Malaysia is a parliamentary democracy with a federal constitutional monarch, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, as head of state. Civic space remains obstructed, with rights-based CSOs operating under restrictive legal frameworks and uneven enforcement of fundamental freedoms.
While the Malaysian Media Council Bill and consultations on a federal Freedom of Information law offered modest openings, these contrast with a tightly regulated digital and legal environment. The Sedition Act continues to be used against activists and journalists. Amendments to the Communications and Multimedia Act and the Online Safety Act introduced expansive enforcement powers, vague content restrictions and obligations on platforms to proactively moderate speech, raising risks of over-censorship. Peaceful assemblies remain policed through an approval-based logic, with police notification or local authority “permission” restricting protests. Restrictions on expression, particularly around race, religion and royalty, are expected to persist.
Developments affecting CSOs’ freedom of association and operations were mixed. Amendments to the Trustees Act improved financial transparency, while changes to the Trade Union Act marginally expanded organising rights for Malaysian workers. However, student associations in public universities remain vulnerable to interference.
Despite stronger civil society engagement in 2024, consultations remain briefing-style, with inadequate dialogue and limited transparency on how feedback is incorporated. CSOs are acknowledged as partners in some international processes, but this shifts when they raise policy shortcomings or rights violations.
Civil society faces structural funding challenges, including reliance on short-term, donor-driven grants and constrained access for unregistered or marginalised organisations. The USAID funding freeze in January 2025 may tighten resources.
Network Member:
Suara Rakyat Malaysia
