Thursday, August 21, 2025

China’s Railway Cuts Through ‘Disputed’ Aksai Chin; Will Beijing’s New Xinjiang–Tibet Line Ignite India-China Tensions?


Thursday, August 21, 2025


China’s Railway Cuts Through ‘Disputed’ Aksai Chin; Will Beijing’s New Xinjiang–Tibet Line Ignite India-China Tensions?


By Shubhangi Palve


Even as New Delhi and Beijing are mending ties, China is quietly moving ahead with a massive infrastructure push right along India’s doorstep.

Chinese media reports say the project is one of the most ambitious rail links attempted in the region, connecting Xinjiang with Tibet, cutting through Aksai Chin, and running near sections of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) with India.


A Railway Across The Roof Of The World


At the heart of this plan is the Xinjiang-Tibet railway, one of China’s most ambitious rail projects to date. Stretching nearly 5,000 kilometres, it will connect Shigatse, Tibet’s second largest city, to Hotan in Xinjiang, while linking up with the existing railway network in Lhasa.

Once complete, it will form a 2,000 km strategic corridor between China’s northwest and southwest. For India, this means a direct rail artery cutting through sensitive terrain not far from the border.

The geography of the route underlines its scale. The railway will snake across the Kunlun, Karakoram, Kailash, and Himalayan ranges, climbing to an average altitude of more than 4,500 metres. To make this possible, about two-thirds of the line will be made up of bridges and tunnels.

The train will traverse glaciers, frozen rivers, and permafrost zones, where temperatures in winter drop to minus 40 degrees Celsius and oxygen levels are less than half of what they are in most inland regions of China.

Chinese engineers face daunting challenges. Harsh weather, accelerated wear on machinery, sky-high logistics costs, and the environmental sensitivities of the plateau are all factors that could slow progress.


Construction is expected to begin this November and will take about a decade to finish. Trains are planned to run at speeds of 120/160 km/h.

This project has been in the making for years. The idea was first included in China’s “Medium and Long-Term Railway Network Plan” back in 2008. Since then, milestones have included the launch of survey and design work for the Hotan-Shigatse section in May 2022.

By April this year, officials from China’s Ministry of Transport confirmed that work would officially start in 2025.


The Price Tag Behind The Railway

China has officially set up a new company to take charge of the Xinjiang-Tibet railway. Called the Xinjiang-Tibet Railway Company (XTRC), it is fully owned by the state-run China State Railway Group and has been registered with a starting capital of 95 billion yuan, roughly 13.2 billion dollars.

That $13.2 billion, however, is only the opening figure. It represents initial funding, not the actual cost of the project.


For comparison, the 1,800-kilometer Sichuan-Tibet railway ended up costing about 45 billion dollars. Given that the Xinjiang-Tibet line is more than twice as long and will cross far harsher terrain, the eventual bill is likely to be much higher.

Even at this early stage, analysts already call it the world’s most expensive and technically challenging railway project. To put things in perspective, Russia’s high-speed line between Moscow and St. Petersburg, currently one of the costliest rail projects on record, runs just 679 kilometers and carries a price tag of about 25 billion dollars. The Xinjiang-Tibet line could easily surpass that several times over once completed.

Chinese reports are clear that the railway is not being built for commercial gain. The terrain it cuts across is sparsely populated and has little economic activity. Instead, the project is about strategy, securing Beijing’s hold over Tibet and Xinjiang while giving the military faster access to border regions.

Why Is China Building This Railway?

On paper, Beijing says the Xinjiang-Tibet railway will boost tourism, trade, and local development. The newly registered Xinjiang-Tibet Railway Company even lists businesses like real estate, catering, and international projects in its portfolio. But the strategic intent is far more telling.


The line will give the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) quicker access to Tibet from its Chongqing-based 13th Group Army, allowing faster movement of troops and supplies to the Himalayan frontier.

Chinese officials openly call it part of “major national strategies” to strengthen key transport corridors into Tibet and Xinjiang, two regions that remain politically sensitive for Beijing.

The project also serves Beijing’s demographic goals. Xinjiang is already an example of how large-scale Han migration can shift the balance. In 1953, Uyghurs made up three-fourths of the region’s population. By 2020, the Han share had risen to about 42 percent.

Tibet remains overwhelmingly Tibetan, but Beijing hopes new rail links, towns, and factories will draw more Han settlers to the plateau.


China’s Expanding Rail Grip On Tibet

China first pushed its railway into Tibet in 2006 with the Qinghai-Lhasa line. At the time, it was hailed as an engineering wonder, the highest railway in the world, with more than 960 kilometers running above 4,000 meters. But for India, it was also the start of Beijing physically binding Tibet closer to the Chinese heartland.

The new Xinjiang-Tibet line is part of a wider plan. Beijing has mapped out four major railways to link Tibet with the rest of the country – through Qinghai, Sichuan, Yunnan, and now Xinjiang.

Only the Qinghai-Tibet railway is fully operational. The others are still under construction, with price tags running into hundreds of billions of yuan. The Sichuan line alone is expected to open only by 2032.

China calls Tibet ‘Xizang’ in its official documents, underscoring its attempt to Sinicize the region not just politically, but linguistically. Railways play a central role in that effort. Faster trains mean not only easier access for tourists to sites like Mount Kailash or Manasarovar, but also quicker movement of troops, settlers, and resources.

At home, China boasts the world’s largest high-speed rail network, over 40,000 kilometers by 2022, more than double that of the next ten countries combined. By contrast, the United States, which still runs the world’s largest overall rail network, has less than a thousand kilometers of high-speed lines. Beijing wants its railways to reach nearly every city with more than 200,000 people.

But this ambition comes at a heavy price. China Railway Group, the state giant driving the expansion, is drowning in debt. By last year, its borrowings had crossed 6 trillion yuan ($846 billion) while profits were razor-thin. The strain has forced Beijing to do something rare in its tightly controlled system. Raise fares on major bullet train routes to claw back some revenue.

The financial burden is Beijing’s problem, but the strategic outcome is India’s concern.


Image for Representation: A bullet train at Shenyang North Railway Station.


Aksai Chin: Tracks Through Disputed Land

One of the most striking parts of the Xinjiang-Tibet railway is that it cuts through Aksai Chin, a region that is part of eastern Ladakh but has been under Chinese occupation since the 1950s.

The tracks will run dangerously close to the Line of Actual Control, the disputed frontier where Indian and Chinese troops have clashed in recent years.

For Beijing, this railway network is a force multiplier. The line will allow the PLA to move troops and heavy equipment to the LAC much faster than before. At present, many stretches of the frontier are remote and underdeveloped compared to the rest of China. Once this railway is complete, that weakness disappears.

China frames the project as a way to boost trade and connect remote regions. But for India, the military dimension is impossible to ignore.


Indian and Chinese armies greet each other along the Line of Actual Control (LAC)


The Tibet Autonomous Region is already well linked by highways, airports, and railways, including a high-speed line that runs close to the Arunachal border. With the Xinjiang-Tibet link, China is stitching together a web of infrastructure that doubles as a military logistics grid.

Observers argue that this is part of a broader playbook. China presents such projects as economic development, but in reality, they tighten Beijing’s control over disputed areas and strengthen its hand in any future conflict.

The same strategy can be seen in the creation of ‘border defence villages’, where civilians are encouraged to settle and maintain a permanent presence, gradually shifting the balance on the ground without triggering a large-scale confrontation.

This railway deepens China’s ability to reinforce troops at short notice, making standoffs like Galwan or Doklam even riskier. It also signals Beijing’s intent to secure long-term dominance along the Himalayan frontier, under the cover of connectivity and development.

The challenge for New Delhi is, while Beijing lays down steel tracks across disputed land, India must accelerate its own border infrastructure, strengthen defence partnerships, and stay alert to China’s creeping attempts to redraw facts on the ground.


The Double Track Of Relations

What makes China’s push for the Xinjiang-Tibet railway even more significant is its timing. The plan surfaces just as New Delhi and Beijing have begun cautiously resetting ties after more than four years of tension sparked by the Ladakh standoff.

That confrontation, which began in the summer of 2020, saw Chinese troops cross into eastern Ladakh and culminated in the deadly Galwan Valley clash. Aksai Chin, where part of the railway is expected to run, remains central to that dispute.

Since late last year, relations have begun to inch upward. The turning point came when Prime Minister Narendra Modi met President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the BRICS summit in Russia. Since then, both countries have reopened limited trade through selected border posts and even resumed discussions on restoring direct flights.

One of the clearest signals of a thaw has been the decision to restart the Kailash Mansarovar Yatra in 2025, after a five-year gap. For many in India, the pilgrimage holds deep spiritual meaning, and its resumption is seen as a step toward easing the bitterness of recent years.

Diplomacy is also picking up pace. Modi is scheduled to travel to Tianjin later this month for the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit, his first visit to China since 2019.

Beijing has publicly welcomed his presence, calling the SCO a platform of ‘friendship and solidarity’. His trip follows a series of visits by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, and External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar, who have all been engaging their Chinese counterparts in recent months.

Yet, beneath these gestures of normalisation, India cannot ignore that Beijing is laying tracks through disputed territory. The dual reality defines India–China ties today: attempts at dialogue and cooperation on one hand, and on the other, China’s relentless push to strengthen its military position along the Himalayan frontier.


What Is India Doing?

New Delhi is not standing still while Beijing lays tracks through contested land. India has stepped up its own infrastructure drive along the Line of Actual Control to narrow the gap.

The most critical project is the Darbuk – Shyok – Daulat Beg Oldie (DSDBO) road, which serves as the lifeline to the Galwan Valley and the northernmost military outpost near the Karakoram Pass.

This route is being reinforced to carry heavy armour, including tanks and missile launchers, ensuring India can respond quickly if tensions flare.

At the same time, India is working on a 130-kilometre alternative road that will run out of sight of Chinese patrols.

This stealthier link is designed to reduce reliance on the exposed DSDBO stretch and give the military greater flexibility in moving troops and supplies.

To push projects faster, the government has deployed bigger workforces, raised wages to attract labour in remote high altitude areas, and invested in advanced surveillance and logistics networks. The aim is to cut response times in a crisis and strengthen India’s hand against China’s growing military presence along the frontier.

For India, building roads is not just about connectivity; it is about ensuring that the next time Beijing tries to change the status quo, New Delhi is better prepared to hold its ground.



Shubhangi Palve is a defense and aerospace journalist. Before joining the EurAsian Times, she worked for ET Prime. She has over 15 years of extensive experience in the media industry, spanning print, electronic, and online domains.


Israel Plans ‘Zone Defence’ Anti-Missile Network to Stop Iran’s New Mach 13+ Hypersonic Glide Vehicles


Military Watch:


Israel Plans ‘Zone Defence’ Anti-Missile Network to Stop Iran’s New Mach 13+ Hypersonic Glide Vehicles

Middle East , Missile and Space






Vice President of Israel’s Rafael Advanced Defence Systems Yuval Baseski has outlined plans to develop a defensive capability against attacks launched using hypersonic glide vehicles, highlighting that this had forced the firm and the Israel Defence Forces to rethink their approach to missile defence. Following Israel’s launching of large scale attacks on Iran on June 13, the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps gradually escalated its ballistic missile strikes against Israeli targets, and on June 18 announced that the country’s first class of hypersonic ballistic missile, the Fattah, had been launched. The Corps alleged that the missile’s employment marked “the beginning of the end” for Israel’s “mythical” missile defences. “The powerful and highly manoeuvrable Fattah missiles repeatedly shook the shelters of the cowardly Zionists tonight, sending a clear message of Iran’s strength to Tel Aviv’s warmongering ally, which continues to dwell in delusions and false assumptions,” the Corps claimed, stating that the new missile class left Israel defenceless against its precision strikes.



Iranian Ballistic Missiles Arrive Over Israel




“Hypersonic missiles open a new era in air defence,” Baseski said regarding the new challenge, warning that traditional approaches to missile defence would not be effective against such targets. “Every air defence system today is based on flying faster than the target. But this principle does not apply to hypersonic missiles. To intercept an object moving at Mach 10, one would need a defence moving at Mach 30, which is impossible in the atmosphere due to friction,”he stated. Drawing an analogy to basketball, he observed: “One interceptor missile tracking one hypersonic missile is like defending LeBron James with a single player. You may keep chasing him, but you won’t stop him from scoring.” He instead suggested a “zone defence” model, under which multiple interceptors covered defined areas and engaged threats as they entered.



Surface-to-Air Missile Launch From Israeli David`s Sling System



A growing number of strongly corroborating sources have indicated that the fallout from Iranian missile attacks has far exceeded prior Western and Israeli expectations, with military bases and key infrastructure targets such as Haifa Port, the Haifa Oil Refinery, Ben Gurion Airport and the Weizmann Institute of Science and Technology suffering serious damage. The headquarters of Rafael was among the targets singled out for attacks. Commenting on the extent of the strikes at the subsequent NATO summit, President Donald Trump observed: “Especially those last couple of days, Israel was hit really hard. Those ballistic missiles, boy they took out a lot of buildings.” Hypersonic missile attacks were notably far from the only serious challenge faced by Israeli air defences, with the extreme cost of anti-ballistic missiles and the resulting limited supplies available making a sustained defence against missile strikes wholly unviable. The severity of the damage, and the fast diminishing ability of Israeli missile defences to blunt the attacks, was considered a primary factor leading Israel to accept a ceasefire on June 24.



Damage in Tel Aviv After Iranian Missile Attacks




Unveiled in June 2023, the Fattah is Iran’s first class of missile with a hypersonic glide vehicle, making the country the fourth country after Russia, China and North Korea to field such an asset. The missile has a 1400 kilometre range, and can achieve a terminal speed of between Mach 13 and Mach 15. Its combination of speed and manoeuvrability make it nearly impossible to intercept. After North Korea first flight tested a ballistic missile with a hypersonic glide vehicle in September 2021, the Hwasong-8 with an estimated 1800km range, it was speculated that Pyongyang could quickly transfer key technologies to Iran’s defence sector, with North Korean missile technologies having been steadily transferred to Iran for over four decades. North Korea previously responded to Israel’s procurement of Patriot missile defence systems by Israel in the 1990s by supplying manoeuvrable reentry vehicles and associated technologies to both Syria and Iran to strengthen their penetrative capabilities.


***


Belly-gut - hentam Shailoks kaukau 👍👍👍😂


MRT Corp: Penang LRT budget raised to RM16.8b due to land costs, inflation and extended route to Seberang Perai





MRT Corp: Penang LRT budget raised to RM16.8b due to land costs, inflation and extended route to Seberang Perai



Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim (centre) officiated the groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of the Penang Light Rail Transit (LRT) Mutiara Line project at the Bandar Sri Pinang project site. Jan 11, 2025. — Bernama pic

Thursday, 21 Aug 2025 8:42 AM MYT


GEORGE TOWN, Aug 21 — The budget of RM16.8 billion set for the LRT Mutiara Line in Penang was due to market conditions, including land acquisition costs, since 2016.

According to MRT Corp, the original estimated cost for the Penang LRT Bayan Lepas project was set at RM10 billion eight years ago, as the original alignment was only from Silicon Island to Komtar.

“In early 2024, the federal government made the decision to take over the project, now known as LRT Mutiara Line, with an extended alignment from Macallum to Penang Sentral,” it said in a statement here.

The statement came to clarify an announcement by Transport Minister Anthony Loke recently that the budget ceiling for the project is now between RM16 billion to RM17 billion.


The extension of the alignment to stretch across to Seberang Perai from the island meant that the project cost was increased by RM3 billion from RM13 billion, said MRT Corp.



The company said that the project budget also needed to be revised to reflect global supply chain inflation, escalation of land market values, and additional works at Macallum as well as Silicon Island based on market data in 2024.

“In December 2024, the federal government approved a project budget ceiling of RM16.8 billion and MRT Corp has been mandated to keep the cost lower,” it said.


It stressed that the actual project cost would depend on results of ongoing and upcoming open tender exercises.

It said a conditional contract, valued at RM8.31 billion, was awarded to SRS Consortium Sdn Bhd for the Civil Main Contract Package 1 in January this year.

As part of the contract conditions, the contract was subject to a value management exercise in April and this eventually reduced the contract sum to RM7.93 billion.

“The budget ceiling of RM16.8 billion also includes land acquisition cost which is now estimated at approximately RM2 billion,” it said.

It said the balance RM6.8 billion is for project management and consultancy costs, Civil Main Contract Package 2, Light Stabling Depot at Sungai Nibong and Systems Turnkey Contract.

These contracts are yet to be awarded.

Last month, in a media briefing session, MRT Corp chief executive officer Datuk Mohd Zarif Hashim said the developers will try to keep the costs below RM16 billion.

He said the LRT Mutiara Line will be the “most reasonably priced LRT system in Malaysia”.

The LRT Mutiara line is 29.5km with 21 stations from Silicon Island to Komtar and from Komtar to Penang Sentral in Butterworth.

The Mutiara Line is expected to complete in 2031 while there are also three other lines in the plans that will cover Tanjung Bungah, Batu Ferringhi and Air Itam.

All four lines are expected to be fully completed by 2050.


India test-fires Agni-5 missile capable of striking any part of China





India test-fires Agni-5 missile capable of striking any part of China



India is part of the Quad security alliance with the United States, Australia and Japan, which is seen as a counter to China. — AFP pic

Thursday, 21 Aug 2025 9:12 AM MYT


NEW DELHI, Aug 21 — India said yesterday it had successfully test-fired an intermediate-range ballistic missile which, when operational, should be capable of carrying a nuclear warhead to any part of China.

The Agni-5 missile was successfully launched in India’s eastern Odisha state, with authorities saying it “validated all operational and technical parameters.”

India and China, the world’s two most populous nations, are intense rivals competing for influence across South Asia and relations plummeted in 2020 after a deadly border clash.

India is also part of the Quad security alliance with the United States, Australia and Japan, which is seen as a counter to China.


India’s bitter rival Pakistan has nuclear weapons as well and the two countries came to close to war in May after militants killed 26 people in Indian-administered Kashmir, an attack New Delhi blamed on Islamabad. But Pakistan denied any involvement.


Caught in global trade and geopolitical turbulence triggered by US President Donald Trump’s tariff war, Delhi and Beijing have moved to mend ties.

Last October, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping for the first time in five years at a summit in Russia.


Modi is expected to make his first visit to China since 2018 later this month to attend the summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) -- a regional security bloc.

Ties between New Delhi and Washington, meanwhile, have been strained by Trump’s ultimatum that India end its purchases of Russian oil, a key source of revenue for Moscow as it wages its military offensive in Ukraine.

The United States says it will double new import tariffs on India from 25 percent to 50 percent by August 27 if New Delhi does not switch crude suppliers.

The Agni-5 is one of a number of indigenously produced short- and medium-range Indian ballistic missiles aimed at boosting its defence posture against Pakistan, as well as China. — AFP


Veterinary Services confirms pig culling, enforcement moves to contain ASF in Penang






Veterinary Services confirms pig culling, enforcement moves to contain ASF in Penang



Pigs are seen at a farm in Kampung Valdor, Sungai Bakap, on June 24, 2019. — Picture by Sayuti Zainudin

Thursday, 21 Aug 2025 8:59 AM MYT


TASEK GELUGOR, Aug 21 — Pig farmers and traders in Penang, especially in Kampung Selamat here, received a reminder not to misuse the Movement Permission Account (AKP) or transfer permits by using the names of other farms to prevent the spread of African Swine Fever (ASF).

Penang Veterinary Services Department (JPVPP) director Dr Saira Banu Mohamed Rejab said they are also prohibited from moving sick pigs or those confirmed as positive for the disease to slaughterhouses.


“Such actions are not only against the law but also pose a high risk of spreading ASF infections to other farms and areas, as currently the infected pigs are under control, and we hope no further spread occurs.

“JPVPP has strengthened the enforcement and monitoring of slaughterhouses, while also conducting continuous surveillance to ensure that other farms remain ASF-free,” she told Bernama yesterday.


She said so far, four farms in Kampung Selamat have been confirmed positive for ASF, and 21 pig samples from slaughterhouses have also tested positive for ASF.



Saira Banu added that investigations and sampling revealed that all farms linked to positive cases at slaughterhouses were negative at the farm level, except for one farm in Kampung Selamat.

However, she said pigs confirmed as positive at that farm did not show any symptoms or clinical signs of ASF, and the herd was quarantined for 14 days, with repeat tests returning negative results.


“Therefore, the number of ASF-positive farms remains at four, and so far, 351 pigs have died on the farms, while 1,709 pigs have been culled using CO2 Gas across the four ASF-positive farms,” she said.

On July 12, three pig farms in Kampung Selamat were confirmed positive for ASF based on laboratory test results by the Northern Region Veterinary Laboratory, with two of them recording high mortality rates before another farm was confirmed infected on July 27.

Kampung Selamat has 63 pig farms with about 120,000 hogs. — Bernama


***


Hope State govt will help the farmers cope with such an immense loss


US demand for RVs driving deforestation in Indonesia’s Borneo, say NGOs





US demand for RVs driving deforestation in Indonesia’s Borneo, say NGOs



A forest in Palangkaraya, Central Kalimantan. Indonesia has one of the world’s highest rates of deforestation linked to mining, farming and logging, and is accused of allowing firms to operate in Borneo with little oversight. — Pexels.com pic

Thursday, 21 Aug 2025 7:00 AM MYT


JAKARTA, Aug 21 — Tropical wood demand from some of America’s top RV brands is fuelling deforestation on the Indonesian island of Borneo, home to Asia’s last great rainforest, according to a new investigation by environmental NGOs.

The recreational vehicle industry is now the biggest consumer of tropical wood in the United States, UK-based NGO Earthsight and Indonesian NGO Auriga Nusantara said in a report published late Tuesday.

They said evidence showed sheets of tropical “lauan” plywood found in Indonesia were likely being used in the floors, walls and ceilings of RVs produced by major brands like Jayco, Winnebago and Forest River.

“Nature-loving RV owners will be horrified to learn that their hobby risks destroying rainforests,” said Earthsight director Sam Lawson in a press release.


“America’s RV giants need to get out of the 1980s and implement the kinds of minimum sustainability standards other US corporates have had in place for decades.”


Indonesia has one of the world’s highest rates of deforestation linked to mining, farming and logging, and is accused of allowing firms to operate in Borneo with little oversight.

Borneo island has one of the world’s largest tracts of rainforest and hosts orangutans, long-nosed monkeys, clouded leopards, pig-tailed macaques, flying fox-bats and the smallest rhinos on the planet.


Large tracts of orangutan habitat in Borneo were found to be “cleared to make way for a plantation of fast-growing timber”, the NGOs said.

An Indonesian plywood company, PT Kayu Lapis Asli Murni, sourced timber mostly from rainforest in areas the NGOs visited, half of which was then exported to US firms MJB Wood and Tumac Lumber in 2024, they said.

MJB Wood is the main lauan plywood supplier to Jayco, while Tumac Lumber supplies companies such as RV parts maker Patrick Industries, “whose customers include Thor Industries, Forest River and Winnebago”, the report said.

The NGOs said it meant it was “almost certain” Indonesian tropical wood was being used in the RV supply chain in the United States.

None of the companies mentioned replied to the report’s authors when asked for comment, it said.

Neither the companies nor the Indonesian environment ministry immediately responded to an AFP request for comment. — AFP


Pontian dental clinic shut 30 days for flying Jalur Gemilang upside down





Pontian dental clinic shut 30 days for flying Jalur Gemilang upside down



Datuk Seri Ahmad Maslan said the mistake at a Pontian dental clini was unintentional. — Picture from Facebook/Akmal Saleh

Thursday, 21 Aug 2025 1:54 PM MYT


PONTIAN, Aug 21 — A private dental clinic at the Pontian Trade Centre has been ordered to shut for 30 days after it was discovered displaying the Jalur Gemilang upside down yesterday.

Berita Harian cited Pontian Municipal Council (MPPn) president Abd Azim Shamsuddin saying the notice of closure was issued to the clinic’s owner at 8.20am today.

“Every licensed premises under the by-laws is required to fly the Jalur Gemilang or the Johor state flag correctly and properly for a set period, including during the month of independence.

“The closure action was taken under By-Law 49 (2), which empowers the president to shut down any premises that violates licensing conditions,” he reportedly said.


He added checks showed the premise had violated the Pontian District Council (MDP) 2019 Business and Trade Licensing By-Laws regarding the hoisting of flags.



Abd Azim said the owner may file a written appeal during the closure period, but the final decision would rest with the MPPn president.

Yesterday, Pontian MP Datuk Seri Ahmad Maslan said the mistake was made by a female staff member who admitted it was unintentional and has since been rectified.


He stressed that this should not be turned into a racial issue, but seen as a matter of sensitivity, attentiveness, and patriotism.

Ahmad’s statement came after the Youth chief from his party, Datuk Dr Akmal Saleh, rebuked the incident by saying that others are not putting in the effort to “respect each others’ feelings”.

Last week, The Attorney General’s Chambers warned Malaysians against vigilantism in cases involving the improper display of the Jalur Gemilang, amid furore over Umno Youth’s protest in Kepala Batas, Penang over the matter.

The AGC said such actions could include raiding premises, spreading personal details, or making unfounded accusations on social media.

The AGC also warned the public against provoking or issuing threats against the individuals or organisations concerned.

Lawyer says family still in dark over Pamela Ling’s disappearance despite Home Ministry’s update






Lawyer says family still in dark over Pamela Ling’s disappearance despite Home Ministry’s update



Datin Seri Pamela Ling Yuehwas reported missing after boarding an e-hailing vehicle from her home in Kota Damansara to the MACC headquarters in Putrajaya.

Thursday, 21 Aug 2025 3:55 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 21 — The family of missing woman Datin Seri Pamela Ling Yueh has criticised the recent update by the Home Ministry, calling it lacking in progress and transparency.

Lawyer Sangeet Kaur Deo said the questioning of four Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) officers in connection with Pamela’s disappearance offered no new information.


“We must emphasise that this update provides no new information or progress in the case,” she said in a statement here.

“Despite these claims, there have been zero leads uncovered, and Pamela’s family remains completely in the dark regarding any developments.”


She noted that statements suggesting investigations were ongoing were meaningless without tangible action or results.


She said the repeated mention of 47 persons being questioned and a car found near the border had already been disclosed months earlier.

“To repeat these same facts now only confirms the absence of any fresh developments,” she added/


Sangeet said the lack of transparency and results had prolonged the family’s suffering, and also eroded public confidence in the seriousness of the investigation.

Yesterday, Home Minister Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail said the police have called 48 witnesses, including four officers from MACC to record statements to assist in the investigation.

Ling, 52, was reported missing after boarding an e-hailing vehicle from her home in Kota Damansara to the MACC headquarters in Putrajaya on the morning of April 9.

The e-hailing driver later lodged a police report, claiming the woman was “taken away” by three individuals believed to be impersonating police officers near the MACC building.


***


Another 'Raymond Koh' and 'Amri Che Mat'


‘Where’s Fadhlina?’: Student activists demand education minister quit over handling of Zara Qairina death, bullying crisis



‘Where’s Fadhlina?’: Student activists demand education minister quit over handling of Zara Qairina death, bullying crisis



Demonstrator gather as to protest against Education Minister Fadhlina Sidek in front of the Ministry of Education building, Putrajaya. — Picture by Sayuti Zainudin

Thursday, 21 Aug 2025 1:34 PM MYT


PUTRAJAYA, Aug 21 — A few dozen student activists today protested in front of the Education Ministry, criticising Minister Fadhlina Sidek’s handling of the late Zara Qairina Mahathir’s death and calling for her resignation.

The protest, which began around 11am, saw participants holding placards reading “Justice for Zara,” “Turun Lina,” “Stop Bully,” and “Malaysia Tolak Pembuli.”


They gathered just a few metres from the ministry’s entrance, where a line of auxiliary police formed a barricade.

The activists listed six demands to Fadhlina, which they say must be addressed within 30 days:


  • Establish psychosocial support systems in schools
  • Establish mandatory training for teachers and hostel wardens
  • Implement a parent education module: bullying starts at home
  • Ensure independent and transparent school monitoring
  • Make a national anti-bullying plan an official agenda
  • Additional measures to safeguard students

“Failure to meet these demands, Fadhlina must step down from her post,” said Azamuddin Sahar of the Malaysian Muslim Students Coalition (Gamis).

Zara Qairina died at Queen Elizabeth I Hospital on July 17, a day after being found unconscious in a drain near the hostel of Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Agama Tun Datu Mustapha di Papar.

Five teenage girls has since been charged in Kota Kinabalu’s Children’s Court over alleged abusive words. Their identities cannot be revealed under the Child Act 2001 which guarantees their privacy.


The rally today continued with speeches as seven police officers observed the protest.

“Fadhlina must be held accountable because, so far, nothing has been done regarding Zara’s case and the issue of bullying,” said Tang Yi Ze, president of the Universiti Malaya Association of New Youth (Umany).

“Systemic failures contributed to her death, and similar incidents may be happening elsewhere without our knowledge. This is not an isolated case; bullying like this has been happening for a long time,” he added.

Brendon Gan, president of Himpunan Advokasi Rakyat Malaysia (Haram), said Fadhlina should have gone straight to the ground instead of implementing “syok sendiri” policies.

Gan pointed to initiatives such as the “Anti-Bullying” slogan campaign, the reward scheme for “bully-free schools,” and the RM8.4 million purchase of Jalur Gemilang pins.

“None of these address the real root causes of the crisis,” he added.

The protest was organised by Gamis and Haram, and joined by groups including Umany, Demokrat UKM, and United Muslim Malaysia.

Azamuddin said they would not leave the protest spot until Fadhlina personally met them to hear their demands.

However, Faiz Rashid, a representative from the minister’s office, received the demands on her behalf.

The protest ended around 12.30pm with chants of “Where’s Fadhlina?”


US court blocks Texas law requiring Ten Commandments in school classrooms




US court blocks Texas law requiring Ten Commandments in school classrooms

Texas is the third state in the past month to see its requirement to display the commandments struck down in court.

A school bus rolls down a Texas road during icy weather
A Texas bill would have required public school classrooms to display the Ten Commandments starting on September 1 [Julio Cortez/AP Photo]

A United States federal judge has granted a temporary block against a Texas law that would require the Ten Commandments from the Christian Bible to be displayed in the classrooms of every public school.

On Wednesday, US District Judge Fred Biery issued a preliminary injunction against Texas’s Senate Bill 10, which was slated to take effect on September 1.

Texas would have become the largest state to impose such a requirement on public schools.

But Judge Biery’s decision falls in line with two other court decisions over the past month: one in Arkansas and one in Louisiana, both of which ruled such laws are unconstitutional.

Biery’s decision opens by citing the First Amendment of the US Constitution, which bars the government from passing laws “respecting an establishment of religion”. That clause underpins the separation of church and state in the US.

The judge then argues that even “passive” displays of the Ten Commandments would risk injecting religious discourse into the classroom, thereby violating that separation.

“Even though the Ten Commandments would not be affirmatively taught, the captive audience of students likely would have questions, which teachers would feel compelled to answer. That is what they do,” Biery wrote.

“Teenage boys, being the curious hormonally driven creatures they are, might ask: ‘Mrs Walker, I know about lying and I love my parents, but how do I do adultery?’ Truly an awkward moment for overworked and underpaid educators, who already have to deal with sex education issues.”

Biery’s decision, however, only applies to the 11 school districts represented among the defendants, including Alamo Heights, Houston, Austin, Fort Bend and Plano.

The case stemmed from a complaint made by several parents of school-aged children, who were represented by groups including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

One of the plaintiffs was a San Antonio rabbi, Mara Nathan, who felt the version of the Ten Commandments slated to be displayed ran contrary to Jewish teachings. She applauded Wednesday’s injunction in a statement released by the ACLU.

“Children’s religious beliefs should be instilled by parents and faith communities, not politicians and public schools,” Nathan said.

Other plaintiffs included Christian families who feared the schoolhouse displays of the Ten Commandments would lead to the teaching of religious interpretations and concepts they might object to.

The Texas state government, however, has argued that the Ten Commandments symbolise an important part of US culture and therefore should be a mandatory presence in schools.

“The Ten Commandments are a cornerstone of our moral and legal heritage, and their presence in classrooms serves as a reminder of the values that guide responsible citizenship,” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a statement. He pledged to appeal Wednesday’s ruling.

But in his 55-page decision, Judge Biery, who was appointed by Democratic President Bill Clinton in 1994, drew on a range of cultural references – from Christian scripture to the 1970s pop duo Sonny and Cher and the actress Greta Garbo – to sketch a history of the dangers of imposing religion on the public.

“The displays are likely to pressure the child-Plaintiffs into religious observance, meditation on, veneration, and adoption of the State’s favored religious scripture,” Biery wrote at one point.

He also said such displays risk “suppressing expression of [the children’s] own religious or nonreligious backgrounds and beliefs while at school”.

Biery even offered a winking, personal anecdote to illustrate the power that governments can hold over the adoption of religion.

“Indeed, forty years ago a Methodist preacher told a then much younger judge, ‘Fred, if you had been born in Tibet, you would be a Buddhist,'” Biery wrote.

A separate federal case involving Dallas area schools is also challenging the Ten Commandment requirement. It names the Texas Education Agency as a defendant.

Such cases are likely to eventually reach the Supreme Court, which currently has a six-to-three conservative supermajority and has shown sympathy for cases of religious displays.

Advertisement

In the 2022 case Kennedy v Bremerton School District, for instance, the Supreme Court sided with a high school football coach who argued he had the right to hold post-game prayers, despite fears that such practices could violate the First Amendment. The coach had been fired for his actions.

Judge Biery concluded Wednesday’s decision with a nod to how controversial such cases can be. But he appealed for common understanding with a prayer-like flourish.

“For those who disagree with the Court’s decision and who would do so with threats, vulgarities and violence, Grace and Peace unto you,” Biery wrote. “May humankind of all faiths, beliefs and non-beliefs be reconciled one to another. Amen.”

Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies

Israel starves two Palestinians to death; Gaza City attacks intensify


al Jazeera:


Israel starves two Palestinians to death; Gaza City attacks intensify