‘Symbolic or institutional reform?’: Why Malaysia picks ex-judge as chief of embattled anti-graft agency
While Abdul Halim Aman’s appointment could be seen as an attempt to restore public trust, experts ask if an outsider can overcome internal resistance and carry out much-needed reforms.
ORIGINAL SOURCE →via Channel NewsAsia
ADVERTISEMENT
⚡ STAY AHEAD
Events like this, convergence-verified across 689 sources, land in your inbox every Sunday. Free.
GET THE SUNDAY BRIEFING →RELATED · MY
- [CONFLICT] Woman in Malaysia gets 2 years’ jail for throwing her newborn from 38th-floor condo unit
- [CONFLICT] Money mule gets jail and caning under updated law targeting scam syndicates
- [CONFLICT] Malaysia to slash federal operating spend over Iran war costs
- [AVIATION] Ascend Airways Malaysia prepares for passenger flights as UK sister closes
- [CONFLICT] Fire destroys dozens of homes in Malaysia’s Sabah state
- [CONFLICT] Malaysian Indians least likely to be scammed as they ask too many questions: police