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Malaysia
This Week in AsiaOpinion
Syaza Shukri

Asian AngleMalaysia’s LGBTQ crackdowns aren’t hypocrisy, they’re politics

Anwar’s government isn’t failing its ideals. It’s navigating a reality where Malay-Muslim legitimacy dictates the limits of social change

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A man holds a rainbow flag, commonly used to signal LGBTQ pride. Photo: Shutterstock
Malaysia’s recent enforcements and cancellations linked to LGBTQ-related activities have ignited debate about whether the government is backsliding on reform. Rather than reading these moves purely as contradicting past administrations’ policies, these government actions may be better understood as an attempt to balance two political imperatives.
For the political establishment, appearing conservative – and being conservative – remains central to political survival in a context where Malay-Muslim legitimacy continues to shape Malaysian politics.

Highly publicised raids carry symbolic weight and function as moral statements. Even if enforcement levels by various state Islamic Religious Affairs Departments seem low, with 135 LGBTQ-related arrests from 2022 to 2025, the visibility of action communicates resolve.

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Earlier police statistics recorded 670 cases (not arrests) of “unnatural sex” between 2020 and 2021, suggesting that such enforcement predates the current administration. A late 2025 raid on a men-only spa in Kuala Lumpur, conducted jointly by the police, City Hall and the Federal Territories Islamic Religious Department, reportedly led to more than 200 people being detained.
The “Glamping With Pride” retreat in January was cancelled after official pressure and public backlash. Photo: Handout
The “Glamping With Pride” retreat in January was cancelled after official pressure and public backlash. Photo: Handout
In January, a planned “Glamping with Pride” retreat was cancelled after official pressure and public backlash. Police raided an HIV/Aids outreach programme in Kota Baharu on suspicion of LGBTQ association. The Ministry of Health later clarified it was a public health initiative. That a medical outreach programme could trigger enforcement action on such grounds illustrates how moral anxieties shape enforcement decisions.
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