Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Put the sprint coach on the first flight home


FMT:

Put the sprint coach on the first flight home




6 hours ago

Frankie D'Cruz


A teen sprinter was told to fake an injury so a slower teammate could take his place. Why is the coach who orchestrated it still at the SEA Games?




Malaysia entered the SEA Games in Bangkok with the usual expectations — discipline, integrity and faith in those guiding our athletes.

Instead, among the national contingent stands a coach accused of the unthinkable: telling an 18-year-old to lie, fabricate an injury and step aside for a slower senior sprinter.

That man is now in the games village, credentialled by Malaysia, surrounded by young athletes who rely on their coaches for trust, guidance and safety.

A figure facing allegations of coercion, document distortion, retaliation and abuse of authority should not be there.

Not for another hour. Not for another race. Not for another team meeting.

He should be on the first flight home.

Because a coach who allegedly tells a teenager to lie — in writing, step by step — is not just a threat to one athlete’s career.

He is a risk to every athlete under his influence, and to the integrity of the sport itself.


And this case, backed by WhatsApp messages, medical records and a formal letter from the family, is not a “miscommunication”.

Not a personality clash. Not a quibble over selection criteria.

It is a clear breach of authority, involving pressure on a minor, manipulation of information, intimidation and interference in selection — conduct Malaysian sport cannot tolerate.

The question is not whether the coach is guilty; that will be determined by due process.


The question is why he remains with the national team in Bangkok while that process unfolds.

Under global SafeSport standards in the UK, US and Australia, any allegation involving pressure on a minor, misuse of medical information, intimidation or behaviour affecting selection triggers immediate suspension pending inquiry.

Not “monitoring”. Not “waiting for the panel to meet”.

Immediate removal from athlete environments to prevent influence, tampering or repeat behaviour.

Malaysia’s decision to leave him in place, overseeing athletes, some minors, all vulnerable, is a failure of safeguarding.

Athletes in a games village are isolated from their families, dependent on coaches for daily decisions, and often afraid to speak.

It is the very environment where pressure can thrive if unchecked.

A coach under investigation for instructing a teenager to lie should not be mentoring or monitoring anyone.

This is not harsh. This is standard. And right now, Malaysia is falling below standard.

A sport with no guardrails

The case of Danish Irfan Tamrin exposes a deeper structural failure long whispered within athletics: coaches have disproportionate control over selection, with weak checks and no independent oversight.

Danish, one of the season’s top four sprinters with 10.61s, had every reason to expect fair SEA Games consideration.

He had results, momentum and consistency. What removed him was not performance — it was pressure.

The WhatsApp messages show the coach dictating a withdrawal letter, telling the teenager exactly what to write and asking him to cite “back pain” despite no diagnosis.

Danish’s response, “Write what, coach?”, should chill anyone familiar with athlete–coach power dynamics.

It is the voice of a boy who feels he has no choice.

When athletes comply not because they trust but because they fear consequences, the system is not a talent pathway; it is a pressure chamber.

The ISN contradiction reveals a wider institutional weakness

One of the most alarming elements is how the medical system was drawn into the saga.

Danish underwent a full assessment at the National Sports Institute (ISN). The result was unequivocal: he was fit to compete.

Fit — directly contradicting the withdrawal letter he had been told to submit.

This raises a fundamental question: what happens when athletes are instructed to “act injured” before seeing ISN?

It undermines the integrity of one of Malaysia’s key high-performance institutions.

Medical appraisals must reflect reality, not the agenda of coaches seeking to sway selection.

Once medical information becomes a tool, the entire sports-science ecosystem stands compromised.

A shadow over meritocracy

That the SEA Games 4x100m spot went to a senior sprinter with slower season times is not the issue — selectors may weigh experience, past form and relay chemistry.

The issue is if that place was safeguarded by forcing a younger, faster athlete to withdraw through deceit.

That crosses the line from discretion into manipulation, a serious breach internationally.

Meritocracy cannot survive if athletes believe places are predetermined by relationships rather than performances.

And when a coach manipulates the process, he does more than rob one athlete; he weakens the country’s best possible team.

Then comes the allegation of blacklisting.

When Danish’s family heard from a third party that the coach allegedly said, “Maybe after this, Danish will be blacklisted,” it confirmed their worst fear: that refusing to comply or speaking up could end their son’s path.

Whether the remark was real, exaggerated or misheard is not the point. The point is that athletes believe blacklisting is possible.

That belief alone is a systemic red flag. When careers depend on silence, wrongdoing multiplies.

What Malaysia must do — now

Malaysia Athletics has said its disciplinary committee will investigate, but that is the wrong starting point.

This requires an independent selection review by a panel with no ties to the national body.

The wider ecosystem must also respond:

  • Suspend the coach immediately. This is not punitive; it is protective.
  • Guarantee Danish immunity from retaliation. Put it in writing — publicly.
  • Clarify ISN’s independence. Medical integrity must not be traded away.
  • Establish a real SafeSport mechanism. Athlete welfare cannot be managed by ad-hoc committees and silence.

If the WhatsApp messages are authenticated and the pressure proven, consequences should follow international precedent:

  • revocation of coaching licence,
  • multi-year ban,
  • prohibition from working with youth athletes,
  • and, if blacklisting threats are verified, a lifetime ban.

This is the standard Malaysia should uphold. It is a referendum on how seriously we take athlete welfare.

A country cannot aspire to be a sporting nation while tolerating behaviour that corrodes trust in its pathways.

Put the coach on the first flight home, and fix the sport so no Malaysian athlete ever feels this fear again.


***


Hannah, jangan tidur OK?


Over half a million evacuated in Cambodia, Thailand during border clashes


FMT:

Over half a million evacuated in Cambodia, Thailand during border clashes


Thailand's defence ministry said it wants to prevent a recurrence of the attacks on civilians suffered in July


Thai evacuees who fled from their homes following clashes between Thai and Cambodian troops rest at an evacuation center. (EPA Images pic)


BANGKOK: More than 500,000 people have fled their homes to safety in Thailand and Cambodia since the start of a reignited border conflict, both governments said on Wednesday, surpassing the total number evacuated during similar clashes earlier this year.

“Civilians have had to evacuate in large numbers due to what we assessed as an imminent threat to their safety. More than 400,000 people have been moved to safe shelters” across seven provinces, Thai defence ministry spokesman Surasant Kongsiri told reporters at a news conference.

“We want to prevent a recurrence of the attacks on civilians we suffered in July 2025.”

In Cambodia, “101,229 people have been evacuated to safe shelters and relatives’ homes in five provinces,” as of Tuesday evening, defence ministry spokesman Maly Socheata told reporters.

The Southeast Asian neighbours dispute the colonial-era demarcation of their 800km frontier, where competing claims to historic temples have spilled over into armed conflict.

This week’s clashes are the deadliest since five days of fighting in July that killed dozens and displaced around 300,000 on both sides of the border before a shaky truce was agreed, following intervention by US President Donald Trump.

Both sides blame each other for instigating the renewed fighting, which on Tuesday expanded to five provinces of both Thailand and Cambodia, according to an AFP tally of official accounts.


Cambodia pull out of SEA Games in Thailand


FMT:

Cambodia pull out of SEA Games in Thailand


Cambodia's exit comes as a border conflict with hosts Thailand escalated and forced a mass exodus of civilians from both sides of the disputed frontier


Cambodia had already pulled out of eight sports at the Thailand-hosted games citing ‘safety’ concerns.



BANGKOK: Cambodia withdrew on Wednesday from the Southeast Asian Games, a Games official said, as a border conflict with hosts Thailand escalated and forced a mass exodus of civilians from both sides of the disputed frontier.

At least 11 soldiers and civilians have been killed on both sides, according to officials, as renewed hostilities derailed a US-brokered truce.

Cambodia had already pulled out of eight sports at the Thailand-hosted games, with its National Olympic Committee chief Vath Chamroeun citing “safety” concerns.


But Akarin Hiranprueck, a SEA Games senior official, said Wednesday that Cambodia would no longer participate at all: “It is confirmed that Cambodia withdrew,” he told AFP.

The SEA Games run until Dec 20 in Bangkok and the nearby coastal province of Chonburi, with thousands of athletes from southeast Asian countries competing in events ranging from football and fencing to skateboarding, sailing and combat sports.

But renewed combat this week between Thailand and Cambodia over a long-standing border dispute has overshadowed the SEA Games.

There was tightened security at Tuesday’s opening ceremony at the Rajamangala National Stadium in Bangkok attended by Thai royals and featuring Thai K-pop idol BamBam. A small delegation from Cambodia took part in the athletes’ parade.

This week’s clashes are the deadliest since five days of fighting in July that killed dozens before a shaky truce was agreed, in large part owing to intervention by US President Donald Trump.

Both sides blame each other for sparking the renewed clashes, which on Tuesday expanded to five provinces of both Thailand and Cambodia, according to an AFP tally of official accounts.

More than 500,000 people have fled their homes to safety in Thailand and Cambodia since the start of a reignited border conflict, both governments said on Wednesday, surpassing the total number evacuated during similar clashes earlier this year.

The dispute between Thailand and Cambodia centres on a century-old disagreement over borders mapped during France’s colonial rule in the region, with both sides claiming a smattering of boundary temples.


Lim Guan Eng pushes for RM20b tax refunds for two million Malaysians despite personal attacks





Lim Guan Eng pushes for RM20b tax refunds for two million Malaysians despite personal attacks



According to Lim Guan Eng, the MOF reply only confirmed that more than three million taxpayers had been issued refunds totalling RM9.35 billion as of June 30, 2025, with only 1.07 million receiving full refunds amounting to RM2.73 billion. — Picture by Sayuti Zainudin

Wednesday, 10 Dec 2025 12:02 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 10 — Former finance minister Lim Guan Eng has vowed to continue pressing the government to ensure two million Malaysians receive full refunds of excess taxes paid to the Inland Revenue Board (LHDN) since 2020, despite facing personal attacks over his claims.

In a statement, Lim said DAP’s Teng Chang Khim had launched personal attacks against him twice on Facebook, questioning his figures and ridiculing his proposal for LHDN to issue RM20 billion in refunds next month.

“Teng even used a parliamentary reply by the Ministry of Finance on August 20, 2025 to DAP Stampin MP Chong Chieng Jen as proof of my mistake, to use some of his more polite language,” the statement read.

According to Lim, the MOF reply only confirmed that more than three million taxpayers had been issued refunds totalling RM9.35 billion as of June 30, 2025, with only 1.07 million receiving full refunds amounting to RM2.73 billion.


“This indicates that at least two million taxpayers have not received their full refunds,” Lim said.

“From my estimate of such cases, the amount of excess taxes paid not fully refunded by LHDN amounts to tens of billions ringgit.”

Lim said he had welcomed Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s decision in December to increase the allocation for refunds from RM2 billion to RM4 billion, but argued that this sum is still insufficient.


“I had urged the prime minister to increase the sum of refunds by LHDN to RM20 billion next month in January 2026. This RM20 billion will go a long way towards ensuring a joyous and prosperous Chinese New Year of the Horse in February for employers and their workers who can get better ang pows,” he said.

He also defended his calculations against Teng’s criticism.

“Obviously Teng has forgotten how to dissect and understand parliamentary replies. Nowhere in the parliamentary reply by MOF did they state the actual amount owed by LHDN to taxpayers of excess taxes not refunded,” Lim said.

“The Ministry of Finance has neither denied nor confirmed my figure of tens of billions ringgit of excess taxes paid not fully refunded. MOF has only verified that such a problem of taxpayers not getting back their own excess taxes paid since 2020 by LHDN exists,” he added.

Lim urged Malaysians to support the affected taxpayers, saying, “I would urge all right-thinking Malaysians to side with these unfortunate two million taxpayers attempting to get their full refunds of excess taxes paid since 2020 from LHDN.”

Despite the criticism, he vowed to continue his efforts.

“Despite facing personal attacks, I will not stop but persevere to strive on behalf of these two million Malaysian taxpayers owed tens of billions of ringgit of excess taxes paid to LHDN since 2020 to get back their full refunds from LHDN,” Lim said.

Moral Policing in Malaysia: Why The Chow Kit Raid Should Concern Us All

 

Dennis Ignatius

 

~ Provoking discussion, dissent & debate on politics, diplomacy, human rights & civil society.

Moral Policing in Malaysia: Why The Chow Kit Raid Should Concern Us All

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[1] The joint police-religious affairs department raid on a wellness centre in Chow Kit made headlines all over the world. Some 208 people from various walks of life were arrested. 

[2] According to news reports, those detained were investigated under Sections 377 (which criminalises “carnal intercourse against the order of nature” and includes homosexual acts) and 372 (which covers prostitution and other unlawful/immoral activity) of the Penal Code. 

[3] Significantly, all those detained in the raid were subsequently freed. The police explained that “under current laws, offences involving exploitation, prostitution or unnatural sex acts require a victim… since none of those detained claimed to be victims, the case against them could not proceed.”[1] In other words, over 200 people were harassed, humiliated and hauled off to detention without there being any real evidence that a crime had been committed!

[4] If that was not bad enough, a video of the raid quickly went viral, exposing the identities of some of those detained. They were shamed and humiliated. Lives and livelihoods were upended.  Government servants caught up in the raid are now facing disciplinary action.[2]  Others are living in trepidation, worried of being recognized.[3] It’s hard to image the terrible trauma that has been visited upon them. Although they were not charged with any crime, they now have to live with the presumption that they were engaged in “immoral activities”.  

[5] The minister for religions affairs defended the raid and urged Malaysians not to “take lightly the issue of moral decay… which can undermine the nation’s dignity”. He added that the government aims to “to build a progressive Malaysia with strong values and high moral standards.”[4]

[6] The hypocrisy of the religious establishment is, as always, stunning. They are able to zero in on what’s goes on in an obscure wellness centre in Chow Kit but don’t seem to notice the things that are really destroying the moral fibre of our nation – corruption and the abuse of power. They get worked up by what goes on in a men’s club but not the sexual abuse of minors in institutions under their care. 

[7] Astonishingly, in the wake of the disastrous raid, there have been calls to broaden the reach of Section 377 even further. One MP is demanding that “intent” be criminalized as well[5] while others complain that “existing gaps, particularly relating to consent, are preventing authorities from prosecuting cases involving acts against the order of nature.”[6]

[8] One would have thought that the government had better things to do than entertain such asinine ideas; but Madani is all about appeasing the mullahs. No surprise then that the Home Minister immediately promised to “review existing legal provisions on the enforcement of deviant activities”.[7]

[9] Media coverage of the event was not helpful either. They joined the rush to judgement with sensational and misleading headlines like “Surgeon, DPP among 201 held at all-men sex den”[8] and “Caught with their pants down: Prosecutor, surgeon among 201 detained at ‘men only’ vice raid”.[9] It was not journalism; it was a smear job. 

[10] The Chow Kit raid is another warning sign that we are increasingly morphing into a Taliban-style state, one in which a narrow-minded, intolerant, religious establishment is taking it upon itself to determine our moral standards, invade our privacy and trample underfoot our rights as citizens. Moral policing ought to have no place in a nation like ours. That is why we need to see what happened in Chow Kit for what it is – a very real threat to our way of life as a democratic, secular, multicultural nation.

[Dennis Ignatius | Kuala Lumpur | 9 December 2025

Tuesday, December 09, 2025

$38 Billion Gift To Taliban: How U.S. Taxpayers Armed The Taliban Twice & Set The Af-Pak Region On Fire



Tuesday, December 9, 2025


$38 Billion Gift To Taliban: How U.S. Taxpayers Armed The Taliban Twice & Set The Af-Pak Region On Fire


By Sumit Ahlawat
-December 9, 2025


It’s a well-known fact that during the Soviet-Afghan War (1979–1989), the U.S. government funded the Afghan Mujahideen movement through the CIA under Operation Cyclone. However, what is not very well-known is that this funding of the Afghan Taliban through U.S. taxpayers’ money continued right until 2021.

In fact, ironically, the billions of dollars of U.S. money that were poured into Afghanistan during the two-decade-long ‘War on Terror’ (2001-2021) for infrastructure development and military aid ended up in the hands of the very forces the U.S. Army was fighting in Afghanistan, the Afghan Taliban.

Taken cumulatively, the Afghan Mujahideen movement that later morphed into the Afghan Taliban has received most financial and military support from none other than the U.S. taxpayers, running close to USD 40 billion, and some of the most advanced weapons systems, according to a new report by the US government’s Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR).

These weapons systems, which were left behind during the US’s hasty and disorganized retreat from Afghanistan in 2021, include combat aircraft, armored vehicles, machine guns, night vision helmet devices, High Mobility Multipurpose Vehicles, and millions of rounds of ammunition, and now form the backbone of the Afghan Taliban government’s defense infrastructure.

Worse, many of these advanced weapons systems are reportedly sold on the black market and are even ending up in the hands of terrorist organizations such as the Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP), also known as the Pakistan Taliban, fueling insurgency in Pakistan.

Notably, the TTP has been recognized by the US government as a Foreign Terrorist Organization since 2010.

The story underscores the futility of the U.S.’s longest war, which, according to Brown University’s Costs of War Project report, cost the U.S. taxpayers a whopping USD 2.3 trillion, and the death of 2,450 American troops.

How U.S. Taxpayers Armed & Funded The Afghan Taliban

According to a new report by SIGAR, from 2002 through mid-2021, the United States Congress appropriated approximately US$144.7 billion for Afghanistan reconstruction—far more than it spent on the post-World War II Marshall Plan in inflation-adjusted terms.

However, during the abrupt withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, US and coalition forces left behind billions of dollars’ worth of military equipment, which is now a key part of the Taliban government’s defense infrastructure.

According to the report, the United States left behind over US$38 billion in military equipment and infrastructure, both military and civilian.

“The U.S. obligated at least $38.6 billion equipping and building infrastructure for the ANDSF (Afghanistan National Defense and Security Forces) and constructing civil infrastructure for the benefit of the Afghan people,” it said.

Of the US$38 billion, the Department of Defense (now Department of War) had earlier estimated that at least US$7 billion worth of weapons were now under Taliban control.

According to the report, the United States has provided 96,000 ground combat vehicles and more than 51,000 light tactical vehicles to Afghan forces.

The list also included 23,825 High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles, nearly 900 armored combat vehicles, 427,300 weapons, 17,400 helmet-mounted night-vision devices, at least 162 aircraft, and other items.

As of July 31, 2021—approximately two weeks before the Taliban takeover—DOD records indicated that the Afghan Air Force had 162 U.S.-provided aircraft in its inventory, of which 131 were usable.

Most of these weapons systems could now be under the control of the Afghan Taliban.

Notably, in July this year, US President Donald Trump called the Afghanistan troop withdrawal “the most embarrassing moment” in US history.

Taliban take over Kabul airport and USA military equipment (via Platform X)


Trump also pointed to the loss of military equipment and the Bagram Airbase, which he said had strategic significance.

Trump said: “They left all that equipment behind and every year they have a parade down from street with the equipment. With all that equipment that they left, they should have taken every ounce of it. Every screw, every bolt, every nail you take out of there. And Millie said, I remember one time, so we’re better off leaving the equipment.

“Why? It’s cheaper to leave $150 million airplane rather than flying it into Pakistan or India or some place… They left their dignity behind. It was the most embarrassing moment in my opinion in the history of my country.”

Trump has also suggested that the Afghan Taliban should hand over the Bagram Airbase and the weapons left behind to the US, a demand the Afghan Taliban has rejected.

Pakistan has also supported the idea of the US getting back its weapons and the US control of the strategic Bagram Airbase, due to Islamabad’s ongoing hostilities with the Afghan Taliban.

A Pakistan Foreign Office spokesperson has said, “Our concern is that these weapons have been found to be used by terrorists in their extremist activities inside Pakistan. We have raised this issue before. If the US makes any effort to return these weapons, it will be helpful for overall regional security.”
Is The Afghan Taliban Giving U.S. Weapons To TTP?

The links between the Afghan Taliban and the TTP (Pakistan Taliban) are well established.

Earlier this year, in February, a UN Security Council report said: “There was increased collaboration between TTP, the Afghan Taliban and Al-Qaida in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS, not listed), conducting attacks under the banner of Tehrik-e Jihad Pakistan (TJP, not listed).

Taliban fighters inspect a jet left behind by US troops at Kabul airport. (via Twitter)


“Greater facilitation among these groups and TTP in terms of the provision of suicide bombers and fighters and ideological guidance might transform the latter into an extraregional threat and an umbrella organization for other terrorist groups operating in the region.”

Indeed, Pakistan has repeatedly accused the Afghan Taliban of not only supporting and sheltering the TTP, but also providing it with arms left behind by the U.S. forces.

The Taliban government in Afghanistan has denied these allegations, saying terrorism inside Pakistan is Islamabad’s internal problem; however, Pakistan has launched air strikes inside Afghanistan, citing these allegations.

Pakistan and Afghanistan are currently engaged in a low-intensity war over these allegations.

Meanwhile, in another high-profile attack on December 9, TTP militants stormed a security checkpoint in Pakistan’s northwest near the Afghan border, killing six soldiers.


🚨6 Pakistan Soldiers Killed in TTP Attack 🇵🇰Pakistani #Taliban militants stormed a security checkpoint in Pakistan's northwestern border area with #Afghanistan, killing six soldiers & wounding four others.
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Islamabad has accused the Afghan Taliban of using US weapons in its hostilities with Pakistan.

The videos released of recent clashes between the Afghan Taliban and Pakistani forces show the Taliban forces mainly using light weapons.

The light weapons currently in the hands of the Taliban government’s army include mostly Kalashnikovs, American M16, M4, and M29 light machine guns.

These include heavy machine guns like the Pika M2 and M240, grenade launchers, as well as rocket launchers and anti-tank missiles like the RPG Seven and AT Four.

According to a Taliban commander, in recent clashes, “night vision goggles and laser-equipped weapons have been effective in nighttime attacks.”

Sami Yousafzai, an expert on Afghan affairs, told BBC Urdu that not only is the Afghan Taliban using the weapons left behind by US forces in its fight against the Pakistani security forces, but these weapons are also being sold in the black arms market.

Sami Yousafzai said, “Anyone can buy these weapons, be it arms dealers, ordinary people, or jihadists.”

He said that TTP militants were also part of the Afghan Taliban forces, which captured weapons left behind by retreating US forces. Thus, these weapons also fell into the hands of TTP militants, and are now also being used inside Pakistan.

He added that no evidence suggests that the Afghan Taliban themselves provided these American weapons to the TTP.

He also said that the Afghan Taliban will not return these weapons to the US as they see them as “war booty.”

For now, these US weapons in the hands of the Afghan Taliban and the TTP have become a headache for the Pakistani armed forces, which are already battling insurgency in many parts of the country.Sumit Ahlawat has over a decade of experience in news media. He has worked with Press Trust of India, Times Now, Zee News, Economic Times, and Microsoft News. He holds a Master’s Degree in International Media and Modern History from the University of Sheffield, UK.


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Same thing when the wanks hightailed it from Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City now) - left tons of military equipment for the Viets. Blardy good. To be fair, prior to their great escape, the wanks did ask around SE Asian countries like Malaysia as to what equipment we would like, but everyone was cautious about picking up probably useless wankee stuff. In the end, Malaysia declined.