Malaysia shuts 2 sites over illegal waste as raid linked to Chinese gangs widens
- The raid follows last week’s seizure of 100 containers filled with e-waste bound for illegal smelters run by Chinese gangs in Malaysia
Malaysian authorities have shut down two factories suspected of unlicensed electronic and plastic waste recycling in the northern Kedah state, as the government extended a crackdown on illegal waste imports linked to Chinese gangs.
The factories were closed on Thursday following a raid led by the ministry of natural resources and environmental sustainability, which found 1,600 tonnes of electronic and plastic waste stored at the sites.
“The e-waste factory is estimated to have produced 1,500 tonnes of e-waste on site while the plastic factory produced 100 tonnes of pellets which were packed in bags labelled as fish food,” Minister Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad said in a post on LinkedIn on Friday.
The authorities will prepare investigation papers “to charge both premises on all offences” under the relevant laws, Nik Nazmi said.
If found guilty, the perpetrators will face fines of up to 10 million ringgit (US$2.1 million) and mandatory jail time of up to five years, he said.
The minister said the environment department would also conduct further investigations to find the source of waste stored at the plastic recycling factory, including whether it was imported illegally.