Penang Cracks Down on Littering with Stricter Enforcement
L'essentiel
- Penang, Malaysia, has implemented stricter littering enforcement after a six-month grace period.
- Patrol teams can now issue immediate notices for offenses, using body camera footage for transparency and evidence.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Penang has implemented tougher enforcement measures against littering, giving patrol teams new powers to issue immediate notices for offenses.
The tougher enforcement, which took effect on Wednesday after a six-month grace period, gives patrol teams from the Penang Island City Council and Seberang Perai City Council powers to record offences at public hotspots across one of Malaysia’s best-known tourist states.
Penang local government committee chairman H’ng Mooi Lye said enforcement officers would patrol public areas, including places where small litter such as cigarette butts, tissues, plastic waste, bottles and food wrappers were often discarded.
“Do not litter, even if it is only a cigarette butt, tissue or small waste,” H’ng said in a social media post after joining Seberang Perai mayor Baderul Amin Abdul Hamid and enforcement officers during a check in Bandar Perda.
H’ng said each operation would be led by an authorised officer, with body camera footage used to ensure enforcement was carried out “transparently and professionally” while also serving as evidence.
“There will be no warnings. Once our enforcement officers obtain sufficient evidence through body camera recordings, they have the authority to issue a notice immediately,” he said separately after the statewide enforcement walkabout.
Questions ouvertes
- What are the specific fines for littering offenses?
- How will the councils monitor the effectiveness of this enforcement?






