M’sia Has a SG Nasi Lemak Clone & M’sians’ Responses Are Different


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Recently, the Telegram group SG Nasi Lemak was under fire for reportedly having a whopping number of 44,000 active members and spreading lewd photographs and videos of unsuspecting women.

Four of the administrators of the group aged between 17 and 37 were subsequently caught after many people reported this Telegram group for indecency.

Another group called SG XMM was also talked about because it was said to have spread photographs and videos of young girls in their school uniforms.

The emergence of these groups highlights a scary problem that not many of us know about, especially because of the anonymity function of Telegram which allows one to join groups under an alias.

Despite measures to clamp down on such groups, it seems that nothing much can be done to prevent them from resurging.

A Malaysian copy of SG Nasi Lemak was recently found, and this was what the Malaysians did.

Gadis Melayu (Malay Girls) – The Discovery

The new Telegram group is called Gadis Melayu which translates to Malay Girls, and was discovered when Malaysian hijab retailer Aisya happened to stumble upon it. She realised that her photos were being shared in it without her permission.

Even though the photographs were of her fully dressed, she was still disturbed by it because she knew that this group was made for men for their own sexual pleasures. Cannot be to admire the clothes, right?

She took a screenshot of the Telegram group chat and posted it on Twitter on Saturday, 27 October, for all her 16,300 followers to see.

Image: Twitter (@_aisyaisa)

She posted it with a caption saying “WTF is this group? I’m f****** mad. Please help to report.”

She even included a link to join the group so that more people could report them.

Gadis Melayu (Malay Girls) – The Downfall

After she tweeted that with a link to the group, Malaysian netizens all joined the group to give all the members within a piece of their mind.

And report they did…not.

Instead, they started sending memes and religious warnings into the group, flooding all the members and forcefully making sure that they wash off all their sins.

Image: Twitter (@nwwr4h)

As you can see, the group was flooded with images of a comical person holding a “STOP BULLYING” sign and another image of a woman hitting a man with what appears to be a shoe.


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Image: Twitter (@imranazlan_91)

According to World Of Buzz, the group that initially had 7,000 members had an influx of members, causing their total to hit 10,000 members.

Malaysia boleh!

At the end of it, their efforts proved to be not for nothing because the group seems to no longer exist and they have changed their group into one for fighting fishes.

How lovely.

This was such a different response compared to Singaporeans when the first SG Nasi Lemak group came out.


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But whatever it is, we’re glad that these groups no longer exist and we hope that they don’t emerge again.

If not, you know what to do (before it’s taken down).