Rudyard Kipling"
āWhen 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 soldierā
General Douglas MacArthur"
āWe are not retreating. We are advancing in another direction.ā
āIt is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.ā āOld soldiers never die; they just fade away.
āThe soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and be the deepest wounds and scars of war.ā
āMay God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't .ā āThe object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.
āNobody ever defended, there is only attack and attack and attack some more.
āIt 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."
COMMENT - Real 'harapan' with Rafizi's Bersama? By Andrew Sia
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Malaysiakini : Many Pakatan Harapan core supporters, especially the non-Malays, are
angry that the prime minister has largely allowed racial hate speech to
run free, instead of enforcing existing laws against such provocations.
We
feel taken for granted, as the cynical calculation has been that we
have nobody else to vote for, since PAS is worse. Meanwhile, DAP is a Dilemma Action Party caught between reform demands and Malay racial politics.
But
now, Rafizi has launched Bersama, which offers a real alternative for
all races. To use the lingo of cowboy movies, thereās a ānew sheriffā in
town.
Sky-high medical insurance
Hot
racial issues have grabbed attention, but I am more worried about the
creep and creepiness of big money on government policy. For example, why
is medical insurance skyrocketing under the Madani government?
An overview in The Edge
summed up the sad situation: government officials, private hospitals
and insurance companies all blame each other. Hospitals point to
insurersā higher profits. Insurers accuse hospitals of jacking up bills.
Both blame āglobal medical cost inflationā.
Doctors have told me
that even if some of their colleagues want to be honest, private
hospitals pressure them to āboost revenueā with KPIās on ordering MRIs,
CT scans etc.
Given
such profiteering, we expect Putrajaya to step in as a guardian of
public interest. But what if health industry towkays have made
āpolitical donationsā to influence policy?
This is notorious in the United States, where big health corporations have given huge legal bribes called ācampaign contributionsā to ensure that medical bills stay sky high.
But surely, such a disease has not affected our āhighly moralā Madani government?
Well,
letās see. A law was proposed to stop the sale of cigarettes and vapes
to youths born after Jan 1, 2007. Yet, the deputy health minister admitted that lobbying by the tobacco industry killed this proposal.
Money politics
Umno is infamous for money politics, but it may have infected PKR too. Rafizi revealed there is a culture of ākepit beg duit bawah ketiakā (clutching a money bag under the armpit) when going round to buy support.
To combat this disease, he explained
that Bersama will be the first party with a constitution where
leadership must be based on merit and hard work, not goodies given out.
But there is a ādeep stateā in Malaysia of powerful vested interests which is resistant to change. Can that be overcome?
Perhaps thatās why Bersama has announced a rather modest 12-point agenda that includes free preschools for children, more government doctors to reduce waiting times and improvements in education.
These
are technocratic issues and wonāt really dethrone the deep state, but
the 12 points will really help people. So, it's doable.
I believe Bersama has competent and committed leaders to achieve this ā unlike our education minister, who rushed to start āPendidikan Karakterā after cases of school rapes and bullying.
But can Bersama even win? Rafizi has said they are on a ākamikaze missionā, and it doesnāt matter if they all lose.
For
me, whatās crucial is that we finally have a party to pressure Harapan
to do more progressive reforms, rather than bending over backwards to
please Umno, which has betrayed Madani in Johor and Negeri Sembilan.
Kingmakers in hung Parliament?
Rafizi,
Nik Nazmi and eight other PKR MPs in his camp already have 10 seats.
This number could swell because the huge group called Pamu (Parti Aku Malas Undi ie non-voters) was 24 percent of the electorate in 2022.
They could be energised to go to the polls and drive Bersama to victory in 15 to 25 mixed seats.
This
will put the party in a ākingmakerās positionā because the next
elections are not expected to have a clear winner, given the
multi-cornered fights involving Umno/BN, Harapan, PAS and Bersatu, which have āberpecahā (broken up) with Hamzah Zainudinās faction.
In
that scenario, Bersama can insist that any coalition they join must do
certain reforms, just as small groups like the Green Party of Germany
have done. The party would live up to its kancil or mousedeer logo of
outwitting bigger opponents.
If DAP decides to walk out of the Madani government at their upcoming July congress, they may want to ask: do they want to sink with a tainted Anwar? Or find alternatives?
Some people say Rafizi is clever but arrogant. But I prefer āsincere sombongā to ācharming cunningā. Former Singapore prime minister Lee Kuan Yew was also arrogant, but he got the job done.
Half
of Malaysians are under 31. But the leaders of PAS, PKR and Bersatu are
all around 79 years old. Will they take short-term moves to stay in power, without bothering about future problems after they have passed on?
The
ultimate dream is of a new wave to sweep away our worn-out politics.
The launch of Bersama focused on Gen Z, Gen Alpha and new solutions.
Rafizi
himself has cited how voters who wanted true change have propelled
various reformists to surprising victories over the status quo. These
include Zohran Mamdani in New York, Move Forward in Thailand and
recently, Joseph Vijayās TVK party in Tamil Nadu.
Do we dare to dream of something bigger than voting for the āleast badā option?
No Safe Seat For PKR ā PM Anwar To Run Away From Tambun
Finance Twitter : Even PKR supremo ā Anwar Ibrahim ā would most likely lose his current seat of Tambun in
Perak, which has been classified as a marginal safe. In the 15th
General Election, Anwar, contesting in Tambun for the first time after
running away from Port Dickson, won the four-way race with a majority of
only 3,736 votes. Therefore, the Prime Minister is expected to run away
again, abandoning Tambun.
He chose Tambun in the November 2022 election instead of Gombak, the
constituency of his former deputy who had betrayed him ā Azmin Ali ā for
a reason. Tambun has twice the number of Chinese voters
in terms of electorate percentage. But Amirudin Shari, PKR candidate
fielded as sacrificial lamb to challenge Azmin, had instead secured
higher majority (12,729 votes) than Anwar in Tambun.
Angry voters scammed by
forked-tongue Anwar are now sharpening their knives to vote out the
serial liar, who had promised the sky and moon to Tambun farmers, but
never delivered. For example, farmers in Kanthan, Tambun, have faced
āforced evictionsā by state authorities to reclaim land for development,
destroying the livelihoods of farmers who have worked the land for over
60 years.
On October 24, 2023, the Perak Land and Mines Office, accompanied by police, enforced the eviction,
leading to the arrest of four individuals, including PSM chairman Dr.
Michael Jeyakumar Devaraj. The Perak government, of which Anwar-led
Pakatan Harapan is a governing partner, wanted to reclaim over 1,000
acres of land, arguing the eviction is legal and that alternative land
was offered in Changkat Kinding.
However, farmers and PSM activists argued that not only have they
operated on the land for decades, claiming they have āimplied consentā,
but also they are legitimate producers and that the state failed to
provide promised 30-year lease agreements for replacement land. Crucially, they also argued that the eviction is unjust and undermines local food supply.
The inhuman āland grabā incidents have resulted in physical confrontations, with reports of protesters being injured
and agricultural machinery clearing farmland. While the Perak state
government conveniently denied and lied about the forced eviction, the
federal government saw PM Anwar ā along with toothless tiger Democratic
Action Party (DAP) ā kept quiet as farmers were bullied and oppressed.
Despite Anwarās election promise to defend over 130 small-scale
farmers in Kanthan, which is part of the Tambun parliamentary
constituency, the Madani government brutally deployed heavy machinery to
uproot farmers
from their lands. Some families have been farming for about 80 years.
Sure, the farmers were not legal owners of the land, but they can
certainly vote out PKR and Anwar Ibrahim legally.
Worse, when these desperate farmers tried to meet their own MP at
Parliament ā the Prime Minister, who is also the Finance Minister ā they
were turned away unceremoniously, rudely and arrogantly by security
because Mr Anwar has no more use of the same Tambun farmers whom the PKR
president had once āterhegeh-hegehā begging votes from.
Some constituents are so frustrated and upset they have expressed
that they āwill not missā Anwar even if he chooses not to defend his
seat in the next general election. Tambun getsnothing while
Gaza gets RM200 million and billions poured into opposition states.
Even Permatang Pauh, a stronghold of Anwar family before losing to an
unknown opposition in 2022, received 14,000 chicken.
As all hell broke loose after the PKRās analysis report was leaked, there is speculation that Anwar may shamelessly steal Batu ā one of seven āTier 1ā safe seats ā from party member P. Prabakaran, who won the seat with a 22,241 majority.Speculation
is also swirling that Anwarās daughter ā Nurul Izzah ā may contest
mommyās seat of the Bandar Tun Razak in the next general election.
The father and daughter may get safe seats by cannibalizing
their own comrades. Others are not so lucky though. PKRās newly crowned
vice-presidents Ramanan (Sungai Buloh) and Amirudin Shari (Gombak)
fared even worse given they fall under āTier 3: Difficult Seatsā. With
limited safe seats available, dozens of PKR warlords would lose their
shirts as they scramble to lobby for seats.
From 47 won in the 14th General Election in 2018, PKR only
won 31 out of the 81 parliamentary seats contested in the November 2022
national polls. Now, the once mighty Peopleās Justice Party may end up
winning only around 10 parliamentary seats in the next
election ā if itās lucky not to be wiped out. That would reduce PKR to a
mosquito party, eliminating Anwarās wet dream for a second term.
Anwar has no one to blame but himself. The report, most likely
incorporated with military intelligence input, shows how PKR under the
fake reformist has screwed up the past three years. The narcissist
single-handedly destroys his own party with internal power struggles ā
eliminating Rafizi seen as a threat to his Iron Throne whilst promoting dynastic politics, cronyism and nepotism.
Surrounded by apple polishers and bootlickers, the Premier becomes incredibly arrogant and
out of touch with the ground. Critical allies like DAP are doing more
harm than good by keeping quiet as Pakatan Harapan behaves like the
previous racist and corrupt Barisan Nasional government ā protecting corrupt leaders of all sizes, defending corporate mafia, marginalizing minoritiesā interests, promoting racism and extremism, and whatnot.
A known racist during his time as former UMNO deputy president before
his sacking in 1998 due to sodomy and corruption, Anwar is committing
political harakiri with unpopular new taxes, e-invoice system, delayed tax refunds, scrapping fuel subsidies, escalating cost of living, corporate mafia scandal, selective corruption, nepotism and cronyism.
Hilariously, after the leak of the document stating that the party of
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim is going to face an uphill battle with
devastating consequences in the next 16th General Election, PKR MPs who had been sleeping
on the job have suddenly woken up. Lee Chean Chung, MP for Petaling
Jaya ā supposedly one of 7 safe seats ā now says his seat is also at
stake.
Lee said although his constituency ā Petaling Jaya ā
is located in Selangor, very urban, and considered strong and safe, in
reality, it can no longer be considered guaranteed. Having kept quiet
for the last 3 years, he somehow found the balls to warn that Anwarās
party, Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR), could face a similar situation as in
2004 when it won only one seat in Penang.
If PKR could not even defend Petaling Jaya, chances are the party may
win āless than 5ā parliamentary seats ā even fewer than Rafiziās new
political party which is yet to be set up. Anwarās political revenge
with fabricated corruption charges against former PKR Deputy President
Rafizi Ramli and his aide James Chai could backfire and cause more damage to the party.
And based on how newly crowned PKR Deputy President Nurul Izzah led
the party to an annihilation in the Sabah state election last year,
clearly Anwarās daughter isnāt the leadership material needed to drive
the party. Nobody cares or believes what the former āPuteri Reformasiā
screams, let alone his hypocrite and liar daddy ā the only prime
minister who is a seat-hopper.
Even if Anwar is lucky enough to win a seat, he may no longer be the
prime minister. With limited time left and without strategist Rafizi to
help PKR regain public support, especially from young voters and fence
sitters, the moron prime minister is leading the party to self-destruction. The best part is bootlickers like Ramanan are still in denial over the severity of the partyās crisis.
COMMENT - KJ knows the state wants citizens to practise self-censorship By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, May 18, 2026
Malaysiakini : āIt is evidently clear that Umno Youth has no guts to debate in
public; they only like closed-door debates. I wanted to show the public
the kind of people you have in Umno. Everyone now knows what a coward
Khairy is,ā he had said.
But then again, these are politicians, and a couple of years later, Khairy was teaching Rafizi how to use Instagram filters.
Rafizi Ramli
This
is not about ācowardiceā but rather how the state wants citizens to
practise self-censorship. Khairy knows this. Journalists know this, and
you better believe that academics know this.
International Islamic
University Malaysia (IIUM) academic Syaza Shukri said, āEven something
minor, perhaps just an objective question that we genuinely want to
understand, or maybe even a complaint from outside, can be turned into a
3R (race, religion, and royalty) issue.ā
Actually, her statement echoes what PKR MP Hassan Abdul Karim had lamented,
that the 3R ban is masking the systemic dysfunction when it comes to
the kind of crony capitalists orbiting Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim.
āThese people seem to enjoy immunity and cannot be touched due to the 3R ban,ā Hassan reportedly said.
Every policy decision is based on the 3Rs; it is just that people who disagree with the 3Rs should not talk about it.
From
Anwar to PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang, political operatives using the
3Rs for political purposes are not sanctioned by the state.
But
if you are the unlucky dissenter who points out that the 3Rs are part of
the problem, then the state comes down on you like a ton of bricks.
Impractical, difficult to monitor
Look, all governments want the rakyat to practise self-censorship. Two years ago, as reported in the press, Fahmi Fadzil
āā¦told participants to behave themselves, warning that they were being
āmonitored by authoritiesā and may be visited by the policeā.
When
Fahmi claimed that it was a miscommunication about watching your words
and being monitored by the authorities, National Human Rights Society
(Hakam) president M Ramachelvam said: āAs the communications and digital
minister, he should have used his position to answer the comments left
by viewers rather than to say the authorities will come after them.
āThreats
by government ministers against freedom of expression leave a negative
perception of the government (which has a duty) to uphold this
fundamental constitutional right guaranteed to citizens.ā
And
all this is not new. Fahmi is just echoing what then-communications and
multimedia minister Salleh Said Keruak said nearly a decade ago.
āIt
is impractical and difficult to monitor or control a userās access to
the massive amount of content found online. So, it is left to us, the
user, to exercise self-censorship and to verify all news shared over our
social media feeds.ā
At
one time, legacy media practised self-censorship as some sort of
misguided idea of nation-building - at least, thatās what they told us.
Indeed, all instruments of colonial legislation were and are used to
stifle every facet of Malaysian public life.
Former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad
once said, "When I was the prime minister, there was press freedom, but
it is the media itself who did self-censorship, as if they didn't want
to hurt leaders' feelings. This is the habit that we have in Malaysia.ā
Which
sounds civilised, as if the media were not operating under the
possibility of the Internal Security Act or a history of state
intervention into the so-called āFourth Estateā.
Insidious kind of censorship
Self-censorship
is the most insidious kind of censorship, because its coerciveness
becomes voluntary - this is how we become complicit in our own
subjugation.
Then again, self-censorship has a karma-like effect - especially here in Malaysia.
This is best illustrated when Mahathir bemoaned
the fact that, āSoon after (Abdullah Ahmad Badawi took over as PM), I
was cut off from the press... reporters were not allowed to interview
me... and they were not allowed to print anything I said.ā
Dr Mahathir Mohamad
Remember
the so-called media blackout on the e-hailing driver episode? Deputy
Communications Minister Teo Nie Ching played coy about self-censorship
by some of the media, āIt (ordering media to censor) never happens on my
level. I never heard about the so-called government orders.ā
Apparently, it was all āinternal decisionsā.
Gerakan Media Merdeka (Geramm) spokesperson Radzi Razak had the perfect response when asked by Malaysiakini about Teoās comment.
āLetās
not pretend that there are no āfriendly texts or callsā to the editors
from someone in the office of the powers that be. Letās not pretend
writers and publishers are not being āgentlyā reminded of how a story or
headline should be written by someone not in the industry.ā
No sanctions
But
here is the important part. Self-censorship only extends to speech and
ideas that the state deems offensive. Ideas that seek to reinforce the
narrative of racial and religious superiority are enabled by the state.
This
means that politicians, preachers, and academics who conform to
hegemonic ideas or religion and race are free to say what they want, and
there are no sanctions by the state.
Take this PAS-led, Umno-endorsed Daulat Tuanku rally. Keep in mind that PAS has gone against the diktats of the Selangor sultan and Umno over the decades, and has curtailed the power of the royalty.
But of course, this kind of hypocrisy
is par for the course for these types of religious people. The fact
that the mainstream Malay establishment and the royal institution say
nothing about this hypocrisy should tell rational people what this game
is all about.
Meanwhile, progressive voices and those who seek to
nurture democratic or secular values are punished by the state, and more
often than not. resort to self-censorship for personal and economic
safety.
It is easy to be brave when you have the protection of the state.
COMMENT - From hunger to hope: Your turn to rise, Malaysians By R Nadeswaran
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Malaysiakini : Soon after arriving, his father returned home, leaving Yashasvi with
an uncle. Within days, the boy struck out on his own. He worked at a
hawkerās stall before finding shelter in a groundsmanās tent at Azad
Maidan, the famous cricket ground.
His diet was glucose biscuits
and the occasional free meal; his sustenance was cricket. From dawn to
dusk, he batted, practised, and played, honing his skills with
relentless focus.
Two
years later, coach Jwala Singh spotted and took Jaiswal in, became his
legal guardian, and together they pursued the dream. Today, Yashasvi
represents India in all formats of the game - a testament to resilience
born of solitude and struggle.
Yashasvi Jaiswal
Vaibhav
Suryavanshiās journey could not be more different. From a small town in
Bihar, it is an experience that is less about solitude and more about
sacrifice. His parents believed in his passion when many families would
have steered their children toward studies and safe careers.
His
father, Sanjeev, made immense sacrifices, ferrying him to training 100km
on a scooter three times a week. His mother woke at 4am daily to
prepare meals so her son could devote himself fully to cricket.
At
five, Vaibhav practised at the doorstep; at seven, he joined Samastipur
Sports Academy under coach Brijesh Jha. Later, his fatherās long rides
to Patna ensured he received advanced training.
The family faced
financial crises, but they never gave up. Their belief carried Vaibhav
forward. Turning 13 two years ago, he made history as the youngest
player ever picked in an Indian Premier League auction, snapped up by
the Rajasthan Royals for RM420,000 after a bidding war.
These days, he is worth much more. Sponsors are standing in line; his rewards have escalated, and rightly so.
Now
15, having already made headlines in the Under-19 World Cup (scoring
175 in the final against England), he is on the cusp of making the
senior team and history.
Grit and faith
Together,
these stories teach us that there is no single formula for success.
Yashasviās rise was carved out of hunger, hardship, and self-belief.
Vaibhavās
ascent was nurtured by parental sacrifice and unwavering support. One
story is about resilience in solitude; the other is about the power of
family.
Stories like those of Yashasvi and Vaibhav (who are now
millionaires) show young athletes that success is not reserved for the
privileged few. Yashasviās hunger and resilience prove that even without
resources, discipline and obsession can carve a path forward.
Vaibhav Suryavanshi
Vaibhavās
journey highlights how parental belief and sacrifice can transform raw
talent into opportunity. For local players, these examples are more than
cricket tales - they are blueprints for perseverance and support
systems that can make dreams possible.
For our communities, the lesson is clear: nurturing local talent requires both individual grit and faith from those around them.
Coaches, parents, and mentors can play the same role Jwala did for Yashasvi, or Vaibhavās parents did for him.
By
investing time, encouragement, and resources - even in small ways -
local athletes can be lifted from obscurity to recognition. These
episodes remind us that talent exists everywhere; what matters is
creating the conditions where belief and hard work can meet, and winners
can emerge.
But the conclusion is the same: when hard work meets
belief - whether self-belief or parental belief - there is always a
winner. Cricket may be the backdrop, but the lesson stretches far beyond
the boundary ropes.
Local talents
In every
field, every art, every pursuit, success is not about replicating
someone elseās path. It is about finding the fuel - whether hardship or
support - that powers your own.
And that is why these tales bear
repeating. They remind us that greatness is never accidental. It is
forged in tents and on scooters, in hunger and in hope. It is built on
sacrifice, discipline, and belief. And when those forces collide, the
scoreboard eventually lights up with victory.
For young
Malaysians, the challenge is whether they are ready to embrace the same
hunger and discipline. Yashasviās solitude and Vaibhavās family
sacrifice show two paths to the same destination - proof that talent
alone is never enough.
Local
players must ask themselves: are they willing to endure the grind, the
early mornings, the sacrifices, and the setbacks? Are parents, coaches,
and communities prepared to back them with the same faith and support?
Malaysia
has no shortage of raw talent. What it often lacks is the
infrastructure of belief - mentors who spot promise in the shadows,
families who dare to invest in passion, and institutions that nurture
rather than neglect.
If Malaysians can combine grit with support,
hunger with hope, then the next great story need not come from Mumbai or
Bihar. It can be written right here, on Malaysian soil.
COMMENT - Do Malays really want to be united? By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, May 11, 2026
Malaysiakini : Of course, when you consider that DAPās head honcho Anthony Loke
said, āI told Anwar Ibrahim, as long as you can be prime minister, DAP
is willing to sacrifice anything, that is my commitment to Anwar
Ibrahimā, rational people realise that the main thing this country has
going for it is that every community is complicit in the destruction of
the countryās democratic future.
I noticed the former prime
minister replaced āroyaltyā with ācountryā, and this fits his pattern
because if there is one institution that Mahathir has shown more
contempt for than any other, it is the royal institution, which over the
decades he has battled not for any populist agendas but rather because
he chafed at his power being shared.
While Mahathir attempted to
curtail the royal institution for self-serving reasons, the resurgence
of the institution under the current prime minister, which issues
diktats that the federal government assimilates, demonstrates how weak
the political apparatus is when dealing with incursions into its
constitutional powers.
Threat to status quo
Keep
in mind, back in the Najib Abdul Razak era, Mahathir acknowledged that
the royal institution and he were in the same camp because both viewed
Najib as a threat to the status quo.
āSo what they are doing
is not because of me or supporting me, it is because they know that the
future is bad. I wonāt be around for very long, but their future, their
childrenās future, new sultans will be under the thumb of Najib and
also under the thumb of future prime ministers. So they worry about
that.ā
Najib Abdul Razak
Mahathir
was adamant that he did not know of Najibās malfeasances, dismissing
allegations as rumours, which, strangely enough, is something that
Madani does when confronted with evidence of corruption within the ranks
of Madani.
This, of course, does not take into account the
various discharges not amounting to acquittals which have been granted
to fellow travellers on the Madani road.
Then again, corruption
allegations always seem to be swirling around the prime ministerās men
in this country. Mahathir claimed that he only ever heard rumours about
Najibās corruption.
Now, of course, with the corporate mafia,
allegations against various aides and an assortment of holdovers from
previous Umno regimes, the current prime minister hears no corruption
but, more importantly, sees no corruption, while the state goes after
individuals deemed a threat to the natural Madani order of things.
Selective
prosecutions, even if those targeted are corrupt, do not detract from
the very obvious failings of the graft-busting agency and the political
apparatus.
Hand in gravy train
Anwar
was recently crowing about Madaniās strong bumiputera agenda. As
reported in the press, ā⦠Anwar added that the responsibility of
advancing the bumiputera agenda has also been entrusted to the deputy
prime ministerā¦ā which raises two points.
The
first is that Umno still has its hand on the direction of the gravy
train, which would make it easier to sustain the political party. The
second is that all these state-sponsored programmes, which are supposed
to benefit the bumiputera community, will not have the desired effect
because of incompetence and leakages.
Former prime minister Ismail
Sabri Yaakob has admitted that the vast bureaucracy had carried out all
those poverty alleviation programmes and nobody had any idea about
their effectiveness ā ā⦠that hitherto many ministries had programmes on
poverty alleviation but there was no specific monitoring on their
effectiveness.ā
Not because monitoring these programmes
would mean transparency, but because many of these programmes were part
of the gravy train driven by bureaucrats, political operatives and
their various proxies.
Umno was never really for the Malays, but
rather, they were for Umno. Memories of some are short, but I remember
when former Kota Raja Umno chief Amzah Umar revealed: āWe give a seven percent discount for bumiputera buyers and 12 percent for Umno members, if I am not mistaken.ā
Enslaving, not emancipating
Every
āMalayā politician is acutely aware that championing the āMalayā cause
does not mean emancipating the Malay community but rather enslaving
them.
Of course, nobody thinks they are enslaving their community
but carrying out so-called favourable policies meant to protect their
community from the āothersā.
Why do you think that Madani wanted something like the failed Urban Renewal Act?
Instead of local council elections, which act as a check and balance to
a whole range of issues and where communities determine what is needed
in the places they live, we get the URA, which concentrates power in the
government and where back channelling, backroom deals and corporate
malfeasance get a fig leaf of legality.
This is why PSM wants the focus back on holding local council polls.
Do
you know why Malay uber alles politicians play the race card when it
comes to local council polls? They want to destroy democratic
opportunities where the Malays, especially if they are a minority in
certain areas, understand that their welfare is safeguarded by a
non-Malay majority.
And that right there is the problem. The
establishment is defined by how it wants to destroy democratic
opportunities for the Malay community, not to mention curtail
independent thought, because such freedoms would jeopardise the
political elites.
By mainstreaming a racial supremacist policy, the majority community has trapped itself in a Gordian knot.
It is not about uniting the Malays. It is about keeping them under your boot.
COMMENT - Bangsa Malaysia: Building one nation with a shared destiny By Ranjit Singh Malhi
Sunday, May 10, 2026
Malaysiakini : Malaysia cannot afford such a drift. The time has come to articulate,
with clarity and conviction, a unifying national vision - one that
reflects our constitutional foundations, honours our diversity, and
inspires collective purpose.
That vision is Bangsa Malaysia.
Bangsa
Malaysia is not a slogan. Nor is it an attempt to erase ethnic,
cultural, or religious identities. Malaysiaās diversity is a historical
reality and a national asset.
Bangsa Malaysia means building a
higher and shared national identity that binds Orang Asli, Malays,
Chinese, Indians, the indigenous peoples of Sabah and Sarawak, and other
ethnicities into one national community. It means seeing ourselves
first and foremost as Malaysians, while remaining proud of our
respective cultural and religious inheritances.
This idea is not new. It is rooted in the aspirations of our founding fathers and the Malay rulers at the dawn of independence.
The
constitutional framework that emerged from the 1956-57 intercommunal
bargain reflected a delicate but principled balance. It recognised the
special position of the Malays as the ādefinitive peopleā of the land,
while safeguarding the legitimate interests of other communities.
It
also envisaged a future in which Malaya, and later Malaysia, would
evolve towards greater fairness, inclusivity, and national unity.
Aspirations of political figures
It is worth recalling the words of Dr Ismail Abdul Rahman, one of Malaysiaās finest statespersons, who reportedly declared: āKita
bukan bermaksud untuk mendirikan sebuah Malay-Malaysia, tetapi Malaysia
yang dipunyai serta diwarisi oleh semua warganegara tanpa mengira kaum
dan agamaā (We do not intend to establish a Malay-Malaysia, but a
Malaysia that is owned and inherited by all citizens regardless of race
and religion) (Utusan Malaysia, Aug 4, 1973).
That remains one of the clearest and most profound expressions of the spirit of Bangsa Malaysia.
Likewise,
Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat, the longest-serving menteri besar of Kelantan,
stood for a humane and inclusive understanding of social justice. He
advocated that government assistance should reach all the poor,
regardless of race (The Malaysian Insider, March 1, 2009). This is the kind of moral clarity Malaysia urgently needs today.
For
the sake of future generations, Malaysia requires not merely reform,
but a national reset and a profound mental revolution: from narrow
communal politics to genuine national unity; from religious extremism to
constitutional governance; from religious domination to mutual respect;
from mediocrity to excellence; and from an obsession with numbers to a
culture of quality, integrity, and competence.
The
proposed vision, mission, and guiding philosophy for Bangsa Malaysia
are outlined below. Together, they define the desired future state of
our beloved nation, the key pathways towards attaining that vision, and
the guiding principles for building a united, just, and forward-looking
Malaysia.
But vision without implementation is mere rhetoric. The real question is: how do we put Bangsa Malaysia into action?
Steps towards unity
First,
Malaysia needs a Bangsa Malaysia Action Group comprising respected
multi-ethnic intellectuals, educators, historians, constitutional
scholars, community leaders, youth representatives, religious leaders,
professionals, business leaders, and civil society activists.
This
group should not be party-political. Its role should be to develop
practical programmes, public statements, educational materials, forums,
videos, community dialogues, and policy proposals aimed at strengthening
national unity.
Second, this action group should prepare a
Peopleās Charter for Bangsa Malaysia - a concise declaration affirming
constitutionalism, unity in diversity, religious moderation, fairness,
shared prosperity, and equal national belonging. Malaysians from all
communities should be invited to endorse it.
Third, we must reform
how history is taught and understood. Our history must be truthful,
inclusive, and evidence-based. It must recognise the contributions of
all communities - Malays, Orang Asli, Chinese, Indians, indigenous
peoples of Sabah and Sarawak, and other ethnic groups - to
nation-building.
A
selective, exclusionary, or distorted national narrative weakens unity
and undermines national belonging. A truthful and inclusive history
strengthens belonging.
Fourth, intercultural engagement must move
beyond formal ceremonies. Malaysia should revive and reimagine
neighbourhood-based unity groups, similar in spirit to Rukun Tetangga,
but with a stronger focus on communal harmony, civic education,
community service, and interfaith understanding.
These groups can
organise neighbourhood meals, youth projects, cultural exchanges,
history talks, sports activities, community clean-ups, and dialogues on
shared Malaysian values.
Education, religion, and theeconomy
Fifth,
schools and universities must become laboratories of Bangsa Malaysia.
Students should be encouraged to participate in mixed-group projects,
service-learning activities, heritage walks, debates, and inter-school
unity programmes.
Young Malaysians must not grow up in ethnic silos. They must learn to see one another as fellow citizens with a shared destiny.
Sixth,
religious and community leaders must play a constructive role. They
should publicly reject extremism, hate speech, and communal
demonisation. Places of worship can also become bridges of understanding
by hosting interfaith visits, charity drives, and community solidarity
programmes.
Seventh, economic justice must be pursued with wisdom
and fairness. Affirmative action needs to be recalibrated to help all
poor and marginalised Malaysians, regardless of ethnicity or religion,
while recognising the special challenges faced by the Malays, Orang
Asli, and the natives of Sabah and Sarawak.
Eighth, the media and
social media influencers must help shape a new national consciousness.
Short videos, articles, podcasts, posters, WhatsApp messages, and public
campaigns should promote the idea that Malaysia belongs to all
Malaysians.
We must make unity more compelling than division, and truth more powerful than propaganda.
Ninth,
corporate Malaysia should support Bangsa Malaysia through workplace
diversity, fair employment practices, leadership development,
scholarships, internships, and community outreach. Companies must not
merely speak of inclusion; they must practise it.
Finally,
ordinary citizens must take ownership of this national project. Bangsa
Malaysia begins in everyday life - in how we speak, how we vote, how we
teach our children, how we treat our neighbours, and how we respond to
divisive rhetoric.
Fundamental truths about our independence
Nation-building
is not the responsibility of politicians alone. Indeed, we cannot
depend entirely on politicians, many of whom remain trapped in communal
calculations and short-term self-interest.
Right-thinking
Malaysians from all communities must therefore come together with
courage, wisdom, sincerity, and a shared sense of national purpose. We
must reject narratives that divide and embrace values that unite. We
must act with fairness, integrity, and respect.
Above all, we must
recognise three fundamental truths about the intercommunal bargain of
1956-57 as clearly expressed in the 1957 Report of The Federation of
Malaya Constitutional Commission.
First,
our nation is meant to be secular. Second, the special position of the
Malays, which was never meant to be permanent, should be reviewed from
time to time. Third, there should be āno discrimination between races or
communitiesā in the long run.
The time has come to move beyond
rhetoric and rediscover the larger national purpose envisioned by our
founding fathers and the Malay rulers.
Let us move forward
together - not as fragmented communities defined by suspicion and fear,
but as one people bound by a shared Constitution, common values, and a
collective destiny.
In the final analysis, Malaysiaās future will
not be determined by what divides us, but by whether we possess the
wisdom and courage to strengthen what unites us.
The choice before
us is clear: we can continue drifting through communal politics and
national uncertainty, or we can rise together with clarity, conviction,
and purpose to build a truly united, just, and progressive Bangsa
Malaysia.
Let us choose wisely ā for ourselves, for our children, and for generations yet unborn.
COMMENT - Historians want to protect their rice bowl, Khairy By Mariam Mokhtar
Saturday, May 09, 2026
Malaysiakini : Khairy was possibly referring to International Islamic University
Malaysia (IIUM) academic Solehah Yaacob, whose claims about ancient
Romans learning about shipbuilding from the Malays made Malaysia a
laughing stock, yet again.
She is not the only lecturer to distort early Malayan history. Even once respected historians have been known to ājaga periuk nasiā (guarding oneās rice pot) and toe the official line.
Challenging narratives
I
once attended a lecture in Ipoh in 2011, called āPeristiwa Bukit
Kepong, Siapa Wira Sebenar?ā (Bukit Kepong Incident, who were the real
heroes?)
Two of the speakers were former police chief Haniff Omar
and historian Khoo Kay Kim, who said Malaya was never colonised by the
British. The audience stared dumbfounded, but few dared to counter them.
A majority of the audience were police officers and members of the
security forces.
Historian Khoo Kay Kim
Khooās
comments did not go unnoticed because his former student, Rachel Leow,
wrote him an open letter, which went viral. She was a PhD student at
Cambridge, and she dared to correct him.
Umno policies of the
1980s-1990s shaped institutional behaviour. Public narratives were
tightly controlled. Some were encouraged, others were treated
cautiously, and those that generated controversy were banned.
Self-censorship and silence became the new norm.
So when people
ask why historians appear silent or restrained, the answer they give is
not just fear. It is also because of structure.
Post 1969, the
political atmosphere punished perceived challenges to sensitive identity
frameworks. In time, institutions naturally learned to operate
carefully within those boundaries. Public history then took shape.
Non-Malay erasure
Take Kuala Lumpur.
Critics
claim that Yap Ah Loy, one of the key founders of modern Kuala Lumpur,
has been reduced to little more than a passing mention in school
narratives.
The parents who complained about this distortion of
our early history say this is not about one missing name. They worry
about how stories get flattened over time.
The narrative promoted
by some Umno leaders five decades ago was that non-Malays were
relatively recent arrivals to the country, having come only within the
last 200 years.
Critics argue that this framing ignored the much
older presence of Chinese and Indian communities in the Malay peninsula
as miners, traders, and spice merchants who arrived through the monsoon
trade networks centuries earlier.
Yap Ah Loy
Then there is the deeper past.
Sites
such as Bujang Valley in Kedah reflect a long archaeological history of
trade, industry, settlement, and Hindu-Buddhist cultural influence in
early Southeast Asia.
Had this heritage been more fully preserved
and allowed to flourish, with its many artefacts and ancient structures
protected, Malaysia might today rival historical treasures such as
Angkor Wat in Cambodia or Borobudur in Indonesia.
To many
observers, the lack of urgency in preserving these sites gave the
impression that the authorities preferred not to draw too much attention
to the countryās non-Islamic historical roots.
Furthermore, the Orang Asli are the original settlers of Malaya, but they remain as a mere footnote in history books.
Inheriting an environment of caution
What
many parents and some teachers describe to me is not a conspiracy. It
is a caution. Certain historical topics, especially those touching on
identity, origin narratives, or competing interpretations of early
civilisation, may not be discussed freely in institutional settings.
Not
because it is formally forbidden, but because, over time, a culture
develops where stepping too far outside accepted framing feels risky,
unnecessary, or professionally unwise.
Khairy
may have criticised historians, but academic caution is not the root
problem. This pattern of silence among experts is not unique to history.
In
mining, industry, and engineering, warnings about hill development,
slope stability, radiation, and ecological risks are often raised early,
and without drama.
Yet, those warnings frequently gain public attention only after a disaster forces visibility.
Then the same questions return: who knew, who warned, and why was it not acted on sooner?
The
issue is not simply ācowardly professorsā. That framing is too easy. It
shifts attention away from the longer political and institutional
history that shaped what could be safely said, and what could not.
Historians did not design that environment. They inherited it.
And
when political actors now express frustration at historical confusion,
the harder question is not why some academics are quiet, but how the
boundaries of acceptable speech were formed in the first place, and by
whom.
History is not only written in books.
It is shaped by
political frameworks, institutional incentives, and the long shadow of
national narratives, including āKetuanan Melayuā as a defining feature
of Malaysiaās post-independence political architecture.
Pakistanās Blasphemy Law: The Islamic License to Lynch ā Blood, Mob Justice, and Zero Accountability By Faraz Pervaiz Roshan
Friday, May 08, 2026
Jihad Watch : In all these terrorist, inhuman, and religiously fanatic attacks, not
a single Muslim perpetrator received even one minute of punishment.
However, in Sargodha, when a false allegation was leveled against an
elderly Christian named Lazar (Nazir) Masih, the furious mob subjected
him to brutal torture. He succumbed to his injuries and was martyred ā
while neither the accusers nor the attackers faced any punishment.
Human rights activists have been making failed and futile attempts
for many years to bring changes to this law but have not succeeded. The
main reason is that they have failed to connect with the common people.
Because ordinary Muslims consider this law a command of the Quran and
Hadith, and the Islamic scholars regard it as correct.
In 2010, as soon as a case was registered against Asia Bibi, Punjab
Governor Salman Taseer demanded a pardon and criticized the law. Muslims
launched massive and fierce protests against him. In December 2010, his
own bodyguard Mumtaz Qadri shot him dead. The public gave Qadri a
heroās welcome. When he was hanged, hundreds of thousands attended his
funeral, and protests erupted across the country.
This clearly shows that human rights activists still do not
understand the hearts and minds of the Pakistani people and are
terrified of being labelled enemies of Islam if they speak up.
To change this law, the same courage, boldness, and language is
needed that directly confronts the prevailing false teachings and
beliefs of Islam. The gap between the people and reformers has widened
even further.
If criticism is made only in the name of human rights, nothing will
change. In a country like Pakistan, human rights are seen as alien and
contradictory to Islam.
The biggest problem in Pakistan is: who should one talk to about
amending this law? This question remains unanswered to this day.
Everyone values their life, home, wife, children, and family. Anyone who
talks about amending this law loses everything ā their life, property,
and family.
This problem can only be solved by speaking directly to Islam. But unfortunately, according to todayās dominant interpretation, Islam demands blood, not humanity.
COMMENT - Madani should not reduce healthcare budget to save money By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, May 04, 2026
Malaysiakini : Billionsdown the drain,but healthcare neglected
I
am one of those people who believe that healthcare is a human right. I
believe that this is one of the areas where our tax ringgit could be put
to the best use, together with education. But what are the priorities
of our successive governments?
We have billions of ringgit poured
into the religious bureaucracy over decades, the sole function of which
is to hamper reforms in favour of regressive ideas that have divided the
people of this country.
This also includes public health policies, not to mention health policies for marginalised groups.
Think
about this: every time the government, through one of its instruments,
responds to every perceived slight, provocation, and engages in the
persecution of individuals deemed detrimental to the well-being of the
state, this costs money.
When the government enables programmes
and individuals who stir resentment amongst the various ethnic
communities in this country, this costs money.
Think about the
money lost in leakages because of crony capitalism, on double or triple
pensions of the political class, and inflated government projects. Think
about the money lost when the government decides that it needs to spend
tax ringgit to aid foreign victims of wars when the rakyat are
grappling with vagaries brought upon by international geopolitics.
Galen
Centre chief executive Azrul Khalib said, āThe Health Ministry should
not be treated as a convenient place to find savings. Health is a core
public investment. It protects lives, productivity, economic stability,
and social trust,ā and this is the alpha and omega of this issue.
Every
time you visit a public healthcare facility and notice the dilapidated
condition of the buildings, keep in mind that successive governments did
have the funds to maintain these structures, but instead diverted those
funds to other projects deemed more important.
This
is about priorities, and successive governments have demonstrated that
they do not view healthcare in the same way they view other programmes
that they believe will keep them in power.
The least well-off suffer
CodeBlue has done some remarkable coverage on this issue. If you think urban folks have it bad, think again.
Class
determines the level of healthcare available, and again, the majority
are āpenalisedā because more often than not, especially in rural areas,
they are short-changed by the federal and local government, which have
no problems sustaining projects which offer no tangible benefits but
have no interest in providing quality healthcare.
In such
circumstances, it is left to the ordinary rakyat to fend for themselves.
Online, there are an inexhaustible number of stories of how healthcare
workers from top to bottom are helping government hospitals or clinics
with money from their salaries, which is not very much to begin with.
Rational
people should question the need for government employees to use their
own salaries to supplement the needs of a government facility, which is
there to support the rakyat.
Instead, we have political shysters attempting to divide the rakyat on issues like a water festival, for instance.
This
is the problem with Malaysiaās healthcare sector. We have the expertise
and commitment to handle almost any situation. We also have competent
people, but they have always been sidelined.
We also have the laws
and tools necessary to deal with healthcare issues, but they have never
been applied consistently and rationally.
Only someone ignorant of the realities in Malaysia would claim otherwise.
Different tune when in power
And
you would think that Pakatan Harapan, which has at one time or another
in their years as the opposition, would have a strategy when it comes to
this countryās healthcare system.
But as always, once in power, they forget about the average Joe Rakyat who relies on this system.
In
2023, Ipoh Timor MP Howard Lee, who, to be fair, is one of the more
interesting candidates the DAP has to offer, fumbled with the issue of
healthcare in an interview with CodeBlue,
which is worth revisiting because it shows you how political operatives
use this issue when they are not in power and how their tone and agenda
change when they come into power.
Lee was arrogant when he said
that he would not entertain āemotive questionsā, but the reality is that
healthcare for the majority of Malaysians is an emotive issue, whether
you rely on public healthcare or are workers in the public healthcare
system.
Life, death, or quality of life are emotional issues, so is public healthcare, and the funding of it should be sacrosanct.
There is a reason why the political elites and the enabled class play football with this issue.
Unlike
the rest of us, who rely on public healthcare, they have money to spend
on private healthcare or are accorded VIP or privileged status when
they use public healthcare.
It says something about our society
when the healthcare budget is trimmed while the gross enabling of
institutions which provide very little benefit to the average rakyat
endure.
The issue of healthcare could be a real vote getter for
Madani as it is in many countries, and moreās the pity that Madani does
not understand this.
COMMENT - Is the PM powerless after 2018? By Mariam Mokhtar
Saturday, May 02, 2026
Malaysiakini : Malaysian prime ministers have never governed in a vacuum. Since
independence, leadership has always required managing coalitions,
balancing regional interests, and dealing with internal party dynamics.
First prime minister Tunku Abdul Rahman
Even
during the long dominance of the BN framework, executive authority
depended on keeping coalition partners aligned, managing competing
demands, and maintaining internal discipline through long-standing
power-sharing arrangements involving parties such as MCA and MIC.
Constraint has always been there. It was just less visible.
What
has changed after 2018 is not the constraint itself, but its structure.
Political alliances are more fragmented, support is less predictable,
and coalition partners are more assertive. What has changed is not power
itself, but how it is used.
This is clear when we look at how
coalition politics actually works. Before 2018, stability depended on
alignment with parties such as MCA and MIC, where coalition discipline
was maintained through established seat and cabinet arrangements.
Today,
similar dynamics exist within coalitions such as Pakatan Harapan,
involving parties such as DAP and others. The actors have changed. The
logic has not.
This is not evidence of a weaker PM. It is evidence
of a more fragmented political environment that requires constant
balancing of competing interests.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim at a Unity Government National Convention in 2023
Relying on East Malaysian support
The
role of East Malaysian parties shows this clearly. Sabah and Sarawak
have long held strategic importance in federal politics, often described
as crucial to maintaining parliamentary majorities.
This was
evident in earlier coalition arrangements as well as more recent
government formations, where East Malaysian support has often been
decisive in maintaining stability.
Their influence did not emerge
after 2018; it has long been part of coalition politics. The phrase
āfixed depositā is not new. What has changed is visibility and
negotiating flexibility.
Clearly,
coalition complexity did not begin after 2018. Constraint has always
been part of the system. What has changed is how fragmented and unstable
it has become.
What looks like instability should not be mistaken for loss of authority.
The
idea that leadership today is only about survival is overstated.
Negotiation has always been part of Malaysian governance. The PM still
appoints and dismisses ministers, sets priorities, and leads the
executive branch, as seen in periodic cabinet reshuffles across
different administrations.
These powers have not been reduced. What has changed is the political cost of using them.
Flags of Sabah and Sarawak
The
idea of a leader who simply ācommandsā also assumes earlier prime
ministers operated with near-absolute control. That was never the case.
Even
in the strongest period of BN dominance, prime ministers had to manage
coalition partners such as MCA and MIC, balance Sabah and Sarawak
interests, and navigate internal factional pressures within Umno itself.
Even
at the height of Dr Mahathir Mohamadās authority, the internal Team A
and Team B split could not simply be commanded away. Leadership has
always depended on maintaining support, not overriding it. In that
sense, ācommand versus survivalā is a false binary.
The power to award positions
Restraint
should not be mistaken for incapacity. A leader who does not act
quickly is not necessarily unable to act. In a more fragmented
environment, decisions require more careful balancing. This does not
remove authority; it changes how it is used.
The PM still has the
authority to appoint, dismiss, and restructure the cabinet, but every
use of that power comes with consequences that must be weighed
carefully.
Removing a senior figure in a governing party, for
example, is not a simple administrative step. It can trigger internal
divisions, strain coalition relationships, and weaken broader policy
goals. In such situations, restraint reflects calculation, not weakness.
Cabinet meeting in 2024
At the same time, complexity cannot become an excuse for inaction.
Reform
does not sit only with the executive. It must pass through Parliament,
where debate, procedure, and politics decide whether policy becomes law.
Leadership is not just about making decisions, but about ensuring they
survive the process needed to implement them.
These pressures are
made worse by economic conditions. Rising living costs, subsidy burdens,
and global uncertainty leave little space for hesitation. Leadership
must balance caution with direction, and negotiation with delivery.
See
how accountability works. There is a recurring pattern where
investigations begin under strong public pressure, but over time, lose
visibility. Updates become less frequent, conclusions remain unclear,
and outcomes are not always clearly communicated.
Cases such as
MACC chief Azam Bakiās share ownership controversy illustrate how
initial urgency can fade, leaving the public uncertain about the final
resolution.
Institutions such as the MACC show how prolonged
uncertainty can affect trust. When processes are delayed or outcomes
unclear, the issue goes beyond individual cases and becomes a question
of consistency and transparency.
Malaysia has not entered an era
of powerless leadership. What it has entered is an era where power is
more visible, more contested, and more demanding to exercise.
The system has not become less powerful; it has become harder to ignore.
The
PM has not lost power; we have mistaken complexity for weakness, and
the greater danger is a public too ready to believe that he has.
COMMENT - Greatest confusion lies not in symbols or celebrations By R Nadeswaran
Malaysiakini : Now, even a water festival
in Kuala Lumpur has drawn the ire of religious czars, Umno has been
forced to join the chorus - brandishing its āreligious badgeā to avoid
exclusion - with Deputy Prime Minister and Umno president Ahmad Zahid
Hamidi entering the fray.
But
then again, Malaysians have to be reminded that some politicians say
all kinds of things without respect for the law and common decency.
The Bon Odori festival in Selangor in 2022
Zahid
says Umno wants events to align with Malaysiaās cultural values,
religious sensitivities, and societyās norms, and to uphold local
customs and religious sensibilities.
He claims Umno took the concerns
of the Federal Territories Islamic Religious Department and the Federal
Territories Mufti Department, saying they reflect the views of a large
segment of Malaysians.
āOur principles are clear - entertainment
is not wrong, but it must come with limits. Progress must continue, but
our values cannot be compromised,ā he posted on Facebook.
Organisers, he added, should discuss future programmes with authorities to āpreserve community harmonyā.
Where
was this deep concern for sensitivities and decency when Umno leaders
were demonising opponents in the run-up to GE15? Where did these values
disappear? Now, like worms out of the woodwork, they talk about
community harmony.
Convenient shield
Then
again, Zahid and Umno had fought and continued fighting for someone who
stole billions and was found guilty, which reflects their interpretation
of values.
Some were busy enriching themselves at the expense of the state. Where was the respect for the law then?
Politicians
love to wrap themselves in culture and religion when it suits them.
Itās a convenient shield to control what people watch, listen to, or
enjoy - while their own conduct remains questionable at best.
If
Zahid truly believes in ālimitsā and āharmonyā, maybe he should start by
cleaning his own house before telling musicians and concertgoers how to
behave.
Ahmad Zahid Hamidi
Respect
for the law and common decency isnāt just about entertainment - itās
about those who make the laws and follow them. Until then, forgive me if
I take Zahidās call with a truckload of salt.
At
the end of the day, the real confusion isnāt in kebayas, hot dogs, or
water festivals -itās in the selective morality of politicians who
preach virtue while defending vice.
They clutch pearls over
Oktoberfest and Bon Odori, yet clutch wallets when billions vanish from
the state coffers. They warn of ālimitsā and āharmonyā, but their own
conduct has been limitless in hypocrisy and discord.
Zahidās
sermon on cultural values and religious sensitivities might sound noble,
but it collapses under the weight of his partyās record.
Where
was this moral compass when opponents were demonised before GE15? Where
was this respect for law when leaders fought to protect a convicted
thief? It is not festivals that erode harmony - it is the erosion of
trust when leaders bend rules for themselves while tightening them for
everyone else.
Behind the curtain
Politicians
love to wrap themselves in religion and culture when it suits them.
Itās a convenient cloak, shielding them from scrutiny while they dictate
what ordinary Malaysians can watch, eat, or celebrate.
Yet,
behind the curtain, the same guardians of morality are busy enriching
themselves, trampling the very values they claim to defend.
If
Zahid truly believes in ālimitsā, perhaps he should start by limiting
corruption. If he truly believes in āharmonyā, perhaps he should
harmonise his partyās actions with the laws they claim to uphold.
Until
then, every lecture on festivals and concerts is nothing more than
theatre - a morality play staged by actors who long ago abandoned the
script of integrity.
Respect for law and decency isnāt about
banning kebayas or renaming Oktoberfest. Itās about lawmakers living by
the standards they impose.
Until that happens, forgive me if I
say that right-minded citizens will take Zahidās sermon not just with a
pinch of salt, but with a truckload.
The next time politicians
warn us about āconfusionā, we should remind them: the greatest confusion
lies not in symbols or celebrations, but in leaders who mistake
hypocrisy for values and propaganda for principle.
COMMENT - From camera to courtroom: Ex-press photographer's trial for truth By R Nadeswaran
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Malaysiakini : So, you film a short clip: not inciting violence, not naming names,
just voicing the frustration of a community abandoned by those meant to
protect it. You post it online, hoping to remind the authorities to keep
the residents updated.
That act of civic desperation turned 54-year-old Shahril Abdul Rani into a criminal - in the eyes of the law.
Acting on a complaint, the MCMC prosecuted him under Section 233 of the Communications and Multimedia Act.
The
section is a legal dragnet. It criminalises sending āobscene, indecent,
false, menacing, or grossly offensiveā content with the intent to
annoy, abuse, threaten, or harass. The penalties? Up to RM500,000 in
fines and jail time.
But Shahril is not a hero or a vigilante. He
is a former press photographer who used the only tool he had - a camera
and a social media account - to say what the police would not hear. For
that, he faced the full weight of the state.
In February 2024, the Kajang Sessions Court imposed a fine of RM20,000, a penalty upheld by the High Court last June.
Let that sink in: with the intent to annoy. Not to incite riots. Not to threaten public order. To annoy.
The
law does not distinguish between a malicious troll and a desperate
neighbour. It does not ask whether the police genuinely failed the
public.
It only asks whether someone felt annoyed or harassed by
your words - and whether the content could be labelled āgrossly
offensiveā.
That phrase, āgrossly offensiveā, has no fixed
meaning. It means whatever the MCMC or a judge wants it to mean. And in a
country where break-ins go unattended but critical videos draw swift
prosecution, the message is clear: protect institutions, not citizens.
Judgesā ruling
Last
week, the Court of Appeal brought clarity. A three-judge panel led by
Noorin Badaruddin, together with Hayatul Akmal Abdul Aziz and Radzi
Abdul Hamid, unanimously overturned the High Courtās ruling and acquitted Shahril.
Delivering the judgment,
Noorin said that proving intent is a fundamental requirement in
offences involving online communication. She said such intent must be
supported by clear, credible evidence and cannot be inferred merely from
how the content is perceived.
The
panel found that the video in question was produced with the intention
of informing residents about the status of a police report and urging
faster action from the authorities, rather than to insult or provoke.
āThe
purpose of the communication was legitimate and cannot be equated with
an intention to annoy or offend,ā she said, adding that the context of
the message must be considered as a whole.
āIn this case, the
evidence, particularly from the seventh prosecution witness, showed that
the primary purpose of the appellantās communication was to inform
residents about the progress of a police report and to request that the
investigation be expedited.
āThe purpose of the communication was legitimate and cannot be equated with an intent to annoy or offend,ā she said.
Rare crack in armour
When break-ins echo unanswered, but a neighbourās plea is prosecuted, the law itself becomes the crime scene.
Section
233 is not a shield for citizens; it is a gag for dissent. Its elastic
language - āgrossly offensiveā, āintent to annoyā - is less about
justice than about convenience for those in power.
Shahrilās
acquittal is a rare crack in that armour, a reminder that intent
matters, evidence matters, and legitimacy cannot be criminalised. Yet
the larger truth remains: in Malaysia, it is easier to punish a camera
than to protect a community.
The police can ignore shattered windows, but the state will not ignore a video that shatters its image.
The law does not ask whether citizens are safe; it asks whether officials are annoyed.
It
does not measure the failure of institutions; it measures the
discomfort of those who run them. And in that transposal, justice is not
blind; it becomes blinkered.
Shahrilās case should have been a turning point, a moment to admit that laws written to muzzle trolls are now muzzling citizens.
Instead,
it exposed the deeper rot: a system where āgrossly offensiveā is
whatever the authorities say it is, and āintent to annoyā is whatever
they feel it to be. That is not law; that is discretion masquerading as
justice.
The acquittal offers hope, but hope tempered by reality.
For every Shahril who fights back, countless others will not risk the
weight of the state. Fear settles in like a second shadow, and silence
becomes the third.
Until institutions learn to protect citizens
rather than themselves, Malaysia will remain a country where crime is
tolerated, but criticism is punished. And that is the real offence - an
offence against the very idea of justice.
COMMENT - Invoking royalty, but defying when convenient By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, April 27, 2026
Malaysiakini : The fact of the matter is that PAS is in no position to make claims
that non-Malay political operatives are treacherous or seditious to the
crown for allegedly defying royal decrees.
Seri Kembangan assemblyperson Wong Siew Ki
PASā
top leadership and various PAS adjacent groups have defied the royal
institutions. This has become even more pronounced of late because
Perikatan Nasional senses how weak Madani is.
Keep in mind that in 2022, when the Selangor sultan rebuked then-religious affairs minister Idris Ahmad and asked him to attend the Bon Odori festival āso that he can understand the difference between religion and cultureā, what did PAS do?
Its ulama wing backed the religious minister, defying the sultan by saying, āThe claim that (Bon Odori) was strictly a cultural event does not have enough merit.ā
The
quote that opens this piece demonstrates how Hadi believes that when it
comes to religion, he knows better than constitutionally mandated
instruments of government.
Paying lip service
The royal institution has been weaponised against the non-Malays by the Malay uber alles crowd.
Non-Malays
genuflect whenever hot-button issues arise, and the royal institution
is dragged into the political arena, normally siding with the very
forces that want to have and have weakened its constitutional powers.
Meanwhile,
so-called āMalay firstā politicians pay lip service to the institutions
but rouse the rabble against the institutions when it suits their
purposes.
Bersatu president Muhyiddin Yassin said, āI take shelter
under the greatness and nobility of the Malay rulers, and my loyalty to
the institution of constitutional monarchy should not be questioned,ā when questioned by the state security apparatus about insulting the former Yang di-Pertuan Agong.
Bersatu president Muhyiddin Yassin
And believe me, there was nothing lost in translation in the speech he gave, decrying that he was sidelined by the royal institution when he had the necessary votes to be in the driverās seat of Putrajaya. But all this is not new.
Remember
when a former prime minister blamed a certain person for Pakatan
Harapanās pulling out of the International Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Icerd)?
Who could forget this juicy tidbit from his press statement: āJadi kita punya keputusan kabinet (our cabinetās decision) this morning is that we will withdraw our ratification of the Statute of Rome kerana (because of) confusion, bukan kerana
(not because) we believe it is going to be bad for us but because of
the confusion created by one particular person who wants to be free to
beat up people and things like that.
āAnd if he beats up people again, I will send the police to arrest him, I donāt care who he is.ā
Keep in mind that Muhyiddin publicly declared that he rejected the Agongās suggestion that his coalition form a unity government with Pakatan Harapan:
āSince
the beginning, we already discussed that we will not cooperate with
Harapan. No matter what the purpose is, we will not agree to it. So when
I was asked to sign the offer letter, I signed ādisagreedā.ā
Royalty and political reality
Where
was PAS during all of this? This horse manure about defending the royal
institution is the kind of political skullduggery that PAS especially
excels in.
The party is playing a deeper, sinister game. Theocrats
around the world do not share power in the conventional sense. They
allow certain legacy institutions to endure so long as those
institutions give credibility and legitimacy to the religious party in
control.
Keep in mind that religious extremists have always
threatened the traditional institutions of power in various
Muslim-majority countries.
PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang
The
legacy institutions of power in this country understand that they are
vulnerable to the political and religious malfeasance of religious
political parties, which is why these institutions are caught between a
rock and a hard place when it comes to their constitutional powers and
theocratic impulses.
Sacred cows need to be slain by religious
politicians because this will demonstrate not only the superiority of
religion but also the faith of religious leaders.
This is not
about whether you support the royal institution or not. This is about
how these defenders of race and religion, in reality, have no respect
for the institutions they claim to champion.
These are the same
people who would use the royal institution as a hammer to whack
recalcitrant Malays, and whack non-Malays whom they claim are
disrespecting the royal institution, the Malays, and Islam.
Has a
non-Malay politician ever done any of this to the royal institution? The
threat to the royal institution has always come from the Malay uber
alles crowd.
Former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad used the
royal institution when it suited his purposes, which was to bash the
non-Malays, but then decried how giving too much power to the
institutions resulted in the degradation of the democratic system and
lamented the feudalistic nature of the dynamic in the majoritarian
community.
In 2019, he spelt this out clearly, which is ironic because it is in a similar context to what Muhyiddin is fighting against now:
āAre
we willing for this to continue? The rakyat is afraid of not serving
the rulers, and when the rulers act beyond the Constitution, it is the
rakyat who become the victims.
āThis is the problem we have now.
If we are willing to lose democracy and the parliamentary system, then
letās stop having elections.ā
One could make the argument that
this is exactly what the Seri Kembangan rep is doing. Upholding the
tenets of democracy and the parliamentary system.
COMMENT - Zakat: Lifeline for the poor or a private account? By Mariam Mokhtar
Friday, April 24, 2026
Malaysiakini : Lembaga Zakat Selangor, for example, has clearly stated
that it has no connection to the investigation. The institution
operates under a structured legal framework, with multiple layers of
internal and external auditing.
It has reiterated that zakat funds are managed in accordance with established governance systems.
That clarification is important and must be acknowledged. However, it does not fully resolve the wider concern.
The
public considers funds given in good faith, for the needy, are not
always experienced in technical categories. Whether labelled zakat,
donation, or welfare contribution, their expectation remains the same:
that the money reaches the poor.
When trust breaks, people don't lose trust in just one small part of it. They start questioning the whole system around it.
Luxury
vehicles. Frozen accounts. High-value assets. These are not abstract
claims, but are symbols that immediately shape public perception of
welfare-linked giving, regardless of technical distinctions.
Luxury cars seized by MACC
The
damage has already been done, hasnāt it? However, the deeper issue is
not this single case, nor any single institution. It is what the case
reveals about the wider structure of welfare-linked fundraising and
distribution.
Past allegations
Over the years, there have been occasional reports
and investigations involving mismanagement within parts of the welfare
and zakat-related ecosystem, including cases where allocations were
disbursed to ineligible recipients or where administrative weaknesses
were identified.
These cases vary in scale and context, but
together, they point to a recurring challenge: ensuring consistent
transparency across several layers of fund management.
Crucially, this is where the distinction becomes important.
Official
zakat institutions, such as state religious authorities, operate within
defined legal frameworks, undergo structured audits, and are subject to
regulatory oversight.
However,
the wider ecosystem of welfare-related fundraising, including NGOs,
charitable intermediaries, and mixed donation channels, can be far more
complex and less uniformly regulated.
When
funds pass through multiple organisations before reaching recipients,
each layer possibly operates under different levels of oversight.
Without strong and consistent monitoring, transparency may weaken.
This creates a structural reality that is often overlooked.
It
is not always about one system failing, but about multiple systems
interacting with different levels of transparency and control.
So,
when large sums are involved, such as RM230 million, the question
naturally arises. How do funds of this scale move through welfare-linked
structures without earlier detection or intervention?
This is not simply about wrongdoing. It is about system design.
Not a marginal figure
RM230
million is not a marginal figure. It is an amount that, under normal
financial and governance expectations, should trigger multiple
safeguards, like bank-level monitoring, organisational audits,
regulatory scrutiny, and internal compliance mechanisms.
If gaps exist in that chain, then the concern is not only about misconduct, but about oversight fragmentation.
Zakat itself remains one of the most important instruments of social justice within Muslim communities.
It
is a structured obligation designed to redistribute wealth, reduce
inequality, and support those in need. When it functions effectively, it
is stable, targeted, and quietly transformative.
However, the broader welfare ecosystem in which zakat, NGOs, and public donations co-exist is more complex.
Moreover,
complexity without equivalent transparency creates vulnerability, not
necessarily by intent, but it does result in oversight failure.
This is why the central issue is not classification. It is governance consistency.
The
question is not whether zakat institutions are properly managed in
isolation because they have stated frameworks and audit structures. It
is about whether the entire ecosystem of welfare-linked giving is
equally transparent, traceable, and resilient against misuse at every
stage of fund movement.
When the system is fragmented, problems in
one part can affect others through public perception and confusion.
Once people begin to lose trust across different channels of giving,
rebuilding that confidence becomes especially difficult.
This is why reform cannot be reactive or symbolic. It must be structural.
Firstly, transparency must be visible across the entire ecosystem, not just within individual institutions.
Second,
fund flows must be traceable from collection to final distribution.
Third, intermediary layers must be clearly regulated and audited.
Fourth, oversight must be independent, consistent, and publicly accountable.
Basic safeguards
These are not radical demands. They are basic safeguards for systems built on public trust and moral obligation.
Once trust begins to erode, recovery is slow and often incomplete.
In the meantime, those who are meant to benefit from these systems do not wait for clarification. They wait for assistance.
More
importantly, the real question is no longer about one institution or
one investigation. It is about whether welfare-linked and zakat-related
systems are collectively designed to ensure that every ringgit reaches
those it was meant for, without delay, diversion, or doubt.
If the
answer is uncertain, then the responsibility is not only to investigate
what has happened, but to strengthen the systems so that it cannot
happen in fragmented form again.
Accountability is not criticism.
It is protection. Thus, protecting zakat and the wider ecosystem of
charitable trust is ultimately about protecting the people it exists to
serve.