A senior executive from Singapore’s animal feed industry is facing corruption charges that spotlight fragile trust in Southeast Asia’s poultry supply chain.
Hooi Siew Yan, 68, former COO and Managing Director of MJI Universal, was charged by Singapore’s Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB) with one count of corruption and two counts of falsifying accounts.
The case involves alleged bribes exceeding USD 100,000, paid between 2019 and 2020 to a procurement manager at Charoen Pokphand Malaysia, one of the region’s major poultry integrators.
Court documents reveal the payments were made via an intermediary in Kuala Lumpur to secure continued business between MJI and the Malaysian firm. MJI Universal trades feed ingredients critical to poultry and livestock production in both countries.
Risks to regional poultry integrity
This case highlights the broader risks such practices pose to the Malaysia–Singapore poultry industry. Corruption at any point in the supply chain—particularly in procurement—can distort market pricing, reduce competitiveness, and jeopardize food safety and quality.
For Malaysia, it erodes trust in feed sourcing. For Singapore, it threatens the reliability of imported food, a vital part of its agri-food system.
The CPIB reaffirmed that Singaporeans can be prosecuted for overseas corruption, reinforcing the country’s extraterritorial stance.
As both nations work toward more transparent, resilient agri-food systems, this case serves as a warning: ethical lapses in cross-border trade not only damage corporate reputations but can also erode regional food security and investor confidence in a tightly connected poultry ecosystem.