Latest news with #SungaiKlang


Free Malaysia Today
11 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
2 boys drown while swimming at waterlogged area near Sg Klang
No foul play is suspected in the death of the two boys. (PDRM pic) SHAH ALAM : Two boys found drowned at Jalan Cili Merah in Section 24 here yesterday are believed to have been swimming in a water-filled area at the Sungai Klang flood mitigation project site, according to police. Shah Alam police chief Iqbal Ibrahim said that according to witness accounts, the boys, aged nine and 12, had gone to the area to swim before they were found drowned. 'Police were informed of the incident at 8.50pm by a member of the public. 'An examination of the bodies found no signs of struggle or other injuries that could have caused their deaths,' he said in a statement today. The bodies were sent to Shah Alam Hospital for a post-mortem.


Free Malaysia Today
17-06-2025
- Free Malaysia Today
10 corpses pulled out in Sungai Klang widening work
The widening and deepening of Sungai Klang began on Nov 1, 2022 as part of the Selangor Maritime Gateway initiative. (Selangor Maritime Gateway pic) PETALING JAYA : More than 10 corpses, including that of a baby, have been found in the implementation of the Sungai Klang flood mitigation project under the Selangor Maritime Gateway initiative. Landasan Lumayan Sdn Bhd managing director Syaiful Azmen Nordin said the discoveries are not isolated incidents, and have happened many times since work to widen and deepen the river began on Nov 1, 2022. 'So far, we have handed over 10 corpses to the police and the fire and rescue department for further investigation. 'We once found three corpses at one time,' Sinar Harian reported him as saying after a site visit in Kota Kemuning today. Syaiful said pollution also poses a challenge to the project, with the discovery of heavy items such as refrigerators, lorry tyres, mattresses, couches and motorcycles at the bottom of the river. 'I don't understand how a refrigerator ended up in the river,' he said. He said the project has seen more than 918,936 cubic metres of matter, including sediment, garbage and rocks, extracted from the bottom of Sungai Klang.