Hamzah: Recording of police raids or arrests can be a crime if it interferes with their duty

Recording photos and videos of or streaming police officers during theirs raids or arrests in public places can constitute a crime, said the Home Ministry yesterday in Parliament.

In a written reply to Lim Lip Eng (Kepong-PH) Home Minister Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainuddin said those who commit such an act can be prosecuted for allegedly preventing public servants from doing their duty or under Section 233 of the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998.

“For your information, taking pictures or videos is not a criminal offence. However, it can be an offence when members of the public record videos or make live broadcasts using mobile phones when police officers raid or arrest the public while the police are on duty in a public place.

“Those who record can be prosecuted because it is considered to prevent public servants from carrying out their duties and can interfere with the investigation. It also contravenes the provision under Section 233 of the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998 which initiates transmission with the intention of disturbing others,” he said in the reply.

Hamzah replied that the police may request or seize and have the right to check the mobile phones of persons suspected and involved in any ongoing investigation and not members of the public at random.

“The examination of the mobile phone is only carried out when the individual is suspected of committing a criminal offence under the provisions of the law as follows:

a) Penal Code [Act 574];

b) Section 233 of the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998 [Act 588];

c) Sedition Act 1948 [Act 15];

d) Security Offences (Special Measures) Act 2012 [Act 747];

e) Anti-Trafficking in Persons and Anti-Smuggling of Migrants Act 2007 [Act 670]; or

f) Terrorism Prevention Act 2015 [Act 769],” he said.

In another matter, Hamzah also replied that the budget for the acquisition of body-worn cameras for use by members of the police has been approved by the government under Rolling Plan 1 of the 12th Malaysia Plan.

“This procurement is still under scrutiny by the Procurement Division of Home Ministry and some issues need to be resolved and are being resolved by the division together with the police,” he said. —  Malay Mail

[ IMAGE SOURCE ]

Related reading

Recent Posts

iCaur 03 iWD is now locally assembled in Malaysia: Still priced at RM130k

iCaur Malaysia has announced the official availability of the iCaur 03 CKD, which is locally…

1 hour ago

Huawei Watch Fit 5 series launched in Malaysia with diabetes risk analysis & ECG, priced from RM799

Huawei has introduced two new smartwatches in its Watch Fit series — the Huawei Watch…

1 hour ago

MAA warns limiting EV choices could derail Malaysia’s Net Zero emission goals

The Malaysian Automotive Association (MAA) has expressed concern over Malaysia’s updated CBU EV policy, saying…

3 hours ago

DC Handal turns on 6x 22kW AC Charge Points at The Exchange TRX, RM1 per kWh

There are now more EV chargers available at The Exchange Mall at TRX. DC Handal…

9 hours ago

Google cuts AI Ultra pricing in Malaysia, now starts from RM429.99/month with 20TB storage

Google has revised its Google AI Ultra subscription pricing in Malaysia, introducing a new Ultra…

11 hours ago

Samsung and Google tease Gemini-powered smart glasses, their answer to Meta Ray-Bans

Samsung has officially teased a new pair of AI-powered smart glasses developed together with Google,…

12 hours ago

This website uses cookies.