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."
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.
Chai's road from reformasi to reckoning By Mariam Mokhtar
Malaysiakini : Today, that same hope has collided with the machinery it once sought to reform.
Political
talks by the then opposition, the parties that would later form the
government, were regularly organised to expose wrongdoing and keep
Malaysians abroad informed.
The ‘Fight for Justice’ rally in London, held in March 2015
However,
Malaysian organisers often believed attendance had to be encouraged
with food. Nasi lemak, curry puffs, and other dishes appeared at talks,
sometimes sold cheaply, sometimes offered freely.
It was
hospitality, perhaps a way to recreate home, but it also revealed a
style of leadership reliant on inducement rather than persuasion.
In
sharp contrast, in Britain, student political meetings rarely require
such incentives. People attend because the argument itself is
compelling.
Quiet caution
Among Malaysian
students, a quiet culture of caution existed. Some attendees were
thought to be government observers or informants. Photographs were
sometimes taken.
Some students allegedly received warning letters
from the Malaysian education attaché or scholarship bodies, reminding
them that participation in political activities could jeopardise funding
or result in termination of studies.
Some students attended anyway. Incidentally, this culture of fear continues today.
PM Anwar Ibrahim
I
recall meeting Chai during that period, when he was a student activist
in England. Like many of his generation, he was passionate about
reformasi and the belief that Malaysia could be something better than it
had been.
He followed Anwar Ibrahim’s struggles
closely and had been inspired by Anwar’s courage and attention to the
disenfranchised. Chai and his friends in London braved rain and
intimidation to protest injustice, not for reward, but for ideals of
fairness and hope.
Different national conversation
Years later, Chai would find himself at the centre of a different national conversation.
The former aide to ex-economy minister Rafizi Ramli is under MACC investigation in connection with a RM1.1 billion collaboration involving British semiconductor company Arm Holdings.
The MACC states Chai is being sought to assist investigations related to the deal.
Chai has disputed
the public notice and press coverage. He argues authorities made little
effort to contact him privately before issuing the notice and giving
the impression he was a fugitive.
The MACC, however, maintains
they attempted to contact him via WhatsApp starting Feb 24 but received
no response; the number was later blocked.
They stress that such notices do not imply guilt and are routine for any citizen’s cooperation.
At
this stage, the facts remain contested. Chai insists he acted in good
faith, while the authorities maintain their actions were lawful.
The public response, however, points to something broader than a single case.
Disillusioned
For many Malaysians who once invested hope in political reform, Chai's story resonates because it touches on a sense of disillusionment.
The generation that came of age during reformasi believed politics could move beyond patronage, factional rivalry, and the weaponisation of institutions.
Some
idealists returned to serve in government, civil society, or the
private sector. Others discovered how difficult change could be. Many
quietly built lives elsewhere, closing the door behind them.
The
most telling voices are often those who could have benefited from the
system. Many Malay Muslims, who are more likely to face fewer barriers
in education, employment, and public life, spoke of reluctance to
return.
They did not say this with anger, but quiet resignation,
observing a system they did not wish to navigate. These were individuals
who could have prospered comfortably, yet chose distance over
accommodation.
None of this means Malaysia lacks talent. The
country continues to produce remarkable individuals who remain attached
to its future. But the loss of idealism is harder to measure than the loss of people.
People
can leave, but ideals leaving is irreversible and corrosive. Loss of
idealism is invisible, harder to quantify, but arguably more damaging.
When
young, bright, committed people stop believing that the system can
change, the country loses the moral and civic energy needed to push for
reform.
When idealism starts to fade
Chai’s
case will ultimately be decided through investigation and evidence. The
authorities have their account; Chai has offered his own. It is not the
task of a writer to decide here.
What his story reveals is how fragile political idealism can be when it encounters the machinery of power.
For
the generation that once believed reformasi could reshape politics, the
question is not simply who is right or wrong. It is whether the ideals
that animated those struggles still have a place in the country’s life.
Nations
rarely notice the moment when idealism begins to fade. Yet over time,
those moments shape a country’s future as surely as any policy or
election.
The beautiful game, ugly rules with double standards By R Nadeswaran
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Malaysiakini : His parents, members of the Kenyah community in a remote Sarawak
village, had been stateless since their own births due to the isolation
of their settlement. As a result, they were unaware of the importance of
proper identity documentation.
For
more than three decades, he submitted several applications before his
citizenship was approved on January 19 and received his MyKad 10 days
later.
In June last year, seven foreigners - Gabriel Felipe
Arrocha, Facundo Garcés, Rodrigo Holgado, Imanol Machuca, João
Figueiredo, Jon Irazabal, and Héctor Hevel - knowingly submitted birth
certificates containing false information in their applications for
Malaysian citizenship, MyKad, and passports.
It is now public
knowledge that the birth certificates of these were “manufactured” by
the NRD, and their applications for citizenship were fast-tracked by the
same department.
For context, the NRD claimed that the birth
certificates of their grandparents were issued after it had gathered
“secondary evidence” that they were born in various parts of Malaysia,
but the International Federation of Association Football (Fifa) had obtained the original birth certificates issued in Brazil, Argentina, and the Netherlands.
If
the same law - the National Registration Act - had been applied to
these seven, their MyKads would have been seized and their citizenship
revoked. More importantly, they would have been prosecuted.
Double standards
But these seven are no ordinary Joes. At one time, they were so revered and valued that even the home minister “abused his powers” to fast-track their citizenship applications.
The seven ‘heritage’ players
They
are football journeymen - or, to put it bluntly, “mercenaries” -
willing to sign and falsify documents to change their nationalities for a
few shillings.
Their “Godfather” – someone in or connected to the
Football Association of Malaysia (FAM), after one debacle after another
at football’s controlling body, Fifa, went to the Court of Arbitration
for Sport for redemption.
Acting president Yusoff Maqhadi described it as “a major war” to defend Malaysia’s footballing reputation, declaring that all resources would be used.
But
they forgot the doctrine that those seeking equity must come with clean
hands. It requires that anyone seeking equitable relief from a court
must act with fairness, good faith, and without fraudulent conduct
regarding the matter in dispute.
A
moot point: Malaysia does not recognise dual citizenship. So, has the
NRD seized the blue MyKads and has the Immigration Department revoked
their passports?
The archives contain numerous anecdotal accounts
of individuals like Soliman who have waited years - sometimes even
decades - for their citizenship applications to be processed.
But
in the case of the seven foreigners, it took just 45 days for their
applications for birth certificates, MyKads, citizenship, and passports
to be issued.
A case of NRD’s double standards? The answer is a resounding “yes”.
Distortion of justice
Malaysia’s
citizenship system is no longer merely a bureaucratic maze - it has
become a mirror reflecting the nation’s legal, moral, and ethical
contradictions.
On one side, ordinary long-time residents like
Soliman endure decades of humiliation, waiting for recognition that
should have been theirs by birthright.
On the other hand, foreign
footballers are ushered through the gates of citizenship in a matter of
weeks, their papers “manufactured” by the very institution entrusted
with safeguarding national identity.
This is not a clerical error.
It is a deliberate distortion of justice. The NRD bent the rules for
mercenaries in football jerseys while punishing elderly Malaysians for
minor infractions, thus shredding the principle of equality before the
law.
The doctrine of clean hands - so loudly invoked in court
cases and international arbitration rings hollow when the state itself
is complicit in fraud.
The hypocrisy is staggering: villagers in
Sarawak are told to wait, plead, and prove their existence, while
imported strikers are handed blue MyKads as if they were trophies.
The
law, meant to protect the sanctity of citizenship, has been weaponised
to serve expedience and political vanity. What does it say about a
nation when its most sacred document - the birth certificate - is
treated as negotiable currency in the marketplace of football?
Rigged system
Malaysia
does not recognise dual citizenship, yet the silence over whether these
passports and MyKads have been revoked speaks volumes. It suggests not
oversight, but complicity. And complicity corrodes trust.
Every citizen who has fought for decades to be recognised now knows that the system is not broken - it is rigged.
The
real scandal is not just about football. It is about the erosion of
integrity in governance. If citizenship can be bought, bent, or
bartered, then the very idea of belonging becomes meaningless.
Until
the same law is applied without fear or favour - whether to a stateless
villager or a foreign mercenary, the promise of justice will remain a
hollow slogan, and Malaysia’s credibility will continue to bleed, not
just on the football field, but in the conscience of the nation itself.
Chai made a 'wanted' man as Madani faces growing scrutiny over MACC By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, March 09, 2026
Malaysiakini : (Don’t look down on the government because they have power - they
have the television, radio, money, and the media. They also have spy
equipment and the like.)
Umno veteran Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah
Hence,
Madani, as the inheritor of the means and methods of how Umno sustained
power, is in no position to claim that it is unaware of how to contact
Chai.
Any rational person will understand that the intent of this
“wanted person” notice was to intimidate and warn others of the
pitfalls of going against state narratives.
The prime minister and various factotums of Madani have rebuffed
allegations of the supposed “corporate mafia” because they are merely
hearsay, but the MACC is quick to smear Chai’s name and a few others in
police reports lodged.
The fact that DAP has said there needs to be a royal commission of inquiry (RCI) on these issues, and Bersih and other prominent longtime activists have argued the same, demonstrates that reformasi is not only dead but buried.
Anwar
made many Malaysians, especially the non-Malay community, believe in
something. And these were not lofty goals. These were baseline
democratic norms and traditions, which were eroded after decades of Umno
rule.
Other ministers must also face questioning
If this were a serious investigation, then perhaps we should pay attention to what Chai wrote, specifically this:
“On
the first day of KL20, April 22, 2024, Arm Holdings’ team was urgently
invited to see the prime minister at his office. I was not in that
meeting, but from the photos I found on Instagram, several ministers
like Gobind Singh Deo, Zambry Abdul Kadir, Fahmi Fadzil, ex-minister
Tengku Zafrul Abdul Aziz, and other high-ranking government officials
were present.”
What I want to know is, have all those people in
that meeting been questioned by the MACC? After all, if you are going to
investigate a former minister and his team, would it not be logical to
question every other minister who was part of the proceedings of the Arm
Holdings deal?
And we have to wonder why Fahmi, who was at that meeting, is keeping silent on this issue.
Communications Minister Fahmi Fadzil
Investigating
a former minister and his team is not something that a government
should take lightly, but seeing as how this was instigated by a police
report and the MACC takes such allegations deathly seriously, shouldn’t
all ministers involved, either directly or indirectly with this deal, be
questioned?
Or is this solely a Rafizi issue?
Keep in mind
that this was a deal which was signed at a public event attended by the
big cheeses of Madani. So this idea that this was some sort of backroom
deal orchestrated by Rafizi and his team, for self-profit, is, as the
Puchong MP Yeo Bee Yin said, a cerita dongeng (fairy tale) - much like reformasi, I suppose.
Racial and political bias
Another
point to consider in all of this is the racial angle. Chai wrote of the
“type-C is corrupt“ angle. Keep in mind that in the alleged corporate
mafia, it was alleged that Azam was colluding with a cartel of Chinese
businesspeople.
Folks have been sending me these screenshots and
narratives on various social media platforms, of how a narrative is
being formed that institutions are being corrupted by the Chinese monied
class. This, of course, is typical ketuanan (supremacist) methodology.
And so is using government machinery and democratic processes to go after detractors. Anwar should know this, and so should DAP.
Remember
in 2017 when the Umno state launched a witch hunt targeting former
premier Mahathir Mohamad and Anwar for the forex losses.
“Yesterday,
Anwar, who was the finance minister during that period, denied he had
suggested the need to cover up the actual losses. Anwar refuted former
Bank Negara assistant governor Abdul Murad Khalid’s claim that Anwar
told him he would need to resign as finance minister if the figure was
made public.”
Now I am sure Chai had his eyes opened in his brief
time in the government. But I also know this - the state is targeting
him because it is hoping he is a weak link. But I believe that he is
made of sterner stuff.
Final whistle: FAM's reputation in tatters after sports court defeat By R Nadeswaran
Sunday, March 08, 2026
Malaysiakini : That spectacle came to an end yesterday when the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) upheld Fifa’s sanctions against FAM and seven naturalised players who had represented Harimau Malaya using false or forged documents.
Facundo
Garces, Rodrigo Holgado, Imanol Machuca, Joao Figueiredo, Gabriel
Palmero, Jon Irazabal, and Hector Hevel must now serve a 12-month
suspension. Their only reprieve: they may continue training with their
respective clubs.
When first sanctioned in September last year,
Fifa’s Disciplinary Committee said FAM had submitted falsified documents
to confirm the players’ eligibility, enabling them to feature for
Malaysia in the third round of the 2027 Asian Cup Qualifiers against
Vietnam on June 10.
The
committee held: “Using fraudulent documentation to allow a player to
compete constitutes, pure and simple, a form of cheating, which cannot
in any way be condoned.
“Such conduct erodes trust in the fairness
of competitions and jeopardises the very essence of football as an
activity founded on honesty and transparency.”
The conclusion was that none of the grandparents of the players was born in Malaysia, as Fifa through their own investigations, had possession of the original certificates.
Not a mistake, but fraud
FAM put forward a defence of a “technical error”
by its administrative staff. Its then-acting president, Yusoff Mahadi,
stressed that all documentation and procedures had been submitted
transparently in accordance with the prescribed guidelines.
However, the words used by the committee were telling enough to prompt Takiyuddin Hassan,
the chief Parliament whip for the opposition Perikatan Nasional
coalition, to state that the scandal went beyond “routine administrative
errors”.
Football Association of Malaysia former acting president Yusoff Mahadi
“This is not a technical mistake, but a deliberate act of fraud,” he said.
Still
defiant and proclaiming innocence, FAM appealed, but again, it was
dismissed by Fifa’s Appeals Committee. Reaffirming the damning verdict
from Fifa’s Disciplinary Committee - consigning the nation’s football
administrators to the bottom of the heap and concluding that “Malaysia
used forged documents”.
Former deputy law minister Hanipa Maidin
said that if he were representing FAM, his advice would be
straightforward - don’t waste time or money challenging the decision on
the “heritage” players issue.
He made these observations after
reviewing the full written judgment issued by the appeal committee, a
detailed document spanning 64 pages and 304 paragraphs.
But what did they have to persuade CAS to overrule Fifa? Nothing. Zilch. Zero.
Entering battle with manufactured lies
Undeterred
by calls to accept the decision, FAM was defiant, saying it would take
its challenge to the CAS, and Yusoff described it as “a major war” to defend Malaysia’s footballing reputation, declaring that all resources would be used.
But
what kind of war is this, when the generals march in empty-handed? The
birth certificates of the players’ grandparents presented by FAM are
forged. CAS will have access to the originals, and FAM will be left with
egg - not honour - on their faces.
The curtain has finally
fallen, and the fat lady will not sing. Staring down the firing squad is
the institution that gambled its credibility on forged papers.
FAM
marched into battle armed not with truth but with manufactured lies,
and now the war they declared has ended not in triumph but in ridicule.
The
irony is brutal: in trying to defend the nation’s pride, FAM has
bartered it away for cheap tricks. CAS was not swayed by doctored
documents, and when the originals surfaced, FAM was left naked before
the world - egg dripping from its face, dignity shattered, reputation in
tatters.
This was not football administration; it was the theatre of the absurd, staged by men who mistook forgery for strategy.
And
so, the verdict echoes louder than any whistle blown on the pitch:
Malaysia’s football crisis is not about talent, but about truth.
And
the truth, unlike forged papers, cannot be hidden in a drawer. It will
expose, it will shame, and it will demand accountability. The war FAM
chose to fight was lost - not on the field, but in the courtroom of
integrity.
In tennis parlance, it was game, set, and match to Fifa.
Why is govt silent on threats against temples? By Loga Bala Mohan
Saturday, March 07, 2026
Malaysiakini : The silence and inaction create a dangerous perception that either
the government is complicit or that someone powerful within the system
is shielding these perpetrators.
They appear untouchable, immune, and above the law.
If that is the case, what happened to the reform promises? What happened to “equal and fair treatment for all Malaysians”?
Ignoring historical context
The
government is aware that most of these temples were built during the
colonial era, with the consent of the British and later the Japanese
administrations.
All this happened long before Merdeka and before
the National Land Code was enacted, when proper land documentation
systems either did not exist or were entirely different.
To now
brand these decades-old places of worship as illegal simply because they
lack modern documentation is unjust and ignores historical realities,
heritage value, and the faith of generations who have worshipped there
peacefully for over a century.
The long-standing issues
surrounding Hindu temples persist because the government has failed to
decisively resolve temple and land ownership disputes, a matter that was
part of its election commitments.
After
three years in power, only now are some within the Madani
administration realising the urgency of fulfilling those reform
promises, and that too, after political shockwaves from Sabah sent a
clear warning.
Penal Code offence
Threatening
to demolish a place of worship is not rhetoric. It is an open challenge
to the rule of law. It clearly violates Section 295 of the Penal Code,
which covers injuring or defiling a place of worship.
Such actions
also breach Section 295A of the same law, which covers deliberate and
malicious acts intended to outrage religious feelings, and Section 506,
which covers criminal intimidation.
Yet it appears the law does not apply to certain individuals. Why?
Is this a double standard? Selective enforcement? Or is there a hidden hand orchestrating this crisis for political gain?
Worse
still, is this merely a calculated deflection to mask weakness and
incompetence at the expense of another faith and the nation’s fragile
harmony?
It is shameful that instead of upholding the rule of law
decisively, some leaders are seen pleading through media statements for
perpetrators to call off their gathering.
Leadership is not about
begging lawbreakers. It is about enforcing the law without fear or
favour. The government must act immediately. Enough of deflection.
Madani govt must act
The
Indian community does not want to return to the streets as in 2007 to
demand justice. However, patience should not be mistaken for weakness.
The
Madani government carries a heavy responsibility to restore peace,
stability, and confidence in its leadership. What we are witnessing now
is the erosion of trust. Malaysians are losing faith.
The
People's Progressive Party (PPP) demands immediate action against all
those who are deliberately threatening the peace, harmony, and national
security of this country.
The authorities must not delay or remain
silent while provocative actions continue unchecked, and decisive
enforcement must take place before Hindus are forced to take to the
streets to demand justice and equal protection under the law.
DAP, PKR leaders rally behind Chai amid MACC probe
Friday, March 06, 2026
Malaysiakini : Yeo further
criticised the use of government machinery to publicly humiliate
individuals, stressing that no citizen should be treated unfairly
regardless of their political alignment.
James Chai, ex-aide to former economy minister Rafizi Ramli
“I
still want to believe that we can do better than this, that we can
cultivate a new politics for Malaysia, and that our nation can still
shine as a beacon of light in a distracted world,” she added.
Public confidence at stake
Meanwhile,
Seputeh MP Teresa Kok urged MACC to review how Chai is being
investigated to maintain public confidence in the graft-busting agency.
Kok
warned that when individuals who have denied wrongdoing appear to face
intense scrutiny before the full facts are established, it risks
creating the perception that the process may be uneven or excessive.
She
noted that Chai had explained his role as a policy aide participating
in discussions on Malaysia’s semiconductor ambitions, raising questions
about whether a relatively junior individual was facing public pressure
disproportionate to his position.
“The Madani government has consistently emphasised integrity, institutional reform, and the rule of law.
Seputeh MP Teresa Kok
“For
these principles to remain credible, it is essential that enforcement
processes are seen by the public as fair, measured, and consistent,” Kok
said.
DAP Youth chief Woo Kah Leong also raised similar concerns,
warning MACC against political witch-hunting, as such investigation
methods risk creating a climate of fear among the people.
“When
investigations are conducted in a manner that risks eroding public
confidence, the unity government will inevitably bear the political
consequences and face legitimate questions from the rakyat,” he said.
‘Scrutiny escalated after Azam criticism’
Separately, Petaling Jaya MP Lee Chean Chung pointed out that scrutiny of Rafizi and Chai intensified after the Pandan MP called for MACC chief commissioner Azam Baki to be suspended.
According
to Lee, several organisations then lodged police reports regarding the
deal, after which investigations began expanding to include ministers
and senior civil servants.
Lee warned that the episode could
discourage idealistic young Malaysians from entering public service,
especially at a time when the country is already grappling with a
persistent brain drain among talented students and graduates who choose
to remain overseas.
“Chai said his only ‘crime’ is that, in his
30s, when many have already abandoned and questioned so-called ideals,
he still holds onto idealism.
“I hope his ideals continue to shine and awaken the hope and passion for politics in this generation.
“The government must have enforcement agencies that are more independent, professional, and less politicised,” he said.
Petaling Jaya MP Lee Chean Chung
Earlier this week, MACC issued a notice that it was seeking Chai to facilitate investigations against Rafizi.
In a press conference later, Azam said the former aide is being sought as a wanted person, not a witness, the New Straits Times reported.
Responding to the matter, Chai then issued a press statement criticising the MACC and claimed the agency did not contact him before issuing the notice seeking his cooperation.
This
was then disputed by the commission, which claimed its officer tried to
contact Chai since Feb 24, but the latter allegedly blocked investigating officers who contacted him on WhatsApp.
Lobbying, lies, and the Zionist trump card By R Nadeswaran
Thursday, March 05, 2026
Malaysiakini : Following these claims, Anwar was referred
to the Rights and Privileges Committee and was suspended for six months
after it was ruled that he had failed to provide sufficient evidence to
back his claims.
However,
Khairy Jamaluddin, then Umno Youth chief, went a step further, claiming
that Anwar had “links”, pointing to his relationships with several Apco
International Advisory Council (IAC) members.
“Members of the
IAC, which Anwar has accused of having links with the Israeli
government, have very strong personal and professional relationships
with him,” The Edge reported Khairy as saying in March 2010, reeling out several prominent names.
Khairy Jamaluddin
So, when the Inspector General of Police Khalid Ismail announced
last week that they were investigating an attempt to conspire to topple
the government and sabotage the country's stability, the keywords were
consciously absent.
He said that police were investigating a plot involving an “influential individual” and an international media agency.As
investigations proceeded, Na’imah Abdul Khalid, the wife of former
finance minister Daim Zainuddin, who was named in the police report, poured cold water on the claims, claiming they were laughable.
Na’imah Abdul Khalid
According to a copy of the police report sighted by Malaysiakini,
she had allegedly held an online meeting sometime in July last year,
where she discussed a purported plan to use international media outlets
to mount pressure on Anwar and MACC chief commissioner Azam Baki.
PM ups the game
But on Friday, Anwar upped the ante with that infamous word – Zionists - to underline the conspiracy theory.
“Their
plan included contacting all foreign media with a strategy of
questioning the government’s efforts, particularly (those concerning)
the MACC, and arranging moves through the Parliament, which concerns us
(as the plan involved) utilising contacts among parliamentarians to
destabilise (the government),” he told lawmakers.
He also urged
those attempting to defend the plan to consider that the matter could
possibly be linked to “prominent Zionist groups”, and for authorities to
be provided the necessary time and space to complete their probe.
Yesterday, one of the two lawyers named in a police report rubbished the claims. He fired back, describing them as the “mother of all lies”.
Nizamuddin Hamid
Lawyer Nizamuddin Hamid said his client, Na’imah, had never given her legal team such instructions.
“I
confirm that I am one of the lawyers named in the report. The other
lawyer named was Amir Zharif Abdullah. Throughout our duties as lawyers
for Na’imah, there was absolutely no discussion or instructions given to
us to overthrow the government or undermine parliamentary democracy.
“There was none, and that (claim) is the mother of all lies,” Nizamuddin said.
Double standards
However,
is the use of foreign public relations agencies and lobbyists wrong or
illegal? Didn’t PKR leaders use foreign agencies to lobby for Anwar’s
release after he was jailed on sodomy charges?
Former PKR vice-president Sivarasa Rasiah admitted
that in 2016, party leaders, including himself, were in communication
with a US political consultancy firm about getting Anwar out of prison.
Claiming
that lobbying for the release of political detainees was normal and
perfectly acceptable, he said there were emails in 2016 between him and
other PKR leaders and Perseus Strategies boss, Jared Genser.
So, is there a difference between the campaign to free Anwar and one initiated by Na’imah?
Anwar,
when asked why the PKR lobbying was acceptable but Na’imah’s was not,
said the two were not the same - as one was a fight for freedom, while
the other sought to undermine the government.
In
Malaysia, conspiracy theories don’t survive on evidence - they survive
on seasoning. Sprinkle in “Zionists”, stir in “foreign plots”, and
suddenly the blandest allegation becomes a fiery dish for public
consumption.
What began as a recycled slogan scandal has now
metastasized into a political reflex: when cornered, invoke the spectre
of Jews and foreign cabals.
The irony, of course, is that both
sides have dipped their hands into the same lobbying jar - whether to
free a jailed leader or to smear a rival.
Predictable attacks
The
hypocrisy is as blinding as it is predictable. For Anwar and his
administration, the definition of a “conspiracy” is now: whatever the
other side does.
When foreign lobbyists worked to free him from
prison, it was a noble fight for justice. When a political rival’s
associate allegedly engages with international media, whether clumsily
or not, it is suddenly an existential threat to democracy, laced with
the shadowy hand of Zionists.
By injecting that specific,
incendiary word into the narrative, Anwar is not revealing a conspiracy;
he is revealing a strategy. He is reaching for the oldest instrument in
Malaysia’s political toolbox to delegitimise his opponents and shut
down scrutiny.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim
If
the “mother of all lies” is that a lawyer and a former minister’s wife
were plotting to topple a government via Zoom calls, then the father of
all political cynicism is using the spectre of Zionists to distract
citizens.
The difference lies not in principle, but in
convenience. And so, the cycle continues: every crisis dressed up as a
foreign conspiracy, every accusation wrapped in the same tired cloak.
In the end, the nation’s political theatre does not need new scripts - it just needs its favourite trigger words.
The
real question: Is the issue the use of foreign influence, or is it
simply who is wielding it? In Malaysia, apparently, a conspiracy is only
a conspiracy when you are the one being targeted.
'I am not Jho Low 2.0': Why PM and Azam are after me By James Chai
Wednesday, March 04, 2026
Malaysiakini : The basis of this investigation is that there was supposedly
misappropriation by my ex-boss, former economy minister Rafizi Ramli,
and that the deal that I was involved in was rushed through inappropriately.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim and MACC chief commissioner Azam Baki
MACC
issued a public search for me, as though I am a fugitive, and Azam even
held a press conference about this. He gave the impression that I was
hiding like a fugitive. I am not.
What happened
These are the facts and timeline of what happened during my tenure at the Economy Ministry:
On Feb 15, 2023, I was appointed as the special functions (policy) officer to the economy minister, who was Rafizi Ramli.
Between
April 22 and 23, 2024, the government held a two-day tech conference,
called KL20, that featured well-known international and local speakers
from tech and startup.
This was one of the most high-profile tech
events that Malaysia has ever held: Almost RM1 billion of global funds
were launched, 20 venture capital and founders decided to set up offices
in Malaysia, about 10 policies and initiatives were introduced, and the
largest semiconductor park in Southeast Asia was announced.
My
colleagues and I at the Economy Ministry led this conference. Arm
Holdings was invited as a guest speaker in a semiconductor session.
On
the first day of KL20, April 22, 2024, Arm Holdings’ team was urgently
invited to see the prime minister at his office. I was not in that
meeting but from the photos I found on Instagram - several ministers
like Gobind Singh Deo, Zambry Abdul Kadir, Fahmi Fadzil, ex-minister
Tengku Zafrul Abdul Aziz, and other high-ranking government officials
were present in that meeting.
To my knowledge, the main request by
the government was for Arm Holdings to assist Malaysia’s semiconductor
ambitions. Given the enthusiasm they felt from KL20 - and the urgency by
the prime minister - the Arm Holdings’ team gave the government a rough
plan of how this could look.
After
the April 22, 2024, meeting, I was tasked by the economy minister to
explore this collaboration opportunity with the company because I was in
charge of KL20 and most tech-related initiatives of the ministry, among
others.
Between May 2024 and March
5, 2025, I probably created about 20 Google Slides, 10 Google documents,
and talked to over 100 stakeholders in the government and industry to
shape the idea of the collaboration. Feedback from other ministries -
including the Investment, Trade and Industry Ministry and Finance
Ministry were reflected in the final agreement.
The proposed collaboration was presented to the cabinet three times. I was not in the cabinet as I am not a minister.
On
Feb 28, 2025, Anwar announced to the media that the agreement between
the government and Arm Holdings will be signed in a week’s time.
I
was informed that the prime minister also had a video call meeting with
the highest executives of the company, including its CEO and
chairperson, that morning. I was not involved in the meeting as I was
just a special officer.
On March 5,
2025, the government, represented by the Malaysian Investment
Development Authority (Mida) CEO, signed a deal with Arm Holdings at a
public event. The attendees were the prime minister, economy minister,
investment, trade and industry minister; Mida CEO, and the CEO of Arm
Holdings Rene Haas, among others.
On June 17, 2025, my colleagues and I at the economy minister’s office resigned collectively with the minister.
After
my resignation, Arm Holdings requested my assistance for a short-term
transition period. I was reluctant because I was thoroughly exhausted
working in government (the government also made Arm Holdings promise to
do a lot of things) and I wanted a break.
But the company had no
presence in Southeast Asia. They don’t know who to talk to in the
government and industry, how the government works, what Southeast Asia
is like, nor the culture nor the people.
The resignation was
abrupt and unexpected, so it caught everyone off guard, including me. I
also felt responsible for the project that I was involved in; Arm
Holdings must fulfil its obligations so that no public funds are wasted.
So,
I did two months of work for the company to help with the transition,
such as setting up the office, creating Google Slides (I guess I’m the
slides guy), meeting with potential integrated circuit (IC) design
companies, putting the team and structure in place, organising training
for engineers, and raising public awareness, etc.
After exactly two months, I resigned from the short-term role to move on with my life.
So,
to suggest that I was involved in misappropriation or abuse of power or
anything of that nature, I must be proven to have (a) acted in bad
faith by being involved in the project proposal for the period between
May 2024 to March 2025; (b) influenced the prime minister, cabinet, and
the entire government machinery; and (c) misappropriated or personally
benefited from something I had influence over. I had none.
I did
not influence Anwar, the cabinet, and the entire government machinery to
sign with Arm Holdings so I could get a job. I didn’t even know Rafizi
was going to resign at that time. Anwar doesn’t even know who I am, let
alone be influenced by me.
Why go after someone like me
To
know what this campaign is getting at, we need to look at it
holistically. The primary narrative that the government wants to play up
is that Rafizi misappropriated RM1.1 billion from the collaboration,
and I, was the “Jho Low 2.0” (Low Taek Jho) who helped Rafizi with this.
There are a few things behind this narrative-construct.
First,
instead of reaching out to me or those close to me to call me in for an
investigation, MACC has resorted to issuing a public search notice and a
press conference by the MACC chief to “search” for me.
They even
put up my childhood home which my parents currently stay in, exposing my
family to unnecessary danger, which is something I will never forgive
the authorities for.
The government has ample resources at its
disposal but it couldn’t even find my phone number. They could have
asked my friends or my former colleagues in the government.
They could have also emailed or messaged me on social media or searched me on LinkedIn to know what I’m up to now.
I’m
currently working in the UK on artificial intelligence (AI) risks and
policies to regulate because this is the biggest threat of our lifetime.
(I also have to work because I don’t actually have RM1.1 billion in my
bank account).
But
resorting to this elaborate public search method is meant to paint me
as a fugitive with something to hide, as if I am guilty and running from
the authorities.
This is excessive and potentially defamatory - I
presume this is meant to be so. I can say with absolute certainty that I
am not in Macau.
Cybertrooper campaignand racist attacks
Second,
there has been a long-running underground cybertrooper campaign, mostly
led by anonymous accounts, that tries to paint the narrative I
mentioned above.
They even explicitly called me “Jho Low 2.0”. We
were just waiting for a well-resourced person to repeat these claims so
that we could sue for defamation. We couldn’t sue cybertroopers because
if you live for RM20 per post, I doubt you will have enough resources to
pay damages in court.
Some cybertroopers also suggested that I
was appointed to the board of directors of Arm Holdings as a reward. I
wish life were that easy.
Of course, there is a subtle racial
angle to this. The idea is to find someone of a certain race to tarnish
so that the public would believe it was “another Chinese who took money
from the government” and not have sympathy for me. It’s the classic
“type-C is corrupt’ narrative.
Third, painting me this way is
easier than actually proving the case. I never once doubted the MACC’s
ability to go deep into a person’s life.
Since the day we were
appointed to Rafizi’s office, we knew that we were vulnerable to being
attacked, investigated, and searched. I daresay that the MACC and other
government machinery have probably looked into the accounts, assets, and
personal lives of Rafizi and his former officers, including me. They
likely found nothing.
Rafizi Ramli
When
they looked into mine, they probably only found a modest amount of cash
with credit card debt of a millennial, a mortgage for a home I
half-own, and a 2020 Proton Persona that has a market value of only
RM12,000. Money really isn’t my primary source of motivation in life.
If
it were, I wouldn’t have joined the government. I had to reject a job
offer from Singapore that pays me five times my last drawn salary, and
took a 50 percent pay cut to join the government with no prospect of
promotion or increment.
I wasn’t even paid until my sixth month in
office because of the tremendous bureaucracy. However, I put up with
this often-foolish belief that I should play my part in serving the
country.
How I’m feeling now
When Rafizi
first called me to offer me to join him, I took two weeks to ruminate
over it. Most friends and family strongly discouraged me from doing it
because it would stifle my career, waste my time (because they think
Malaysia has no hope), and would leave me politically exposed.
But
I had to give it a shot because I am still the same person who wrote a
book about Malaysia's underdogs, called “Sang Kancil: An Ordinary Tale
about How Malaysians Defied the Odds”.
I’m still the same person
who wrote the article titled “Choosing to return to Malaysia, with hope”
in 2017. I’m still the same person who organised the protest for Anwar.
As
for how I’m feeling: Little annoyance, some sadness, and a lot of
anger. Annoyed that I had to go through this unnecessary process, sad
that the large state has been weaponised to go after someone small like
me, and angry that they are coming after what I represent.
I am not a politician, a tycoon, or an influencer (I only have 1,200+ followers on Instagram and 131 subscribers on Substack).
Make
no mistake, this is not about coming after me specifically. It is about
coming after people like me. People who fell on the wrong side of the
government.
You could be the most well-meaning, well-intentioned,
sacrificial person who wants to serve the government, and have done
nothing wrong, haven’t misappropriated a single sen - but God forbid you
fall on the wrong side.
When the government is desperate and insecure, no one is safe from its radar. Today it is me, tomorrow it might be someone else.
When
people tell me that Southeast Asia is lawless, arbitrary, and chaotic,
I’ve always defended Malaysia. Now, I cannot in good conscience say the
same anymore.
In a confusing time like this, I’m grateful that my
friends and family have offered me all kinds of support: Lawyers (thank
God I studied law and know some of the best lawyers), NGO support,
getting the word out, reassurances, and words of prayer.
My only crime is that I held on to an idealism even into my early 30s when most people would have abandoned it by then.
But I know that the fight against injustice must continue, however inconvenient and tiring.
I
know I could have taken a different path, but I will never regret
serving my nation because serving Malaysia remains the greatest honour
of my life. No oppression will change that.
Belling the Madani cat By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, March 02, 2026
Malaysiakini : The rule of law does not define political stability in most Malaysian
governments. Rule by law does. And for the most part, especially during
BN’s heyday, most Malaysians voted for this. So this is not really
something which could be solely attributed to Madani.
Some people
are not going to like this, but if Madani is cracking down on anyone who
stirred up racial and religious sentiment, even though it went against
basic democratic norms and constitutional protections, I would not have
any problem with this.
But even this would not ensure political
stability as, generally, non-Muslims do not want to engage in this type
of behaviour, because ultimately, as minorities, pragmatism wins the
day.
The
result would be more Muslims sanctioned by the state because they are
indoctrinated into thinking that religious supremacy trumps everything,
and the resulting backlash by the majority community, egged on by the
opposition.
When you look at all these provocations when it comes
to religious issues, it normally emanates from the state. In Madani's
cases, it is made worse by the reality that the prime minister always
attempts to burnish his religious credentials.
Nobody forced the
prime minister to claim that the demolishment of a 100 year old temple
was a victory or claim that that states need to clean up
“illegal” temples or preside over the conversion of a convert or define
the religious narratives of this country as a fight between those who
are Islamophobic and those who feel “they are the only Islamic group,
and everyone else is deviant, evil, and oppressive.”
Madani equals PAS?
When it comes to PAS sowing religious and racial conflict, this is to be expected. After all, they make no secret of this.
PAS’
atavistic interpretation of Islam, of course, does not extend to its
politburo, which engages in the kind of excesses that most Malay uber
alles outfits engage in.
However,
while the opposition may benefit from the racial and religious turmoil
that exists in Madani, and yes, may very well contribute to it, the real
reason Madani is in a fix is because of its racial and religious
agenda, which shares too many similarities with PAS.
Two
years ago, when there was a possibility that Madani was going to place
Islamic Development Department (Jakim) officers in government agencies,
this is what PAS said about the interfaith group, which raised concerns
about this issue and of course – the Syariah Courts (Criminal
Jurisdiction) Act 1965 (Act 355).
“In both oppositions, the group
clearly shows its Islamophobia, where every step taken to strengthen
Islam is construed as a threat to the rights and liberties of the
non-Muslims in the country.
“PAS sees the MCCBCHST’s (the Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism, and Taoism) stance as having serious repercussions and as a challenge to Muslims’ right to practise their religion.”
Neither PAS nor Madani think that Malaysia is a secular country.
"Malaysia is not a secular country. If it was, why should DAP include ‘to fight for a secular country’ in its own manifesto?
"Islam
is the official religion of the federation. Then there is the idea of
Malaysian Malaysia. No Malay can accept the concept of equality," said PAS deputy president Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man.
Moderate way
To be fair to the prime minister, he did define a religious state in a more “moderate way”.
“There
is no issue about complete separation of state and religion because
Islam is the religion of the federation, but it is not a theocratic
state where you can impose Islamic laws on everybody, including
non-Muslims,” he said.
PM Anwar Ibrahim
Keep
in mind that this moderate form of secularism does not apply to
unilateral conversion or the banning of words, films and any other
things that would offend the sensitivities of Muslims.
Indeed,
Madani has gone out of its way to protect Muslim sensitivities at the
expense of non-Muslim sensitivities, and this is by design because it is
the desiderata of religious supremacy.
Hence, to claim that Islamic imperatives would not be imposed on non-Muslims is complete horse manure.
When we talk of religious provocations, we have to understand that it is institutional.
Preachers like Firdaus Wong and Zamri Vinoth are protected because they are part of the institution.
Furthermore,
look at how the police behaved in raiding a “gay party“ in Kelantan and
the lies and misinformation spread during that fiasco.
The
action of the police in Kelantan is particularly egregious because the
top brass continued with the disingenuous narrative that they were
disrupting a “gay sex party”, even though the Health Ministry confirmed
that this was an event it was involved in.
The PAS state
government even thanked the police for acting the way they did, even
though what they did contradicted what a federal agency said about this
so-called “gay sex party”.
So this is not only political, but it
would seem an action endorsed by Madani. Because Madani has chosen to
remain silent, this sets a precedent for the police in all other states
to carry out their duties based on religious dogma, as the Kelantan
police justified.
The reality is that Madani has not offered an
alternative religious agenda, and what the non-Muslim voters are left
with is either not voting and getting a religious state at a faster pace
or voting and still getting a religious state, but at a slower pace.
Same script, different actors, endless distractions By R Nadeswaran
Sunday, March 01, 2026
Malaysiakini : As the results of the election trickled in on the early morning of
May 10, 2018, the protagonists of such a theory melted into the
woodwork, never to be heard of thereafter.
Paul Stadlen and Apco,
the spin masters engaged by the BN government, packed their bags and
disappeared, leaving many government officers with egg on their faces.
In
2021, Stadlen voluntarily agreed to release RM7.1 million to a 1MDB
trust account. The case against him for money laundering was
subsequently dropped.
Some of the victims, former PJ Utara MP Tony
Pua, being the most prominent, was investigated by the police and
barred from leaving the country for “alleged conspiracy in activities
detrimental to parliamentary democracy.”
Same old, same old
On Friday, a similar conspiracy emerged. The police announced
that the wife of a former minister is under investigation following a
report alleging that she was plotting to topple the government and Prime
Minister Anwar Ibrahim.
But Na’imah Abdul Khalid, the wife of the late former finance minister Daim Zainuddin, came out swinging, dismissing the claim of being involved in any form of effort to topple the government.
In a statement, Na'imah said that any attempt suggesting she was behind the Bloomberg exposé involving MACC chief commissioner Azam Baki is not only irresponsible but also an insult to the journalists concerned.
“The
claim that I am trying to destabilise or topple the government is
laughable and brings to mind past accusations faced by the prime
minister himself, when he used to declare having the ‘formidable
numbers’ to seize power.
“Unlike him, at no time did I engage in,
contemplate, or support any effort to destabilise or topple an elected
government,” she said.
Na’imah Abdul Khalid
But
by this time, a copy of the police report filed by a 54-year-old who
listed his occupation as “editor” was already circulating online.
The
gist of the report is as follows: On July 31 last year, he, together
with his business partner, attended a discussion via Zoom with the
chairperson and staff of a UK-based strategy and communication company.
Also
allegedly present were Na’imah and her two sons, along with two
lawyers. The discussion, the report claimed, covered the use of
international media to pressure the MACC and Anwar, specifically to drop
charges against Naimah.
It was also suggested to use “lobbyists”
around the world, including in the UK and the US, to apply pressure on
the Malaysian side.
“My partner and I felt that this matter was
wrong and amounted to betraying our own country, as it involved
conspiring with foreign agents to bring down the prime minister and the
government of Malaysia,” the report stated.
Emerging questions
For many, this claim and the side-shows provided a welcome relief from the serious business of corporate mafia, kuil haram (illegal temples), etc, which had been making the headlines during the week.
If it was a deliberate diversion, it succeeded, but then, questions began to emerge.
Why did it take the editor more than six months to realise the matter was wrong? What happened during the interim? Mental block?
Oh yes, he was in London on Feb 10 when Bloomberg broke the story on the MACC’s shady dealings, and hence his memory was jolted, and he put two and two together.
But
Na'imah offered a different explanation entirely. According to her, the
individual who lodged the report had initially approached her in July
2025, offering his services as part of a proposed communications team.
He was later terminated due to poor performance. After his dismissal, she claimed, he made further monetary demands.
She
insisted the contents of the police report are false and preposterous,
and that its timing - seven months after the alleged meeting - points to
a desperate attempt to distract the public from growing calls for
Azam’s removal.
Deflecting attention
The
conspiracy theory is a political chameleon, adapting its colours to suit
the landscape of the moment. Once deployed to shield Najib from the
1MDB scandal, it now resurfaces to deflect attention from mounting
scandals facing the Anwar administration.
The parallels are
unmistakable. Then, as now, foreign actors are cast as the villains.
Then, as now, the machinery of law enforcement is mobilised to
investigate those who dare to challenge the status quo.
Then, as
now, the timing is impeccable - and the impression of the masses is that
these circumstances are designed to change the conversation when it
becomes uncomfortable.
But
the public is no longer naive. We have seen this script before. We have
watched it unravel. And we recognise that when the dust settles, the
protagonists of these manufactured crises often fade away, leaving
behind a trail of distraction and division.
The question is not
whether Na'imah conspired with foreign agents or just spoke with public
relations personnel, which remains a matter for proper investigation.
The question is why, time and again, conspiracy theories become the default refuge of those in power.
Why,
when faced with legitimate scrutiny, is the response to cry foreign
interference? And why does the truth always seem to be the first
casualty in these political dramas?
Until we break free from this
cycle of manufactured narratives, we remain prisoners of our own
political dysfunction - forever chasing shadows while the real issues
fester in the dark.
Malaysiakini : PKR’s Rafizi Ramli, one of the few parliamentarians openly critical of the government, has publicly slammed the MACC probe against him, accusing the PM of allowing allies to weaponise slander against critics.
Academics
like Murray Hunter, who previously taught and lived in Malaysia and is
familiar with what happens behind the scenes, were sued despite commenting from overseas.
Bestinet’s lawsuit against multiple publications (including Malaysiakini), politicians, and individuals demonstrates why people are afraid. Similarly, Azam Baki’s lawsuit against Bloomberg is another example.
When
political dissent risks investigation, reputational attack, or party
retaliation, many citizens understandably choose silence, leaving only a
small, vocal minority willing to openly challenge the government.
They
are real, tangible problems affecting millions of Malaysians every day.
Dismissing them as “petty” risks alienating citizens and minimising the
lived realities of those who experience economic, social, and political
injustice.
While the prime minister calls some issues “petty”,
ordinary Malaysians struggling with job security, rising costs, social
fairness, minority rights, and limited opportunities would strongly
disagree.
For
many Malaysians, like myself, these issues matter, and they are
anything but petty. Anwar cannot simply dismiss our fears and anxieties
in such a flippant manner.
Perhaps the current troubling “ignored”
issue is the MACC nexus, the network of enforcement power, corporate
influence, and political connections that allows systemic abuses to
persist.
This is far from petty. Ignoring the MACC nexus is like
being a homeowner who sees a termite infestation in one corner of the
house but does nothing.
Eventually, the problem spreads, weakens the structure, and can cause the whole house to collapse.
Not‘fringe’ issues
Questions
remain about whether serious governance failures have been adequately
addressed, with critics arguing that law enforcement agencies risk being
perceived as a political instrument, undermining accountability and
sending a chilling message to dissenting voices.
Ordinary
Malaysians witnessing this cannot help but feel their concerns are being
dismissed while powerful figures and allies operate with impunity, with
allegedly corrupt politicians being fully acquitted.
If
this is considered “petty”, it is only in the sense that the prime
minister has redefined what matters, leaving systemic corruption and
abuse unchecked while public anger simmers.
It’s no longer
possible to claim corruption is limited to a small fringe. The armed
forces have been rocked by corruption probes involving top brass whose
actions undermine national security and trust in the military.
Beyond the military, Malaysia’s customs and enforcement agencies have faced scandals where smuggling syndicates and corrupt officers allegedly caused billions in leakages and illegal activities.
Immigration
enforcement has had multiple corruption allegations, too, including
officers arrested over “flying passport” schemes and visa‑related
misconduct. Vulnerabilities in systems meant to protect borders and
human rights are not petty issues.
When police, customs,
immigration, and defence officials - the people entrusted with national
security and law enforcement - face corruption scandals, it is not
fringe anger. It is public anger at a governance system that has failed
to protect ordinary citizens.
Rakyat feeling the pinch
Meanwhile, converts and controversial figures strain Malaysia’s delicate multicultural harmony.
Non-Muslims
face restrictions, and Orang Asli see their ancestral land rights
eroded. Unilateral conversions of minors anger Malaysians and divide
families. Ordinary citizens are left feeling that their voices, rights,
and cultural identities are under threat.
Even if the economy
grows on paper and exporters in sectors like electronics, rubber gloves,
and condoms report strong overseas sales, this doesn’t always translate
into better jobs and security for ordinary workers.
Many workers
feel their livelihoods are threatened by automation and low‑cost migrant
labour, with few high‑quality, sustainable jobs. These are issues that
growth figures alone won’t solve.
Environmental crises, from river
pollution to mismanaged rare earth projects, highlight serious
governance failures and the consequences of neglect.
In October, Sungai Perak around Gerik turned blue. We await the detailed mineral analysis; have the polluter(s) been identified and punished?
Fish died, and humans face risks. Are we supposed to wait indefinitely for an outcome? This is no petty issue.
The waters of Sungai Perak turning blue near Gerik
The
consequences of ignoring our anger are manifold: escalating social
tension, loss of trust, economic stagnation, silenced dissent, erosion
of harmony, and environmental collapse.
The 16th general election
could be decisive. Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, if fully
acquitted, could rise. Many may cling to Anwar, not because he’s
effective, but because the alternative seems worse.
So, the real anger is not a few. The majority feel unheard. Ignoring these issues risks deepening discontent and eroding trust.
Leadership is not just about encouraging investment. It is about making growth inclusive, fair, and sustainable.
Address grievances and deliver real solutions. It is essential for peace, prosperity, and survival, including Anwar’s.