KUALA LUMPUR — The Civil Aviation Authority of Malaysia (CAAM) has been directed to investigate the breakdown of the baggage handling system (BHS) at KLIA Terminal 1, after delays of up to four hours affected arriving passengers.
Transport Minister Anthony Loke said the Ministry of Transport (MOT) views the incident seriously, stressing that “the inconvenience caused is deeply regretted”.
“While the BHS system was restored the same evening, a technical restoration does not close the matter. Passengers who travel through our national gateway deserve a standard of service reliability that this incident has clearly failed to meet,” he said.
He added that CAAM has been tasked to assess whether punitive action is warranted against Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd (MAHB) over the lapse in service delivery.
Loke has also instructed MOT secretary-general Datuk Seri Jana Santhiran Muniayan to convene an emergency meeting with relevant agencies to review standard operating procedures on breakdown management, focusing on response time, passenger communication and contingency protocols.
“A national gateway cannot afford repeated lapses of this nature,” he said, stressing that MAHB, as the operator of KLIA, will be held accountable.
Beyond immediate remedial steps, Loke said the incident points to deeper organisational issues, calling for a stronger culture of accountability across the aviation sector.
“We cannot realise our aspiration of being among the world’s best airports without first inculcating a genuine culture of accountability and responsibility across the organisation,” he said.
Separately, CAAM confirmed operations at KLIA Terminal 1 have stabilised, with the system restored and airport functions, including check-in and departures, returning to normal.
The regulator said it exercised strict oversight of the recovery and continues to engage with MAHB and airlines to ensure full operational stabilisation and compliance with safety and service standards.
“MAHB is obligated to comply with established Quality of Service (QoS) standards, including the timely and efficient handling of passenger baggage,” CAAM said, adding that enforcement action will be taken in cases of non-compliance.
It also required MAHB to implement corrective and preventive measures to prevent a recurrence, stressing its commitment to maintaining high standards of safety, service quality and accountability across the aviation sector. — April 19, 2026
