In the following decades, the murder of Ang May Hong remains as one of Malaysia's most horrific unsolved murders to date. In 1996, Ang's murder ranked the first among the top ten most cold-blooded murders that happened in Malaysia in the past decade. The occurrence of the Ang May Hong murder case also once again brought to light several other cold cases of girls raped and murdered during the past decade, including the 1978 Kuantan rape-murder and the 1978 Penang canal rape-murder. In 2001, it was revealed by an Indian newspaper
The Hindu that during the last 14 years since the murder of Ang, cases of sexual violence against both female minors and adults had been rising in Malaysia and there were increasing concerns about the safety of women in Malaysia. The unsolved murders of Ang and a 17-year-old student
Audrey Melissa Bathinathan were cited as the worst of such cases that happened in the past century. According to a report by the
All Women's Action Society (AWAM), in Malaysia, an average 4.1 cases of rape were reported daily in 1998, up from 2.4 cases a day in 1993. Also, AWAM continually sought to have the laws on rape reviewed by the Malaysian government even after the death of Ang, which was considered to be a turning point in the need for awareness on the phenomenon of sexual violence against women in Malaysia. In 2013, after the acquittal of
Shahril Jaafar for the 2006 rape and murder of Chee Gaik Yap, an opinion piece published by the
Oriental Daily stated that the brutality of Chee's murder was comparable to the Ang May Hong rape-murder case, and these cases highlighted the judicial system's issue of unable to solve a cold case or convicting a person of rape and murder. The acquittal was eventually reversed by the courts upon the prosecution's appeal, and following a re-trial, Shahril was found guilty and
sentenced to death for murdering Chee in 2015. From September 2017 to April 2018, local Chinese-language newspaper
China Press began to publish a special series of real-life crime stories, covering the 30 most horrific crimes that happened in Malaysia since the 1970s and updated every Friday. The murder of Ang May Hong was recorded as the fifth volume of the
China Press crime story series. After her retirement in 2022, a journalist who formerly wrote for the
China Press recalled her past experience of covering the Ang May Hong rape-murder case back in 1987. She stated that at the sight of Ang's body, she felt sympathy and sadness for the girl, and even the mortuary workers could not hide their revolt and condemned the murderer for doing such an inhumane thing on a little girl. ==See also==