PUTRAJAYA, April 24 — A crackdown on misuse of controlled goods, known as Ops Tiris, has driven a sharp rise in the Domestic Trade and Cost of Living Ministry's (KPDN) enforcement cases, with seizures totalling RM263.41 million to date.
Its enforcement director general Datuk Azman Adam attributed the success to expanding the operation to cover six main commodities: diesel, RON95 petrol, liquid petroleum gas (LPG), sugar, cooking oil, and flour, as well as involving multiple agencies through a "whole-of-government" approach.
"To date, the Ops Tiris series has recorded 6,773 cases with 2,219 individuals arrested, including witnesses and accused.
“Nearly 80 per cent of them are Malaysians," he said during a media conference today on Ops Tiris enforcement achievements for 2025 up to March 2026.
Under Ops Tiris 4.0, which began on March 16, 377 cases have been recorded with 107 individuals arrested within the first month of the operation and seizures amounting to nearly RM17 million.
Diesel-related cases recorded the highest number, at 166, involving 1.126 million litres of diesel, followed by 78 petrol cases, with 31,931 litres seized, and 49 LPG cases.
Sarawak recorded the highest number of diesel-related cases, with 57 in one month, followed by Sabah, Kelantan, and Johor, indicating adequate enforcement in border states.
Azman added that starting April 11, KPDN and other enforcement agencies, including the police, have deployed officers to monitor 151 petrol stations in high-risk border areas.
This measure is important amid uncertain geopolitical situations, which can create price gaps and affect supplies, thereby increasing the risk of misuse.
Meanwhile, he said the authorities are also using technology, including artificial intelligence, to monitor fuel usage patterns and spot early signs of tampering, such as unusual spikes in fleet card transactions or supply anomalies at petrol stations.








