In Humans of KL

“I’ve been close to all the world leaders, and in London I was working as a car wash man, as a cover for being an intelligence officer. Whenever there was Malaysians hurt or involved, student riots or civil war, we would be there.

I’ve been around the world but Russia was tough. The scariest country I had gone to was in Namibia in 1979, during the Namibian War for Independence from 1966 to 1990. During that time we were looking to recruit informers. I was afraid during that time because, despite Namibia being a less-developed country and having very helpful people, almost everyone had guns and weapons. It was dangerous.

Most people think that being a spy is like being James Bond. We are nothing like him – he had expensive watches, attracted attention and revealed his name everywhere he went. But we did have a watch which had special recording equipment built inside of it.

If you want to be a secret intelligence officer, the first thing you need is patience. Secondly, you need to blend in, not stand out and ‘look stupid’ (unassuming), so people will not suspect you, like when I was a car wash man in London. Number three, ‘biar pecah di perut, jangan pecah di mulut’ (keep secrets to yourself’). In this case, you must not reveal the secrets of the Malaysian government.”

– Humans of Kuala Lumpur

Photostory by Mushamir Mustafa

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(This post was first published on October 18th 2016)

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