BFM 89.9

HIGHLIGHTS 
Podcast  >  Morning Run  >  Current Affairs  >  Road Safety - Reinventing Enforcement

Road Safety - Reinventing Enforcement

Dr. Kulanthayan K.C. Mani

08-Jul-16 08:35

Road Safety - Reinventing Enforcement

PDRM has plans to revamp the Kejara and Demerit system. This is to ensure better compliance with traffic laws, as a means to reduce the number of accidents and the resulting fatalities. Today on Current Affairs, we discuss what this means for road users.

This is a report by Nadiah Abdul Aziz.


This and more than 60,000 other podcasts in your hand. Download the all new BFM mobile app.

Categories: 

Tags:  TrafficenforcementkejarademeritAeslawsroadsafetyaccidents





Play / Pause

Listen now : BBC World Service: Datshiane Navanayagam talks to two women who changed paths...

Today’s Shows



11:00 AM

Best of Enterprise

(REPEAT) We catch up with Founder and CEO Henry Ting to unpack how TTRacing has grown since 2024, how its revenue mix and operations have changed, the commercial logic behind its product and market expansion, and how the company is balancing growth with profitability.

12:00 PM

Popcorn Culture

(REPEAT) Stuff We Missed: Memori & Sore + Time Travel Movies

1:00 PM

Cruise Control

(REPEAT) Are Malaysians switching to EVs at an acceptable rate? We unpack where we are in this week's episode.

2:00 PM

Matt-Splained

(REPEAT) On today’s show, Richard and Matt offer up their apologies and outline what you can expect to see at your desk in 2026. From agentic AI bundling up your day, to managerial trends and mentoring.

3:00 PM

Earth Matters

(REPEAT) For this month’s Nature Reads, wildlife researcher Su Mei Toh discusses a range of books, including environmental classics, books on Indigenous knowledge, science writing, and field guides rooted in Malaysia.

4:00 PM

Bar None

(REPEAT) Are our shuttlers playing in too many tournaments in a calendar year? We unpack the issue.

5:00 PM

BBC World Service

Datshiane Navanayagam talks to two women who changed paths to design and manufacture their own shoes in their own countries.