Opinion

Improvement in making Hari Raya Haji travel more bearable

It may sound like a small improvement, but for Malaysians who spend hours navigating traffic daily, the impact on quality of life should not be underestimated.

Updated 1 month ago · Published on 23 May 2026 4:40PM

Improvement in making Hari Raya Haji travel more bearable
For many, the "balik kampung" is a dreaded affair due to the notorious festive traffic on the highways. - May 23, 2026

WITH Hari Raya Aidiladha approaching and another long weekend ahead, many Malaysians will once again join the annual exodus out of the Klang Valley. Like many others, I will be driving back to my hometown in Sungai Petani, Kedah.

For many, the "balik kampung" is a dreaded affair due to the notorious festive traffic on the highways.

But for me, the journey back north from Subang Jaya will be more tolerable due to a recent technological improvement that I tried during the Hari Raya holidays.

I first used the JustGO app to pay tolls when I went back to my hometown back then. Coming from the congestion and chaos of Klang Valley toll plazas, this user-friendly system was so much more convenient.

No fumbling for cards. No last-minute lane switching. No unnecessary slowing down at toll booths. You simply drive through while the system recognises your vehicle and processes payment almost instantly.

It may sound like a small improvement, but for Malaysians who spend hours navigating traffic daily, the impact on quality of life should not be underestimated.

At a time when Malaysians constantly complain about congestion, bottlenecks and wasted commuting hours, it is remarkable that a solution which directly improves traffic flow has not received greater national attention.

The real value of ANPR systems like JustGO goes beyond convenience. Every unnecessary stop, slowdown and lane change at toll plazas contributes to congestion, fuel wastage and driver stress.

In heavily urbanised regions such as the Klang Valley, even marginal improvements in traffic flow can generate meaningful economic and social benefits over time.

This matters even more today amid rising fuel costs and broader global supply pressures. Improving highway efficiency should no longer be viewed as merely a convenience initiative. It should be seen as part of national productivity and energy efficiency efforts.

Another advantage is that the system does not require motorists to install additional devices. Integration with existing payment methods lowers barriers to adoption significantly.

Of course, nationwide implementation will require strong backend infrastructure, public confidence and proper safeguards involving enforcement, interoperability and data protection.

But Malaysia should not fall into the trap of endlessly piloting technologies without scaling successful ones. If the system has already demonstrated operational stability and public acceptance, policymakers and highway concessionaires should seriously consider accelerating broader nationwide adoption.

Countries that succeed in infrastructure modernisation are often not those that invent the most technology, but those willing to implement practical systems that meaningfully improve daily life.

Sometimes progress does not come through mega projects or billion-ringgit announcements. Sometimes progress is simply a smoother drive home.

Rodziah Sulaiman

Subang Jaya

The observations reflect the writer's personal insights and do not necessarily represent the official stance of The Vibes.com

Related News

Malaysia / 1d

Johor PRN: Over 300,000 outstation voters expected to return

People / 4w

Malay kampongs in Bangkok: Echoes of southern heritage in Thailand’s capital

Events / 1mth

Arrivia, KrisFlyer deepen partnership with launch of cruise redemptions

Malaysia / 1mth

Bus driver with 29 traffic summonses arrested on suspicion of reckless driving (video)

Malaysia / 1mth

3.3 million vehicles expected to flood highways in conjunction with Aidiladha, school holidays – LLM

Malaysia / 1mth

1.9 million vehicles expected to enter Penang for long holidays starting this week

Spotlight

Malaysia

Johor state election: MACC receives three reports of alleged corruption

Malaysia

Banks need to do more to help counter rising costs of living – Guan Eng

By Ian McIntyre

Business

BNM holds OPR at 2.75 per cent

Malaysia

MACC: No one off limits in probe into US$13 million luxury property deal

Malaysia

Govt rejects claims Jho Low secretly returned to Malaysia for 1MDB asset talks

Malaysia

School stabbing incident: Suspect claimed she was dissatisfied, allegedly bullied

Places

Four premier hotels in Penang to be restored, open doors soon

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Rosmah demands action against Nga over alleged misleading election poster in Johor polls

Malaysia

Malaysia faces RM51.4b 1MDB burden after recovering RM31.3b in funds and assets

You may be interested

Opinion

US attacks in the Gulf show the weaknesses of MOUs

Opinion

Stronger political will needed as drug abuse threatens national security and youth future