Minister orders Jakim to lodge report on woman sharing explicit content on sex life
FARHANA ABD KADIR
SHAH ALAM - Minister in the Prime Minister's Department (Religious Affairs) Datuk Dr Mohd Na'im Mokhtar has ordered the Malaysian Islamic Development Department (Jakim) to lodge a report about a woman being the administrator of a Telegram account with immoral content.
He said following revelations of the case on social media, a report has been made to the Malaysian Communications Multimedia Commission (MCMC) for further action.
"I have also instructed Jakim to summon and hold a meeting with the person to offer some advice and guidance," he said in a statement on Saturday.
Recently, the woman in question had been actively uploading sexual content in a Telegram group, exposing her partner and openly sharing explicit details about their sexual relationship as well as her's with her ex-husband.
Mohd Na'im added, every human being needs to have a sense of shame in order to preserve their morality.
He insisted that there were things that do not need to be discussed openly including the intimate relationship between a husband and wife.
"In the words of the Prophet, Peace Be Upon Him, "Indeed, among what had been obtained by mankind from the words (unanimously) of the Prophets are; "if you are not ashamed, do as you wish." (Narrated by Bukhari).
"Not to mention the subject involves profanity. This is not Islamic or moral," he added.
Yesterday, a Twitter account revealed that a woman, masking herself as an Ustazah, had been managing a Telegram group and sharing "knowledge" on how to treat husbands and how the wife should be a prostitute ready to serve him. Internet users later shared screenshots, photos and videos of the woman and her husband proving that she was an authentic person following claims that it could have been a fake account.
Download Sinar Daily application.Click Here!

![<div itemscope itemtype="https://schema.org/VideoObject"><meta itemprop="name" content="[TOP NEWS PODCAST] Art vs Boundaries — Where Should the Line Be Drawn?"><meta itemprop="description" content="One viral clip and the internet is split. Bold expression or going too far? As universities tighten control, the spotlight is now on artistic freedom, censorship and where institutional boundaries should begin or end.<br /><br />In this conversation, Aswara Assistant Director Corporate Imee Nadia Abdul Hadi weighs in on improvisation in performance, defining “sensitivities” and whether fear of viral backlash is pushing students towards self-censorship.<br /><br />As people debate, bigger questions emerge are tighter rules protecting values or limiting expression? And should university theatre adopt stricter guidelines like film rating systems?<br /><br />Watch the full discussion now on Sinar Daily.<br /><br />#TopNews #Art #Theather #Aswara #SinarDaily"><meta itemprop="uploadDate" content="2026-05-06T07:31:31.000Z"><meta itemprop="thumbnailUrl" content="https://s1.dmcdn.net/v/ataGo1f-k_5whPcid/x120"><meta itemprop="duration" content="P2094S"><meta itemprop="embedUrl" content="https://geo.dailymotion.com/player/xlcbf.html?video=xa89lbm"><script src="https://geo.dailymotion.com/player/xlcbf.js" data-video="xa89lbm"></script></div>](/theme_sinarenglish/images/no-image.png)