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Malaysia says residents at tech commune run by ex-Coinbase exec have valid travel documents

By Thomson Reuters Jul 15, 2026 | 12:16 AM

By Rozanna Latiff

KUALA LUMPUR, July 15 (Reuters) – Malaysia’s Immigration Department said on Wednesday that members of a “digital nomad” community run by U.S. investor ​Balaji Srinivasan had valid travel documents, a ‌day after authorities announced a probe into claims that Israelis were among them in violation of local laws.

The investigation came after some social media users alleged that The Network School, ‌founded ​by the former Coinbase chief ⁠technology officer in 2024, ⁠included participants from Israel who had entered Malaysia with passports of other countries.

• Muslim-majority Malaysia, a staunch supporter of the Palestinian cause, bars entry of Israeli ​passport holders as the countries do not have diplomatic relations. However, it does not have specific ⁠laws barring Israelis from traveling ⁠on second-country passports.

• The immigration department ​said it had inspected 266 foreigners from 40 countries and ​found they had valid documents, though further ‌checks were ongoing to ensure compliance with all other entry requirements and related laws.

• “(The department) will conduct further investigations into any matters that raise suspicions or if ⁠there is new information regarding misuse of identity, travel documents, immigration facilities or violations of permit conditions,” its Director-General ⁠Zakaria Shaaban said ‌in a statement.

• The Network School ⁠is described on its website as ​a “frontier community ‌of techno-optimists” aimed at “turning internet communities ​into physical ⁠startup societies”.

• Srinivasan has said the community was based “near Singapore” but authorities confirmed on Wednesday it is located on Forest City, a sprawling $100-billion development on reclaimed land in Malaysia’s Johor state.

(Reporting by Rozanna Latiff; Editing ​by Martin Petty)