Tamil TikTok in Malaysia is no longer messy. It has collapsed into a toxic circus where intimidation is normalised and cruelty is rewarded with views. What was once a space for expression is now a battleground of threats, insults, and organised harassment. At the centre are not just anonymous trolls but visible personalities who thrive on chaos while pretending it is entertainment.
Influencers Who Should Know Better
The greatest outrage is not the trolls but the people enabling them. A man presenting himself as a government school teacher hosts long, aggressive live sessions filled with foul language and misleading narratives, drawing audiences that can reach a thousand. A woman claiming to be a doctor casually performs beauty work while engaging in the same toxic behaviour. These are not harmless contradictions. They destroy credibility and encourage a culture where influence is abused without consequences.
Trolls Without Faces, Without Shame
Surrounding them are anonymous trolls hiding behind fake names and voice changing tools. They do not debate, they attack. They move in packs, hijack live sessions, and target individuals relentlessly. This is not random behaviour. It is coordinated harassment designed to intimidate and silence.
The Rot Is Spreading
What began with names like Tamil Fighter, Naan Manithan, Prakash, and Suren has evolved into something worse. A new crowd, including figures like Pasiji from Johor and Puma from Shah Alam, presents itself as educated and middle class. Instead of raising standards, they validate the same toxic behaviour. This shift is dangerous because it normalises harassment across social lines that should know better.
The Shadow Around Logendran a/l Ghazali
At the centre of the storm is Logendran a/l Ghazali. His name repeatedly surfaces in connection with intimidation and troll networks. During live sessions, individuals aligned with political circles have lifted him up symbolically, while supporters linked to Naan Manithan have even created posters portraying him as the Prime Minister of Malaysia. This level of glorification is not just absurd, it is reckless and deeply disturbing.
Doxxing as a Weapon
The most dangerous development is doxxing. Personal information has become a weapon. Identity numbers, family backgrounds, and deeply private details are exposed to shame and threaten victims. In one case, a senior journalist reportedly had family details spanning generations circulated. This is not online drama. It is calculated intimidation that puts real lives at risk.
Fractures and Serious Allegations
Nalini Kothandabani’s fallout with former allies has exposed claims of coordinated troll operations using identities such as Amaley Ganjak, AG Princess, Cikgu Chandra, and Adheera (presumably an account owned by Jasa Mastan, one of Logendran’s henchmen). She also raised alarming concerns about the irresponsible sharing of sensitive information, pointing to a PDRM personnel, exposing a deeper system that appears organised and deliberate.
Trust Is Breaking Down
The consequences are severe. People are afraid to report abuse because they fear their own information could be exposed. When victims believe seeking help will make them targets, trust collapses completely. This is no longer a platform issue. It is a failure that affects public confidence more broadly.
Enough Is Enough
This is not entertainment. It is organised harm. Platforms must act decisively, influencers must be held accountable, and systems must restore trust. If nothing changes, Tamil TikTok will not just be toxic. It will become a space where fear dominates and decent voices disappear.
While all this information might present as true, this is how I know that the editor who wrote this article is not reliable. Firstly, how come Rita George and the gang (SM Mogana, Shalini Periasamy-new addition by the way, Rathigamenon, Anniyan Loga, KNSJ Collections, Kannan Selvaraj) has been left out? Secondly, that senior journalist is not an innocent party in all this. She had been repeatedly targetting Logen and the gang but refused to call out SM Mogana’s (who is her aunty’s daughter) cyberbullying, which is much worse, citing the reason that she had washed her hands off her a long time ago. Also, she supported Amaley Ganjak when he trolled Shalini Periasamy in the beginning because she had prior beef with Shalini. But when Amaley Ganjak questioned the senior journalist regarding her indifference towards SM Mogana’s cyberbullying, that very same troller became a bad person in her eyes. Thirdly, who the hell is Pasiji and Puma? Because there are no such parties involved in all this. If the editor is using cover names, then I ask, why the double standards? If the editor can name the names for all other parties, then why not for these 2 individuals? And fourthly, is the editor allowed to link a name without the proper evidence? Because “Adheera (presumably an account owned by Jasa Mastan” doesn’t sit right. By the way, let me make it clear that I don’t favour any group over the other. I’m an observer like so many others and am questioning the biasness.
Puan,
Itu SM dan RG punya cerita sudah lama keluar disini. You never read yet? Please find to read.
Kenapa orang India macam ni?
I am asking myself the same question
I studied in a multiracial school, and to this day many of us still gather as former classmates. My Indian friends have gone on to excel in various fields. My closest friend, who is Indian, is now a professor at an institution of higher learning.
That is why it is deeply unsettling to see a mere 6% of our population so frequently associated with criminality in public discourse, when the overwhelming majority are law abiding, accomplished and exemplary citizens. Unfortunately, the actions of a small minority often cast an unfair shadow over an entire community.