Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Can trash be halal?












Andrew Sia
Published: Jun 22, 2026 11:44 AM
Updated: 1:44 PM




COMMENT | Halal rubbish. No, I am not insulting halal standards. I am merely pointing out that shopping malls in Selangor must now separate halal rubbish from non-halal rubbish or food waste.

Forgive my limited knowledge of Islam, but in Malaysia, halal usually refers to foods deemed ritually pure enough for Muslims to eat.

But I am confused. Surely nobody expects them to eat food scraps, so why the need for separate trash bins?

Garbage is garbage. Leftover food is meant to be recycled into fertilisers. They are broken down by bacteria and fungi to become rich compost. The only possible reason for separate bins is if we want to create “halal fertilisers”.

If so, is the soil where food is grown halal? What if a wild boar from the nearby forest pees on it? Frogs and snakes are also haram. What if these hop or slither across the soil?


Going too far?

What’s next? Halal train seats? Halal toilets? Halal blood donation? Will some people stoke fear of pork molecules in non-Muslim blood?




Back in 2012, fast-food chain A&W rebranded its “Coney Dog” and “Root Beer” to “Chicken Coney” and “RB” as the Islamic Development Department (Jakim) deemed that certain words would “confuse” Muslims.

Yet A&W had been in Malaysia since 1963, and Muslims drank root beer for over 50 years, knowing full well it had nothing intoxicating, except too much sugar.

In fact, the Malay dessert of fermented tapioca, or tapai, probably has more alcohol.

In 2017, a “halal laundry” in Muar refused to serve non-Muslims. Johor ruler Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar, as the head of state of Islamic matters, called this “extreme” and a “narrow mindset”.

He pointed out that ringgit notes may have also come in contact with pork or liquor.


Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar


“Will the government then have to produce Muslim-friendly money?” asked His Majesty.

“Think for yourselves. What about seats in public places that may have been licked by dogs? This will never end.”


Islamisation of Selangor


Some people grumble online that Selangor is slipping into an Islamic state by stealth - not via PAS but under the so-called “moderate” Pakatan Harapan.

In an earlier column, I wrote that the PKR-led state government had scored three own goals before the coming elections - restrictions to temples/churches, secretly selling forest land cheaply to cronies, and claiming there was “no land” for a public hospital in Petaling Jaya.


READ MORE: Paused Selangor rules would bar non-Muslim houses of worship from exceeding mosque height


The fourth own goal is that “No Pork, No Lard” signs may be banned in Selangor, as they may “confuse” Muslim customers into believing they are halal.

The “halal waste” issue counts as the fifth own goal. It was left to Lee Chean Chung, the outspoken MP for Petaling Jaya, to reveal this and the church/temple issue.

He is still in PKR but will probably soon move to Bersama for the next election.


Petaling Jaya MP Lee Chean Chung


Ng Suee Lim, the state exco for local government, then claimed that the policy on halal and non-halal waste separation in Selangor has been around since 2010.

He explained that due to “confusion and questions”, its implementation will be “reviewed” to ensure that they are “more practical, clear, and in line with current needs”.

The review will include “getting views from NGOs, industry players, local councils, and relevant agencies”.

Yet, the question remains, why did the four DAP state exco members not object to this silly policy? And is the government only seeking views from stakeholders after the rubbish has hit the fan?


Deeper problems


Malaysians generate around 8.3 million metric tonnes of food waste annually, or roughly 260kg per person. Food waste makes up 40 percent to 45 percent of all daily waste sent to landfills. No wonder garbage disposal is big business.




I see many Malaysians, including Muslims, leaving lots of perfectly good food uneaten at cafes. They don’t even bother packing it to eat at home.

Yet in Islam, wastage is a sin, and offenders are deemed as “relatives of Satan”.

I wish that halal was something that unites us - as a symbol of quality, like say the “organic” label.

Halal is supposed to mean compliance with Islamic principles of hygiene. But what about halal restaurants that are dirty? Or halal food packed with harmful preservatives and nitrates?

Most importantly, are we getting bogged down in micro details while missing the big picture?

Former minister Rafidah Aziz said in 2024 that authorities should focus on combating corruption, which was “non-halal money”, instead of “causing inconvenience” by enforcing rigid halal rules.




Thus, rather than getting fixated about halal garbage, we should examine if politicians, top civil servants, plus corporate/GLC leaders got their wealth in halal or haram ways.


Legislate against unexplained riches

Former Klang MP Charles Santiago said this can be done easily if the government has an Unexplained Wealth Law (UWL).

So if a civil servant with a RM10,000 salary has seven luxury cars and two huge mansions, the UWL can compel such jokers to explain how they acquired such massive assets.

If they cannot justify it, the government can quickly seize illicit wealth without dragging cases forever in court, said Charles. This will stop the “systemic corruption among the elite”.

But I do wonder if his strong, uncompromising stands were what caused DAP to drop him as the Klang parliamentary candidate in the 2022 general election, even though he was an immensely popular MP?


Former Klang MP Charles Santiago


Authorities have every right to spend immense time and effort checking cafes for the slightest mistakes on their halal status, for example, a menu listing “hot dogs”.

But perhaps more energy should be spent on doing “halal tests” on suspected corrupt wealth using a UWL.

After all, the biggest threats to Muslims and Malaysians are the 3Rs of “rempit, rokok, rasuah” - reckless motorcyclists, smoking, and corruption.

These 3Rs are what really harm lives, health, and society - not the other R - a lack of halal rubbish bins.



ANDREW SIA is a veteran journalist who likes teh tarik khau kurang manis. You are welcome to give him ideas to brew at tehtarik@gmail.com


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Is 'halal waste' mentioned in the Quran? Or, is it just a kerbau item (BS) created by JAKIM to protect its own 'rice bowl'?



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