Rudyard Kipling"
“When you're left wounded on Afganistan's plains and
the women come out to cut up what remains, Just roll to your rifle
and blow out your brains,
And go to your God like a soldier”
General Douglas MacArthur"
“We are not retreating. We are advancing in another direction.”
“It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.” “Old soldiers never die; they just fade away.
“The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and be the deepest wounds and scars of war.”
“May God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't .” “The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.
“Nobody ever defended, there is only attack and attack and attack some more.
“It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived.
The Soldier stood and faced God
Which must always come to pass
He hoped his shoes were shining
Just as bright as his brass
"Step forward you Soldier,
How shall I deal with you?
Have you always turned the other cheek?
To My Church have you been true?"
"No, Lord, I guess I ain't
Because those of us who carry guns
Can't always be a saint."
I've had to work on Sundays
And at times my talk was tough,
And sometimes I've been violent,
Because the world is awfully rough.
But, I never took a penny
That wasn't mine to keep.
Though I worked a lot of overtime
When the bills got just too steep,
The Soldier squared his shoulders and said
And I never passed a cry for help
Though at times I shook with fear,
And sometimes, God forgive me,
I've wept unmanly tears.
I know I don't deserve a place
Among the people here.
They never wanted me around
Except to calm their fears.
If you've a place for me here,
Lord, It needn't be so grand,
I never expected or had too much,
But if you don't, I'll understand."
There was silence all around the throne
Where the saints had often trod
As the Soldier waited quietly,
For the judgment of his God.
"Step forward now, you Soldier,
You've borne your burden well.
Walk peacefully on Heaven's streets,
You've done your time in Hell."
A call for a united Malaysia By Ranjit Singh Malhi
Monday, March 30, 2026
Malaysiakini : Historical truths we must acknowledge
To begin
with, let us acknowledge that the Orang Asli are the earliest
inhabitants of Peninsular Malaysia who have lived on this land for tens
of thousands of years. Their presence represents the foundational layer
of our nation’s history. Our Orang Asli brothers and sisters are an
integral part of our multi-tiered society.
As noted by Iskandar
Carey in “Orang Asli: The Aboriginal Tribes of Peninsular Malaysia”, the
Orang Asli occupy a “special position as the truly indigenous
inhabitants” of the peninsula. He further emphasised that they lived in
the region “before the arrival of the other races, that is, the Malays,
the Chinese and the Indians”.
Centuries later, the Malays (early
migrants) emerged as the definitive people of the peninsula, shaping its
political institutions, cultural identity, and systems of governance
through the establishment of enduring sultanates. The rise of powerful
polities such as the Malacca sultanate in the fifteenth century marked a
turning point in the consolidation of Malay political authority and
cultural influence in our society.
In modern times, the Malays
have constituted the core of our nation’s political leadership since
independence. Our civil service has been largely drawn from the Malay
community.
So too have been our army and police, who help to
secure our borders and ensure that law and order prevail. Malaysia’s
constitutional monarchy, which is rooted in the system of Malay rulers,
serves as a bedrock of stability and harmony in our often-fractious
society.
This
dual recognition is not contradictory. Rather, it reflects the
richness, depth, and complexity of Malaysia’s historical evolution and
our uniquely layered multi-ethnic heritage.
Contributions of all communities
Malaysia,
as it exists today, is the product of the contributions, sacrifices,
and aspirations of diverse communities. Over time, people of different
ethnic, cultural, and religious backgrounds have come together – through
labour, enterprise, intellect, and service – to build and sustain the
nation.
From
early trade networks and colonial economic development to
post-independence nation-building, the contributions of multiple
communities are the defining hallmark of our national identity.
Non-Malay communities (later migrants) have played a vital role in Malaysia’s nation-building and economic development.
Chinese
entrepreneurs and labourers were central to the growth of tin mining,
commerce, and urban centres, laying the foundations of modern industry
and trade. Indian communities contributed significantly to plantation
agriculture, public works, railways, security, and the civil service.
Over
time, both communities expanded into business, education, medicine,
law, and the professions, strengthening the nation’s human capital.
Alongside
other minority groups and together with the Malays, they enriched
Malaysia’s cultural diversity, stimulated economic growth, and
contributed to the emergence of a dynamic and resilient multi-ethnic
society.
Equally, East Malaysians,
including the Ibans, Kadazandusun, and many other indigenous
communities of Sabah and Sarawak, have played a vital role in
nation-building. Their rich cultural heritage, stewardship of the land,
and contributions in public service, defence, and governance have
strengthened the Malaysian federation.
Any
meaningful call for unity must fully recognise and honour their
rightful place as equal partners in the nation’s past, present, and
future.
Any narrative that diminishes, ignores, or excludes these
contributions does a disservice to truth and undermines the very
foundations of our national unity.
Eschewing the label ‘pendatang’
It
is therefore both unjust and historically unsound to label non-Malays
as pendatang in a derogatory manner that questions their legitimacy,
belonging, or citizenship. Such a label is not only divisive; it is
deeply damaging to the project of nation-building that remains
challenging.
A mature and confident society does not foster unity
by devaluing others. It nurtures unity by recognising shared belonging,
mutual dignity, and common purpose.
They
have worked, sacrificed, paid taxes, defended the nation, developed
institutions, and contributed to every sphere of national life. They are
not outsiders to Malaysia’s story - they are an integral part of it.
Faithful to constitutional vision
Let
us remain faithful to the vision of our founding fathers and the Malay
rulers: a nation that is secular in character and allows freedom of
worship, multi-ethnic in composition, and ultimately just and
non-discriminatory.
The framework that binds this diverse society
into a cohesive nation is the Federal Constitution. It remains the
supreme law of the land, providing both the structure of governance and
the moral compass of the nation. It recognises the special position of
the Malays and the indigenous peoples under Article 153.
At
the same time, it also guarantees equality before the law under Article
8 and citizenship rights irrespective of ethnicity. It is within this
judiciously balanced constitutional framework that Malaysia’s identity
as a multi-ethnic, inclusive, and just society must be understood and
preserved.
A shared homeland, a shared vision
In
light of these realities, we must affirm that Malaysia is a shared
homeland. It does not belong exclusively to any single group, but to all
who are bound by citizenship, loyalty, and a shared commitment to its
future.
Unity, therefore, cannot be built on exclusionary
narratives or bigoted and divisive rhetoric. It must be grounded in
truth, mutual respect, and a genuine appreciation of diversity as a
source of strength.
Malaysia urgently needs to rekindle its shared
national vision, one that rises above ethnic suspicions and sectarian
politics. Malaysia’s vision should be to become a just, inclusive, and
progressive nation where every citizen, regardless of ethnicity or
religion, feels a genuine sense of national belonging.
Such a
vision must inspire all citizens to see themselves first and foremost as
Malaysians, bound together by a common destiny. We must learn to work
together, not as competing ethnic communities, but as partners in a
common national enterprise.
No community can build Malaysia alone. And no community should be made to feel that it does not fully belong to the nation.
What Malaysians must do
To
translate this vision into reality, Malaysians must embrace certain
fundamental guiding principles. There must first be a commitment to a
truthful and inclusive historical understanding, one that acknowledges
the contributions of all communities fairly and accurately.
Respect
for diversity must be practised consistently in everyday life,
transcending differences of ethnicity, religion, and culture.
Citizens
must consciously reject divisive narratives that promote prejudice,
exclusion, or superiority, and instead uphold constitutional values that
define rights and responsibilities within a shared legal framework.
Above
all, Malaysians must actively build bridges across communities,
fostering trust, empathy, cooperation, and a common national purpose.
The role of government
The
government bears a profound responsibility in shaping a united nation.
It must ensure that education, particularly the teaching of history,
reflects a balanced, accurate, and inclusive national narrative.
History
can unite a nation, but only if it is narrated truthfully and
inclusively. Scholars such as Azmi Sharom have cautioned against narrow
historical interpretations that undermine critical thinking and
inclusiveness.
Equally important, the government must uphold
justice and equality through the impartial application of laws, while
honouring constitutional provisions. Public policies should promote
national integration and social cohesion rather than deepen divisions.
National
leaders, in particular, must demonstrate integrity, reject divisive
politics, and articulate a unifying vision that inspires collective
purpose and national confidence.
Truth, courage, and collective will
Ultimately,
a united Malaysia will not emerge by accident. It must be consciously
and consistently built through courage in confronting uncomfortable
truths, discipline in upholding justice, and sincerity in fostering
inclusiveness.
The responsibility lies not only with institutions of governance but also with every citizen who calls this nation home.
If Malaysia is to thrive in the years ahead, it must remain steadfast in its commitment to unity in diversity.
A national pledge
Let this be our pledge:
To honour the truth of our shared past.
To uphold the principles of justice and equality.
To reject discord and embrace unity.
To work together for the common good.
And
to build a Malaysia that is not only prosperous and stable, but also
just, inclusive, and truly united – for this generation and those to
come.
KJ's wrong about Madani and opposition By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Malaysiakini : And the opposition is not stupid and incompetent, but merely going to
use as a blueprint what Madani is doing now if they ever gain political
power. The opposition is not making much noise in these corruption
issues because they understand that this is the way they are going to
handle things when they assume power.
In fact, by remaining
silent, they allow Madani to be the corrupt party in this, and what they
say will not come back to bite their behinds when they assume power and
do the same thing. Let us be honest here. We can talk about “big
fishes” when it comes to corruption, but recall when Pakatan Harapan was
in power for the first time.
Harapan, if you remember, talked a
good game about cleaning up corruption but always found an excuse for
not doing it when in power. Remember the investigation into former
Sarawak governor Abdul Taib Mahmud - perhaps the white whale of
oppositional talking points when it came to corruption - came to a
standstill?
Then de facto law minister Liew Vui Keong said, “They were not new evidence that would allow MACC to open a new investigation paper.”
At
the time, then-MACC chief commissioner Latheefa Koya said of the status
of high-profile cases: “However, not all complaints ended up being
investigated, especially those with evidence which were just printouts
from the internet.”
Look,
I think Latheefa is doing sterling work now, but when folks had the
chance to correct the system, nobody took it. Corruption is not a recent
phenomenon, but rather it is part of the DNA of the organism, fuelled
by racial and religious imperatives and a compromised electoral system.
Umno/BN
designed the system, and Madani is attempting to replicate it, or at
least this is the way it seems to rational Malaysians.
Game recognises game
Furthermore,
remember Perikatan Nasional was briefly in power, and how did that go?
With all those really dumb “Langkah, langkahs”, professional charlatans
figured out that they didn’t even need voting to get into power, and a
small shift in voting got them ejected from the halls of power in
Putrajaya.
With the way the system is gerrymandered, and the
unequal weightage of votes, issues like corruption and competent
governance are not exactly the greatest concerns of a majority of rakyat
who sustain themselves on entitlement programmes and the delirium of
social media.
The fact that Malaysians have to keep choosing the
same recycled politicians is another reason why this country is screwed.
Folks forget that all these people know each other. They understand
that they are moving parts in a system designed not to encourage
independence but co-dependency.
I mean, with these folks, there is no real ideological difference except game recognises game.
Take this snapshot from the past, for instance. From reportage:
“(Lawyer N) Surendran, who is also a former PKR vice-president, said
Khairy also organised a roadshow with lawyer Shafee Abdullah after Anwar
(Ibrahim)'s sodomy II conviction.”
Corruption cases always start
like this. All these rumours and dramas about who the always-present
Mister X is then fizzles out when something else happens, and the system
endures.
As always, the prime minister maintains his silence and
attempts are made to use the state security apparatus to silence his
critics. People forget, and those who don’t are vilified by those who
want the system to remain but want to kvetch about the system needing
reform.
Recent scandals
I am sure Khairy
knows more about this most recent of PKR scandals than the average
citizen. I am sure Rafizi Ramli knows more about this recent scandal
than the average citizen and proves it by naming names.
Why all the drama? The fact that all the players in the corporate mafia
scandal are interconnected and Rafizi keeps playing hide and seek with
facts that he is privy to muddies the waters when it comes to cases like
this.
Rafizi Ramli
Khairy
and folks like him want to delude people into thinking that they offer
change, but they are all imprinted with the imprimatur of old, corrupt
men who want the system to endure. There is really no genuine reason to
believe that either Khairy, Madani or PN wants to reform the system.
It
has come to a point where nobody is even pretending anymore. This is
all about who holds on to power, and the non-Malays are merely the vote
bank of a coalition which knows it is imploding. There is very little
that mainstream politics offers in this country, and the outliers are
dodgy at the moment. With PSM getting PAS curious and Muda floundering, the system is content.
I
have great sympathy for the agenda of cyber troopers who run around
attempting to paint a picture that everything is kosher in Madaniville,
because really thinking this through is heart-wrenching. This is how BN
got away with their malfeasances for decades.
The difference now
is that the world and technology have advanced to a point where masses
of people are easily manipulated into surrendering their liberties to
fascistic agendas whose oligarchs, clerics and elected officials have no
problem colluding with each other.
The only thing that Khairy is evidence of is that Madani and BN's chickens are coming home to roost.
When Sarjit met Subahan, the explanation was clearer, but no less contentious.
“He told me he was not happy with the world ranking,” Sarjit said.
Sarjit said the conversation also turned to a remark he had made about the need for a larger player pool.
He told me he took issue with my remark that we need more players,” he said.
Sarjit insisted his comment was taken out of context.
“We have so many tournaments coming, the
Nations Cup, World Cup, Asian Games, Sultan Azlan Shah Cup, Asian
Champions Trophy. We need more players so we can rotate,” he said. “I
said it in a good way.”
The disagreement hinted at a deeper
divide between the demands of international hockey and expectations at
the administrative level.
Subahan, however, remained focused on
Malaysia’s slide in the world rankings following defeats at the World
Cup qualifier in Ismailia, Egypt.
But Sarjit pointed to what he believed should have carried greater weight.
“I told him I had already said we would qualify for the World Cup, and we did,” he said. “So I think it’s not fair.”
For Sarjit, the issue was not just the decision, but the timing.
“I think I am the first coach to take a team to the World Cup and not go with them,” he said.
No report, no process
Beyond results, Sarjit questioned how the decision was handled
“You must understand, I had just come back. They had not even seen my report,” he said.
The post-tournament report, he argued, should have been central to any evaluation.
“I have all the data on penalty corners, goals conceded, everything. But I got the boot before anyone read it,” he said.
He also raised concerns over the lack of notice.
“They should give adequate notice, not just remove me like this,” he said.
Sarjit further claimed the coaching and development committee was not part of the decision-making process.
He said it had already been finalised, and Manjit told him he could not intervene.
Majid
Manjit Abdullah, who heads the coaching and development panel, is
hard-pressed to explain the committee’s role and involvement in the
coaching change.
Pressed on whether this reflected a breakdown in governance, Sarjit stopped short of direct criticism.
“I don’t want to comment on that,” he said. “But the coaching committee plays a very important role.”
‘We qualified, yet I was removed’
At the heart of Sarjit’s frustration is a simple argument.
He met the target set for him.
“When I took the job, I said give me two years. If I don’t qualify for the World Cup, I will resign,” he said. “I kept my word.”
Malaysia secured their place at the 16-team World Cup in the Netherlands and Belgium this August through the world rankings.
They won two matches, lost three and finished fourth in their group.
Ranked No 15, they edged ahead of Poland,
who finished fourth in the other qualifying event in Chile but sit
lower in the rankings.
“Suppose you are told to qualify and you do it, will you be removed?” he asked.
His answer was direct. “I was made a scapegoat.”
Malaysia
took on England in the World Cup qualifier, where a 7-1 defeat
highlighted the gap with top teams. They went on to crash against Japan
in the last crucial match that impacted their world ranking. (Malaysian
Hockey Confederation pic)
‘Very hurt’, and a warning
Sarjit said the manner and timing of his dismissal, less than five months before the World Cup, made it difficult to accept.
“I did not deserve this,” he said. “Why make a last-minute move and go back on your assurances?
He said he had asked for time to build the team. “I needed two years to build and another two years to get results.”
The experience, he added, left a deep personal impact.
“I am very hurt,” he said. “When they
want you, they tell you all sorts of things. When they don’t need you,
they just chuck you out.”
Sarjit said the issue goes beyond his own case.
“What happened to me should not happen to any coach in any sport,” he said.
He also pointed to the need for stronger leadership within Malaysian hockey.
“We need the right people in sports,
people who know the game, who understand high performance and
development,” he said. “We need administrators with vision.”
He acknowledged that his exit may overshadow his past contributions.
“It is sad some people will remember me
for this instead of my playing days,” said the two-time Olympian, who
represented Malaysia for 12 years and was the national captain for seven
years.
Questions that remain
Sarjit did not directly criticise the leadership of Malaysian hockey but his account raises key questions.
If results were the benchmark, why was World Cup qualification not enough?
If rankings were decisive, why was the decision made before a full post-mortem?
And if process matters, who ultimately decides, and on what basis?
Sarjit says he bears no ill will toward his players.
“I have no problems with the players. I wish them all the best,” he said.
He also thanked all parties — players,
staff, officials, MHC leadership, the national sports council and
national sports institute — for their support during his tenure.
But the sense of unfinished business lingers.
And with the World Cup approaching, Malaysia move forward without the coach who got them there.
World needs a regime change in US - By P Gunasegaram
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Malaysiakini : Who has caused panic at home and abroad by over-reaching himself to
help the agenda of a person wanted for war crimes and has a warrant of
arrest over his head, in the process causing an oil supply squeeze which
threatens the world economy and forcing prices up in the US?
Who
has made brazen illegal invasions and attacks across the globe and
threatened more, not seen since the days of Adolf Hitler in Nazi
Germany, when tanks and troops rolled into Poland, and when others kept
quiet, into the rest of Europe, triggering World War II?
Who rules
the world’s most powerful economy and has the levers of destruction at
his fingertips, using them like a child that might be given too much,
despite being a convicted felon, having instigated a march on Capitol
Hill and having numerous allegations of sexual misconduct made against
him?
Capitol Hill is the seat of the US government
The
answer, if you need one: Donald Trump in every single case, amply
demonstrating the need for regime change - but in the United States, no
less - where a person who should not have become president is wreaking
havoc at home and abroad.
Unchecked power threatens global peace
When
is the world going to realise that you have to push back against a
megalomaniac intent on shaping the world according to his narrow,
narcissistic desires to see the return of imperialism and all its
untramelled effects?
A world where naked power rules without check
or balance, against the norms of behaviour established through
international treaties and groupings among nations post World War II to
maintain relative peace and equity in a world previously torn asunder by
conflict.
Instead, most major countries are bowing to the
infantile demands of a spoiled child who has suddenly realised the power
he holds in his hands and, instead of using it with great restraint and
calm, is taking delight in its irresponsible, irreverent use.
After
boasting that he hit Iran’s Kharg Island, which holds many of its key
oil facilities, Trump crowed, “We may hit it a few more times just for fun,”
demonstrating crass insensitivity, extreme idiocy, and a total lack of
sympathy for the needless suffering he imposes on the innocent.
Tehran, Iran, being bombed
The
world should remember that Trump and his good friend, the cruel and
heartless Benjamin Netanyahu, who is wanted for war crimes by the
International Criminal Court for genocide in Palestine, struck Iran and
killed its top leadership with a sneak attack during negotiations for
nuclear disarmament.
Trump-Netanyahu duo flouts global law
Can
anyone trust this devious, destructive duo after such a flagrant
violation of international norms, law, and order, clearly against United
Nations protocol and common human decency, to engage in negotiations or
enter into any agreements with them again?
Won’t those affected swear eternal revenge against them instead?
The Independent described the Israeli attack on Iran’s energy installations as a possible war crime
and a move taken straight out of Vladimir Putin’s playbook in Ukraine.
Now, who believes Israel would have done this without US support,
despite what Trump says? No one decent trusts him anyway.
The
response from the so-called civilised West - the United Kingdom,
Germany, and France - was muted, instead of calling Trump to account,
expressed mere regret and reiterated that Iran must not have nuclear
weapons. There is no evidence they have.
This follows the same kind of reaction when the Venezuelan president and his wife were abducted at gunpoint and whisked away
to New York to stand trial. Ahead of this, the US torpedoed boats off
Venezuela’s coast on a mere suspicion of being engaged in the drug trade
- no evidence needed.
US blockade deepens crisis
With
Venezuela falling, the US has blockaded oil to Cuba, a country which
has not harmed the US in any way, resulting in considerable hardship to
its citizens. The West remained mute, giving courage to Trump to venture
forth even more outrageously.
There could be more than a touch of
racism here - most of the decisions of the West have always been
considered behind racist lenses, and it seems clear that black, brown,
and yellow lives matter less than white ones.
Former Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro in 2020
But
if the history of Hitler and Nazi Germany is to be learnt, it is that
despots and demented people need to be put in their place before they
get out of hand, and everyone becomes a victim. Who is to know what
Trump does next, if Iran does capitulate, or if they don’t?
And
what would the West do - indeed, what can they do - if the US moves
against Greenland or Canada or if they demand that they want to control
the EU? What are they going to do to resist?
The only way is if
the rest of the world collectively stood up to the US and its main
allies, the way they did against Nazi Germany and Japan - remember the
Soviet Union fought with great effect on the side of the allies, as did
the Chinese under Mao Tse Tung against Japanese occupation.
If they allow Trump to get too strong, it may be too late to avert a catastrophe - a full-blown war, in other words.
What
would happen if the US strongarmed its way into Greenland, for
instance? This is not unjustified speculation. Jonas Gahr Store,
Norway’s leader, received a text message from Trump in January, according to the New York Times:
“Considering
your country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having
stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of
Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about
what is good and proper for the United States.”
That’s from a
person who is so embroiled in embellishing his own credentials and an
unhealthy penchant for the Nobel prize during an international crisis,
he has lost all sense of perspective, making him unfit for the
presidency and a menace to world peace.
The West needs to push
back hard against Trump and, if necessary, act in concert with the rest
of the world to do so. Trump cannot simply act as he pleases, and the
sooner he is stopped, the better.
Regime change starts with global pushback
Considerable
opposition to Trump is building up against him at home, especially
about allowing Israel to drag the US into the Iran war at the height of
the Epstein scandal, which has also tainted Trump. Some even postulate
that the war was to divert attention from that.
If the rest of the
world is brave enough to confront Trump, it will also send a message to
US voters who will decide who controls the House of Representatives in
the November polls. If the Republicans lose that round, Trump’s powers
will be considerably curtailed.
The majority party post-election
decides the legislative direction of the House, which is responsible for
initiating revenue bills, acting on impeachment, and voting on federal
law. It may not be regime change yet, but it’s definitely the first step
- it will limit presidential power substantially.
The rest of the
world needs to show what kind of person Trump is and why he is not fit
to lead the US. He will take the US into the gutter, not “Make America
Great Again”. The sooner the US public realises it, the sooner regime
change in the US will happen.
The only religions that need defending are non-Muslim faiths By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, March 23, 2026
Malaysiakini : The shrine was part of the scenery. Part of the life of the community.
A Datuk Gong shrine
But
the shrine is no more. Or rather, the red structure remains, but it is
empty. The porcelain inhabitant who for decades stood guard in the
neighbourhood has vanished. No more offerings or lit candles, just a
derelict red structure remains.
I was told that people were afraid
in the current climate that the shrine would be desecrated. That its
immobile guardian within would be defiled. Better safe than sorry, they
told me.
It was not as if the road was earmarked for municipal
business or construction. Some folks were just worried; in this current
climate, you have to be cautious, they said.
So, something which
has been there for decades is no more. Soon, the red structure would be
removed, and it would be as if it never existed in the first place.
Why ‘defend’ a religion?
I
understand the impulse to protect what is sacred. After the supposed
land activist, Tamim Dahri Abdul Razak, stepped on a Hindu religious
symbol and made a mockery of the state security apparatus, people
understood that their religion needed defending.
After the prime
minister announced that state governments need to handle illegal
temples, people rightly embraced the need to protect and preserve what
is sacred to them.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim
For decades, I never understood this pathological need by some to defend their religion.
Truth be told, the concept was alien to me. I defined it as propaganda meant to control and maintain power over the majority.
It
was a political tool that the establishment used to maintain order. I
never understood how a religion, any religion, needed to be “defended”.
When
the prime minister talked of “illegal” structures and “victory” over
the demolition of a structure which predated municipal laws, people
became rightfully worried about the way they observed their religions.
After all, these structures existed for decades under various permutations of ketuanaism and endured.
While
there had been flashpoints, there was never an organised, state-enabled
attempt to disrupt the racial equilibrium when it came to places of
worship, for the most part.
The vandalised Dewi Sri Maha Kaliaman temple in Kampung Tasek Ampang on May 19, 2025
PSM
deputy chairperson S Arutchelvan recently wrote a piece which I mostly
agree with, and I understand the need to make this a class issue and not
a racial one.
The problem with this kind of argument is that it
smashes into the reality of race in this country, which is embedded in
mainstream politics.
Arutchelvan wrote
- in defending urban pioneer settlements, such as the mostly
Malay-Muslim communities of Kampung Aman, Kampung Chubadak, Kampung
Rimba Jaya, Berembang, and others - that PSM has seen surau and mosques
built on untitled land, supported by politicians and residents.
But
this is about race and religion, because you have to wonder why on
earth, besides corporate interests, would anyone be interested in
“illegal temples” if not to demonstrate the superiority of their
religion over that which they are attempting to demolish.
And yes, temples and the Hindu community are low-hanging fruit.
Oppression
You
have to ask yourself, why now? We have all these extremists either
engaging in the destruction of temples or claiming that all this is a
legal endeavour.
The fact of the matter is that not one of these
temples caused any form of social, economic, or legal dysfunction in
this country.
The Sri Poyatha Moorthi temple in Malacca
Hindu
temples are in your face. While Christian places of worship are subject
to strict rules when it comes to Islamic sensitivities - the cross, for
instance, apparently has a debilitating effect on some people - Hindu
temples are gaudy architectural provocations for people who believe in
the supremacy of their faith.
Legacy temples are also a reminder
of how the Indian community built this country. Cities may have grown
around temples, and without the Chinese, there would be no cities, as
former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad reminds us.
However,
this has given rise to strategists who delude themselves into thinking
that they come from technical backgrounds, but only demonstrate such
expertise by demolishing and stepping on sacred symbols.
They are the problem, but the state makes the victims
of their harassment the problem. Their crusade reeks of an inferiority
complex made worse by a state which thinks it is defending race and
religion.
Not only is this malicious, but it also creates an
atmosphere where people with not much power feel powerful. This, in
turn, becomes a distraction from the failings of an all-powerful state.
Folks like Tamim and controversial preacher Zamri Vinoth prove this every time Madani does not censure them.
Zamri Vinoth (left) and Tamim Dahri Abdul Razak
Rational
Malaysians should keep in mind that the establishment portrays
non-Muslims as the ones causing disharmony. This is the narrative that
is being reinforced by the powers that be.
This is why it is not
only about the destruction of temples but also the obliteration of
history. Most importantly, this is about compliance.
Temples are not only symbols of dissent in this climate, but also a reminder of why non-Muslim religions need to be defended.
In Tamim's world, law is negotiable By Mariam Mokhtar
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Malaysiakini : At first, such incidents may appear isolated, but what we are
witnessing here is not a one-off controversy. This is a clear
progression, where the events escalate step by step.
Second, the amplification: the act is filmed, uploaded on social media, and widely shared.
A screenshot of Tamim Dahri Abdul Razak stepping on a soolam
Third, the justification. After the public backlash, explanations emerged, with claims of ignorance that the object was mistaken for scrap metal, or that the site was not recognised as religious.
Finally, the escalation emerges in the form of demands, most notably a conditional offer to surrender tied to the demolition of temples deemed “illegal.”
Dangerous line
In short: provoke first, justify later.
If this situation is allowed to fester, compliance itself becomes conditional, and that is a dangerous line.
On
the “Tanah Malaya” social media account, Tamim said he would return to
Malaysia and surrender to the police only if the authorities demolished a
list of allegedly “illegal” Hindu temples.
He wrote: “We, the
strategists of Tanah Malaya, come from technical backgrounds instead of
arts, and thus we are familiar with only one thing: problem solving.”
This
framing goes beyond activism. It turns a legal process into a
negotiation, where compliance with the law is tied to political demands.
Calling
themselves “strategists of Tanah Malaya” and saying they deal only in
“problem solving” sounds confident and technical, but there is irony
here. You cannot solve a problem if you are the one defining what the
problem is in the first place.
When that definition is disputed, it begins to sound less like problem-solving and more like self-praise dressed as expertise.
The
attempt is to make compliance with the law conditional. It links a
personal legal situation to an ideological demand, introducing a
precedent where the law is treated as negotiable under pressure.
Tensions not new
This is not the first time Malaysia has faced such tensions.
In the case involving convert and controversial preacher, Zamri Vinoth, public perception was that early inaction allowed tensions to build, with enforcement only coming later when the risk of escalation had grown.
Whether
that perception was entirely fair is secondary. What matters is the
lesson it offers: delays in acting on sensitive, provocative incidents
do not calm situations. They often inflame them.
Hesitation creates space for anger to grow, for narratives to harden, and for communities to feel unprotected.
If there is one lesson to be drawn, it is this: timely, consistent enforcement is essential.
When provocative acts are seen to gain attention or receive delayed responses, others may feel emboldened to act.
The demolished Hindu temple in Rawang Perdana
They
do so not necessarily out of malice, but from the belief that they are
defending legality, identity, or justice. This is how vigilantism begins, not as defiance, but as misguided justification.
Once individuals begin to take matters into their own hands,
believing the law will bend or delay, the consequences become harder to
contain. Recent incidents involving religious desecration have already
set a public expectation: that action must be swift, enforcement must be
firm, and standards must be equal.
If one case is handled decisively while another drifts, the issue is no longer about law.
It becomes about whose sensitivities are protected, and whose are not.
That perception alone is enough to fracture trust.
Ruleof law cannot be conditional
Malaysia’s Federal Constitution, under Article 11, guarantees freedom of religion. It requires the state to:
protect all religious communities
act fairly and impartially
prevent acts that inflame tensions
Enforcement cannot bend to the pressure of any kind. Once it does, constitutional protections begin to feel conditional.
At
its core, this issue is simple. No person alleged to have broken the
law can be allowed to set conditions for compliance or hold enforcement
hostage to demands.
The balance of authority must remain with institutions, not individuals negotiating with the law.
That is a line a functioning state cannot blur.
This
is where leadership is tested. There will be pressure to manage
sentiment, to avoid backlash, to respond tactically, but leadership is
not about managing outrage. It is about upholding principles.
Politicians must act in accordance with the Constitution, which guarantees equal protection to all Malaysians.
This moment demands clarity. Not rhetoric. Not delay. Not negotiation.
The
rule of law cannot be conditional. Provocation cannot be rewarded, and
no individual can be allowed to hold the nation to pressure or make
demands. We should draw the line now, clearly and firmly, because if it
is not held here, it will be tested again.
From pitch to pocket: Tracing money trail in M'sian football By R Nadeswaran
Friday, March 20, 2026
Malaysiakini : Yet, FAM’s leaders refused to throw in the towel and instead chose to “go to war” at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), only to be met with an uppercut that left them sprawled on the canvas.
Everyone
loves a winner - the sweet taste of glory, the rewards of victory. But
failure? Failure flips the script. Friends vanish. Reputation crumbles.
Authority is stripped away.
Suddenly, you are the villain. The
same fans who cheered now tear you apart. The scrutiny intensifies -
especially when the truth about breaking the rules comes to light. There
is nowhere to hide.
The entire FAM committee has resigned. But who is really taking the fall?
On March 17, the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) found that FAM had violated the rules by fielding ineligible players in two 2027 Asian Cup Qualifiers matches last year.
Following
the finding, the AFC slapped FAM with a fine of US$50,000 (RM196,000)
and nullified Malaysia’s wins in the two matches, which ended with the
scores: Malaysia 2-Nepal 0 and Malaysia 4-Vietnam 0.
The AFC
disciplinary and ethics committee decided that Malaysia lost 3-0 for
both matches, based on Article 25.1 of the AFC Disciplinary and Ethics
Code.
Govt’s role in citizenship scandal
Even political leaders joined the chorus. PKR Youth chief Kamil Abdul Munim vented his feelings on social media.
“Penyudahnya ‘cekelat angin’,” he said on X, which roughly translates to “We got nothing in the end”.
But Kamil is barking up the wrong tree. He should have sought answers from Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, whom FAM thanked for “facilitating the citizenship papers” for the seven foreign players.
PKR Youth chief Kamil Abdul Munim
Was it not his party stalwart and Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail who aided in getting citizenship for the seven?
The prime minister also allocated RM30 million for the national football squad. Shouldn’t he and Saifuddin be providing answers instead of maintaining stoic silence, Kamil?
The
government was also complicit in the issuance of the false birth
certificates and other documents, as confirmed by National Registration
Department head honcho Badrul Hisham Alias.
Royal rebuke
But the issue has not ended. They say it never rains, but it pours.
On the heels of the CAS decision
two weeks ago, Johor Regent Tunku Ismail Sultan Ibrahim or TMJ, as he
is known, has made startling allegations against certain FAM officials -
past and present.
The regent claimed he is being made a scapegoat in the scandal and is instead blaming FAM insiders who he claimed had an axe to grind with him over financial matters.
In
a post on X, Tunku Ismail claimed that some in FAM had approached him
for projects, and to avoid MACC investigations, among others.
These
individuals, he claimed, were also unhappy that the government
channelled funds directly to the national football team - implying it
was because they did not get a cut of the funds.
Tunku Ismail Sultan Ibrahim
In
a series of social media posts, he alleged misuse and abuse of power
and money. In one, he wrote: “Ask him to explain where the TV rights
money and sponsorship money that should have gone to each team that
competed for years went? Whose pocket?
“Is he still disappointed that his son does not work for FAM anymore because there were issues with the staff?”
In another post, he slammed a former manager of Harimau Malaya.
Those named have retreated into a cocoon, refusing to comment on the allegations.
Due for an overhaul
Football
in Malaysia is not just on the ropes; it’s down for the count. It is a
multi-million-ringgit enterprise with large amounts flowing through
ticket sales, TV rights, sponsorship, allocations from Fifa, etc.
Rightly,
it should be run like a commercial organisation, but this is not the
case. It is being run like a family-owned business.
Accountability
cannot stop at resignations because they risk becoming a convenient
exit - a way for those responsible to slip quietly into the shadows
without ever answering for the roles they played.
We need a
forensic audit conducted by an independent, third-party body with no
ties to FAM, no political affiliations, and no vested interests.
This
audit must trace the flow of every single ringgit - from broadcasting
rights and sponsorship deals, to government allocations and development
funds. It must ask the hard questions: Who approved these deals? Who
benefited? And who tried to silence those who raised concerns?
Transparency
is not just about opening the books; it is about restoring the faith of
millions of Malaysians who love this sport. The fans who pack the
stadiums, the children who dream of wearing the Harimau Malaya jersey.
Reforms
must follow. Not cosmetic changes, not a reshuffling of the same faces,
but a fundamental overhaul of how Malaysian football is governed.
That means stronger oversight, stricter conflict of interest rules, and real consequences for those who abuse their power.
The time for an independent audit is now. Not next month. Not next year. Now.
Because
every day we wait, the rot deepens, and the trust of the nation erodes
further. Malaysian football has been knocked to the canvas - but whether
we get back up depends on whether we dare to clean house, once and for
all.
Zamri (above, left)
and Tamim have been arrested and questioned by the state security
apparatus before. For whatever reason, both have demonstrated a brazen
attitude to the prospect of being sanctioned by Madani.
Zamri has since claimed
he did not flee and was willing to meet the inspector-general of police
(IGP), which further makes the Royal Malaysia Police look like a bunch
of “Keystone cops” who are incompetent.
The fact that Zamri
believes that he can meet the IGP to settle this issue and throws
accusations at other prominent personalities reacting to his religious
extremism points to how compromised the state security apparatus is when
it comes to issues like these.
Unequal power
To
understand this kind of thinking, all we have to do is observe the
rhetoric of independent preacher Firdaus Wong, who has encouraged minors
to disobey their parents if they want to convert, and nothing has
happened to him.
He said this about the police, when another
agitator was targeted: “Once the operation begins, they will haul
everyone in. Trust me.”
This is the kind of confidence which is
shaped by the knowledge that the state is sympathetic to your cause and
the experience of never being sanctioned by the state.
Keep in
mind that Zamri reuploaded a video after the state removed it, and no
action was taken against him, which is further evidence that when it
comes to insulting minorities and their religion, there will always be
insufficient evidence for the state to act.
The police, quick to
act against perceived insults to the religion of the state, remain
lackadaisical when it comes to insults against other religions.
What we are dealing with here are people who aim to sow discontent in the Indian Malaysian community.
The
problem with the religious discourse in this country is not that people
are going about insulting each other’s religion, but rather the state
has the power to sanction people for trespassing on religious and racial
issues.
This power is often applied unequally, with the
state-sanctioned religion and its adherents getting off scot-free, when
the same does not apply to other religions.
To understand this, I refer you to what Perlis mufti Asri Zainul Abidin hopes for, as reported in the press.
“Asri
also voiced his hope that Khalid will consider ‘justice for Muslims’,
professionalism, the background of the issues involving Zamri and Tamim,
as well as the ‘identity’ of the nation.”
Perlis mufti Asri Zainul Abidin
The
mufti also hoped that any ruling government would safeguard “the
nation’s identity, particularly in matters concerning religion and the
Muslim community”.
All this basically means is that people should be treated differently depending on their religion. It is as simple as that.
If
you think it is seditious of me to claim that religious operatives are,
for whatever reasons, being shielded by the state, which includes the
vast religious bureaucracy, hold your horses.
Listen to what the Perlis mufti said about the reasons Global Ikhwan Services and Business Holdings (GISBH) was allowed to operate without state intervention for a long time.
“They
may not have picked up this case for certain reasons... some were
unwilling to take the risk, and others may have viewed it as
insignificant.
“Perhaps some of the group’s (GISBH) beliefs are linked to certain individuals involved, or it may be due to other reasons.”
Law and order
Zamri
said he did not flee, and IGP Khalid Ismail said, "Based on
intelligence obtained by the police, both suspects have been found to
have fled to Thailand.”
Seriously? We are told to believe that the
state security apparatus was investigating two suspects in a criminal
case, and the police did not have eyes on them?
Think about it
this way. Let us say that the police are investigating a terrorist plot,
it would only be logical if the police had eyes on the suspects 24/7,
right? This is tradecraft 101. What intelligence is the IGP talking
about?
IGP Khalid Ismail
The
same kind of intelligence that the police in Kelantan had when they
raided a Health Ministry-sponsored event in the state, which they
claimed was a gay party? So what game is the IGP playing?
Look,
I’m not knocking on the police. Believe it or not, from personal
experience and a history serving the state security apparatus, I know
for a fact that there are police officers who believe that folk like
Zamri et all pose a threat to national security.
These are not
progressive types by any measure but rather good old-fashioned law and
order types who believe that the security of the realm is far more
important than any kind of religious ideology.
The fact is,
neither Zamri nor Tamim was lying low. Both were using social media for
publicity and to agitate against the Indian community.
Zamri was
allegedly attacked, and Tamim had caused a firestorm on social media;
hence, it was not as if these two criminal masterminds were evading the
state.
Indeed, as former Selangor MIC chairperson Awtar Singh, who
was involved in a war of words with another agitator, the aptly
misnamed Cikgu Chandra (S Chandrasegaran), observed, police personnel
were outside the house of this “teacher” when his property was damaged
because of his toxic views.
So, if the state security can do all of this, we are to believe that they did not have eyes on these two?
Forces at work
So,
what do we know? We know that Zamri was deeply connected with the
religious state. We know that both have been investigated at various
times and let off by the state.
We know that both were smug and displayed a level of hubris when it came to state investigations into their words and actions.
We
have to understand the forces at work here. We have a popular mufti,
Asri, who has a well-known animus towards India and who contextualises
all conflicts as religious ones.
We have a known Zakir Naik
acolyte, Zamri, who is on a crusade to destroy allegedly illegal temples
with a supposed nativist activist, Tamim.
The question is not if
these two extremists have fled the country, but rather, will the Madani
state persecute these two offenders, or will they kowtow to the
religious extremists in this country?
When some enjoy immunity above the rest By R Nadeswaran
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Malaysiakini : Against this backdrop, official assurances of “taking action” ring
hollow. Our enforcement authorities, whether constrained by political
expediency or institutional inertia, appear paralysed when confronting
the privileged class.
Any suggestion of double standards is met
with reflexive declarations that “no one is above the law” - a mantra
repeated so often it has lost all meaning.
The nation watches,
less in awe than in anger, as some break the law with impunity while
others face its full weight. The authorities' subdued response to these
transgressions has cemented a public perception that justice in Malaysia
is not blind - in some cases, it merely looks the other way.
While lawmakers are pushing for the authorities to take action against an “activist” over the desecration of a Hindu symbol, he seems to be enjoying immunity as if he was the special one.
Some leaders speak out but…
DAP
politicians have been in the forefront pressuring for action to prevent
threats to social harmony and the nation’s stability as racial tensions
flare.
DAP chairperson Gobind Singh Deo
urged Inspector-General of Police Khalid Ismail to take immediate
action against Tamim Dahri Abdul Razak, accused of desecrating a Hindu
symbol at the Langkawi Shree Muniswarar Alayam temple.
Tamim brazenly filmed himself and released the video publicly, later insisting
that he believed the object he stepped on was “a rusty piece of metal
in an unoccupied land clearing,” and not “a place of worship”.
The
clip has since triggered highly provocative, emotive, and incendiary
reactions across social media, further inflaming tensions.
This is
not an isolated case. A handful of others, including two Muslim
converts and self-proclaimed preachers, Zamri Vinoth and Firdaus Wong,
have in the past escaped citation for similar activities or provocative
posts.
When a temple in Rawang was demolished two weeks ago, Gobind, in a statement, said: “I have raised this matter in the cabinet on numerous occasions.
“However,
the final authority to prosecute rests with the attorney-general (AG).
He must explain why there has been such a slow response thus far and
what he intends to do to change the growing perception of inaction.”
Yesterday, Gobind issued another reminder: The authorities need to take swift action against those who disrespect the “soolam” (trident) as the police did in a recent case involving the prosecution of an individual accused of stepping on the Quran.
‘Unwilling to prosecute’
But
here is the bitter truth: Zamri and Wong, who were previously reported
to have insulted religion, but not prosecuted because the police
classified their cases as “no further action”.
Appearing
on behalf of the AG, deputy public prosecutor Ainul Amirah said the
Attorney-General’s Chambers was unwilling to prosecute the duo as police
had classified their cases as NFA.
The important question is: why is there inaction on the part of the police, despite hundreds of reports lodged against Zamri?
This
has led to speculation that he and the others enjoy special privileges
or have a patron who ensures that the long arm of the law does not reach
them.
Most
believe such a perception is true because Zamri has been belittling
other religions, especially Hinduism, continually over the years, and
has escaped scrutiny.
Yesterday, Wong dropped the name of Prime
Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s wife on social media. He wrote: “I was also
surprised when Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail mentioned my name during her
inaugural speech.
“Azman Abidin, political secretary to Prime
Minister Anwar Ibrahim, invited me to attend the Bandar Tun Razak
parliamentary Iftar Jamaie event with Amanah Ikhtiar Malaysia at the
Azzubair Ibnul Awwam Mosque.
“Before Wan Azizah left, she called me over and said: “Keep up your work.”
Firdaus thanked her for those words of encouragement, adding, “They mean a great deal to me.”A post shared by Firdaus Wong Wai Hung (@firdauswong)
The recent parade of provocations exposes a rot that runs deeper than isolated instances of bigotry.
When
Wong - a figure with a documented history of controversial religious
posts - can publicly name-drop the prime minister’s wife as his source
of encouragement, the message to the nation is unmistakable: proximity
to power confers immunity.
A failed system
This
is the defining characteristic of a failed system. While Gobind rightly
demands swift action against Tamim for desecrating a Hindu symbol, the
authorities remain conspicuously unmotivated when confronting Zamri -
despite hundreds of police reports lodged against him over the years of
religious belittling.
The question writes itself: What explains the paralysis in one case and the quickness in another?
We
are told no one is above the law. But when preachers drop political
names as shields, when activists film their own desecrations without
consequence, and when hundreds of reports vanish into bureaucratic
oblivion while others face prosecution within days - the mantra becomes
mockery.
The authorities cannot posture as defenders of social
harmony while allowing serial provocateurs to operate under political
patronage. They cannot claim to be blind defenders of justice while
selectively closing one eye.
Malaysians
are not fools. We see the double standards. We hear the name-dropping.
We watch as some are elevated above the law while others are crushed
beneath it.
And to those who believe their political connections
render them untouchable - remember that in a nation watching more in
anger than in awe, public patience is not unlimited.
Justice delayed may be justice denied, but public memory is eternal.
The
question now is not whether the system is flawed or failed. The
question is whether those who benefit from its failures will ever be
held accountable - or whether in Malaysia, the name you drop matters
more than the law you break.
When the rule of law arrives too late By Frankie D'Cruz
Free Malaysia Today : Zamri’s case involves statements alleged to have caused public alarm during a gathering outside the Sogo shopping complex in Kuala Lumpur.
The other centres on the alleged desecration of a sacred Trishul at a Hindu temple in Langkawi.
Both incidents have ignited intense reactions online and among the public.
If offences were committed, the authorities must pursue the case and bring those responsible before the courts.
Yet the debate surrounding the case does not stop at the alleged acts themselves. It extends to a more uncomfortable question: why action appears to come only after tensions have already flared.
Over the years, complaints have surfaced about provocative rhetoric directed at other religions. Some reports were said to have been closed with no further action.
Whatever the legal justification, the pattern has created a perception problem authorities cannot ignore.
In a multireligious society, perception matters almost as much as action. When enforcement appears inconsistent, speculation fills the vacuum.
People begin to wonder whether the same rules apply equally to everyone.
The deeper danger is that such provocations are no longer isolated. Each incident nudges the boundaries of what society tolerates.
What was once unthinkable gradually becomes merely controversial, and eventually routine.
Social media has accelerated that shift. Today, provocation rarely stays confined to one place.
A single video or post can reach thousands within minutes, often stripped of context and driven by emotion. The result is a cycle in which outrage spreads faster than facts.
In that environment, delays in enforcement carry a cost.
When people lose confidence that institutions will act swiftly and fairly, anger spills into the public arena – where fury, not evidence, shapes the narrative.
Public debate becomes louder, sharper and less patient with due process.
This is why early and consistent enforcement matters. Acting before tensions escalate often protects social harmony more effectively than prosecuting offences after emotions have hardened.
Malaysia already has laws that address acts capable of insulting religion or causing public alarm, and the challenge lies in how consistently and visibly those laws are applied.
The credibility of the law is not measured only by punishment, but by predictability – the assurance that the same act will trigger the same response, regardless of who commits it.
Predictability builds trust. Communities feel protected when they know the system will respond fairly and promptly.
Uncertainty, by contrast, feeds grievance and suspicion.
This affair should prompt wider reflection.
Religious harmony cannot depend solely on legal consequences after the damage is done.
It also depends on the confidence that institutions will act firmly, impartially, and in time.
In a country as religiously diverse as Malaysia, the law must not only be fair, but must be seen to be fair, and seen to act in time.
Who's the most powerful man in Malaysia? By Mariam Mokhtar
Friday, March 13, 2026
Malaysiakini : The MACC is the country’s principal anti-corruption body, responsible
for investigating everyone else. When its chief comes under scrutiny, a
contradiction arises: who investigates the investigator?
Possible mechanisms include the Attorney-General’s Chambers under Dusuki Mokhtar, the Chief Secretary of the Public Service Department under Shamsul Azri Abu Bakar, parliamentary oversight committees, or a royal commission of inquiry.
Disappointingly, the government has chosen
to treat this as a civil service disciplinary matter, leaving the chief
secretary to decide the next steps. This cautious move preserves
institutional appearance and avoids fully confronting the legal and
ethical implications.
Minister Fahmi Fadzil's reluctance to
disclose further details of the investigation is unacceptable. How is
this a disciplinary issue and not a criminal corruption investigation?
This hesitancy has arisen because the investigator is being
investigated.
The Madani administration brands itself as a
reformist government, and the prime minister knows that the Azam issue
functions as a political trap: An aggressive investigation could expose
weaknesses within the MACC, undermine the agency’s credibility, and give
opposition groups leverage to claim systemic corruption.
On the other hand, to delay or dilute the investigation,
reinforces public perceptions of insider protection much like a
members-only club, eroding trust and making the GE14 reform promises
look hollow.
Paradox
Unsurprisingly, the
political instinct has been to delay, redirect, or diffuse pressure.
Successive governments tend to use this classic tactic to avoid immediate accountability.
Allegations reported by Bloomberg describe a network of business figures allegedly colluding
with enforcement officers to manipulate companies. Politically, this
reframes the story from “Did the MACC chief break rules?” to “Is there a
broader corporate conspiracy?”
While
the narrative appears to show decisive action against systemic
corruption, it also diffuses pressure on Azam personally. Talking about a
bigger corruption investigation makes the government look active, but
also reduces the pressure to answer the specific questions about Azam.
Here
lies the paradox: the MACC is simultaneously accused of selectively
undermining certain businesses while protecting others, yet the
perceived threat of the ‘corporate mafia’ functions as a bogeyman.
Companies
and officials not directly involved behave cautiously, fearing
scrutiny, which reinforces elite control and maintains the appearance of
oversight. In other words, the elites stay protected, and the rest walk
on eggshells. It may look like oversight is working, even if it’s just a
show.
Cast
our minds back to the 2018 general election, which ended decades of
uninterrupted Umno-Baru rule. Today, the ruling coalition still includes
Umno-Baru elements, with many leaders retaining their Umno-Baru DNA
despite belonging to other parties.
Reformers must juggle
power-sharing and institutional integrity. In doing so, they hesitate to
pursue major investigations that might rock elite networks. Coalition
politics and influential officials often undermine well-intentioned
reforms.
Ask any Malaysian, and they will say that they expect the
rule of law, independent institutions and anti-corruption enforcement
in the country. Delays in the Azam investigation feed perceptions of double standards, institutional protection, political survival and selfish self-interests overriding reform.
Trust
in governance, both on the domestic and international fronts, depends
on visible, credible enforcement, especially at the top. Not listening
to the rakyat is why public frustration is growing.
Stakes are high
The
core paradox boils down to this: systems versus powerful individuals.
Investigating systemic corruption, such as the alleged corporate mafia,
is politically easier than investigating the head of the MACC.
Selective
enforcement, structural protection, and coalition politics converge to
create an environment where the most powerful man in Malaysia can
operate with relative impunity, while ordinary citizens and businesses
face the bogeyman of systemic oversight.
The stakes are high, and a transparent, high-profile investigation would:
Reassert MACC independence and restore domestic credibility,
Boost investor confidence by signalling fair enforcement and a level playing field,
Strengthen the reformist image of the Madani administration ahead of GE16, and
Ensure governance is predictable, transparent, and resilient.
Failing
to act decisively risks entrenching cynicism, undermining public trust,
and sending the wrong signal internationally: that Malaysia tolerates
selective enforcement at the top while expecting compliance from
everyone else.
A rigorous, transparent investigation
into Azam and a full probe of the MACC would carry substantial
benefits. Public trust would be restored. Institutional independence
would be strengthened, and show that the MACC is not a political tool.
Investor confidence would be enhanced.
Perhaps, more importantly
for the leaders of the Madani administration, whose reputations are
declining, they would gain political advantage ahead of GE16.
Decisive
action would signal courage and principle, strengthen the coalition’s
reformist image, and counter perceptions that parties such as DAP are
passive or disengaged.
For Anwar, the choice is stark: Inaction? Or act decisively to uphold transparency and the rule of law?
For
the nation, the implications, political, economic, and reputational,
could not be higher. Malaysians will not tolerate the most powerful man
in Malaysia remaining beyond meaningful accountability.
Editor's note:Amid allegations that its officers are entangled in a “corporate mafia” scheme, the MACC on Feb 24 issued a second firm denial and dismissed the claims as baseless.
Sabah’s 40% Revenue Right: If the Promises of 1963 Are Broken, What Remains of the Federation? By Daniel John Jambun
Murray Hunter : When Malaysia was formed in 1963 through the Malaysia Agreement 1963 (MA63), Sabah and Sarawak agreed — though with caution and considerable hesitation — to join a new federation together with the Federation of Malaya and Singapore.
This agreement was not unconditional.
Sabah’s leaders accepted the formation of Malaysia only after receiving assurances that specific constitutional, political and financial safeguards would protect the autonomy and interests of the Borneo territories within the new federation.
Among the most important of these safeguards were the financial provisions now reflected in Articles 112C and 112D of the Federal Constitution, which guarantee Sabah 40% of the net federal revenue derived from the state.
This arrangement was never presented as a discretionary federal grant.
It was designed as a structural constitutional safeguard to ensure that Sabah would retain a fair share of the wealth generated from its own land and natural resources, allowing the state to develop and prosper within the Federation.
It is therefore reasonable to say that Sabah might not have considered joining the Federation in 1963 had such assurances — including the 40% revenue safeguard — not been given.
These safeguards were not peripheral concessions but fundamental conditions intended to ensure that Sabah would not be economically disadvantaged within the new federation.
Constitutional Basis of the 40% Formula
Sabah’s entitlement to 40% of the net federal revenue derived from the state is not an abstract political claim.
The formula itself is embedded in the Tenth Schedule of the Federal Constitution, which sets out the financial arrangements between the Federation and the Borneo States.
The inclusion of this formula in the Tenth Schedule demonstrates that the 40% revenue entitlement was designed as a structural component of Malaysia’s constitutional framework at the time of its formation in 1963.
It reflects the financial safeguards negotiated under the Malaysia Agreement 1963, ensuring that Sabah would retain a fair share of the wealth generated from its own territory.
In other words, the safeguard was incorporated directly into the constitutional architecture of Malaysia itself.
The issue before the courts is therefore not whether Sabah should receive special treatment.
The real issue is whether the constitutional safeguards written into the Federal Constitution will finally be implemented as originally intended.
Why the 40% Safeguard Was Created
The financial safeguards provided to Sabah were not arbitrary arrangements.
They were introduced because the Borneo territories were significantly less economically developed than Malaya when Malaysia was formed in 1963.
The architects of the Malaysia Agreement recognised that Sabah would require greater financial capacity to build infrastructure, develop its economy and improve the living standards of its people.
The 40% revenue entitlement was therefore intended to ensure that a substantial portion of the wealth generated from Sabah’s own territory would remain available for the development of the state.
In other words, the safeguard was designed to ensure that Sabah could catch up economically within the new federation rather than fall further behind.
Yet more than six decades later, the reality remains deeply troubling.
Despite its immense natural wealth — including petroleum, timber and other valuable resources — Sabah today remains one of the poorest and most economically underdeveloped states in Malaysia.
For many Sabahans, this painful reality reinforces a growing belief that the constitutional safeguards intended to protect Sabah’s economic future have never been fully implemented.
The Historical Assurances Given to Sabah
It is also important to recall the assurances that accompanied Sabah’s decision to join Malaysia.
At the time, Tunku Abdul Rahman publicly acknowledged that the Borneo territories were entering the new federation on the understanding that the arrangement must benefit them.
Historical records further indicate that shortly before the formation of Malaysia in July 1963, Tunku Abdul Rahman stated that the territories joining the federation would have the freedom to reconsider their position if the new nation did not bring them benefit.
These assurances were intended to address the concerns of Sabah and Sarawak that they might otherwise be dominated within the new federation.
The message conveyed at the time was clear:
Malaysia must work for the benefit of all its founding partners, including Sabah and Sarawak.
These assurances formed part of the broader understanding that the constitutional safeguards granted to the Borneo territories would be honoured in good faith.
Historical Context of Sabah’s Entry into the Federation
The circumstances under which Sabah entered the Federation must also be properly understood.
Historical records indicate that the political institutions of North Borneo were still in their formative stages when discussions on the formation of Malaysia took place.
Sir William Goode acknowledged that local political leadership in the territory was still in the early stages of development when the question of forming Malaysia arose.
Similarly, Donald Stephens later reflected that many of the local leaders involved in the negotiations had limited political experience, as North Borneo was only beginning its transition towards self-government.
In such circumstances, the constitutional safeguards negotiated for Sabah — including the financial protections contained in Articles 112C, 112D and the Tenth Schedule of the Federal Constitution — were particularly important.
These safeguards were intended to ensure that Sabah’s interests would be protected within the new Federation despite the asymmetry in political and administrative experience among the parties involved.
Sabah and Sarawak as Founding Partners
It must also be remembered that the constitutional position of Sabah and Sarawak differs fundamentally from that of the eleven states of Malaya.
Malaysia was not created by simply enlarging the Federation of Malaya.
Rather, it was established through the Malaysia Agreement 1963, an international agreement concluded between the Federation of Malaya, North Borneo, Sarawak and Singapore.
Sabah and Sarawak therefore became founding partners in the creation of a new federation called Malaysia, rather than simply joining an existing federation as ordinary states.
The constitutional safeguards granted to the Borneo territories — including the financial arrangements reflected in Articles 112C, 112D and the Tenth Schedule of the Federal Constitution — were therefore structural components of the constitutional settlement that made the formation of Malaysia possible.
Respecting these safeguards is not merely a fiscal matter.
It is a matter of honouring the constitutional foundations upon which the Federation itself was built.
The Question That Cannot Be Ignored
The Federal Government is entitled to pursue its legal rights through the courts.
However, the appeal cannot resolve the deeper constitutional issue that now confronts the nation.
If the safeguards promised to Sabah under the Malaysia Agreement 1963 were genuine, they must be honoured both in letter and in spirit.
If they were never intended to be honoured, then the historical basis upon which Sabah agreed — though cautiously — to join the Federation deserves honest reassessment.
For many Sabahans, this issue is not merely about constitutional interpretation or fiscal calculations.
It is about whether the dignity, rights and future of Sabah within Malaysia are being treated with the respect that was promised in 1963.
Ultimately, the question before the nation is simple:
If the safeguards that persuaded Sabah to join Malaysia in 1963 are not honoured today, how can the people of Sabah continue to believe in the promises upon which the Federation itself was built?
Because a federation founded on trust cannot endure if the promises that created that trust are allowed to fade into history.
In the end, this is not merely a legal dispute about revenue. It is a test of whether the constitutional promises that persuaded Sabah to join the Federation in 1963 will be honoured in good faith — because the strength and unity of Malaysia ultimately depend on the trust that those founding promises will be kept.
Daniel John Jambun
Borneo’s Plight in Malaysia Foundation (BoPiMaFo)
Issued in the interest of constitutional accountability and the faithful implementation of the Malaysia Agreement 1963.
From glory to gutter: Football's bitter truth deserves to be told By R Nadeswaran
Thursday, March 12, 2026
Malaysiakini : From the moment the scandal broke, FAM officials chose clouding over
accountability, peddling fibs and half-truths to cover up a brazen act
of forgery.
They attempted to cloak the fact that fraudulent
documents - including birth certificates - were used to clear these
seven players to don the Harimau Malaya jersey in the Asian Cup
qualifiers.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim was quick to shower
praise on our athletes in cycling and hockey over the weekend. Yet, when
it comes to the national sport, mired in a gutter of its own making, he
has remained conspicuously silent.
PM Anwar Ibrahim
It
seems his aides curate briefings to deliver only victories. But this,
unfortunately, is not a victory; it is a national embarrassment of the
highest order, exposing Malaysian football to charges of systemic
skullduggery.
FAM itself tied the prime minister to this fiasco.
After Anwar had congratulated the team on their 4-0 win over Vietnam
last June, FAM, in a statement, thanked
his administration not just for the RM30 million allocation, but also
for “facilitating the documentation” of the seven players. The
government’s fingerprints are all over this.
Through the National
Registration Department (NRD) and Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution
Ismail, whose ministry oversees it, the government’s role is already a
matter of public record.
NRD’s bluff
When the scandal broke, a declaration
dated Sept 19, 2025 made by NRD director-general Badrul Hisham Alias,
and submitted to Fifa as a defence statement, stated that the players
provided the required documents with the names and identification
details of their grandparents.
“In accordance with our internal
procedures, NRD conducted a cross-examination and verification of this
information. As part of this verification, the government also received
documentation relating to all seven applicants issued in Argentina,
Brazil, and Spain.
“These documents were reviewed and used as part
of our internal cross-verification process to confirm the applicants’
lineage through their grandparents. This comparative assessment of
foreign and domestic records was a standard measure undertaken to ensure
accuracy and integrity in determining eligibility,” it said.
Three
bodies - the Fifa Disciplinary Committee, Fifa Appeals Committee, and
the Court of Arbitration for Sports (CAS) have called NRD’s bluff; there
is no such lineage. So, what has NRD got to say?
FAM’s Badrul Hisham Alias
In January, Badrul said they would address all concerns and allegations after a conclusive report is released.
“We
will answer this later. After the report is out, we will address the
issue because inconsistency can complicate the matter,” he told Malaysiakini.
So,
what is holding up the explanation of the issue? How did NRD find links
or lineage when none were presented to any of these panels? Was Badrul
ordered to lie? By whom?
The game is up. The bravado has died. The
threats of legal war have fizzled into silence. The high-priced Geneva
lawyers, paid with public funds, could not undo the damage.
Now,
on top of those legal fees, FAM must swallow its pride and wire 350,000
Swiss Francs to Fifa - the fine for its reckless defiance.
But
no fine will appease Malaysians. Because this was not just an
administrative failure; it was an exercise in cheating, executed with
public money. It was an abuse of taxpayer funds to deceive the very
people who fund the game.
No amount of spin, no condescending
press statements, and no threats of lawsuits can change that. The appeal
process is over. Those who beat their chests about “going to war” have
retreated with their tails between their legs, their silence deafening.
Rakyat want answers,accountability
But
Malaysians have not retreated. We have a right to know the full extent
of this rot. Here are the questions that will not go away:
Who
exactly mooted the idea of recruiting these specific foreign-born
players? Was it a collective brainwave among the 16 executive council
members?
It is absurd to imagine a sudden flash of inspiration
electrifying the room, with everyone leaping to their feet in unison.
Ideas like this come from individuals.
Who was it? Was it a proposal from a third party, an agent or a fixer, funnelled through an exco member?
And
who, specifically, in FAM walked into the NRD office to submit the
birth certificate applications? What documents did they provide as
proof?
Most
critically, to the NRD: What “secondary evidence” was gathered to
falsely establish that a grandparent of these players was born in
Malaysia? What is the standard of proof when the integrity of the
nation's citizenship is at stake?
Digging up the truth
For
166 days, we have been told to trust the process. But the process was
rigged. The truth has been buried under a mountain of lies, legal fees,
and fines. It is time to dig it up.
Malaysians deserve answers,
not silence. We deserve the names, the documents, and the accountability
that have been so artfully dodged.
This saga has never really
been about football. It is about a culture of impunity that allows
officials to gamble with the nation’s reputation and taxpayer money,
then hide behind legal smoke and mirrors when the bet fails.
The
silence from the top is not just an oversight; it is a quiet resignation
to the rot. If our leaders cannot answer for how public funds were used
to forge public documents, then they are not just silent partners in
this scandal - they are complicit in the cover-up.
The truth has
been sanctioned, fined, and silenced for 166 days since the fiasco
emerged last year, and that is 166 days too long.