Sunday, July 12, 2026

How supercop Paul Kiong triggered mass defections of communists inside Perak’s jungles, while cheating death for six years






How supercop Paul Kiong triggered mass defections of communists inside Perak’s jungles, while cheating death for six years



An undated picture of Paul Kiong at the Petai communist camp in Kinta Forest Reserve in Central Park, Perak while serving as the Special Branch’s ground commander. — Picture courtesy of Datuk Paul Kiong

First Published: Sunday, 12 Jul 2026 2:00 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, July 12 — At 82, Ipoh-born Datuk Paul Kiong still prides himself as a sharp judge of character, a trait that served him well when leading a high-stakes double life amid communist fighters back in the 1960s.

The gritty Kiong always longed for adventure and even applied to become a game ranger in Kenya after finishing school.

He did eventually traverse the wilderness — but closer to home.

Kiong enlisted as a police constable in 1964 and served in Singapore for three years before the second wave of communist insurgency hit Malaysia in 1968.


At that time, the Communist Party of Malaya (CPM) dispatched the Fifth Assault Unit to Perak, the Sixth Assault Unit to Pahang and the Seventh Assault Unit to Kelantan.


The deadly attacks led to the Second Malayan Emergency which was from 1968 to 1989.

In 1967, Kiong was posted as a Special Branch detective to neutralise underground communist cells in Johor. In 1976, he was deployed as the ground commander under Operation Bamboo to cripple the Fifth Assault Unit operating in Perak’s jungles.


Kiong’s biggest success was the en bloc defection of the Fifth Assault Unit while keeping the 13th Regiment — the armed wing of CPM — in southern Thailand, oblivious about it until they surrendered in 1989.

“For six years, the 13th Regiment was supplying weapons and funds to the Fifth Assault Unit whenever they asked at our behest. They had no clue!” Kiong told Malay Mail, after his guest lecture at Universiti Malaya here recently.

“Whenever we caught communist terrorists (CTs), we treat them well, give them proper meals like what we eat and repeatedly talk them out of communism.“We would then use the turncoats to lure more CTs to defect. Gunfight was always the last resort,” he explained.

Kiong’s undercover life began as a courier driving the communist fighters to deliver secret messages or “roll-slips” to other guerilla units.

He also delivered provisions to them but would deliberately reduce certain items and delay the deliveries to maintain frequent communications.

“We would purposely give them less salt to induce muscle cramps.

“If they asked for condoms and old newspapers, it meant the group had sexually active males and female CTs and some females were undergoing menstruation.

“We would give them fewer condoms to trigger accidental pregnancies, which would subsequently trigger desertion,” Kiong said.


A career built on close shaves



An undated picture of Paul Kiong while serving as the Special Branch’s ground commander under Operation Bamboo to neutralise communist forces operating in Perak’s jungles. — Picture courtesy of Datuk Paul Kiong



Kiong, a devout Catholic, always prayed at his church in Ipoh before each mission.

Looking back, Kiong said his unwavering faith saved him during many close encounters — moments where he thought he would not survive.

One such moment occurred in 1981 when Kiong had to accompany a CT — who claimed to have defected — to deliver a “roll-slip” to a guerilla unit at a cemetery in Chemor to avoid suspicion.

Kiong reluctantly followed but with every passing minute, he anxiously anticipated an ambush and was prepared to pull the trigger when a group of fighters escorted the man back.

“I was ready to kill at least two communists before I die. But, just before I fired, the guy quietly got into the car and we drove back to the police camp,” Kiong recalled.

Another narrow escape came later that year when Kiong led a raid to nab communists at a camp called Stone Coffin in Perak.

The rebellious female fighters threathened to go hostile and crash the helicopter during the transfer but Kiong tactfully foiled the attempt.

The Special Branch detained 43 CTs in Perak between 1981 and 1986 through covert operations led by Kiong.


Not all doom and gloom




Datuk Paul Kiong showing some of the equipment he still treasures from his time in the jungle. — Picture by Choo Choy May



Some light-hearted moments also remain vivid in Kiong’s memories like when he played Cupid for two defectors in his custody and got them married in 1981.

The following year, some defectors made Chinese dumplings or pau, stuffed with wild boar meat, to celebrate Kiong’s 38th birthday.

Even today, Kiong visits some of the ex-communist members and their families to share a meal and reminisce the grim old days.

“For them, every cause demands a sacrifice and they paid their price with their loved ones. So, they don’t hold grudges now as the war is over,” Kiong said, when asked about the reconciliation.

In 1983, Kiong was awarded the Seri Pahlawan Gagah Perkasa — Malaysia’s highest gallantry award — and is currently one of the only four living recipients.

He retired as a superintendent in Bukit Aman on Feb 1, 1998.

Kiong obtained his honorific ‘Datuk’ title from the Sultan of Terengganu in 2011 and received a Honorary Masters in Strategy from Universiti Pertahanan Nasional Malaysia (UPNM) in 2014.

He will be launching his memoir, The ‘Communist’ Role I Played: Undercover During The 2nd Malayan Emergency (1968—1989), on July 26 at the Subang National Golf Club.

(6) Not all CT were Chinese, not all heroes were Malays


** Dr Akmal should read all these


DEDICATED to our Malaysian Heroes


NOT at the battle front,--writ of in story;
Not on the blazing wreck steering to glory;

Not while in martyr-pangs soul and flesh sever,
Died he--this Hero new; hero forever.

No pomp poetic crowned, no forms enchained him,
No friends applauding watched, no foes arraigned him:

Death found him there, without grandeur or beauty,
Only an honest man doing his duty:

Just a God-fearing man, simple and lowly,
Constant at kirk and hearth, kindly as holy:

Death found--and touched him with finger in flying:--
Lo! he rose up complete--hero undying.

Now, all men mourn for him, lovingly raise him
Up from his life obscure, chronicle, praise him;

Tell his last act, done midst peril appalling,
And the last word of cheer from his lips falling;

Follow in multitudes to his grave's portal;
Leave him there, buried in honor immortal.

So many a Hero walks unseen beside us,
Till comes the supreme stroke sent to divide us.



- extracts of a poem by Dinah Maria Mulok Craik





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