
Malaysian anti-graft agency allegations: Key party in ruling coalition calls for royal inquiry
The Hindu
Malaysian coalition party demands a royal inquiry into misconduct allegations against the anti-graft agency amid public outcry.
A key party in Malaysia’s ruling coalition called on Wednesday (February 25, 2026) for a Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) to be formed to investigate misconduct allegations against the country’s anti-graft agency.
The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission and its chief have been the focus of a public outcry following multiple media reports earlier this month accusing it of misconduct and breaching public service laws, among other allegations.
Bloomberg reported that MACC officials were helping a group of businessmen to seize control of companies. Reuters has not independently verified the report, which cited internal documents and interviews with witnesses.
MACC said the allegations were “baseless”, saying in a statement on Tuesday (February 24, 2026) that they were an attempt to discredit its investigations and enforcement actions within the corporate sector.
However, the Democratic Action Party, a key member of Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s administration, said it will push for an inquiry into the allegations, calling MACC’s denial “insufficient”.
“There must be an inquiry into the allegations made and that inquiry ought to be by way of an RCI equipped with all those powers necessary to ensure an effective and transparent probe into the matter,” DAP national chairman Gobind Singh Deo, who is also a Cabinet Minister, said in a statement on Wednesday.













