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."
COMMENT - Dear Harapan, can you hear the song of angry men? By Yiswaree Palansamy
Sunday, July 12, 2026
Malaysiakini : Harapan took its loyal supporters for fools, believing its tired and
increasingly irrelevant battle cry and Nga's childish attempts to use Rosmah Mansor as a political diversion would still resonate.
It
threw every trick in the book at the campaign, yet kept pulling the
same rabbit out of the hat, an appeal that has long since lost its
potency with voters.
Even so, it seemed to believe that a token
effort would somehow deliver a landslide victory. Again, it took the
people of Johor for fools, only to face their seething wrath.
Unpacking the sentiments
As
a Johorean, I will attempt to unpack the sentiments that appear to have
shaped the state’s political mood. It is really not rocket science.
Voters are often far more practical than politicians give them credit
for.
The 1MDB narrative has lost much of its political mileage.
For years, the issue was the centrepiece of the opposition’s campaign
against BN, but the Johor results suggest that the issue no longer carries the same weight among many voters as it once did.
The
political silver bullet that was expected to end BN’s appeal appears to
have lost its impact. The old script is no longer producing the same
reaction.
Rosmah is no longer the figure that keeps voters awake
at night; instead, concerns have shifted towards what they perceive as
the arrogance of power.
Rosmah Mansor
The
fear factor has changed. The issue is less about past personalities and
more about whether those currently in power are seen as overconfident,
disconnected or taking voters for granted.
For many Johoreans,
bread-and-butter issues remain far more immediate than political
narratives. Jobs, wages, economic opportunities and the future prospects
of their children are concerns that cannot be solved through slogans or
campaign rhetoric.
A voter may tolerate political differences, but uncertainty about employment and livelihoods is a far more pressing matter.
Livid Indian voters
The Indian community’s support for Harapan appears to have also weakened very, very significantly.
The
fact that MIC, a party often written off as politically irrelevant
within the community, managed to retain or win seats, including in
contests against DAP, should serve as a wake-up call.
The message from some voters appears simple. It is not because they love BN, but it was “asalkan bukan Harapan”
(as long as it is not Harapan). When a party once considered
politically marginal can outperform expectations, it suggests a deeper
dissatisfaction that cannot be dismissed so simply.
Beyond
politics, voters also judge the government based on everyday realities,
particularly the state of public education and healthcare.
I have
received numerous complaints from government doctors and teachers
voicing frustrations with the government's problem-solving approach in
these matters.
They
requested anonymity, of course, because the government would rather
conduct a witch-hunt than actually address the problems mentioned.
These
are not abstract policy discussions; they are services that directly
affect families. When schools struggle and healthcare facilities remain
under pressure, voters naturally question whether political promises
have translated into meaningful improvements.
In the end, the
Johor election may have reflected a familiar political instinct. Voters
sometimes choose the villain they know over the friend they feel has
quietly betrayed their trust.
It is not necessarily an endorsement
of everything the old order represents, but rather a rejection of what
some voters perceive as disappointment, overpromising or a lack of
delivery from the alternative.
Lack of action on anti-corruption pledge
In
fact, there have been quiet conversations within some quarters of the
Indian community for a while now: yes, Najib "stole" money, but at least
he provided livelihoods.
When this sentiment starts translating into voter apathy, it signals that Harapan is in deep trouble.
The
fact that voters are willing to look past corruption of this scale
suggests that Harapan has not done itself any favours on the
anti-corruption front.
It
also implies that whatever gains people expected from a cleaner
government have failed to materialise in ways they can feel in their
daily lives.
This
is a telling admission. It suggests that, for a segment of voters,
corruption is not judged in the abstract but weighed against tangible
outcomes such as jobs, income, and opportunity.
If a leader seen
as corrupt is remembered as someone who delivered on that front, while a
government elected on a reform platform is seen as falling short
economically, then the anti-corruption argument alone loses its
persuasive power.
Disillusionment
of this kind rarely stays confined to one community; it tends to be a
warning sign of a broader erosion of trust that could shape voting
behaviour well beyond the immediate group where it first takes root.
The
lesson from Johor is perhaps uncomfortable for all sides. Voters may
forgive old mistakes, but they are far less forgiving when they feel
ignored.
The next litmus test in this? Negeri Sembilan state polls. All the best, Harapan.
Yiswaree Palansamy is a member of the Malaysiakini team.
COMMENT - Johor protest vote will wake Harapan up By Andrew Sia
Tuesday, July 07, 2026
Malaysiakini : Just two months ago, Zahid said PAS had traitors within, and that blocked cooperation with Umno.
So why are BN and PAS now in a loving embrace? It's as if there was a secret “political khalwat (close proximity)” between the parties, which has now become pregnant with meaning for all to see.
PAS
pretended to be “holy” and honest to fight bribery, but now
passionately embraces what it had slammed as a tainted party. What a
joke.
Vote BN to free Najib
Not only do we get PAS by voting BN. Another bonus is that it may lead to Najib Abdul Razak being freed!
His son Nazifuddin said that a major BN win in Johor will send a “strong signal” that the people “still cherish” his father and want to see the former premier receive a royal pardon.
This “upgrades” BN to a three-in-one product of shampoo and conditioner plus moisturiser.
The extra ooomph is an indirect endorsement by PAS of the felon Najib.
Ex-PM Najib Abdul Razak
Both
of them did another backroom deal before the 2018 election. At that
time, PAS fielded candidates in so many unwinnable seats, hoping to suck
away Malay votes from Pakatan Harapan.
For this “favour”, PAS allegedly received RM90 million from Umno.
But the move backfired spectacularly, and led to the splitting of Malay votes and the toppling of both Umno and Najib.
This
time in Johor, both PAS and Umno hope to consolidate the Malay vote
behind BN. But will voters approve of this twisted charade?
Damaged brand
Don't
forget that in the 2022 general election, PAS and Bersatu (Perikatan
Nasional) rode a “Green Wave” to big gains with their slogan “Prihatin, Bersih, Stabil” or "Caring, Clean, Stable".
PN
was touted as the cleaner, more religious option than Umno, which
carried the baggage of mega scandals of 1MDB, Felda and missing combat
ships.
But with PAS’ latest embrace of Umno, will that damage the Green Wave brand?
Wasn't it bad enough with Bersatu (the Malay word for united) now becoming berpecah (broken) after the expulsion of its former deputy Hamzah Zainudin?
Will Malay voters wake up to the double talk of PAS, which changes its stand as the political winds blow?
PAS
went from supporting DAP in 2013, to then getting “married” to Umno via
Muafakat Nasional in 2019. Then they broke up over PAS’ so-called
“infidelity” with “third party” Bersatu.
This love-hate relationship now sees them hugging each other again, casting aside the jilted lover of Muhyiddin Yassin’s party.
I can almost imagine PAS singing the song “Peaches and Herbs”:
I was a fool to ever leave your side, Me minus you is such a lonely ride, Reunited, and it feels so good, Reunited 'cause we understood, There's one perfect fit, And, sugar, this one is it.
Wounded Harapan
As for Harapan, political scientist Ong Kian Ming has predicted they will suffer a crushing defeat in Johor.
Harapan leader Anwar Ibrahim bent over backwards for over three years to please Umno and broke promises of reform.
PM Anwar Ibrahim campaigning for Harapan candidates in Johor
Supporters became angry, weakening Harapan. Then a well-fed reptile saw the chance to turn around and bite Anwar in Johor.
As the Malays say, “padan muka” or "serves you right".
Bersama underdogs
This gives space for Parti Bersama Malaysia to capture “disillusioned voters”.
Not
only from those exasperated with Harapan's failures, but also from
those disenchanted with the cynical games of both PAS and Umno.
Bersama has succeeded in fielding 15 candidates in Johor, barely a month after being taken over by two former PKR leaders.
The
candidates were not chosen for political bootlicking, but based on
merit as self-made professionals, businesspeople who want real change.
The team is running on a shoestring budget, using unpaid volunteers and a rented truck as a mobile campaign platform.
This is because they refuse to take “political donations” from tycoons, which will come with demands for favours later.
“How are big campaign events of other parties being funded?” asked Bersama leader Rafizi Ramli in a ceramah.
In contrast, the party will reveal how it gets its funding and how it's spent, starting with the Johor election.
Rotan naughty kids
But why vote for Bersama when it only has modest aims to be a vocal opposition in Johor?
Because even if Harapan wins big in Johor, its power is limited as the palace has the final say.
As former Umno leader Puad Zarkashi claimed, “Johor Umno is controlled by the palace in making decisions.”
Indeed,
even though Umno won a landslide victory of 40 of 56 seats in the last
state election, the party's choice of menteri besar was blocked by the
palace.
A Harapan win will only give sinking Anwar another breath of air, and lull him into thinking “all is fine, don't change things.”
It's better to choose Bersama as a risk-free “protest vote” to wake up Harapan.
Forget about the Islamic state fearmongering, as the palace is moderate and PAS is only contesting 11 seats anyway.
A
strong protest vote against Harapan is like giving a firm whack of the
rotan on a naughty boy's backside to make him change for the better.
Don't
worry, Harapan will still be there. But I hope that after a rude
“wake-up call” in Johor, the coalition will do real radical reforms in
its last year of power.
Then voters can decide if a new and improved “Harapan Baru” is still worth supporting.
COMMENT | Bravo, Guan Eng and Pua By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Monday, July 06, 2026
Malaysiakini : I have no idea why Lim and Pua would be singled out
now, which should have been a time for inclusive political optics since
the rakyat obviously approve of the completion of the LRT3 project.
The
quote that opens this piece is evidence that there was nothing done by
Lim and Pua which was not approved by former prime minister Dr Mahathir
Mohamad.
Former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad
Keep
in mind that it does not matter whether this was a cabinet decision or
not, because the old maverick has publicly said that Lim could not and would not do anything without his approval.
“So, how come he is said to be the one with the power? He had no power,” the former prime minister said.
Furthermore,
when it comes to the benefit of the rakyat, the old maverick has said
it was Lim “... who proposed for the federal government to give a
one-off payment of RM400 million to Kelantan, which was facing financial
trouble. Terengganu and Kedah, two other Malay-majority states, were
also given RM200 million each.”
“These two states were not even
Harapan states. They were the opposition, and they were Malay states.
But he (Lim) knew that there were many financial problems there,”
Mahathir had said.
No one stops the gravy train
Now
what we have to remember is that these kinds of dynamics always play
out because the system is predicated on rewarding the sometimes-criminal
behaviour of the crony class, as the old maverick reminds us.
Former prime minister Najib Abdul Razak
“You
can’t do that (terminate contracts under former prime minister Najib
Abdul Razak’s administration) easily; you have to make considerations.
“Although the contractors may have bribed the (then) prime minister, he had given up a portion of his profit,” Mahathir said.
The
problem with our tax ringgit is that its uses, which are supposed to be
for the rakyat, rarely work out that way because of the so-called
“drainage”.
Bureaucrats
are oftentimes indifferent or complicit in these leakages. Former prime
minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob admitted that nobody in the vast
bureaucracy had any idea about the effectiveness of the government’s many poverty alleviation programmes.
“Many
ministries had programmes on poverty alleviation, but there was no
specific monitoring of their effectiveness,” Ismail said.
Former prime minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob
Monitoring
these programmes does not mean there would automatically be
transparency. This is because many of these programmes are part of the
gravy train driven by bureaucrats, political operatives, and their
various proxies.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim also recently
lamented the abuse of bumiputera loans, which tells rational Malaysians
everything we need to know about the average majority of rakyat who are
screwed over by the system, which has nothing to do with non-Malay
political operatives.
And let us be very clear, not only did the old maverick threaten to fire Lim a couple of times, but he also got into a public spat with Pua, labelling him (in a roundabout way) as arrogant.
The
response from these two men demonstrates that there were tensions
between the crony class and public servants who believed it was their
job to safeguard the public interest.
Theplutocratic class
Meanwhile,
PKR rabble rouser Hassan Abdul Karim has said that not only has there
been a return of the crony class, but now we have the Mahakaya.
You can discover the types of Remora capitalists (as I refer to them) in Hassan’s warning, but pay attention to the third type: “These people seem to enjoy immunity and cannot be touched due to the 3R ban.”
The Pasir Gudang MP also noted their business dealings, even though this was expressly forbidden by the Federal Constitution.
Pasir Gudang MP Hassan Abdul Karim
And Mahathir did have his scraps with this type of class back in the day. As reported by The Independent, “In the meantime, the government is waging all-out war on the rulers.”
“Civil
servants have been told to seek the prime minister’s permission before
seeing the king; state governments are under orders to refuse business
favours to their rulers.
“Religious teachers have been encouraged to comment on the un-Islamic behaviour of the supposed guardians of Islam.”
I want to be very clear. I am not saying that the party Lim and Pua represent is not linked in any way to the plutocratic class.
Indeed, it would be disingenuous to make that claim. It is no accident that the DAP got its moniker “Development Action Party”.
But
the reality is that, from public records and their responses, it is
evident that both men operating under the system they were under chose
to safeguard public interests, or at the very least attempted to do so.
We
can have a discussion about the numbers behind these kinds of projects,
but to further a specific type of narrative by singling out these two
is beyond the pale.
Najib gets his reputation laundered while Lim
and Pua get smeared as people who do not have the interests of the
rakyat at heart.
By not responding to these types of
criticisms, the only thing the DAP is doing is normalising narratives
that will damage its credibility with its base.
COMMENT - How to interpret the LRT3 fiscal controversy By Mariam Mokhtar
Friday, July 03, 2026
Malaysiakini : Unsurprisingly, competing political narratives quickly
surfaced around the LRT3 completion, with various camps seeking to
emphasise the roles played by their preferred leaders, Najib Abdul Razak
or Anwar Ibrahim.
Selangor ruler Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah
cautioned against any party attempting to claim sole credit and stated
that the original proposal for the LRT3 project had stemmed from his own
concerns about the daily commute faced by the rakyat.
At the same time, the royal statement also highlighted that during Lim Guan Eng’s tenure as finance minister, the project cost was reduced
and parts of the plan were revised, with fewer stations and train cars,
which critics characterised as reducing the overall “size” of the
project.
Two narratives
So, we are left with two clear narratives.
One
says that multiple administrations contributed to a successful public
transport project. The other argues that key decisions during the
rationalisation phase reduced the project’s original scope.
To
some people, the word “cuts” sounds simple and negative, as if something
was taken away; but in big infrastructure projects, things are not that
simple.
A change in cost or design can mean many things:
adjusting the plan to match real demand, fixing earlier cost estimates
that were too high, or changing contracts to stop future cost increases.
So,
what is termed a “cut” in politics may actually be something else in
finance, like a correction. Big projects like LRT3 rarely move in a
straight line. They evolve step by step.
First,
a plan is approved based on forecasts. Then construction starts. Then
real costs start to appear. Then problems and overruns become clear.
Then decisions are made to fix the situation.
By
the time correction happens, the project is already partly locked in,
and that is the stage where difficult decisions must be made. Continue
and let costs grow further. Or step in and control it.
Most people look at this as a political issue, whereas the real issue is how the contracts are designed.
Moreexpensive, higher fees
In
the original model, the project delivery partner was paid based on the
total value of the project, and that creates a simple problem.
If
the project becomes more expensive, fees can increase. This may not
necessarily be corruption, but it is a system that can encourage higher costs over time.
So
when the system was changed to fixed-price contracting, that mattered.
It was not just paperwork, but a way to control future spending. That is
what fiscal discipline actually looks like.
This problem is not unique to Malaysia. In the United Kingdom, the HS2 high-speed rail project has also faced ballooning costs, redesigns, delays, and scope changes.
Parts
have been reduced or reconsidered as costs became too high. Not because
anyone “failed”, but because large infrastructure projects often cost
more than originally expected.
So, when that happens, governments must adjust.
With
the LRT3, the disagreement is not really about whether it should exist.
It does exist and the disagreement is about what certain decisions
mean.
One view says that reducing scope means the project was
weakened. Another view says that reducing scope means costs were brought
under control.
Both views sound reasonable, but they lead to very different conclusions about responsibility.
Nota simple story
Big
infrastructure projects are not one decision, but many decisions over
many years, so we should not treat them as one simple story.
There are different stages: approval, construction, adjustment
and completion. Each stage involves different people. Each has
different pressures. Thus, each stage should be judged differently.
The most important question is not who approved the project, or who completed it, or who inherited it.
The most important question is this: When costs started rising, were decisions
made early enough to prevent bigger financial damage later? Because in
public finance, the biggest risk is not change, but waiting too long to
change.
No one likes changes in big projects. They are hugely controversial and often criticised; but if no changes are made when costs rise, the problem can worsen.
Regrettably, the public pays for it later; through higher debt, higher taxes, or when other services are reduced.
That is the real trade-off.
The LRT3 line is now complete and that is good. However, completion should not stop questions.
We still need to ask how decisions
were made along the way. Not to blame individuals for political
reasons, but to understand whether public money is being managed
properly.
In the end, fiscal discipline is not about political narratives or competing claims of credit.
It
is about whether difficult decisions are made early enough to prevent
problems from becoming crises, or whether political narratives later
turn responsibility into blame.
What will the next federal government look like? By Murray Hunter
Thursday, July 02, 2026
Murray Hunter : Too be sure, no one can safely predict the actual outcome of the
Johor State election. There are too many factors involved. However, the
nominations last Saturday provide UMNO with a great electoral advantage.
After Johor is Negeri Sembilan which is currently ruled by a minority
Pakatan Harapan government, after UMNO withdrew support. Negeri Sembilan
will be a very fair test of voter sentiment within the southern half of
the peninsula.
The crucial question that will be answered in the
coming two state elections will be if PH and UMNO are better off running
solo. Secondly the two state elections will show the DAP what options
the party really has. Will their disaster in Sabah be repeated is the
crucial test for them.
There have been many signs that major
political parties will change alliances, based upon the Johor and Negeri
Sembilan results. We have already seen PAS calling for voters to choose
UMNO, if PAS is not running a candidate in the seat during the Johor
campaign.
Johor will also test the one month old Bersama Party led
by ex-PKR deputy president Rafizi Ramli. They are presently an unknown
quantity. Bersama is contesting 15 seats in Johor.
The key to
watch in Johor is whether UMNO can do better than the 40 seats it had in
the last assembly, and whether Bersama can be taken seriously.
So, what will the next federal parliament look like?
To answer this question this far out, requires some assumptions and guess work based upon trends that can be observed.
Its
most likely that PAS could win up to 50 seats, cannibalizing seats from
Bersatu. Some Bersatu seats were lent to Bersatu for GE15 and PAS wants
them back. Amanah could also be eaten up in the coming election, some
of their seats going back to PAS.
PH is in a quandary. Many
activities that have made PH unpopular actually were undertaken by rogue
parts of the bureaucracy. However, PH will most likely pay for these
activities electorally. This is going to leave the DAP with fewer seats,
maybe with some going to the new Bersama party. PKR’s own electoral
research tells the story, unless something drastic happens.
UMNO
is a big question mark, which Johor, Negeri Sembilan, and Melaka will
answer. If UMNO does well in the south of the Peninsula, this could mean
that in a general election that UMNO could win up to 40-50 seats,
particularly if Bersatu performs poorly. Hamzah’s new movement is an
unknown.
Who will form the next government?
If
the voting scenario above occurs, PAS will be in the best position to
form a government in coalition with other parties. The most obvious is
UMNO (Barisan Nasional). This could give this grouping somewhere close
to 100 seats.
The remains of PKR, which could be around a dozen seats could allow PAS/PN to have a simple majority.
Its
well known that Ahmad Zahid Hamidi wants to take up the mantle of being
PM. However, many dismiss this for a number of reasons (proficiency in
English, etc.). Anwar could with agreement of PAS and UMNO take on a
second term, although its more likely he may take on a position as a
mentor-minister. There are other scenarios which are best to explain
later.
The ‘deep state’ elements want an UMNO controlled
government. Otherwise, a government with UMNO playing a powerful role.
However, there is a group of ‘professionals’ within PAS that want to rid
the government of such artifacts. They want to ‘save Malaysia’ and
bring back good governance. The more conservative grouping in PAS want
to play a ‘backroom role’ in any future government.
Under such as
scenario, the DAP and the small number of seats Bersama may win will be
banished to the opposition benches in parliament and not heard from.
One
can expect that most Sabah MPs in the two blocks Wawasan and GRS will
support the new government in exchange for positions and conditions. GPS
will decide on what is best for Sarawak.
This scenario has a high
possibility looking at the political environment now. After the Johor
state election this scenario could be re-evaluated as to its potential
reality.
COMMENT - Is Anwar better for non-Malays, Malaysia? By P Gunasegaram
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Malaysiakini : A third party is already strongly allied with PAS, and also a PN member, Parti Wawasan Negara, led by Hamzah Zainudin.
He exited with 19 MPs from Muhyiddin Yassin’s Bersatu - leaving the latter with just six MPs, a dispute with PAS, and probably on its way out.
Malaysiakini
reported: “Of those 23 seats (not contested by PAS), 13 are held by BN,
nine by Pakatan Harapan, and one by Muda. PAS, which currently controls
PN, has confirmed previously that it had been in talks with Umno to form an electoral pact to avoid multi-cornered fights in the state election.”
PAS deputy president Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man has also instructed party members to vote for BN where PN is not contesting, which will be those 23 seats.
PAS deputy president Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man
It
will defer a decision on whether it will support Bersatu in the state
polls. PAS has been at loggerheads with Bersatu and has stated that it
will not work with them.
A forerunner
This
electoral pact with Umno is very significant. It is likely a forerunner
to similar arrangements for the remaining general and state elections,
with PAS making way for Umno in states where it is weak and Umno
returning the favour.
PAS is also likely to make adjustments for Wawasan Negara,
whose leader Hamzah has sworn allegiance and expressed gratitude to the
redoubtable PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang - the one who might decide
the next prime minister - with Hamzah a possible candidate.
In the
Malay heartland states of Perlis, Kedah, Kelantan and Terengganu, PAS
will lead the charge. In Selangor, it might be a mix of Umno/PAS, while
in the other states Umno will be dominant.
Hamzah Zainudin with PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang (right)
Thus, Malay support across Peninsular Malaysia will be apportioned to the two - Bersatu is a non-entity; PKR is fading away.
It
is quite a sobering and frightening wake-up call for Harapan,
especially PKR. However, it may be too late for them as they continue to
slumber while their opponents are toiling through the night to solidify
their positions.
They seem quite oblivious to the twin threats
posed by PAS/Umno on one combined flank and the newly emergent, dynamic
and hard-working Parti Bersama Malaysia.
The Bersama factor
Bersama is led by ex-MPs and former PKR top guns, the tireless duo of Rafizi Ramli and Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad.
While
the duo has travelled up and down the country to campaign, and put up a
credible list to contest 15 state seats in Johor, Prime Minister Anwar
Ibrahim is rather lacklustre in contrast, preferring to spend valuable
campaign time on overseas trips, this time to Russia.
While
Anwar’s PKR has previously relied on non-Malay support to get many
candidates through, this seems to have evaporated with Bersama likely to
take a lot away from PKR.
DAP’s
less-than-promising stance has resulted in many calling it names -
unfairly perhaps - but their inability to push back against
non-Malay-unfriendly moves not just by Umno but PKR itself has lost it
significant support already.
The unfriendly moves include
regulations and poor decisions over places of worship, diminished
opportunities for deserving non-Malays, and the constant playing of the
race and religion card, especially by Umno Youth.
The moon and keris rise
In
contrast, Bersama’s promise to work for all races and all downtrodden,
with what amounts to a mini-manifesto on its website, continues to
attract attention and seems to resonate well with younger voters not
shackled by the baggage of the past.
It has a promising chance of
taking seats, especially from PKR and poses a threat to DAP as well. It
could cost DAP marginal seats if the youth decide to make a change in
call.
With the PAS moon on the ascendant and the Umno keris rising
in a coordinated attack, not wasting efforts by fighting each other,
Malay support for PKR is likely to be all but extinguished this round.
With
Bersama a threat to urban Harapan dominance and an Umno/PAS pact in the
rural areas and other strongly Malay areas, Harapan and especially PKR
may suffer a pincer attack which will put it out of commission at GE 16.
DAP
may not get the 40 MP seats it has now. If it has any pride, it will
languish in opposition, eschewing a place in the new coalition.
With the outlook for PKR and Amanah bleak, it’s hard to see how Anwar’s Madani government, sans Umno, can rule again.
It
is a plaintive lesson in the importance of choosing friends carefully
and keeping them at arm’s length if they are less than trustworthy.
One forgets at their own peril that Umno is a master of being in government, even if they do not have the voting power.
To
answer the heading for this article, it does not matter anymore. Almost
certainly Anwar will not be given the chance to form the next
government - that privilege is likely to move to PN/BN, the coalition
most likely to get the most number of seats.
Once they get the
privilege, it’s a done deal with some horse-trading with the states
across the South China Sea, Sabah and Sarawak, who are likely to go with
the majority decision in the peninsula.
I
don’t think Islamic law will be introduced for all - apart from the
impact on foreign direct investment and sentiment, some 40 percent of
the population is non-Muslim.
It is a move which won’t be
supported by Sabah and Sarawak. They won’t get a two-thirds majority in
the Dewan Rakyat for the laws to be passed.
Sadly, neither Malays
nor non-Malays, east or west - all Malaysians in other words - will
benefit because the old guard with their deadwood, decrepit politicians
and patronage practices will still be in power. Nothing will change for
now.
For change, we may have to support somebody else who is in it
for the long term. Yes, Bersama, hopefully they get enough support to
stay and fight for another day. No, I am not making any predictions -
let whatever comes be a surprise.
Najib and his fair-weather friends By R Nadeswaran
Monday, June 29, 2026
Malaysiakini : Two years later, on July 28, 2020, Najib was convicted in the
High Court on seven counts of criminal breach of trust, money
laundering, and abuse of position involving RM42 million from SRC
International. He was sentenced to 12 years in prison and fined RM210
million.
The Court of Appeal in 2021 upheld the
ruling, branding his actions a “national embarrassment.” The Federal
Court dismissed his final appeal in 2022, sealing his fate.
Yet
Umno, under Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, refused to let go. For years, the party
rallied under the slogan “Justice for Najib,” insisting he had not
received a fair trial.
Umno president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi
Zahid himself demanded “fair justice” from the judiciary, while leaders and grassroots repeated the mantra long after the courts had spoken.
Pardon and house arrest bid
In 2024, Najib secured partial relief when the Pardons Board halved his sentence to six years and slashed his fine to RM50 million.
This
emboldened his supporters, who then pursued a controversial bid for
house arrest, claiming a “royal addendum order”. But the courts rejected
the argument, ruling it had no constitutional basis.
By April 2026, Najib’s lawyers withdrew the appeal, effectively ending the house arrest saga.
Najib’s
son, Nizar, likened his father’s imprisonment to that of South African
anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela’s experience and described it as God’s way of elevating his father to a higher level.
Nizar Najib
Today,
Najib remains in Kajang Prison, serving his reduced term. No fresh
pardon application has been filed, despite speculation earlier this
year.
The once-thunderous “Justice for Najib” campaign has tapered off, its rallying cry muted by legal closure and political fatigue.
The
irony is stark: Najib has already received clemency, yet his supporters
continue to demand “justice.” What began as a defiant movement has
dwindled into silence, exposing the limits of political loyalty when
confronted with judicial finality.
Another judicial rebuke
Then,
in December last year, the Kuala Lumpur High Court found Najib guilty
on 25 charges and imposed a 15-year prison term plus a RM11.4 billion
fine.
The sentence will begin after he completes his reduced six-year SRC International sentence.
If
the Court of Appeal’s remark that Najib was a “national embarrassment”
was a rebuke, judge Collin Lawrence Sequerah, who presided over the 1MDB
trial, wrote
in his 809-page judgment (released June 16, 2026) that the scale of
Najib’s plunder “made Attila the Hun look like a choirboy by
comparison.”
Judge Collin Lawrence Sequerah
These
damning remarks underscored the unprecedented magnitude of the scandal,
which the judge described as one of the world’s largest kleptocratic
episodes.
Since then, there has been a golden
silence. Perhaps, with state elections looming, Zahid and his Umno
cohorts decided that bringing Najib’s name into the fray would be more
of a liability than of an asset in the lead-up and campaigning.
Even
Najib’s staunchest ally, who benefited from Najib’s generosity, the
MIC, last January held special prayers in Batu Caves with hundreds of
people wearing white shirts bearing the MIC party logo who chanted “Hidup Najib” (Long Live Najib).
Prime
Minister Anwar Ibrahim, who has maintained an elegant silence, ignoring
such calls despite being badgered over the past eight years, has not
yielded.
But when he was in the opposition, he asked
those calling for a royal pardon for Najib to first read through the
judges’ decisions in the SRC International case, which sent him to jail.
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim
“Read
first, how many millions (were taken), which account they went to, how
many diamonds were bought. Once we read and know, then we won’t defend
(Najib),” Anwar said.
Itwas never about Najib
So, has Najib been forgotten or written off by Umno?
When Najib’s conviction was upheld, Zahid demanded “fair justice” (whatever this means) for Najib.
His
rallying cry - “Justice for Najib” - became a partisan slogan, repeated
endlessly by party loyalists even after the courts had spoken.
For
Zahid, Najib’s plight was political capital, a tool to galvanise the
grassroots and project Umno as the defender of its embattled leader.
The contrasting voices within reveal the hollowness of the “Justice for Najib” campaign.
It was never a universal principle within Umno - only a shield wielded by some, while others quietly distanced themselves.
Supporters
of former prime minister Najib Abdul Razak gather outside the Palace of
Justice during proceedings in his 1MDB trial on Dec 26, 2025
The
“Justice for Najib” campaign was loud, relentless, and choreographed -
but it was never truly about Najib. It was about Umno’s survival and the
political dividends his plight could yield.
Zahid
and the party elite wrapped themselves in his cause when it suited them,
demanding “fair justice” as a rallying cry to boost the grassroots.
The
same leaders who once thundered in his defence now pivoted to other
agendas, leaving Najib to serve his reduced term in Kajang Prison. If
his appeal on the 1MDB case fails, he will serve another 15 years.
Najib’s
allies appear to be fair-weather friends. They used his predicament as a
shield against criticism, a banner to rally the faithful, and a
bargaining chip in their own political manoeuvring.
But when the slogan no longer served the party’s interests, they abandoned it - and Najib.
His
fate illustrates a deeper reality of Malaysian politics: loyalty is
conditional, and justice is often invoked only when it aligns with
power.
The
silence of his comrades these days is the clearest proof that “Justice
for Najib” was never about justice at all. It was a slogan of
convenience, discarded once it no longer fit the narrative.
Najib remains behind bars, but the campaign that once roared in his name has withered into whispers.
His
story is no longer about innocence or guilt - it is about how quickly
political loyalty evaporates. And in that silence, Najib stands alone, a
reminder that in politics, even the loudest allies can turn out to be
the feeblest friends.
COMMENT - Johor more a bellwether for DAP than Anwar By Commander S THAYAPARAN (Retired) Royal Malaysian Navy
Malaysiakini : Anecdotally speaking, I know many non-Muslims who are fearful of the
Green Wave and would rather just vote for the lesser of two evils, and
they believe DAP is still the best chance they have to ensure that their
interests are taken care of.
They would rather the non-Muslims
not rock the Madani boat. And believe me, I have much sympathy for that
sentiment. As a long-time DAP supporter told me, “… there is a time to
rant, and there is a time to vote”.
Of course, this is why things never change or rather, political parties believe that they need never change.
Building empowerment
This
is also why Parti Sosialis Malaysia's S Arutchelvan, arguing for a
progressive bloc, writes – “We need to stand to put our policies
forward. We need to show that we are talking about systemic change, not
just changing leaders or parties. We need to build empowerment at the
grassroots; the very work that PSM has consistently done.”
S Arutchelvan
It
is not that political operatives do not want to sell progressive ideas
to their base, even though they live progressive/liberal lifestyles and
the religious bureaucracy does not hassle them; it is that they want to
keep existing narratives alive so they can profit from them politically.
Arutchelvan
is correct when he points out that PAS and DAP use racial narratives,
but more often than not, the latter is a defence against the former.
Increasingly,
when non-Malays vote, they vote because they want their communities to
be left alone. Every time a non-Malay votes, it is in the expectation
that whoever they vote for will constrain the religious and racial
excesses of mainstream Malay politics. This involves issues from closing
down non-Muslim businesses to unilateral conversions to destroying
places of worship.
We are really not talking about deep policy
issues but merely democratic instincts of self-preservation. This is
probably why non-Malays latch onto any Muslim personality who makes the
right noises about issues they consider sacred. This is why the
non-Malay vote is considered secure in the Pakatan Harapan coalition.
The mandarins of the DAP must be really grateful for this election because it puts the kibosh on the whole deadline thing.
Elections have consequences
The
Malay community has choices that non-Muslims do not. Now, while these
choices may be more of the same, the reality is that they can punish
incumbents and political parties that claim to represent them.
This
is why folks say elections have consequences. Malay power brokers
understand that it really does not matter what they do because the DAP
support base will not punish DAP, unlike the Malay majority polity, who
have demonstrated their willingness to shift their support to whatever
reactionary Malay/Muslim party they think best serves their interests.
But
keep in mind they also thought about this in MCA. What destroyed MCA
was not DAP’s propaganda but the acceptance by a large voting
demographic of the Chinese community that no representation in the
government is better than MCA representation.
This is why we get
folks talking about how DAP makes a better opposition for the non-Malays
than when they actually occupy seats of power.
The online
harassment of third-party candidates, as well as the demeaning of
so-called mosquito parties and outliers speaking against the double talk
of DAP, is a testament that the non-Muslims have shot themselves in the
foot when it comes to viable alternatives to legacy parties.
This is an ethnocracy where all these proud defenders of bangsa (race) and agama
(religion) run to DAP and the non-Malays when they need our help and
then take a dump on us when they feel confident enough that they have
suckered their community into voting for them again.
Afraid to take chances
What
we are dealing with here is a new political terrain where there are no
truly progressive political parties in the mainstream establishment.
Yes,
we could hope for independent candidates and outlier coalitions, but
people are too afraid to take any kind of chances, which is what these
legacy parties are banking on. This is about fear.
Prime Minister
Anwar Ibrahim is very well aware that although on social media,
non-Malays rant and rave, the reality is that when it comes to the
ballot box, they will vote for his factotums because they believe that
flawed as he is, there is no alternative.
PM Anwar Ibrahim
For
people I have spoken to who are dissatisfied with the way things are,
they do not really blame Anwar. They blame DAP for not speaking up.
After all, Anwar, they say, is taking care of his community, but why is
DAP kowtowing to everything?
This, of course, directly opposes how
Perikatan Nasional voters think. They have seen Malay politicians
brought down by the will of the people and by factional ideological
blocs.
They understand that the individual is less important than
the political parties that they support or from which they can withdraw
their support.
More the pity that the non-Muslims do not have this advantage.
COMMENT - This was never about Puad By Mariam Mokhtar
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Malaysiakini : Within hours of Puad’s allegations regarding royal influence in Johor
political affairs, the discussion shifted with familiar speed. Police reports were made. Investigations began. Public debate hardened.
Almost
immediately, the focus moved away from the constitutional question,
which is the central issue he raised, and shifted instead to his
motives.
Motive besides the point
Was he bitter? Was he denied political reward? Was this internal party frustration repackaged as a principle?
This
was never about whether Puad was right or wrong. It was about whether
the constitutional question he raised could be openly discussed at all.
What is striking is not disagreement, but how disagreement is handled.
Instead of confronting the constitutional issue, the instinct is to dissect the man himself: ambition, resentment, opportunism, disloyalty.
The individual becomes the story. The institution vanishes.
This
may be politically effective, but it is constitutionally corrosive
because it teaches repeatedly that sensitive questions are not answered.
They are neutralised.
Johor
is widely discussed in public reporting as a state where the boundary
between constitutional form and political reality is not always easy to
separate.
Past
changes in menteri besar leadership and public statements from both
political and royal figures have reinforced a perception that political
outcomes cannot always be understood through electoral arithmetic alone.
Whether
one sees this as constitutional discretion or political influence
depends on interpretation. But what matters is this: the lack of shared
clarity has become part of the political environment itself.
Thus, where clarity is absent, perception fills the space.
Silence doesn’t resolve anything
It is essential to separate two things.
First,
the truth or falsity of any individual allegation, including those made
in current political disputes, is a matter for evidence, institutions,
and due process.
Second, and more important here, is the
structural issue: how constitutional questions are handled in public
life once they are raised.
Our discussion is about the second.
History shows that when direct criticism becomes difficult, it does not vanish, but it changes form.
Jonathan
Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travels” is a classic example. Beneath its
fictional worlds and absurd rulers lay a sharp critique of political
systems and human authority, expressed in metaphor because direct
language carried risk in its time.
Allegory became the language of survival.
Then, as now, people turned to satire and allegory not out of comfort, but out of caution and self-protection.
In
recent years, individuals who raised sensitive political or
constitutional questions faced investigations or legal consequences.
The case of activist Ali Abdul Jalil, who later left Malaysia and sought asylum in Sweden, is frequently cited in this context.
Walking on eggshells
Whether one agrees with his views is secondary.
The
constitutional issue is the perception such cases create: that certain
topics carry consequences beyond normal political disagreement.
When that perception spreads, speech does not disappear. It narrows.
Ordinary
citizens who raise complaints involving powerful individuals or
sensitive institutions often find themselves unsure of the consequences
of speaking out, not only about their complaint, but about themselves.
What matters is not consistency, but perception: that some lines feel riskier to cross than others.
And where that perception takes hold, participation shrinks.
In pre-revolutionary France, criticism of royal authority could lead to imprisonment or accusations of treason.
The problem was not only suppression itself, but the absence of safe, legitimate channels for grievance.
Over time, unresolved pressure did not disappear. It accumulated.
Systems that cannot absorb criticism do not become stronger. They become brittle.
Tensions will continue unless resolved
This is why the Puad episode matters, not because of Puad himself, but because of the pattern it reflects.
A constitutional question is raised. It becomes personal. Then moral. Then political. Then it disappears.
The
immediate issue is contained. The underlying ambiguity remains, but it
will return, disguised in another case and another controversy.
Puad
may be right. He may be wrong. He may be acting from conviction or
calculation, but none of that resolves the issue, because the problem is
not the individual.
It is the absence of a shared, explicit understanding of how constitutional monarchy and political authority interact in practice.
Yang di-Pertuan Agong Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar opening a session of Parliament On Jan 26, 2026
So,
until that question is addressed openly, this will repeat with
different names and different triggers, albeit with the same structure.
Constitutional ambiguity does not disappear when avoided, but it returns when tested.
The moment the debate became centred on Puad the man, the constitutional question had already been lost.
COMMENT - Selangor exco's low-price ploy is a costly political interruption by R Nadeswaran
Malaysiakini : Restaurants serving warm or iced water use 25 cubic centimetre
containers, dropping the cost per serving to a microscopic 0.000735 sen.
Yet, consumers are routinely charged 60 sen (in some places RM1 or more) for plain water or iced water.
Where is the justification? There is no justification - only the reality that consumers are charged simply because the market allows it.
Who
decides the percentage of profits a trader can make? Experience has
shown that this is impossible for various reasons. The mathematics of
overheads further dismantles the argument for price caps.
Standardising
profit margins has proven, time and again, to be an unworkable policy.
There is no law - written or otherwise - that compels the uniform
pricing of goods or services.
Successive governments have wisely refrained from interfering in the free market, allowing supply and demand to dictate prices.
Except
for a handful of essential goods (sugar, cooking oil, flour, etc),
prices remain unregulated. (During festive seasons, a dozen other items
go on the list.) Teh tarik and black tea have never made that list.
The
principle is simple - the consumer decides. If you want to drink your
tea in a conducive environment where you want to be noticed by the
Joneses, or pretend to be in the class of “nouveau riche” (those who became rich recently), be prepared to pay the price.
But if price is a factor, by all means pull up a stool and sit under the withering sun at the stall.
Selangor govt’s pledge
According to a report by The Star
two days ago, the Selangor government said that local councils will be
tasked with ensuring food court traders maintain reasonable prices,
justified by the financial support already given to them.
“Local
authorities will be directed to monitor food court operators and traders
renting premises under council management, with a focus on pricing
practices and compliance with existing regulations,” state Local
Government and Tourism exco Ng Suee Lim said at a press conference on
the sidelines of the Selangor state assembly sitting in Shah Alam last
week.
Yes, anyone can monitor prices, but what action can be taken against those who increase prices?
Ng Suee Lim
The
trader can charge what he likes if he complies with the requirement
that the consumer knows the price he must pay. Hence, a price tag or a
list of prices (including restaurant menus) will suffice.
So, Ng’s charade of “stop the price increases” must stop. It is best left to the adage “caveat emptor” - let the buyer beware.
Ng
said the state’s order was not intended to impose price controls but
rather to encourage ethical business practices and prevent excessive
profiteering, particularly in premises that benefit from public support
and subsidised facilities.
“If operating costs are reduced through
government assistance, they should keep prices under control and, where
possible, offer more affordable prices to attract customers,” Ng said
when winding up the debate at the assembly.
Then again, who and what defines “excessive profiteering”?
Does state govt have the power?
While
councils can issue summonses for littering or hygiene breaches, only
gazetted officers from the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Ministry
have the statutory power to investigate and prosecute price-related
offences. Council staff are legally toothless on this issue.
But
then again, who can forget Ng’s role on the issue involving the
privatisation of street parking in four districts in Selangor? Didn’t he
utter a series of fibs to defend the unpopular decision before the
truth emerged?
If
Ng believes this announcement will placate Selangorians, he is gravely
mistaken. The rakyat have not forgotten the past debacles.
This
sudden concern over prices feels less like economic policy and more like
a desperate attempt at damage control to distract from a sinking
credibility scorecard.
When demands for the four DAP exco members
to explain their roles in approving such draconian regulations are met
with resounding silence, grandstanding about food prices rings hollow.
Grandstanding not working
Ultimately,
the state’s grandstanding on the so-called “excessive profiteering” is
not a genuine consumer protection strategy; it is a populist distraction
that undermines market confidence and insults the intelligence of the
people.
In a free market, price tags and menus aren’t just labels -
they are built-in safeguards. They empower consumers with the
transparency they need, making regulation redundant.
By posturing
over a 60 sen glass of water while remaining muted on substantive
governance failures, Ng is not defending the poor; he is merely doing it
for the headlines.
Selangorians are knowledgeable. They
understand that a government that cannot manage parking, forestry, or
religious harmony has no business dictating what a stall should charge
for rice and curry.
If the exco truly wants to prevent "excessive"
behaviour, it should start by curbing its own excessive appetite for
populist distractions.
Because when silence falls on real issues,
and noise rises on non-issues, the ballot box has a sharp way of
restoring balance - and that is one price the politicians know that they
cannot afford to ignore.
What’s next? Halal train seats?
Halal toilets? Halal blood donation? Will some people stoke fear of
pork molecules in non-Muslim blood?
Back
in 2012, fast-food chain A&W rebranded its “Coney Dog” and “Root
Beer” to “Chicken Coney” and “RB” as the Islamic Development Department
(Jakim) deemed that certain words would “confuse” Muslims.
Yet
A&W had been in Malaysia since 1963, and Muslims drank root beer for
over 50 years, knowing full well it had nothing intoxicating, except
too much sugar.
In fact, the Malay dessert of fermented tapioca, or tapai, probably has more alcohol.
In
2017, a “halal laundry” in Muar refused to serve non-Muslims. Johor
ruler Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar, as the head of state of Islamic
matters, called this “extreme” and a “narrow mindset”.
He pointed out that ringgit notes may have also come in contact with pork or liquor.
Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar
“Will the government then have to produce Muslim-friendly money?” asked His Majesty.
“Think for yourselves. What about seats in public places that may have been licked by dogs? This will never end.”
Islamisation of Selangor
Some
people grumble online that Selangor is slipping into an Islamic state
by stealth - not via PAS but under the so-called “moderate” Pakatan
Harapan.
In an earlier column, I wrote that the PKR-led state government had scored three own goals before the coming elections - restrictions to temples/churches, secretly selling forest land cheaply to cronies, and claiming there was “no land” for a public hospital in Petaling Jaya.
The
fourth own goal is that “No Pork, No Lard” signs may be banned in
Selangor, as they may “confuse” Muslim customers into believing they are
halal.
The “halal waste” issue counts as the fifth own goal. It
was left to Lee Chean Chung, the outspoken MP for Petaling Jaya, to
reveal this and the church/temple issue.
He is still in PKR but will probably soon move to Bersama for the next election.
Petaling Jaya MP Lee Chean Chung
Ng
Suee Lim, the state exco for local government, then claimed that the
policy on halal and non-halal waste separation in Selangor has been
around since 2010.
He explained that due to “confusion and questions”, its implementation will be “reviewed” to ensure that they are “more practical, clear, and in line with current needs”.
The review will include “getting views from NGOs, industry players, local councils, and relevant agencies”.
Yet,
the question remains, why did the four DAP state exco members not
object to this silly policy? And is the government only seeking views
from stakeholders after the rubbish has hit the fan?
Deeper problems
Malaysians
generate around 8.3 million metric tonnes of food waste annually, or
roughly 260kg per person. Food waste makes up 40 percent to 45 percent
of all daily waste sent to landfills. No wonder garbage disposal is big
business.
I
see many Malaysians, including Muslims, leaving lots of perfectly good
food uneaten at cafes. They don’t even bother packing it to eat at home.
Yet in Islam, wastage is a sin, and offenders are deemed as “relatives of Satan”.
I wish that halal was something that unites us - as a symbol of quality, like say the “organic” label.
Halal
is supposed to mean compliance with Islamic principles of hygiene. But
what about halal restaurants that are dirty? Or halal food packed with
harmful preservatives and nitrates?
Most importantly, are we getting bogged down in micro details while missing the big picture?
Former
minister Rafidah Aziz said in 2024 that authorities should focus on
combating corruption, which was “non-halal money”, instead of “causing
inconvenience” by enforcing rigid halal rules.
Thus,
rather than getting fixated about halal garbage, we should examine if
politicians, top civil servants, plus corporate/GLC leaders got their
wealth in halal or haram ways.
Legislate against unexplained riches
Former Klang MP Charles Santiago said this can be done easily if the government has an Unexplained Wealth Law (UWL).
So
if a civil servant with a RM10,000 salary has seven luxury cars and two
huge mansions, the UWL can compel such jokers to explain how they
acquired such massive assets.
If they cannot justify it, the
government can quickly seize illicit wealth without dragging cases
forever in court, said Charles. This will stop the “systemic corruption
among the elite”.
But I do wonder if his strong, uncompromising stands were what caused DAP to drop him as the Klang parliamentary candidate in the 2022 general election, even though he was an immensely popular MP?
Former Klang MP Charles Santiago
Authorities
have every right to spend immense time and effort checking cafes for
the slightest mistakes on their halal status, for example, a menu
listing “hot dogs”.
But perhaps more energy should be spent on doing “halal tests” on suspected corrupt wealth using a UWL.
After
all, the biggest threats to Muslims and Malaysians are the 3Rs of
“rempit, rokok, rasuah” - reckless motorcyclists, smoking, and
corruption.
These 3Rs are what really harm lives, health, and society - not the other R - a lack of halal rubbish bins.
COMMENT - The 'other Malaysia' and plight of Indians By Charles Santiago
Malaysiakini : In every society, there are people who complain about problems. There
are people who analyse problems. And then there are those rare
individuals who dedicate their lives to building solutions.
Selva belonged to that third category.
The
great historian Eric Hobsbawm warned against the illusion that history
is made solely by heroic individuals. Yet, Malaysian politics often
encourages exactly that illusion. Every few years, we are told that a
new leader will save us. A new coalition will rescue us. A new slogan
will transform us.
We pin our hopes on personalities while
neglecting the institutions that actually determine whether communities
grow and advance.
Selva understood better. He knew that when a community becomes dependent on personalities, it becomes vulnerable.
Selvarajoo Sundram
Communities
become strong because they have strong institutions. They have
businesses. They have networks. They have educational opportunities.
They have organisations capable of opening doors for the next
generation.
That is why he devoted so much of his life to moulding
young leaders, including establishing Gopio. He understood that Indians
across the world shared common aspirations. They wanted dignity. They
wanted opportunity. They wanted a future for their children.
Most importantly, he understood that no community can survive on political promises alone.
And that is why his legacy remains so relevant today. Because there is still “the other Malaysia”.
The
phrase comes from Michael Harrington’s famous book “The Other America”.
In the early 1960s, Harrington exposed a reality that many preferred
not to see.
While politicians celebrated prosperity and progress,
millions of Americans remained trapped in poverty and exclusion. They
were invisible to those in power.
We have our own “other
Malaysia”. A Malaysia that exists beyond official speeches and political
slogans. A Malaysia that does not appear in glossy government
brochures. A Malaysia that is seen during election campaigns and
forgotten immediately afterwards.
It
is not hidden. It is not invisible. It exists in plain sight. The
tragedy is not that we cannot see it. The tragedy is that we have become
accustomed to it.
Lived reality
For many Indian Malaysians, this “other Malaysia” is a lived reality.
It is the child attending an under-resourced Tamil school while politicians boast about national achievements.
It is the graduate who discovers that hard work alone does not always translate into opportunity.
It is the small entrepreneur struggling to obtain financing, contracts and support.
It is the family trapped in cycles of economic insecurity despite generations of sacrifice.
It is the plantation worker’s grandchild who was promised social mobility but still finds too many doors closed.
This is not about victimhood. It is about reality.
Let me share some numbers, and they are damning, and they have been damning for decades.
Indian
Malaysians, who make up approximately 6.5 percent of the national
population, account for roughly 22 percent of the prison population and
22 percent of the inmates on death row.
Gangsterism
among Indians. According to Bukit Aman’s data, 71.75 percent of all
identified active gang members in Malaysia are of Indian descent. This
is what happens when young men grow up with no credible path forward; no
matriculation quota, no business grant, no government contract, no
civil service fast track.
Economist Muhammad Abdul Khalid says Indian Malaysians earned, per capita, some 76 percent more than the Malays in 1970.
However,
by the mid-2000s, the advantage narrowed to 27 percent, and for the
bottom half of the community, it has since collapsed. The Indian story
is therefore not one of uniform poverty, but a catastrophic downward
mobility for those at the bottom.
Only nine percent of Indian
candidates received interview call-backs compared to 44 percent of
Chinese applicants, thus creating an additional barrier to fair wages,
career progression and most importantly, employment.
A 2021
Discrimination in Education Survey revealed that nine in 10 Indian
students felt discriminated against because of their ethnicity. About 73
percent of these students were discriminated against by fellow
students, and 74 percent of Indian students were discriminated against
by their teachers.
And unless we are prepared to confront reality, we cannot change it.
Hope is not weakness
For
decades, Indians have been told to wait. Wait for development. Wait for
reform. Wait for inclusion. Wait for opportunities. Wait for the next
policy. Wait for the next government. Wait for the next election.
We
have waited through different administrations, different coalitions and
different political eras. Yet many of the structural challenges facing
Indians remain stubbornly familiar.
Our educational inequalities
remain. Our economic vulnerabilities remain. Our underrepresentation in
key sectors remains. The question is no longer whether politicians
recognise these problems.
The question is whether they are willing to solve them.
Many
Indians placed tremendous hope in the reform movement that eventually
brought Pakatan Harapan to power. They believed a new political culture
would emerge. They believed long-neglected issues would finally receive
sustained attention.
Those hopes were understandable.
Hope
is not a weakness. Hope is what drives democratic participation. But
hope must eventually be measured against outcomes. And many ordinary
Indians today are asking difficult questions.
Where is the comprehensive economic strategy for Indian entrepreneurs?
Where is the bold plan to build Indian-owned businesses capable of competing nationally, regionally and globally?
Where is the transformation in educational outcomes?
Where are the institutions that can uplift communities regardless of who occupies Putrajaya?
Where is the structural change that was promised?
Many
Indians voted for reform. What they received was often administration.
They voted for transformation. Too often, they got management. They
voted for structural change. Too often, they got announcements.
These
are not questions born of hostility. They are questions born of
disappointment. There is a difference. Criticism is not betrayal.
Accountability is not disloyalty.
Democracy demands that citizens
ask difficult questions of those who seek their votes. And Indians must
ask those questions now more than ever. Because one of the greatest
mistakes any community can make is becoming a guaranteed vote bank.
The moment politicians believe your vote belongs to them automatically, they stop earning it. They begin assuming it.
And
when votes are assumed, accountability disappears. Politicians start
believing that symbolic gestures are enough. A speech here. A photo
opportunity there. A committee. A task force. An announcement. A
promise. Another promise. And another.
Meanwhile, communities continue struggling with the same challenges year after year.
Influence in democracy
There
is another reality we must confront honestly. Today, Indian Malaysians
make up roughly 6.5 percent of the population. Some hear that figure and
see weakness. I see leverage.
In a democracy, influence is not
merely a matter of numbers. It is a matter of organisation,
participation, purpose and vision. A community that votes strategically,
builds institutions and contributes to national life can exercise
influence far beyond its numerical size.
But we must also confront
an uncomfortable reality. We may not always be 6.5 percent. One day, we
may be five percent. Perhaps less. When that day comes, our future will
not depend on how many we are. It will depend on how organised we are.
That
is why the next generation matters so profoundly. Young Indian
Malaysians cannot afford political apathy. They cannot afford to
withdraw from public life or believe that their voices do not matter.
They
must become entrepreneurs, professionals, academics, innovators, civil
servants, community leaders and elected representatives. They must
organise, participate and lead.
The future will not be secured by
nostalgia for what previous generations achieved. It will be secured by
what young Indians build from this moment onward.
Selva built platforms. Our younger generation must build power.
The
question facing us is therefore not whether our community will become
smaller. The question is whether it will become stronger.
Selva
understood this. As a visionary leader, he understood results and
outcomes. He knew that intentions alone do not build companies and
communities. Vision alone does not create jobs. Good speeches do not
generate wealth. Only execution does.
The same applies to
politics. Governments should not be judged by slogans. They should be
judged by outcomes: How many businesses were created? How many young
people were empowered? How many opportunities were opened? How many
barriers were removed? How many institutions were strengthened?
These are the measurements that matter.
Because
the future of Indian Malaysians cannot depend on political patronage.
It cannot depend on waiting for favours. It cannot depend on hoping that
someone else will solve our problems.
It must be built upon
entrepreneurship. It must be built upon education. It must be built upon
economic participation. It must be built upon institutions.
Vote as investment
That
was Selva’s vision. He believed in connecting people. He believed in
creating opportunities. He believed in building networks that could help
future generations succeed. He understood that economic empowerment is
not a luxury. It is the foundation of dignity.
A community that
controls its own economic destiny speaks with confidence. A community
that depends entirely on others speaks with uncertainty.
And so,
as we approach the next general election, I believe Selva would have
asked these questions: Who is building institutions? Who is helping
small businesses grow? Who is investing in entrepreneurs? Who is
creating opportunities for young people?
Who understands that
communities need empowerment rather than dependency? Who is thinking
about the next generation rather than the next election? Who is prepared
to do the difficult work of nation-building instead of merely
campaigning?
Those are the questions that matter. Not personalities. Not slogans. Not tribal loyalties. Not fear.
For
too long, Indian Malaysians have often been encouraged to vote out of
fear. Fear of one coalition. Fear of another coalition. Fear of
instability. Fear of losing what little we have.
But fear has
never built a school. Fear has never built a business. Fear has never
created wealth. Fear has never transformed a community. Only vision can
do that. Only leadership can do that. Only courage can do that.
This
election, our votes matter not because politicians need them. Our votes
matter because our future depends on how we use them.
Every vote
should be treated as an investment. And like every investment, it should
demand returns. Not in the form of handouts. Not in the form of
tokenism. Not in the form of symbolic recognition. But in the form of
genuine opportunities.
Selva did not spend his life building Gopio
so that future generations could become spectators. He built it because
he believed Indians could be participants. Builders. Employers.
Leaders. Institution-makers.
The “other Malaysia” does not have to
remain the “other Malaysia”. But that will require courage. The courage
to ask difficult questions. The courage to reject empty promises.
The
courage to demand accountability. The courage to think beyond the next
election. And the courage to take responsibility for our own future.
Because in the end, communities are remembered for what they created. They are remembered for what they left behind.
Selvarajoo Sundram built. The question before us is simple: Will we?