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No Evidence Of Delayed Or ‘Shelved’ Investigations, Says MACC PPO Chairman

Kuala lumpur: The Operations Evaluation Panel (PPO) of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) has found no indication that cases were deliberately delayed or 'shelved', with most investigation papers meeting the agency's set deadlines. Its chairman, Datuk Ahmad Rosli Mohd Sham, said a key focus of the panel is the percentage of investigation papers completed within the prescribed timeframe, including cases capped at a 12-month investigation period.

According to BERNAMA News Agency, Ahmad Rosli emphasized that it is rare for him or other PPO members to question why a case did not meet the target. Only when it does not will they request an explanation. So far, there have been no issues, and they have not found any evidence of deliberately delaying action, dragging investigations, or shelving cases. He conveyed this during the Journalism Workshop: Understanding MACC's Role in Combating Corruption.

Commenting on the PPO's role, Ahmad Rosli added that the panel not only monitors operational efficiency but also reviews cases classified as 'no further action' (NFA) to ensure no investigative gaps are overlooked. The evaluation looks at several aspects, the first being whether there are any weaknesses in the investigation that need to be addressed. If an investigation fails to consider a particular angle, the panel provides instructions or advice to explore it further, including situations where the probe may not reveal a corruption offence but could uncover other potential violations.

Earlier, during a talk with local media, he revealed that from 2009 until last year, the MACC submitted 1,869 investigation papers classified as NFA to the PPO. Of these, the panel agreed with 1,760 NFA decisions, while 136 cases were directed for review.

Ahmad Rosli also noted that the MACC is receptive to the panel's feedback, including recommendations to strengthen the expertise of its investigators. When comments are provided, the MACC does not become defensive or try to justify itself, but rather, they take the feedback into account.

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