Malaysia

Anti-Hopping Bill to be debated July 27: Wan Junaidi

Minister says it’s different from other existing laws as drafting done by Select Committee, not AGC

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 25 Jul 2022 7:04AM

Anti-Hopping Bill to be debated July 27: Wan Junaidi
Minister in Prime Minister’s Department (Parliament and Law) Datuk Seri Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar mentions that the Anti-Hopping Bill will be debated on July 27 with the winding-up session happening the next day. – The Vibes file pic, July 25, 2022

KUALA LUMPUR – The Anti-Hopping Bill will be debated on July 27 with the winding-up session to take place on July 28 if there are no outstanding issues, Minister in Prime Minister’s Department (Parliament and Law) Datuk Seri Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar said. 

He said the bill had involved many engagement sessions since January and is already widely known among Dewan Rakyat MPs.

He added that the bill is different compared to other existing laws as it was drafted by the Select Committee and printed by the Parliament and not drafted by the Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC).

“So I want to clarify here that the procedure of the bill itself, all MPs already know about it. InsyaAllah, it will be debated on the 27th and I will wind up on the evening of the 28th, at about 2.30pm.”

“If there are no obstacles and MPs agree (with the bill), we can end and solve the issue before 5.30pm,” he said during a media conference after attending the 2021 Lang International Corporate Titan Awards (LICTA) ceremony here today.

Wan Junaidi had previously informed that the engagement with the Legal Affairs Division and the AGC together with government MPs would be held on July 25 and the engagement with opposition MPs would be held on July 26.

In other developments, when asked about a bankruptcy-related act, he said the government is studying the mechanism according to models from other countries to tackle bankruptcies effectively.

Although the government had raised the threshold from RM50,000 to RM100,000 in 2020, he still believed that raising the new threshold to a higher value was not a good solution, especially with the impact of Covid-19, he said.

“We need to remember an important thing, we are moving towards an entrepreneur nation by 2030, if there are too many bankrupts, our youth will avoid being entrepreneurs, and will stymie government efforts to turn Malaysia into a business country,” he said.

He added that Malaysia’s bankruptcy laws were created during the British era and have never been changed comprehensively.

“I have said that if we could bring this up during the debate of the budget that will be tabled at the Dewan Rakyat at the end of this year, but that is if there are no challenges in the framework or engagement, and there won’t be too many objections from certain parties, insyaAllah we can get the legal framework,” he said. – Bernama, July 25, 2022

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