HEADLINES

MCMC drops Thai defamation case against Murray Hunter

Regulator says matter settled after apology and retraction of articles

9:53 AM MYT

 

KUALA LUMPUR – The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) has withdrawn a criminal defamation case in Thailand against Australian political commentator Murray Hunter after he apologised and took down articles about the commission.

In a statement, MCMC said the Thai case was linked to four articles published in April 2024 while Hunter was living in Thailand. The commission described the articles as misleading and said they contained serious allegations that harmed its reputation.

MCMC said it had lodged police reports in both Malaysia and Thailand over the publications. The case in Thailand was later taken up by Thai authorities under the country’s laws.

Hunter was arrested at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport in September 2025 and later released on bail.

The regulator said the matter was settled after mediation sessions at the Bangkok South Criminal Court. Hunter issued a public apology and retracted the four articles. Following the settlement, MCMC withdrew the reports related to the Thai case.

Separately, MCMC said it has also settled a civil defamation suit in Malaysia involving 13 articles through a consent order recorded by the High Court on Feb 4.

The commission said both the Thai criminal case and the Malaysian civil suit are now resolved, subject to Hunter complying with the agreed terms.

Hunter, who previously lived in Malaysia and now resides in Thailand, is known for his critical writings on Malaysian politics.– February 18, 2026

Topics

 

Popular

Petronas staff to be shown the door to make up losses from Petros deal?

Source claims national O&G firm is expected to see 30% revenue loss once agreed formula for natural gas distribution in Sarawak is implemented

Cleared for layoffs? AirAsia to retrench 20% of workforce in major cost-cutting move

This allegedly involves cabin services, cargo and logistics, engineering and maintenance, as well as the commercial division, according to Scoop’s source

Apad confirms inDrive licence revoked effective July 24, but company can appeal

Russian-based company can file appeal through the agency for the Transport Ministry's consideration

Related