Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) has received the Health Ministry’s guideline on the standard operating procedure to implement disinfection and sanitisation of public areas.
An officer who requested anonymity told Malay Mail that it had just received the guidelines today prior to conducting a disinfection and sanitisation exercise at Pasar Pudu and its surrounding areas.
“Yes, we just got the guideline. However, I want to explain regarding the criticism we received yesterday, accusing us of spraying and disinfecting roads. Our personnel were not disinfecting the roads.
“What actually happened was when we turn off our jet-sprays, it doesn’t shut off immediately. There’s still pressure on the liquid inside the spray and it takes a little time before the pressure recedes.
“That was the image that went viral on social media. The spray was already turned off, but because of the high pressure, some residue liquid was still being released from the nozzle,” explained the unnamed officer.
Today, a 60-man team comprising from three agencies — DBKL, the Fire and Rescue department and Alam Flora — conducted a joint disinfection and sanitisation exercise covering a one-kilometre radius centred at Pasar Pudu.

Meanwhile, Housing and Local Government Minister Zuraida Kamaruddin today defended actions of local council workers in spraying disinfection on roads in a Covid-19 hotspot recently.
In a Skype interview with Al-Hijrah last night, Zuraida said that the action was necessary as a heightened precaution in the fight to contain the Covid-19 outbreak.
“As for the one done on the roads, I would like to provide my response, as the criticisms did not take matters into account in-depth.
“As of now, there is no one accurate conclusion as to how the coronavirus spreads or travels. There was one time where it was said that it spreads when one sneezes, coughs, airborne and many others.
“So, when we spray on the roads, it is not an issue as we are merely taking the ‘can’t-miss-anything’ attitude for that matter. So, when we did sanitisation in public places, whereby we used the Fire and Rescue Department trucks to spray on roads, I feel it is a good trait to be cautious. Add on to the areas sprayed rather than lacking the areas covered So this is just a precaution,” she said.
Health Director-General Datuk Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah had yesterday, advised local authorities today to follow the standard operating procedures (SOP) to carry out disinfection procedures, following criticisms over the public exercises.
He said the Ministry of Health (MoH) will communicate with the local authorities such as the Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) as well the Ministry of Housing and Local Government on its guidelines on how to conduct disinfection operations.
Dr Noor Hisham said the recent disinfection operations carried out by the local authorities such as DBKL, district councils and also the ministry, were done before the MoH could provide its guideline.
He was responding to the concerns raised by several experts over the SOP of the disinfection operation with some describing it as a waste of resources and suggested that the money could be spent on hospital staff who are lacking personal protective equipment (PPE).
On Monday, Zuraida who wore a PPE, along with the ministry’s personnel, were seen carrying out a public disinfection operation at a wet market in Jalan Othman.
Among the criticisms she received were that the operation was carried out by a minister untrained in the procedure, in addition to the way chemical-laced water was used to disinfect roads and curbs rather than surfaces that come into direct contact with humans.

During her interview, she also drew comparisons between her purported precautionary move, with that of seeing a medical doctor when one is ill.
“If they think that spraying on roads is wasting money or whatever, it is just like going to the doctor. We meet the doctor and tell the doctor that we are coughing, got the flu. The doctor would then not just give flu medicines, but headache, body ache and cough medicines too.
“So, this is something where I cannot label the doctor as doing something pointless. I am a professional and I have to take the doctor’s advice and what’s given,” she added.
In the latest development, Zuraida has accused the media of misinterpreting the words of the Health Director-General, after the latter said disinfection operations being around the country did not follow his ministry’s guidelines.
Zuraida claimed that Dr Noor Hisham, during a press conference yesterday, was commenting on the lack of social distancing practised during the disinfection operations, and not on the actual procedures of sanitising exercise itself.
“This has been slightly manipulated by the media.
“Because Datuk Dr Noor Hisham was referring to the standard operating procedures (SOP) concerning crowd control, not on the SOPs of the disinfection exercise, it wasn’t,” she said at the Fire and Rescue Department (Bomba) headquarters in Putrajaya this evening.
Zuraida today also dismissed notions that a communication breakdown had occurred between ministries following the differing opinions, adding that daily meetings between the government ministries gave them ample chance to communicate with one another.
“So, there is no issue from the aspect of communication. So, there has been misinterpretation and miscommunication by the media.
“Don’t always look to take small matters and misinterpret them, which would later make the people feel uneasy; don’t do that,” she said.

