Site icon Malaysians News

Who Pays the RM1 Billion Bill?” Outrage Grows After Putra Heights Gas Blast

Who Pays the RM1 Billion Bill?" Outrage Grows After Putra Heights Gas Blast

KUALA LUMPUR: A underground gas pipeline explosion in Putra Heights last Tuesday could leave Malaysia grappling with losses topping RM1 billion — and distraught residents demanding answers: Who’s footing the bill?

Over 250 homeowners in the upscale Subang neighborhood now face a nightmare. Their once-pristine properties, bought for RM500,000 to RM1 million each, lie damaged by a fiery inferno that hit 1,000°C. Cars melted. Wiring fried. Even sewage systems buckled under the heat.

Homes “Uninhabitable” After 1,000°C Inferno

“Rebuilding isn’t enough — the entire area might need bulldozing,” warns Prof. Emeritus Barjoyai Bardai of Unirazak. He estimates losses could spiral from destroyed furniture, appliances, and collapsed property values. “This wasn’t a natural disaster. Someone failed technically, and now families pay the price.”

The blast, contained by firefighters within seven hours, exposed gaping holes in Malaysia’s mega-project safety protocols. The ruptured pipeline was part of a 1,400km network — installed without proper buffer zones or real-time monitoring, critics argue.

Rebuild or Relocate?

Residents want full compensation, but confusion reigns. “Why should we suffer for corporate negligence?” fumes a homeowner, whose Mercedes now resembles charred scrap. Experts like Bardai insist developers or insurers must cover 100% of home values, plus repairs.

Yet, doubts linger. With underground wiring and pipes “beyond salvage,” rebuilding costs could skyrocket. Some fear the government might force relocations, stripping owners of their neighborhoods.

A Wake-Up Call for Mega Projects

The incident has ignited calls for stricter safety measures, especially for flammable infrastructure. “No more cutting corners,” Bardai stresses, urging buffer zones and 24/7 monitoring for gas, oil, and power projects.

Meanwhile, Putra Heights residents remain in limbo — their lives reduced to ash and uncertainty. “We trusted the system,” says a mother of two, “Now we’re left picking up the pieces.”

Exit mobile version