Man & woman in Johor caught pumping 71 litres of petrol worth S$76 into plastic containers at petrol station
Malaysian laws ban fuel purchases outside vehicle tanks exceeding 20 litres without a special permit.
A man and woman at a petrol station in Johor Bahru, Malaysia, were caught on camera pumping 71 litres of petrol into hidden plastic containers, contravening a Malaysian law that bans fuel purchases outside vehicle tanks exceeding 20 litres.
The pair's actions were recorded by the driver of another car at the station and uploaded to Facebook, captioned "Did they see that gas prices have increased and pumped more as spare?"
Clips of the incident showed them pumping the fuel into white containers in the boot of a black sedan with a Johor car plate.
The reading at the pump showed that 71.77 litres of petrol were purchased, costing RM234.69 (S$76.36).
They then moved the car to another petrol pump to refuel the car's gas tank.
According to the post, the incident occurred at a Petronas petrol station in Johor Bahru.
It read: "Even though it's a Malaysian license plate, who knows what the oil in these plastic buckets will be used for? What if everyone does this and there is suddenly an accident or fire or explosion?"
An existing law under Malaysia's Ministry of Domestic Trade and Cost of Living prevents the collection of more than 20 litres of fuel in containers without a valid permit.
"If this continues, the country's deficit will increase significantly, and ultimately the entire population will have to foot the bill," a commenter said.
Top images via Facebook
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