Geologists have dismissed social media posts that falsely claimed Malaysia’s capital Kuala Lumpur was built upon a “large, empty cave”, saying the idea was impossible. The misinformation spread across Facebook, TikTok and Instagram after an Indian tourist fell into a sinkhole in the city in August 2024, but the claim circulated in a TikTok post that was tagged “entertainment news created with AI”.
“Kuala Lumpur, August 25, 2024 — In a shocking discovery, a leading geologist from University Malaya (UM) has revealed that an empty giant cave formed millions of years ago beneath Kuala Lumpur,” read a Malay-language Facebook post from August 26.
“An in-depth study by one Dr Sarah Jamal and her team from UM claimed that the geological structure was formed millions of years ago, hence making the city look like it was built on the ‘roof’ of a giant cave.”
The post claimed the cave network was formed from the erosion of limestone due to groundwater and raised concerns about the stability of the Malaysian capital.
The accompanying image shows Kuala Lumpur’s iconic skyscrapers, the Petronas Twin Towers and the KL Tower, with the city apparently sitting atop a large cave.
The claim surfaced days after an Indian tourist went missing when she was swallowed by an eight-metre (26-foot) deep sinkhole in Kuala Lumpur’s Jalan Masjid India — a popular tourist destination — on August 23 (archived link).
A second sinkhole opened up on the same street five days later, prompting authorities to close the road and order an integrity audit of the sewage system in the area (archived link).
The search for the missing woman was called off following a nine-day rescue operation due to safety considerations (archived link).
The same claim also surfaced on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.
However, the “news” about a large cave system under the Malaysian capital was also shared on TikTok, where it was labelled “AI generated news for entertainment”.
Keyword searches on Google followed by a reverse image search of the graphic found a Facebook post from the Universiti Malaya’s Geology Department which said it did not employ a “Dr Sarah Jamal” and that no such person was registered with the Board of Geologists Malaysia (archived here and here).
“The content of the post is not fact-based and it is false,” read the Malay-language post from August 26.