia, which authorities said brought smuggled goods into the country worth about $1.2 million a month.
Malaysia’s king and supreme commander of the armed forces, Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar, warned last week that corruption is “the main enemy” of the military’s credibility, singling out the role of middlemen within the Defence Ministry. “These people shouldn’t be allowed to enter,” he said during a meeting with the new army chief, Datuk Azhan Md Othman.