Businessman Questions MACC's Focus on Small Fry, Demands Action Against Bigger Names

Albert Tei walked out of court and started asking tough questions about corruption charges. The businessman wants to know why anti-graft officers only arrest small players like him. He claims bigger fish swim free despite having evidence against them. Tei says he gave Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission documents about Chief Minister Hajiji Noor and seven other politicians. The evidence against these leaders appears stronger than what prosecutors have on the two men charged alongside him.

The whistleblower feels suspicious about how investigators handled his case. Officials gave him two weeks notice before filing charges against him. Most corruption suspects face arrest and court the next day. Tei wonders if someone made secret deals during those extra weeks. He questions whether the two charged politicians lack powerful connections to protect them.

Tei visited MACC offices three times since October and submitted multiple letters with proof. Only Yusof Yacob from Sindumin and Andi Suryady Bandy from Tanjung Batu face charges with him. The businessman promises more people will end up in court soon. He plans to keep fighting for justice despite pressure from authorities. Tei warns that charging whistleblowers sends dangerous messages to future witnesses.

The businessman made a scary warning to reporters before leaving court. He told them to investigate ten specific people if anything bad happens to him. Tei claims these individuals are his only enemies. He promised to return to court as many times as needed.
 

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