Amendments to the law on sexual offences against children closes a long-standing loophole by which those with substantial links to Malaysia could evade prosecution by committing offences abroad.

From Liew Li Xuan
Child sexual exploitation is no longer a hidden or distant issue: it is a growing reality increasingly shaped by the digital age, cross-border movement, and evolving criminal networks.
Recently, the Dewan Rakyat passed amendments to the Sexual Offences Against Children Act, significantly expanding Malaysia’s legal jurisdiction to prosecute act of sexual offences against children which are committed overseas, particularly when the offender has ties to Malaysia.
Child sexual abuse is increasingly facilitated through online platforms, transnational networks, and anonymity.
Offenders can operate across jurisdictions, victims can be contacted remotely, and evidence can be dispersed across multiple countries. Without extraterritorial legal reach, many cases risk falling into jurisdictional gaps where perpetrators evade accountability simply because the crime did not occur “within” national borders.
Law enforcement agencies and child protection advocates have repeatedly highlighted that sexual exploitation of minors increasingly involves digital grooming, live-streamed abuse, and cross-border trafficking of illicit material. Traditional legal boundaries are often insufficient to ensure prosecution and justice.
The amendments attempt to close a long-standing legal loophole by ensuring that those with substantial links to Malaysia cannot escape prosecution merely by committing offences abroad.
However, legislation alone does not resolve the issue. The effectiveness of such laws depends heavily on international cooperation and the ability of authorities to gather digital evidence across borders.
The societal implications are even more profound. Child sexual offences do not only destroy individual lives, they fracture families, undermine trust in institutions, and create long-term psychological and social consequences.
Survivors often carry trauma into adulthood, affecting education, mental health, and future economic participation. The impact is not isolated; it extends across generations and communities.
This is why the issue demands public attention beyond parliamentary proceedings. It is a matter of societal responsibility. Awareness, early education on online safety, stronger reporting mechanisms, and victim support systems are equally crucial in addressing the root of the problem.
Child protection law must evolve alongside technology and criminal behaviour. The real measure of success will not be found in parliamentary votes, but in whether children are genuinely safer in both physical and digital spaces. - FMT
Liew Li Xuan is a youth advocate, founder of LifeUp Malaysia and an FMT reader.
The views expressed are those of the writer and do not necessarily reflect those of MMKtT.

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