Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) has issued four notices following an inspection of 23 business premises during an integrated enforcement operation at private hawker centres along Jalan Raja Laut.




The operation targeted food and hawker premises located within Pertama Complex and the Employees Provident Fund (EPF) building as part of efforts to ensure operators comply with licensing requirements and established regulations.
According to DBKL, several premises were found to have breached regulations, with cleanliness issues among the offences detected during the inspection.
In a statement shared on its official Facebook page, DBKL said the notices were issued under the Hawkers By-Laws (Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur) 2016.
Of the four notices, one was issued under By-Law 30(1)(a), while two others were issued under By-Law 15(1)(b). Another notice was issued under By-Law 15(1)(c).
The enforcement exercise forms part of DBKL’s ongoing efforts to improve standards at hawker centres and ensure business operators adhere to the rules governing food and trading activities within the city.
Authorities stressed that regular monitoring and enforcement operations will continue to be carried out to address non-compliance and maintain public hygiene standards.
DBKL said these measures are aimed at creating a cleaner, safer and more organised business environment for Kuala Lumpur residents, while enhancing the overall quality of public spaces frequented by visitors and customers.

