Selangor Journal
Several of the 24 Malaysians who were successfully brought home by the Foreign Affairs Ministry from Phnom Penh, Cambodia, after being freed from captivity as victims of job scams, at the arrival lobby of the Kuala Lumpur International Airport 2 (klia2), Sepang, on September 9, 2022. — Picture by BERNAMA

Job scam syndicates: Special committee headed by foreign ministry to be set up

PUTRAJAYA, Sept 21 — A multi-agency special committee led by the Foreign Ministry, will be formed to ensure Malaysians who have fallen victim to job scam syndicates and stranded in other countries are brought home safely.

Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Special Functions), Datuk Abdul Latiff Ahmad said the decision to establish the special committee was agreed upon at today’s Cabinet meeting.

“The issue was seriously discussed and the government is very concerned about the plight of Malaysians stranded in these countries and their worried families.

“The establishment of the special committee is evidence of the government’s commitment to ensuring that the Malaysian victims are brought home safely,” he said in a statement today.

Yesterday, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob said the government would ensure that Malaysians who have become victims of job scams in several countries be brought home safely and efforts were being made through certain channels for this purpose.

He said the government was very concerned and seriously viewed the plight of Malaysians stranded in Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Cambodia as these individuals had become victims of syndicates offering fake jobs overseas.

On Monday, a group of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) sent a memorandum to the prime minister seeking assistance as well as government interference to solve this issue.

As of last Monday, Wisma Putra said the number victims of fake job syndicates who had been rescued from Cambodia totalled 143 from the 158 cases reported, apart from 16 Malaysians rescued from Thailand, 27 (Laos) and five (Myanmar).

Abdul Latiff advised Malaysians to contact the Foreign Ministry if they received any job offers from overseas to ensure the offers are legit so as not to get caught in fraud scams.

— Bernama

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