- Idros, 53, brings with him nearly three decades of experience in strategic investment and real estate, primarily at PNB.
KUALA LUMPUR (July 22): Prolintas Managers Sdn Bhd, the trustee-manager of Prolintas Infra Business Trust (KL:PLINTAS), has appointed Mohamad Idros Mosin as its chief executive officer (CEO) effective Monday (July 21), filling a leadership vacuum that had been managed by an interim executive team since earlier this year.
Following his appointment, the board of directors resolved to dissolve the interim executive management team, which had been led by non-executive chairman Datuk Ikmal Hijaz Hashim, according to Prolintas’ Bursa Malaysia filings.
Idros, 53, brings with him nearly three decades of experience in strategic investment and real estate, primarily at Permodalan Nasional Bhd (PNB). PNB wholly owns Projek Lintasan Kota Holdings Sdn Bhd (Prolintas), which in turn holds a 51.02% stake in Prolintas Infra Business Trust.
Most recently, he served as an executive director of Prolintas from August 2024 to June 2025. Prior to that, he held senior roles at PNB, including group head of real estate and group head of strategic investment.
Idros holds a bachelor of business administration (Hons) degree from the International Islamic University Malaysia.
The appointment follows the redesignation of Prolintas Managers previous chief executive officer, Malik Parvez Ahmad Nazir Ahmad, to become a non-executive director in February this year.
At the time, Datuk Mohammad Azlan Abdullah also relinquished his position as a non-independent and non-executive director of Prolintas Managers, citing personal commitments.
In the absence of a full-time CEO, the board had temporarily installed an interim team to oversee the trust’s operations. This came after Prolintas confirmed in June 2024 that its CEO and seven others were arrested by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) for alleged bribery in connection with two highway projects worth RM1.67 billion.
A year later in June 2025, Prolintas chief operating officer Rostam Shahrif Tami pleaded guilty to an alternative charge of failing to report a bribe and was fined RM100,000. He was also ordered to forfeit over RM1 million in illicit gains, including luxury watches and two vehicles.
A second executive, project manager Zairulnizam Rohani, has claimed trial on a separate charge involving a RM50,000 bribe.
Prolintas Managers has since clarified that neither individual is involved in the operations of Prolintas Infra Business Trust, whose portfolio comprises four highways, namely the Ampang-Kuala Lumpur Elevated Highway (Akleh), Guthrie Corridor Expressway (GCE), Lebuhraya Kemuning-Shah Alam (LKSA), and Kajang Dispersal Link Expressway (SILK).
Prolintas had carved out the four assets out of its portfolio of six highways and placed them under the business trust for the trust's listing in March 2024, raising RM445.3 million. The two remaining highways under Prolintas are the Sungai Besi-Ulu Kelang Elevated Expressway (SUKE) and the Damansara-Shah Alam Elevated Expressway (DASH).
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