KUALA LUMPUR: Petaling Jaya member of parliament Lee Chean Chung said an investigation into the viral video that showed MBPJ enforcement officers engaged in an exchange with members of the public during a stray dogs roundup, should be done in a transparent manner.
In a brief reply to the New Straits Times, he said the probe should also be impartial and professional.
"I expect action from the MBPJ in relation to the outcome of the investigation," Lee said.
In the latest video, an enforcement officer was seen taunting a man who was filming the dog-catching operation.
"Are those your dogs? If it is yours you tell us so," the enforcement officer was heard saying while climbing over a railing and approaching the man.
Another enforcement officer was also heard telling the man to take a picture of him.
The video, titled "Same MBPJ guy - this was 10th Feb", shared on a Facebook user's account, has been viewed 80,000 times.
Last month, MBPJ incurred netizens' wrath after several videos and pictures of an elderly man allegedly being roughed up by its enforcement officers during a stray dog round-up operation started making the rounds.
The man, 69-year-old Patrick Khoo Kian Wui, was involved in the tussle but has since ended up being charged with obstructing a public servant from discharging his duty.
Khoo has pleaded not guilty to the offence.
MBPJ in a statement today said its personnel who struck Khoo during the incident was not charged as the incident was unintentional.
The council said a dog-catching tool had accidentally struck the complainant during a struggle.
It added that an internal investigation into the matter had resulted in recommendations by the investigation committee to improve procedures on dog-catching operations.