Thursday, February 19, 2026

Court of Appeal slashes Khairy’s damages from RM2.5m to RM830,000 in Covid vaccine‑related defamation case





Court of Appeal slashes Khairy’s damages from RM2.5m to RM830,000 in Covid vaccine‑related defamation case



The Court of Appeal today reduced the damages awarded to former Health Minister Khairy Jamaluddin from RM2.5 million to RM830,000 in his defamation lawsuit against Mohd Rasyiq Mohd Alwi over social media posts related to the Covid-19 vaccine. — Picture by Sayuti Zainudin

Thursday, 19 Feb 2026 6:26 PM MYT


PUTRAJAYA, Feb 19 — The Court of Appeal today reduced the damages awarded to former Health Minister Khairy Jamaluddin from RM2.5 million to RM830,000 in his defamation lawsuit against Mohd Rasyiq Mohd Alwi over social media posts related to the Covid-19 vaccine.

A three-man bench led by Justice Datuk Mohamed Zaini Mazlan affirmed the High Court’s decision on liability but varied the quantum of damages. The court also ordered him to pay RM50,000 in legal costs.

Sitting with him were Justices Datuk Ahmad Fairuz Zainol Abidin and High Court judge Datuk Ahmad Shahrir Mohd Salleh.

The court reduced the general damages from RM2 million to RM500,000, and exemplary damages from RM250,000 to RM80,000 and maintained the award of RM250,000 in aggravated damages.


On January 25, 2022, Khairy, 50, sued Mohd Rasyiq, also known as Ustaz Abu Syafiq, for allegedly making several defamatory statements, including posting three videos and photos on ‘Ustaz Abu Syafiq’s’ Instagram on October 20, 2021, and January 6 and 10, 2022.

Delivering the court’s unanimous decision, Justice Mohamed Zaini said the appellant’s (Mohd Rasyiq’s) libel not only damaged the former Rembau Member of Parliament’s reputation but could also impact the public as the postings might discourage some from receiving the vaccine.

“The appellant, who held himself out as a religious preacher, is therefore subjected to a higher standard of care and responsibility when making public statements.


“Society accords a significant degree of trust, respect, and moral deference to individuals who hold religious authority. Members of the public, particularly those within the appellant’s following, are naturally and reasonably inclined to accept the pronouncements of a preacher as truthful and morally grounded,” he said.

He said Mohd Rasyiq, 46, bore a greater duty to verify the accuracy of his statements before disseminating them to others, and by choosing to publish unverified, false, and defamatory allegations against Khairy, he (Mohd Rasyiq) abused his position of moral authority and exploited the trust and deference that society reposes in religious figures.

Justice Mohamed Zaini said there were eight distinct publications and that Khairy was entitled to damages for each of them. However, he added that the court was mindful of the need to ensure that Khairy is not enriched by the damages awarded.

He said that damages in defamation cases are intended to be compensatory and not to generate a windfall, and that any award must remain proportionate and in line with prevailing judicial trends. He added that the RM2.5 million in general damages awarded to Khairy was not in line with those prevailing trends.

“There was a period when our courts awarded damages amounting to millions in successful defamation cases. That era has ended, and we do not wish to see it return,” he said.

Justice Mohamed Zaini said the court also noted that the appellant was recalcitrant, as his alleged apologies border on cynicism, adding that on that basis the RM250,000 aggravated damages awarded to Khairy is maintained.

In April last year, the High Court in Kuala Lumpur ordered Mohd Rasyiq to pay RM2.5 million in damages to Khairy. He then appealed to the Court of Appeal on the quantum of damages.

At the Court of Appeal today, lawyer Lejerod Limpuong represented Mohd Rasyiq while lawyer Abdul Rashid Ismail acted for Khairy. — Bernama

Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh dazzles as she earns Hollywood Walk of Fame star






Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh dazzles as she earns Hollywood Walk of Fame star



Malaysian-born actress Michelle Yeoh honoured with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles. — Picture via Instagram/Michelle Yeoh

Thursday, 19 Feb 2026 3:07 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 19 — Malaysian-born actress Michelle Yeoh, who has made a name for herself in Hollywood, continues to bring pride to the nation – her name was immortalised on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles yesterday, in recognition of her outstanding contributions to the international film industry.

The 64-year-old actress graced the red carpet in an elegant yellow gown with minimal accessories, radiating sophistication throughout the prestigious event organised by the Hollywood film community.

In an Instagram post, Yeoh reflected on her journey from Malaysia to Hollywood, acknowledging that it was far from easy and full of challenges before reaching her current status.

“The path from Malaysia to here wasn’t a straight line. There were moments that I wondered if I belonged, but I was fortunate, fortunate to be part of stories that crossed borders and languages, stories that reminded us how deeply connected we all are,” she said during her speech at the ceremony.


Known for her role as Madame Morrible in Wicked, she said the honour was not hers alone, but represented the many people who have been part of her career spanning over four decades in the film industry.

“Thank you all for surrounding me with love, for being my safe harbour and for helping me stay true to my own North Star. The star may carry one name, but it represents so many people who made this journey possible.

“I hope it also reminds someone, somewhere that it is possible, that where you begin does not define where you can go,” she said.


This recognition further cements her status as one of the most influential Asian figures in Hollywood and serves as an inspiration for young Malaysian talent aspiring to break into the international entertainment industry.

Previously, the Ipoh-born actress made history by winning the Best Actress award at the 95th Academy Awards in 2023 for the film Everything Everywhere All at Once, becoming the first Asian woman to take home an Oscar in a leading acting category.

Yeoh achieved another historic milestone when she was awarded the Honorary Golden Bear for lifetime achievement at the 76th Berlin International Film Festival, the highest accolade recognising her contributions to the global film industry over more than four decades. — Bernama


***


Proud of and very much in love with herπŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚


Billions bleeding, temples blamed: How Malaysia’s moral compass was turned upside down – Ravindran Raman Kutty





Malaysia’s flag flies proudly beside the skyline of Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur — a symbol of national pride set against questions over governance, priorities and the true cost of systemic leakages highlighted in the op-ed. — Scoop file pic, February 2026


Billions bleeding, temples blamed: How Malaysia’s moral compass was turned upside down – Ravindran Raman Kutty


As corruption, smuggling and environmental crimes drain tens of billions of ringgit each year, the uproar over a small “kuil haram” suggests national outrage may be dangerously misplaced, says this writer


Updated 1 minute ago
19 February, 2026
10:27 AM MYT


A country does not collapse because a few devotees light lamps in a small temple; it collapses when billions leak out through corruption, smuggling, illegal exploitation of land and sea, while leaders and loudmouths obsess over a shrine that harms no one.

By the government’s own estimates, Malaysia is losing money on a scale that should make every responsible leader lose sleep. The MACC chief revealed that corruption alone shaved an estimated RM277 billion off our GDP between 2018 and 2023 — roughly RM55 billion every single year. A separate study he cited put total losses from leakages and misappropriation at up to RM4.5 trillion between 1997 and 2022. That is not a typo; it is the figure you get when a culture of impunity is allowed to mature across decades.

On top of that, smuggling and black market trade drain another torrent of revenue. The Finance Ministry reported that RM1.85 billion in tax revenue was lost over just five years due to contraband cigarette and liquor smuggling. Illicit cigarettes alone are now estimated to cost Malaysia around RM5 billion in lost taxes every year, with illegal brands dominating more than half the market. Analysts warn that when you consider all smuggled high-duty goods, revenue leakage easily reaches RM5–10 billion annually.

Then there is the sea, where our wealth swims away under foreign flags. The Fisheries Department has estimated that Malaysia loses between RM3 billion and RM6 billion every year to illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, with about 980,000 tonnes of seafood stolen from our waters annually. This is food that should be feeding Malaysians and income that should be sustaining local fishermen, quietly siphoned into someone else’s pocket. We must pay RM70/- per kg for ikan bilis (anchovies), tenggiri RM45/-, Bawal RM40/- per kg and ikan kembong RM18/- per kg.

Add these together, and a conservative picture emerges: tens of billions of ringgit slipping through our fingers every year — easily RM60–70 billion when you combine corruption, smuggling and illegal fishing, without even counting illegal factories, logging, poaching, e-waste and fake clinics. Yet somehow, in this landscape of real, measurable national harm, the loudest indignation in recent days is directed at a temple.


Illegal fishing in the South China Sea has prompted calls for tougher maritime laws. — Royal Malaysia Navy pic, February 19, 2026


The real haram economy versus a “kuil haram”

Illegal fishing in the South China Sea alone has been estimated to cost Malaysia up to RM6 billion annually, prompting calls for tougher maritime laws and better enforcement. Illegal logging continues to strip hills and forests, with raids seizing timber worth tens of millions of ringgits at a time, while former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad bluntly warned that even “legal logging” can be “destructive of the forests.” This destruction increases flood risk, damages infrastructure, and erodes the natural capital our children should inherit, all for short-term profit.

Thousands of unlicensed factories, such as the 4,170 identified in Selangor alone, operate without proper permits or environmental safeguards, dumping untreated waste into rivers and soil, creating health costs and water treatment bills that will run into the billions over time. E-waste operations mishandling toxic materials contaminate land and waterways, seeding future cancer clusters and chronic illnesses that the public health system will have to pay for. These are not minor regulatory issues; they are slow-motion assaults on national well-being.

At the same time, the black market puts a bounty on our national symbol: a single Malayan tiger carcass can fetch hundreds of thousands of ringgits, making the species “prime bounty” for poachers and pushing it towards extinction. Illegal clinics — nine recently raided in one operation, with a fake “doctor” from Bangladesh arrested — gamble with human lives for cash, bypassing every safeguard of modern medicine. This is what genuine haram looks like: theft of public wealth, destruction of God’s creation, and the casual endangerment of human life. The National Tiger Survey shows we have fewer than 150 tigers, compared to 150-340 about 10 years ago.

Against this background, a small temple — a modest structure where a handful of people gather to pray — has zero impact on GDP, does not poison rivers, does not strip hillsides, and does not sell wildlife or counterfeit medicine nor rob the economy. It is, at most, a land use and planning dispute. Treating it as the great moral crisis of the nation while tens of billions vanish through systemic illegality is not just irrational; it is a profound betrayal of public trust.


E-waste dumping is an issue that needs more attention, says the writer. — Bernama pic, February 19, 2026


Political masters and their selective outrage

When the MACC chief openly says that corruption has cost Malaysia RM277 billion in just five years, any government that claims to be serious about “stability” and “prosperity” should be mobilising its full moral and political capital to wage war on graft. When illicit cigarettes, liquor and other smuggled goods cost the Treasury more than RM5–10 billion a year, the loudest voices in the land should be demanding visible, sustained crackdowns on the syndicates behind them. When the Fisheries Department reports multi-billion ringgit losses from foreign vessels stealing nearly a million tonnes of fish, nationalists should be on the streets defending our maritime sovereignty.

Instead, we see our “political masters” and some “chosen NGO’s” thundering about an “illegal temple”, as if a structure of bricks and prayers is the primary threat to the nation’s future. They speak of law and order, of defending the sanctity of the land, while turning a far gentler gaze on those who loot the Treasury, strip the forests, poison rivers and run underground economies that dwarf the temple issue a thousand times over. This is not leadership; it is a morality play, performed for cameras and crowds, carefully directed away from the powerful interests who benefit from the real haram economy.


Bigots, sycophants and the theatre of rage

Then come the bigots and sycophants, marching onto the streets, waving banners, and shouting for the demolition of a temple as if they are saving civilisation. They claim to defend religion, race and royalty, but remain suspiciously quiet about corruption that robs every Malaysian child of quality schools and hospitals, or about smuggling that steals money meant for infrastructure and social protection. They foam at the mouth over a few square metres of prayer space, yet have nothing to say about forests felled, tigers slaughtered, and rivers turned into open sewers.

Their courage is highly selective: they bully the weak and compliant — temple devotees, minority communities — while avoiding direct confrontation with the real criminals backed by money, weapons and political connections. Their loudness is a service to the status quo, providing convenient distractions and manufactured outrage that allow systemic plunder to continue in the shadows. Behind every such mob, there is a calculation: it is safer to attack a “kuil haram” than to demand answers about where RM55 billion a year is disappearing to.


The outrage against unauthorised temples is misplaced when other bigger issues are ignored, says this writer. — Facebook pic, February 19, 2026


A question of priorities, not piety

The temple issue has been totally misframed and misused. This is not a debate about law versus lawlessness, or religion versus secularism. It is about priorities and honesty. If illegality is the concern, then a rational, evidence-based hierarchy of threats would put corruption, smuggling, illegal fishing, destructive logging, unlicensed factories, e-waste, poaching and fake clinics at the very top of the list, because together they cost the nation tens of billions of ringgit annually and permanently damage our social and ecological foundations.

A small temple belongs near the bottom of that list, to be regularised, relocated or resolved through dialogue, setting up a body overseeing the temple issue and compensation if necessary — never turned into a national punching bag. To pretend otherwise is to weaponise religion against the powerless while shielding the powerful. The numbers do not lie. The question is whether our leaders and their street-level cheerleaders are prepared to face those numbers, or whether they will continue to hide behind the easy target of a house of worship, while the real haram activities devour the future of this country. — February 19, 2026



Ravindran Raman Kutty is an award-winning PR practitioner



IDF data suggests Singapore nationals may be among dual citizens serving in Israeli military during Gaza war





IDF data suggests Singapore nationals may be among dual citizens serving in Israeli military during Gaza war



The dataset, accessed under Israel’s Freedom of Information Law, shows one soldier identified as having dual Israeli-Singapore citizenship, while another held multiple passports, including Singaporean and Israeli. — AFP pic

Thursday, 19 Feb 2026 5:01 PM MYT


SINGAPORE, Feb 19 — Data released by the Israeli Defence Force (IDF) suggests that two individuals holding Singaporean citizenship may have been serving in Israel’s military during the Gaza conflict.

According to information obtained by Israeli NGO Hatzlacha and first reported by AsiaOne, the records cover over 50,000 IDF personnel as of March 2025 — roughly 17 months into the Gaza war — who were registered as holding at least one additional nationality.

The dataset, accessed under Israel’s Freedom of Information Law, shows one soldier identified as having dual Israeli-Singapore citizenship, while another held multiple passports, including Singaporean and Israeli.

The data was previously highlighted by Declassified UK, Israeli media outlet Yedioth Ahronoth, and Al Jazeera between February 11 and February 15.


Singapore does not recognise dual citizenship for adults, though citizens under 21 may retain multiple passports until deciding whether to keep Singaporean nationality.

National Service obligations can influence government approval, and the Constitution allows authorities to revoke citizenship if a foreign passport is applied for or used by someone over 18.

Former Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Home Affairs Amrin Amin noted on Facebook that Singapore law also prohibits citizens and permanent residents from participating in armed conflicts overseas.


He added: “I'm confident our authorities will handle this thoroughly and fairly. If the report isn't accurate, I hope that will be clarified. Either way, transparent findings are key to maintaining public confidence in Singapore's fairness and integrity.”

The IDF figures also show that US citizens make up the largest group of soldiers with dual nationality, with 12,135 personnel holding American passports and 1,207 others possessing additional foreign citizenship.

French-Israeli dual nationals were the second largest group, with 6,127 soldiers, alongside 337 holding yet another nationality.

Other nationalities among IDF members include Russians (5,067), Germans (3,901), Ukrainians (3,210), and British citizens (1,686).

The military counts individuals with multiple citizenships more than once in its nationality breakdown.


***


Probably TS' brother and cousin πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚


Appoint defence counsel – not halal food – should be priority for M’sian detained in Japan for fraud





Appoint defence counsel – not halal food – should be priority for M’sian detained in Japan for fraud






“NO access to halal food.”


That seemed to be a primary concern surrounding a Malaysian being detained in Japan on the suspicion of being involved in an online fraud syndicate.


Details remain sketchy but according to Malaysian Humanitarian Organisation (MHO) secretary-general Datuk Hishamuddin Hashim, the man-in-hot-soup identified as Muhammad Faiq Zafran Muhammad Jailaini was subsisting on vegetarian fare.

“Currently, Faiq is being held at a police station. The conditions there’re not too bad but obtaining halal food may be somewhat difficult. He may have to rely on vegetables and rice.”

#NSTnation Malaysian Humanitarian Organisation (MHO) secretary-general Datuk Hishamuddin Hashim said this was necessary as a third charge was expected to be brought against Faiq on March 12.

"Currently, Faiq is being held at a police station. The conditions there are not too bad, but obtaining halal food may be somewhat difficult. He may have to rely on vegetables and rice."

Read more: https://bit.ly/3ONRg1V


Faiq has become a cause célèbre of sorts since being reported missing in Tokyo on Dec 2 last year.

It should be noted the halal food-deprived prisoner was charged in a Japanese court last month and pleaded guilty to two fraud charges under Articles 246 and 60 of the Japanese Penal Code.

There were queries from humanitarian groups regarding the delay in info being released Faiq’s detention. Moreover, there are also conflicting accounts surrounding his arrest, including initial reports claiming that he was apprehended with money and gold worth about RM500,000.

In a statement dated Feb 17, Wisma Putra explained the delay in releasing relevant information pertaining to his arrest.


The Embassy has been informed by the investigative authorities in Toyama that, at the material time, the necessary consent to disclose information to the Embassy was not granted by Muhammad Faiq.

Consequently, the Japanese authorities were legally prohibited from notifying the Malaysian Embassy or releasing details regarding the investigation.

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Upon successfully securing official confirmation of the detention from the Japanese authorities, the Foreign Ministry immediately contacted the next-of-kin to convey the information.

The Ministry has continued to communicate with the family to ensure they are updated on the latest developments as received through official channels.



Faiq will now face a third charge on March 12 and his family have been scrambling to appoint a lawyer because Japanese procedures stipulated that all facts of a case be disclosed only to lawyers.

The latest developments were shared on NST’s Facebook page with the post having generated 816 likes, 1.1K comments and 56 shares at time of publication.

As expected, the issue of availability of halal food in a Japanese lock-up was highlighted with some proclaiming that the convicted felon is lucky he has any sort of sustenance at all.

One wondered aren’t seafood which are consumed in abundance in Japan considered halal while some tickled pink commenters cheekily suggested that Japan prisons, police stations and detention centres “would even obtain halal certification from Malaysia” or “build halal prison/police station”.



One presumed Muslim commenter even pointed out that nobody dies from having to adhere to a vegetarian diet.



There were a few who tried to underline the importance of halal food for Muslims. But this line of reasoning was quickly shut down as Faiq was a convicted felon, hence making such demands could be viewed as a form of “VIP entitlement”.



Another commenter sarcastically suggested that perhaps the authorities should have air flown halal meals to the unfortunate prisoner “for his crucial survival”.



Some observers mocked the tone of the narrative which seems to suggest the crime was of secondary importance. The main focus was whether the Muslim wrongdoer had access to halal fare.



Some wondered if the great defender of race and religion – UMNO Youth chief Datuk Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh – was going to kick up a fuss at this supposedly mistreatment of a Malay prisoner abroad.



It is quite interesting to note that the reports seem to paint Faiq as an unsuspecting victim duped into some fraud scheme and now has to endure non-halal prison food.

There has been precious little detail as to the crimes he has pleaded guilty to or even what possessed him to travel to the Land of the Rising Sun in the first place.



Indeed, instead of harping about the poor Malay youth detained without access to a halal menu, perhaps it would be constructive to highlight the crimes he has pleaded guilty to or about the on-going process to find a Malay/English conversant Japanese defence counsel to represent him.

If indeed he has been a victim of an online scam, then the focus should be advising others on how to spot red flags and how to avoid being similarly duped.

Logic dictates that should be crux of the matter. But this is Malaysia where logic is often drowned in a flood of religious self-righteousness. – Feb 19, 2026





Main image credit: Bernama

UN warns of ‘gradual de facto annexation’ as Israel tightens West Bank control




UN warns of ‘gradual de facto annexation’ as Israel tightens West Bank control



Members of the Salhab family react next to the rubble of their their apartment building after it was demolished by Israeli bulldozers near the Israeli settlement of Hagai, south of the occupied West Bank city of Hebron, on February 18, 2026. Israel’s far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said he would pursue a policy of ‘encouraging the migration’ of Palestinians from the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israeli media reported on February 18. — AFP pic

Thursday, 19 Feb 2026 10:00 AM MYT


NEW YORK, Feb 19 — A top UN official warned Wednesday that steps by Israel to tighten control of areas of the West Bank administered by the Palestinian Authority amount to “gradual de facto annexation.”

Since last week, Israel has approved a series of initiatives backed by far-right ministers to consolidate control over the West Bank where the Palestinians exercise limited autonomy under past deals.


“We are witnessing the gradual de facto annexation of the West Bank, as unilateral Israeli steps steadily transform the landscape,” UN Under Secretary General Rosemary DiCarlo told a meeting of the Security Council on the Palestinian question.

“If implemented, these measures will constitute a dangerous expansion of Israeli civil authority in the occupied West Bank, including in sensitive areas like Hebron.

“The moves could lead to settlement expansion by removing bureaucratic barriers and easing land purchases and building permits.”


The recently approved steps are set to increase Israel’s control in parts of the West Bank where the Palestinian Authority currently exercises power.


‘Prevent destabilisation’

Under the Oslo Accords, the West Bank was divided into areas A, B and C — under Palestinian, mixed and Israeli governance respectively.

The West Bank would form the largest part of any future Palestinian state, but many on Israel’s religious right view it as Israeli land.

The Oslo Accords, in place since the 1990s, were signed with the stated aim of paving the way for an independent Palestinian state.

The UN missions for 85 member states issued a joint statement Tuesday condemning Israel’s encroaching control of the West Bank.

“We strongly condemn unilateral Israeli decisions and measures aimed at expanding Israel’s unlawful presence in the West Bank,” the statement said.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar said ahead of DiCarlo’s remarks that “amazingly so many countries say the Jewish presence in our ancient homeland violates international law.”

“No other nation in any other place in the world has a stronger right than our historical and documented right to the land of the Bible.”

Palestinian ambassador to the UN Riyad Mansour said “there is something fundamentally racist about this colonial narrative underlying all these illegal policies.”

Britain’s Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, who chaired the meeting, said “we must prevent the destabilization of the West Bank and preserve the viability of a Palestinian state.”

“We have seen the Palestinian economy face strangulation, including the Israeli government withholding some of the Palestinian Authority’s own tax revenues,” she said.

Wednesday’s meeting was reportedly brought forward as Trump prepares to convene a meeting of his “Board of Peace” in Washington.

The board, of which Trump is the chairman, was initially designed to oversee the Gaza truce and the territory’s reconstruction after the war between Hamas and Israel.

But its purpose has since morphed into resolving myriad international conflicts, triggering suspicions the US president wants to create a rival to the United Nations.

“The board is not talking. It’s doing,” US ambassador to the UN Mike Waltz said, accusing “the chattering classes” of criticising the structure of the board.

The UN will be unrepresented at the meeting of the board. — AFP


Why is the US targeting Cuba’s global medical missions?




Why is the US targeting Cuba’s global medical missions?



Amid Cuba’s deepening fuel crisis, countries are bowing to US pressure and winding down their Cuban medical programmes


A cholera patient is treated with an IV solution administered by a Cuban doctor at a hospital in L'Estere, Haiti, on October 26, 2010 [File: Sophia Paris/Minustah via Getty Images



By Sarah Shamim
Published On 18 Feb 20261


Guatemala announced last week that it will begin phasing out its three-decade-old programme, under which Cuban doctors work in its country to fill the gap in the country’s healthcare system.

Communist-ruled Cuba, under heavy United States sanctions, has been earning billions of dollars each year by leasing thousands of members of its “white coat army” to countries around the world, especially in Latin America. Havana has used its medical missions worldwide as a tool for international diplomacy.

So why are some countries withdrawing from the programme that helps the host countries?

Why is Guatemala phasing out Cuban doctors?

Guatemala’s health ministry said in a statement that it would begin a “gradual termination” over this year.

“The phased withdrawal of the Cuban Medical Brigade stems from an analysis of the mission’s completion of its cycles,” the statement, originally in Spanish, said on February 13.

The statement added that the Cuban medical mission was meant to support Guatemala through the 1998 Hurricane Mitch, which devastated parts of Central America, overwhelmed local hospitals and left rural communities with almost no access to medical care.

“The Ministry of Health is developing a phased strategic replacement plan that includes hiring national personnel, strengthening incentives for hard-to-reach positions, strategic redistribution of human resources, and specialized technical support,” the statement said.

The Cuban mission in Guatemala comprises 412 medical workers, including 333 doctors.

The Central American country’s decision comes amid growing pressure from the United States, which wants to stop Cuban doctors from serving abroad.

The move aims to starve Cuba of much-needed revenue as a major share of the incomes earned by doctors goes to government coffers. Cuba has been facing severe power, food and medical shortages amid an oil blockade imposed by the Trump administration since January.

Guatemala is just one country which benefits from Cuban medical missions.

Over the past decades, Cuba has sent medical missions around the world, from Latin America to Africa and beyond. It began sending these missions shortly after the 1959 Cuban revolution brought Fidel Castro to power.

Castro’s communist government reversed many of the pro-business policies of Fulgencio Batista, the dictator backed by the US. The revolution ruptured ties between the two countries, with the US spy agency CIA trying several times unsuccessfully to topple Castro’s government.

Guatemala has moved closer to the US since the election of Bernardo Arevalo as the president in January 2024. He has cooperated with US President Donald Trump’s administration. Last year, Guatemala agreed to ramp up the number of deportation flights it receives from the US. The US has deported thousands of immigrants without following due process to third countries such as Guatemala and El Salvador, which are headed by pro-Trump leaders.

In November 2018, shortly after Brazil elected Jair Bolsonaro as president, Cuba announced its withdrawal from the country’s Cuba “Mais Medicos” (More Doctors) programme. Bolsonaro, who is known as Brazil’s Trump, had criticised the medical mission, deeming it “slave labour”. Bolsonaro is serving a 27-year prison sentence after he was convicted in September 2025 of plotting to stage a coup in order to retain power after his defeat in the 2022 presidential election.

Why is the US targeting Cuba’s global medical missions?

The US has deemed Cuba’s foreign medical missions a form of “forced labour” and human trafficking, without any evidence, and has a goal of restricting the Cuban government’s access to its largest source of foreign income.

US efforts to curb Cuba’s medical missions are not new. Just last year, Washington imposed visa restrictions aimed at discouraging foreign governments from entering into medical cooperation agreements with Cuba.

In February last year, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that the US would restrict visas targeting “forced labor linked to the Cuban labor export program”.

“This expanded policy applies to current or former Cuban government officials, and other individuals, including foreign government officials, who are believed to be responsible for, or involved in, the Cuban labor export program, particularly Cuba’s overseas medical missions,” a statement on the US State Department’s website said.

Rubio, who is of Cuban origin, has been a vocal critic of Havana, and has pushed US policies in Latin America, including the military operation to abduct Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on January 3. Under Trump, Washington has pushed its focus on Latin America as part of its Western Hemisphere pivot, which seeks to restore Washington’s preeminence in the region.

Since Maduro’s abduction, the US focus has turned towards Cuba. Senior US officials, particularly Rubio, hinted that Havana could be the next target of Washington’s pressure campaign.

The US, in effect, cut off Venezuelan oil shipments to Cuba as part of a new oil blockade. Havana has faced sweeping US sanctions for decades, and Cuba has since 2000 increasingly relied on Venezuelan oil provided as part of a deal struck with Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chavez.

The blockade has caused a fuel shortage and, in turn, a severe energy crisis in Cuba. President Miguel Diaz-Canel has imposed harsh emergency restrictions as a response.

This has renewed US pressure on countries to phase out Cuban medical missions.

How many Cuban doctors are on missions abroad?

More than 24,000 Cuban doctors are working in 56 countries worldwide. This includes Latin American countries such as Venezuela, Nicaragua and Mexico; Africa, including Angola, Mozambique, Algeria; and the Middle East, including Qatar.

There have been occasional deployments in other countries. For instance, Italy received Cuban doctors during the COVID-19 pandemic to help overwhelmed hospitals in some of its hardest-hit regions.

Cuban doctors are crucial for Caribbean countries. They fill a significant gap in medical care amid a lack of trained medical professionals.

Have countries resisted US pressure in the past?

Caribbean countries hit back in March 2025 against the US threats to restrict visas. “We could not get through the pandemic without the Cuban nurses and the Cuban doctors,” Barbados’s Prime Minister Mia Mottley said in a speech to the parliament.

“Out of the blue now, we have been called human traffickers because we hire technical people who we pay top dollar,” Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister Keith Rowley said back then, adding that he was prepared to lose his US visa.

“If the Cubans are not there, we may not be able to run the service,” Saint Vincent and the Grenadines then-Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves said. “I will prefer to lose my visa than to have 60 poor and working people die.”

In August 2025, the US announced that it was revoking the visas of Brazilian, African and Caribbean officials over their ties to Cuba’s programme that sends doctors abroad.

It named Brazilian Ministry of Health officials, Mozart Julio Tabosa Sales and Alberto Kleiman, who had their visas revoked for working on Brazil’s Mais Medicos, or “More Doctors” programme, which was created in 2013.

Some countries are now finding ways around the pressure from Washington. For instance, this month Guyana announced that it would start paying doctors directly, rather than through the Cuban government.





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Vicious vile venomous v-wankees


More rivals in the kitchen? Why the rise of Chinese restaurants could strengthen Malaysia’s F&B




More rivals in the kitchen? Why the rise of Chinese restaurants could strengthen Malaysia’s F&B



Malaysia Chinese Restaurant Association president Gao Hao Yun speaks to Malay Mail during an interview session in Kuala Lumpur, January 19, 2026. — Picture by Raymond Manuel

Thursday, 19 Feb 2026 7:00 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 19 — As Chinese businesses expand in Malaysia’s food and beverage industry, industry voices say it’s time to shift focus from seeing them as a threat to recognising how competition can strengthen an already pressured sector.

Since the Covid-19 pandemic, the rapid rise of Chinese-owned restaurants has reignited debates about competition. Some local operators argue that foreign businesses face few barriers to entry while benefiting from state support, favourable policies and systematic resources.

Calls for state intervention, including targeted support measures and closer anti-monopoly scrutiny, have grown.

For Malaysia Chinese Restaurant Association president Gao Haoyun, protectionism is the wrong response — success depends on willingness to adapt, professionalise and compete in a rapidly changing environment.


“First and foremost, there is competition in everything you do. The question is whether local restaurant owners are willing to change their mindset and keep up with the times,” he told Malay Mail in a recent interview.

He likened the situation to China’s automotive industry: the country initially lacked expertise in car manufacturing but learned by opening up to Japanese and American manufacturers.

“It’s the same for restaurants. If you do not open your doors and let people who understand food and beverage management in, then tell me, how do you expect to protect the industry?” Gao said.


According to him, Chinese cuisine accounts for roughly 35 per cent of Malaysia’s food and beverage industry. A significant share comes from hotpot and Sichuan-style restaurants, followed by Chinese fast-food and snack outlets, as well as other regional cuisines such as Northeastern (Dongbei), Hunan and Xinjiang.



Chinese cuisine accounts for roughly 35 per cent of Malaysia’s food and beverage industry. — Picture by Firdaus Latif



Competition is about strategy, not nationality

Gao stressed that the debate should focus on management and strategy, not ethnicity.

“You claimed they came to take your business away. But let me ask you, you both sell the same rice noodles at the same price, so why can’t you beat him? Then you say it’s because they are Chinese. That is wrong. They are people who understand systematic management, know how to market their business and know how to build better relationships with customers,” he said.

He also highlighted the wider impact of Chinese restaurants on the local market, noting that rents have risen sharply, labour costs have increased, and the supply chain for ingredients has improved — raising standards across the industry.

Looking at Malaysia specifically, Gao said even without Chinese restaurateurs, questions remain about retaining young talent.

“Have you noticed that younger Malaysians willing to enter food and beverage have mostly gone overseas? Those who go to Australia, Singapore… when you go to these countries, there is a lot of good food, but many of the people running it are Malaysians earning higher wages than here,” he said.

“It is not that Malaysia has no talent; it is that Malaysia has not retained talent.”

Gao said that if Malaysia could cultivate an environment that retains young professionals, they would have no reason to leave for opportunities abroad.

“When these people go overseas, aren’t they paying taxes to other countries? Isn’t it the same logic? So shouldn’t we reform, using the best solutions, to improve the development prospects of Malaysia’s food and beverage industry?” he asked.

Leveraging Chinese expertise to create Malaysian fusion

Gao said operators could leverage Chinese technologies, seasoning and expertise to create a distinctive Malaysian-style fusion cuisine — a potential culinary draw for tourism.

“With over 40 million tourists visiting Malaysia each year, such fusion could be similar to Nyonya or Peranakan cuisine — blending Chinese ingredients with Malay and Indonesian spices and cooking techniques,” he said.

“Every market has competition. Competition makes you stronger. Without it, you become lazier and the market becomes weaker. If one could make money just by lying down, why would they work so hard for it? And if our salaries cannot rise, why should I stay?”

He added that foreign labour inevitably fills the gaps left by talented Malaysians who go overseas, a scenario that would not benefit the country’s overall development.

“Are you willing to appoint a foreign worker as your head chef? Do you really want all the food you eat prepared by foreign workers? Can they truly replicate the flavours of traditional Chinese cuisine? Do they understand the eight Great Cuisines of China?” he said.

The eight Great Cuisines — Cantonese (Yue Cai), Sichuan (Chuan Cai), Jiangsu (Su Cai), Shandong (Lu Cai), Fujian (Min Cai), Hunan (Xiang Cai), Anhui (Hui Cai) and Zhejiang (Zhe Cai) — represent China’s most influential regional culinary traditions, each with distinct flavours, ingredients and techniques.



Chinese Muslim restaurants along Petaling Street. — Picture By Choo Choy May



Developing local talent


“What we need is for Chinese Malaysians to master Chinese cuisine as a skill. Our arrival here is temporary, as people will eventually return home, but we see the potential for success in this market and aim to use what we have learned to grow here,” Gao said.

“Ultimately, this must include nurturing local Malaysian talent. It is neither realistic nor sustainable for the industry to be dominated entirely by Chinese operators,” he added.


Hamzah’s sacking boosts Azmin’s prospects at Bersatu, says analyst


FMT:

Hamzah’s sacking boosts Azmin’s prospects at Bersatu, says analyst


4 hours ago
Minderjeet Kaur

Hisomudin Bakar of Ilham Centre says Azmin Ali’s path to the very top at Bersatu appears clearer, with no major obstacles in his way


Hamzah Zainudin’s sacking has placed Bersatu secretary-general Azmin Ali in prime position to take the deputy presidency and potentially even the top job.


PETALING JAYA: Hamzah Zainudin’s sacking has shifted the internal power dynamics within Bersatu, with analysts saying it strengthens Azmin Ali’s position as a contender for the deputy presidency and potentially even the top job.

Hamzah and Bersatu president Muhyiddin Yassin have been locked in a leadership tussle for many months now. This conflict culminated in Hamzah and 16 other leaders being sacked by the party last Friday.

Speaking to FMT, Hisomudin Bakar of Ilham Centre said Hamzah’s removal has effectively reshuffled Bersatu’s leadership hierarchy.


“From this perspective, Azmin’s path to the party’s top leadership appears more structured, as he no longer faces the major obstacles he once did,” he said of the Bersatu secretary-general.


Hisomudin Bakar.


Over the past year, Azmin has positioned himself as a loyal and disciplined figure, consistently defending Muhyiddin’s leadership amid the growing rift between the party president and his deputy.

Hisomudin said loyalty and patience are key determinants of political survival.

He pointed out how Azmin’s non-confrontational approach and consistent support for the leadership show that he understands Bersatu’s power structure and political culture.

According to Hisomudin, Azmin, a former Selangor menteri besar, is widely regarded as disciplined and measured in his public messaging.

He said these are traits that could ensure any transition of power between him and Muhyiddin occurs in a stable and controlled manner as the party prepares for the next general election.

Although Azmin’s style has worked in his favour, Hisomudin noted that the timing of any leadership transition still rests entirely with Muhyiddin.

“There is no immediate pressure for change if Muhyiddin, as Bersatu president, intends to lead the party into the next general election, which many believe could be his final contest as party president.

“Azmin is most likely pursuing a long-term strategy and will wait for an orderly and dignified transition,” he said.

Azmi Hassan of Akademi Nusantara also believes that Muhyiddin is unlikely to relinquish the Bersatu presidency soon, despite signs that his influence within the party may be waning.


Azmi Hassan.


He said Hamzah is expected to rely on backing from PAS, while Muhyiddin continues to rely on support from PN component parties such as Gerakan and the Malaysian Indian People’s Party (MIPP).

“Muhyiddin wants to remain Bersatu president because he also seeks to be re-elected as Perikatan Nasional chairman. That position is crucial to maintain control of the coalition,” Azmi said.

“Muhyiddin knew that if he stepped down after the Perlis fiasco in December, PAS would push its own candidate, which MIPP and Gerakan would not accept. That is why he believes he still has a path to return as PN chairman.”


Awang Azman Pawi.


Meanwhile, Awang Azman Pawi of Universiti Malaya cautioned that the majority of Bersatu’s MPs are said to support Hamzah, meaning that Azmin would be leading a “weak party” if he were to take over the top leadership.

“Internal cleanups alone are not enough,” he said, referring to Azmin’s recent warning to party members against attending meetings or gatherings organised by those expelled by the party’s disciplinary board.


***


Everywhere he goes/is, there's Machiavellianism afoot, wakakaka. If he has his way on each and every occasion he would have been the Shahanshah of SE Asia. πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚




Penang PH ramps up preparations for GE16


FMT:

Penang PH ramps up preparations for GE16


Penang Pakatan Harapan chairman Chow Kon Yeow says 2026 is pivotal for the coalition to consolidate and improve governance


Penang PH leadership council chairman Chow Kon Yeow said the coalition is focused on strengthening itself, including restructuring its machinery.


PETALING JAYA: Pakatan Harapan’s machinery in Penang has been told to begin preparing for the next general election.

Penang PH leadership council chairman Chow Kon Yeow said the coalition is now focused on strengthening itself, including restructuring its machinery.

“Time will pass very quickly, so we need to start preparing for the upcoming election.


“This decision was made in a meeting early this month and was not inspired by political events in any other party,” Bernama reported him as saying at Wisma PKR in George Town, Penang, today.

Chow, who is also the chief minister, said 2026 is crucial for PH to strengthen itself and improve its administrative performance.


“We must start working now to build a convincing administrative track record by the time the election arrives,” he said.

He also said any decision on whether the general and state elections will be held simultaneously rests with the central leadership, and Penang PH would abide by any decision made.


Wednesday, February 18, 2026

MARYAM NAWAZ GOVERNOR OF PUNJAB SAYS 1000 PAK SOLDIERS KILLED BY BLA

 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026



MARYAM NAWAZ GOVERNOR OF PUNJAB SAYS 1000 PAK SOLDIERS KILLED BY BLA

 



Maryam Nawaz (picture above) is the daughter of former Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif. The present prime minister Shebaz Sharif is her uncle. Maryam is also the governor of the state of Punjab inside Pakistan. Its all in the family.

In a recent visit to the family of an army captain who was killed by the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) in Balochistan, Ms Nawaz said that a thousand Pakistani soldiers had lost their lives in the recent Baloch uprising. This is FIVE TIMES more than the 200 or so soldiers killed which was the official figures released by the Pakistan Army.

In another episode the BLA has captured alive SEVEN Pakistani army commandos of the Special Services Group (SSG). The Baloch are holding the seven Pakistani commandos as ransom to be exchanged with Baloch prisoners in Pakistani custody. The Baloch have released videos of the seven captured commandos plus audio. The Baloch have also captured separately another Pakistani soldier Mohamed Sharan (top right of picture), making a total of eight captured Pakistani troops.

However the Pakistani Army has denied their existence and says that it is a fake AI video. The video has circulated widely on both regular media and social media and no one is saying that the video is an AI fake. Except the Pakistan Army.

Basically what it means is that the Pakistani Army is disowning its own troops and leaving them to their own fates at the hands of the BLA.

There is also news that after being jailed in solitary confinement for over 900 days with the light constantly turned on, former prime minister Imran Khan has almost fully lost his sight in one eye. Almost blind in one eye.

Thats just some news from Pakistan.



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