Malaysia airport migration system believed compromised

Malaysia airport migration system believed compromised

Malaysia long been target of people smugglers wanting to move migrants from East to West, and on some occasions West to East

By P Prem Kumar

KUALA LUMPUR (AA) - Immigration systems at Malaysian airports are believed to have been compromised by human trafficking syndicates to allow the movement of illegal migrants in and out of the country, a source close to the matter told Anadolu Agency on Tuesday.

The source said that the myIMMs system (Malaysian Immigration System) had been found to have been downed deliberately once a day, allowing manual screening by counter officers in two major international airports in capital Kuala Lumpur.

"The system is believed to have been switched off deliberately, so when the system [appeared] crashed, passports would be stamped manually," the source said on condition of anonymity because of sensitivity of the matter.

They would thus evade computer checks that would register them as entering or leaving the country, check their names on international terror databases, or confirm if their passports were genuine or forged.

In 2014, MyIMMs -- implemented around 20 years ago -- was linked to Interpol’s I-Checkit to enable authorities to verify within seconds if a passport had been stolen or reported lost.

Late Monday, Malaysia's Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said he believed that the system had been sabotaged, with suspected perpetrators already identified.

"We have identified several suspects. The names would be announced by the police soon," he told reporters.

Last week, Malaysian police arrested 19 people suspected of trafficking Sri Lankan nationals with fake Malaysian passports to Geneva, Switzerland.

In a four-week operation, the police arrested six Malaysians including two immigration officers, one agent and three runners as well as 10 Sri Lankans and three Indian agents.

Recently, two Russians and a Sri Lankan were detained in Malaysia's central Selangor state on terror offences.

Questions were raised as to how the men could enter Malaysia when the Sri Lankan was on a wanted list in his country, and the Russian had been deported from Turkey in February on suspicion of ties to Daesh.

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