Friday, April 24, 2026

Penang CM urges cloud seeding as critically low Sungai Muda levels threaten state water supply






Penang CM urges cloud seeding as critically low Sungai Muda levels threaten state water supply



The Penang government hopes cloud seeding in upstream Kedah can raise Sungai Muda’s water levels after it dropped to a critical level. — Unsplash pic

Friday, 24 Apr 2026 1:47 PM MYT


GEORGE TOWN, April 24 — The Penang state government hopes cloud seeding operations can be carried out in upstream Kedah to raise water levels in Sungai Muda.

Penang Chief Minister Chow Kon Yeow said the measure was important to ensure sufficient raw water supply in the state.

“The river’s water level has dropped to a critical stage,” he said at a press conference after launching the Penang ATE campus at Olive Tree Hotel here today.

Chow said the Penang Water Supply Corporation (PBAPP) had contacted authorities in Kedah to coordinate immediate action.


Apart from cloud seeding, he said releasing water from Beris Dam in Kedah had also been proposed as a short-term measure.

He added that Penang would channel water from the Expanded Mengkuang Dam to treatment plants to ensure consumer supply remains unaffected.

Earlier today, PBAPP chief executive officer Datuk K. Pathmanathan said Sungai Muda’s level at Lahar Tiang fell to a danger level of 1.27 metres yesterday, compared with the safe level of two metres.


He said under normal conditions, PBAPP abstracts about 1,300 million litres per day (MLD) of raw water from Sungai Muda for use at the Sungai Dua Water Treatment Plant.

“From 4.30pm yesterday, PBAPP’s abstraction capacity was limited to 1,000 MLD, or 30 per cent below the normal level due to the abnormally low river level,” he said.

He said PBAPP immediately began drawing water from the Expanded Mengkuang Dam to supplement supply to the Sungai Dua plant.

He said the drop in river level could be due to irrigation drawdowns in Kedah upstream of the Lahar Tiang intake.

“As of April 23, the capacity of the Beris Dam (which is releasing water into the Sungai Muda system) was 49.6 per cent,” he said.

He said the release rate was reportedly 864 MLD, meaning reserves may last 70 days before reaching the critical 20 per cent level.

He added that reserves at Muda Dam, another key source for the Sungai Muda system, had fallen to 9.5 per cent.

He called on the National Water Services Commission (SPAN) and the Ministry of Energy Transition and Water Transformation (PETRA) to intervene in managing the Sungai Muda system.

“The security of water supply services in Penang and Kedah must be prioritised over irrigation matters under the present circumstances,” Pathmanathan said.


***


Develop desalination plants, CM Chow. Penang cannot rely on Kedah nor Perak to provide our water supply forever.


Ex-deputy law ministers back DAP rep, say pig farming proposal not defying sultan's decree










Ex-deputy law ministers back DAP rep, say pig farming proposal not defying sultan's decree



Published: Apr 24, 2026 9:51 AM
Updated: 1:45 PM



Two former deputy law ministers have defended Seri Kembangan assemblyperson Wong Siew Ki's proposal for the Selangor government to consider adopting a modern pig farming system.

While questioning Perikatan Nasional's criticism of Wong (above), Amanah leader Hanipa Maidin said the DAP lawmaker's suggestion did not disrespect Selangor ruler Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah's decree against any further pig farming in the state.

"While the sultan’s decree certainly deserves full respect and was undoubtedly made after careful deliberation, it shouldn't preclude assemblypersons from proposing constructive solutions to the issue.

"Suggesting a modern, technical approach in the august House is a matter of policy innovation and should not be misconstrued as a sign of disrespect toward the royal decree," Hanipa said in a statement yesterday.

Calling for elected representatives to differentiate between defiance and problem-solving, the former Sepang MP said the respect for a royal decree should not prevent lawmakers from debating practical alternatives and improvements.


Amanah leader Hanipa Maidin


Yesterday, PN representatives attempted to raise an emergency motion to refer Wong for disciplinary proceedings over her proposal.

The day before, Selangor PAS Youth chief Sukri Omar called for Wong to be suspended from the state legislative assembly for 12 months, while Selangor BN information chief Jamal Yunos said she is welcome to leave the state.

During her debate on the royal address, Wong had said that the issue of pig farming touches on equality rights under Article 8(2) of the Federal Constitution, further arguing that pig farming should be treated the same as other livestock, as it poses similar pollution, hygiene, and health risks.

She proposed that the government and investors consider the adoption of a modern, closed-house pig farming system in Selangor, incorporating zero-discharge processes and biogas recycling technologies.

‘Poor understanding’


Echoing Hanipa's view, DAP national legal bureau chairperson Ramkarpal Singh said condemnation of Wong reflects "a poor understanding" of an elected representative's duties and functions.

"Wong’s proposal ought to be debated rationally and maturely in the state assembly, and calling for her to be reprimanded on the matter will create a dangerous precedent in silencing elected representatives, particularly on matters in the public interest, which is undoubtedly against democratic values and principles," the Bukit Gelugor MP said in a statement yesterday.


DAP national legal bureau chairperson Ramkarpal Singh


He stressed that the issue was one of public interest, and that Wong's suggestion, which offered "constructive alternative solutions", should not have been dismissed out of hand.

On Feb 10, the Selangor sultan said he does not consent to pig farming in the state due to pollution and limited land resources, and suggested instead that pork be imported to meet demand.


READ MORE: KINIGUIDE | The battle over Selangor's pig farms


The decree followed backlash against the state government's proposed centralised pig farming project in Bukit Tagar, with protests from residents in nearby areas.

In January, His Highness firmly opposed the renewal of licences for pig farms in Tanjung Sepat, Kuala Langat, challenging assemblypersons to live next to the pig farms themselves to experience the issues firsthand.


‘Policy should be based on data, not emotions’

In a separate statement today, Selangor MCA chairperson Lawrence Low urged all parties to explore Wong’s suggestion rationally and to avoid politicising the issue.

Low, who is also MCA vice-president, pointed out that Wong’s proposal touched on practical issues such as agricultural modernisation, environmental management, and food security.


Selangor MCA chairperson Lawrence Low


“Public policy should be based on data, technology, and real needs, not driven by emotions or labels. Otherwise, even the most serious policy discussions can easily be derailed.

“Why is it that an issue originally concerning industrial upgrading and environmental management is immediately turned into an emotional confrontation?” he said.

Similarly, former DAP central executive committee member Ronnie Liu urged the Selangor government to address mounting concerns over the state’s pig farming policy, warning that the issue can no longer be ignored.

In a statement today, Liu questioned why senior DAP leaders had not sought an audience with the Selangor ruler, engaged the menteri besar, or raised the matter at the federal level with the prime minister and cabinet.


Former DAP central executive committee member Ronnie Liu


He said the issue goes beyond politics, as it affects long-standing farmers, supply chains, prices, and public confidence in the government.

“Do not continue to delay and evade, and do not wait until the non-Malay communities completely lose confidence in the Selangor state government and the Madani government,” he said.

Liu stressed that if a lawful industry is being phased out due to policy changes, the government must ensure transparency and fairness, including explaining the legal basis, whether due process was followed, and outlining compensation and transition plans.


Court of Appeal affirms RM750K award in Siti Mastura defamation case




Court of Appeal affirms RM750K award in Siti Mastura defamation case


3 HOURS AGO
Faisal Asyraf


A three-member bench unanimously says there is no merit to her appeal


Siti Mastura Muhammad appealed a judgment in favour of Lim Kit Siang, Lim Guan Eng, and Teresa Kok, handed down by the Penang High Court in December 2024.


PUTRAJAYA: The Court of Appeal today upheld a High Court ruling ordering PAS MP Siti Mastura Muhammad to pay RM750,000 in damages for defaming three senior DAP leaders.

A three-member bench chaired by Justice Ahmad Kamal Shahid, who sat with Justices Evrol Mariette Peters and Latifah Tahar, unanimously dismissed her appeal.

Delivering the decision, Kamal said the court found no merit in her appeal and upheld the Penang High Court’s Dec 4, 2024 judgment in full.


The panel also dismissed the trio’s cross-appeal on the quantum of damages, which they contended was inadequate.

The court made no order as to costs to both appeal and cross-appeal.

Siti Mastura was found to have defamed Lim Kit Siang, Lim Guan Eng, and Teresa Kok by linking them to former Communist Party of Malaya leader Chin Peng through alleged family ties during a political speech in Kemaman, Terengganu, on Nov 4, 2023.

The Penang High Court ruled in favour of the trio, awarding RM300,000 to Kit Siang, RM250,000 to Guan Eng, and RM200,000 to Kok.

Justice Quay Chew Soon also ordered Siti Mastura to pay RM25,000 in costs to each plaintiff, with interest at 5% per annum from the date of judgment.

On the defence of fair comment, Justice Ahmad Kamal said the panel agreed with the High Court that the impugned words were not opinions but assertions of fact, and “manifestly false”.

The panel noted that Mastura had made a series of specific factual allegations linking the DAP trio to Chin Peng as well as Singapore’s first prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew, by asserting direct familial ties.

“In the context of Malaysian society, to label a person or imply that they are affiliated with a banned communist party – an enemy of the state and a threat to national security and the Federal Constitution – is undeniably defamatory.

“Such statements go to the very heart of a person’s loyalty, integrity, and reputation,” he said, adding that a defence of fair comment could not be built on false facts.

On justification, the court found that Mastura failed to prove the truth of her claims.


It noted that her reliance on a book allegedly linked to Barisan Nasional’s communications department was flawed as the source lacked any identifiable author, publisher, or date, and its maker was not called to testify.

“A defendant cannot simply regurgitate unverified information from an anonymous source and claim it as truth.

“To do so is reckless and irresponsible,” the judge said.

On qualified privilege, the court rejected the argument that the statements were made pursuant to a political duty during an election campaign.

It held that the defence required an honest belief in the truth of the publication, supported by reasonable steps to verify the information.

Applying established principles, the panel found that Mastura had failed to take such steps, particularly by not seeking the plaintiffs’ response.

The court also upheld the finding of malice, pointing to the defendant’s conduct before and after publication.

It noted that she neither retracted nor apologised, and instead stood by her statements.

Yusfarizal Yusoff represented Mastura while SN Nair acted for the DAP trio.


Rescuers race to reach Australian hiker after fall on Mount Santubong descent






Rescuers race to reach Australian hiker after fall on Mount Santubong descent



Australian hiker Belinda Lapier fell while descending Mount Santubong, prompting a search-and-rescue operation last night. — Picture by Raymond Manuel

Friday, 24 Apr 2026 9:43 AM MYT


KUCHING, April 24 — An Australian woman was reported to have fallen while hiking Mount Santubong here yesterday evening.

Sarawak Fire and Rescue Department (JBPM) said in a statement this morning that the victim, Belinda Lapier, fell on her way down from the summit.


It said JBPM received a call about the incident at 8.20pm, reached the site by 9.43pm, and launched a search-and-rescue (SAR) operation.

“Rescue teams from fire services and rangers headed to the victim’s last known location. The path to where she fell was obstructed, but they could still communicate with her.


“The victim said she was safe but having trouble getting out,” it said, adding that rocks, large trees, and darkness are blocking access to the victim.


“The SAR operation was paused at 3.30am and will resume this morning,” it added. — Bernama


Malaysia’s Karex plans massive condom price hike over US-Iran crisis; warning sparks stockpiling in China





Malaysia’s Karex plans massive condom price hike over US-Iran crisis; warning sparks stockpiling in China



Karex chief executive officer Goh Miah Kiat speaks during an interview with Reuters in Petaling Jaya on April 21, 2026. — Reuters pic

Friday, 24 Apr 2026 9:57 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, April 24 — A warning from Malaysia’s Karex Bhd, the world’s top condom producer, that it plans to raise prices by 20 to 30 per cent has unexpectedly gone viral in China, sparking widespread discussion about stockpiling as the Iran war disrupts global supply chains.


The announcement from the Malaysian company has had its most dramatic impact in China, where the hashtag “condom prices rising” garnered more than 60 million views on the social media platform Weibo.


Karex CEO Goh Miah Kiat told Reuters that the price hike was unavoidable due to soaring costs for raw materials caused by the conflict in the Middle East.

“The situation is definitely very fragile, prices are expensive... We have no choice but to transfer the costs right now to the customers,” Goh said in an interview.


He explained that since the conflict began, Karex has seen cost increases for everything from synthetic rubber and nitrile used in manufacturing to packaging materials like aluminium foil and lubricants like silicone oil.


Karex, which produces over five billion condoms annually and supplies major brands like Durex and Trojan, is also seeing a 30 per cent surge in demand.

This is being driven by rising freight costs and shipping delays that have left many of its customers with lower-than-usual stockpiles. Shipments to Europe and the United States are now taking nearly two months to arrive, compared to one month previously.




ONE condoms by Karex are seen on display in Petaling Jaya on April 21, 2026. — Reuters pic



Viral reaction in China

The news from the Malaysian firm quickly spread across Chinese social media, with many users bemoaning that the Iran crisis was now even invading the bedroom.

The online conversations erupted as Chinese authorities are actively trying to boost the country’s flagging birth rate. Many online comments noted the irony, with some urging others to stockpile condoms.

“A few dozen yuan for a condom is a hundred times more cost-effective than raising a child at a million yuan,” said one popular comment on Weibo.

Another user wrote, “From now on, not only will we have to be frugal, but we’ll also have to stock up on condoms in advance.”

The potential price rise adds to the increasing cost of family planning in China, after the government removed a three-decade-old tax exemption on contraceptives at the start of the year, subjecting them to a 13 per cent value-added tax.


Bangladeshi man killed in MEX crash identified as popular gaming YouTuber, fans call for justice

 





Bangladeshi man killed in MEX crash identified as popular gaming YouTuber, fans call for justice



Muzahid Millad, 22, who was identified as Bangladeshi gaming content creator Advance Gaming, was killed in a crash on the Maju Expressway yesterday. — Composite picture via Facebook/Advance Gaming

Friday, 24 Apr 2026 10:32 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, April 24 — A Bangladeshi man killed in a crash believed to have been caused by a drunk driver on the Maju Expressway yesterday has been identified as gaming content creator Advance Gaming.

Muzahid Millad, 22, died after the vehicle he was travelling in with his wife was struck while they were on their way from Kuala Lumpur International Airport.

His wife, 23-year-old Nafisa Tabassum Adiba, was injured and is receiving treatment at Hospital Kuala Lumpur.

The couple, who were from Habiganj, Bangladesh, had reportedly just arrived in Malaysia for a week-long holiday in the capital before the crash.


On social media, Muzahid’s death sparked an outpouring of grief among Bangladesh’s online gaming community, with hashtags including #JusticeForMuzahid, #JusticeForAdvanceGaming and #BangladeshDemandsJustice trending.

A statement in Bengali uploaded on the Advance Gaming YouTube channel confirmed his death and asked the public to pray for him.

The account has more than 780,000 subscribers.

Yesterday, police arrested a 31-year-old military personnel suspected of driving under the influence of alcohol and causing the fatal crash, with the case being investigated under Section 44(1) of the Road Transport Act 1987.

Ipoh High Court vacates proceedings on Indira Gandhi’s bid to cite IGP for contempt





Ipoh High Court vacates proceedings on Indira Gandhi’s bid to cite IGP for contempt



Support group Ingat has said that the High Court in Ipoh has vacated proceedings on whether to grant M. Indira Gandhi (pictured) leave to initiate contempt of court action against the Inspector-General of Police. — Picture by Yusof Isa

Friday, 24 Apr 2026 9:54 AM MYT


IPOH, April 24 — The High Court in Ipoh has vacated proceedings on whether to grant M. Indira Gandhi leave to initiate contempt of court action against the Inspector-General of Police (IGP).

The matter was confirmed by Indira Gandhi Action Team (Ingat) chairman Arun Doraisamy last night.

“There will be no proceedings today. The case has been vacated by the court,” he said.

The High Court had been scheduled to deliver its decision today on whether to allow Indira to proceed with the contempt application against the IGP.


This marks Indira’s second attempt to cite the IGP for contempt of court. She filed the application on November 17 last year, and it was heard by the High Court on February 27.


Her application centres on the police’s alleged continued failure to enforce the High Court’s May 30, 2014 orders — specifically, to recover her daughter and to arrest her former husband, K. Pathmanathan.


Israeli forces kill Palestinian teenager in occupied West Bank raid



Israeli forces kill Palestinian teenager in occupied West Bank raid

Teenager dies in hospital after Israeli forces shot him with live ammunition in the shoulder, Palestinian media reports.

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Israeli troops take position during a raid in Nablus city in the occupied West Bank on August 27, 2025. (Photo by Jaafar ASHTIYEH / AFP)
Israeli troops take position during a raid in Nablus city in the occupied West Bank [File: Jaafar Ashtiyeh/AFP]

A 15-year-old Palestinian has died from his wounds after he was shot by Israeli forces during a raid in the occupied West Bank city of Nablus, Palestinian media reported.

The teenager suffered critical injuries after being struck by live ammunition in the shoulder and was transferred to a nearby hospital, where he died, the official Palestinian news agency Wafa reported on Thursday, citing medical sources.

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Abood al-Aker, communications director for the municipality, told the AFP news agency that six Israeli army vehicles had arrived in Nablus in the morning.

He said the soldiers spoke to shop owners in the Rafidia district’s commercial area and shot the teenager as they were exiting the city.

“We don’t know why they shot this kid on their way out,” he said.

The Israeli military said a Palestinian hurled stones towards its forces during an “operational activity” in ⁠the area of Nablus and forces initiated “standard suspect apprehension procedures, which ⁠concluded with fire being directed at the suspect”.

The military added that they were aware of reports that a Palestinian was killed at the scene.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

What we know about Israel killing Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil




What we know about Israel killing Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil


Khalil was killed and her colleague injured in what Lebanese officials are calling a ‘double-tap’ strike by Israeli forces


Amal Khalil, a Lebanese journalist working for the daily Al Akhbar newspaper, reports near a destroyed bridge in Qasmiyeh, Lebanon, March 22, 2026 [Mohammed Zaatari/AP]



By Caolán Magee
Published On 23 Apr 2026


Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam has accused Israel of crimes against humanity for killing journalist Amal Khalil and wounding her colleague Zeinab Faraj in an air strike in the village of al-Tayri in southern Lebanon.

Khalil and Faraj were reporting on an earlier Israeli attack on a vehicle on Wednesday, when they were targeted while fleeing towards a building to take shelter.


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Paramedics rescued Faraj and recovered Khalil’s body from the rubble hours later.


Here’s what we know so far:

The journalist was last heard from at about 4:10pm local time (13:10 GMT), when she called her family members and the Lebanese military, according to colleagues and media reports.

She had taken cover inside the house after an earlier Israeli air raid killed two people near the car in which she was travelling with Faraj.

Rescue workers initially tried to reach the veteran Al Akhbar journalist, but came under Israeli fire and were forced to withdraw, according to Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health.

A second strike then hit the house where the two journalists had sought refuge. Khalil’s body was recovered shortly before midnight, more than seven hours after the attack.

Khalil was killed in what Lebanese officials described as a “double-tap” strike in al-Tayri.



Israel kills journalist and wounds another in south Lebanon targeted attack



Lebanon Latest: Israel attacks kill journalist and target first responders



Iran captures two vessels in Strait of Hormuz after ship comes under fire



Trump ordered to ‘shoot and kill’ any boat putting mines in Strait of Hormuz


Rescuers were able to pull Faraj, who was seriously wounded, from the scene and recover the bodies of two people killed in the first strike. But efforts to reach Khalil were delayed after Israeli forces fired on emergency workers, the ministry said.

Khalil had been covering a renewed escalation of hostilities between Israel and the Lebanese group Hezbollah, which resumed in early March amid wider regional tensions linked to the US-Israel war on Iran.

Khalil is the ninth journalist killed in Lebanon this year.

Born in 1984 in Baysariyyeh, southern Lebanon, she had covered the region for Al Akhbar since the 2006 war. Her latest reporting focused on Israeli demolitions of homes in villages where Israeli troops are positioned inside Lebanon.

In an interview earlier this year with The Public Source, Khalil said her reporting sought to highlight the resilience of residents in Lebanon’s border villages.

I debunk the enemy’s narrative of targeting only military sites by showing evidence of them bombing homes, farms, and killing children,” she said. “Through my work, I have tried to be in solidarity with these people – the people of the land.”


Israel condemned for the killing

In a statement to Al Jazeera, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said Khalil’s killing “must be a wake-up call for the international community to enforce international law, urgently investigate Israel’s 262 killings of journalists across the region, and hold all those responsible to account”.

“The Israeli military’s obstruction of medical crews from rescuing wounded civilians is a brutal and recurring crime we have already witnessed in Gaza and now again in Lebanon. Khalil, an unarmed civilian journalist, remained trapped under the rubble for more than seven hours while the Red Cross was prevented from reaching her,” said the CPJ’s regional director, Sara Qudah.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun offered his condolences over Khalil’s death and wished Faraj a swift recovery.

In a post on X, Aoun accused Israel of the “deliberate and consistent targeting of journalists” in an effort to “conceal the truth of its aggressive acts against Lebanon”.

Reporting from Tyre, southern Lebanon, Al Jazeera’s Heidi Pett said Khalil was “a well-known and respected journalist here in Lebanon”.

Pett said Khalil had received direct threats during the last war from an Israeli phone number on WhatsApp, warning her to stop reporting.

“In fact, [they were] telling her that she should leave Lebanon if she wanted her head to remain on her shoulders,”
Pett said.

The Israeli military denied reports it had prevented rescue teams from reaching the scene and said it does not target journalists.

Less than a month ago, three journalists were killed in another reported “double-tap” attack in southern Lebanon. Their vehicle was struck, then hit again, while rescue workers who arrived afterwards also came under attack.

Following that incident, the Israeli army posted an image alleging one of the journalists was a member of Hezbollah’s elite forces, but later acknowledged the photo had been altered.

Lebanon’s Information Minister Paul Morcos described the latest attack as a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law.


US to ‘shoot and kill’ Iranian boats laying mines in Hormuz, Trump says




US to ‘shoot and kill’ Iranian boats laying mines in Hormuz, Trump says


US says it intercepted another tanker carrying Iranian oil as Trump underscores alleged infighting with Iran leadership


An IRGC boat off the coast of Bandar Abbas, Iran [File: Nazanin Tabatabaee/WANA via Reuters]



By Al Jazeera Staff
Published On 23 Apr 2026


President Donald Trump has said he ordered the United States Navy to “shoot and kill” any Iranian boat laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz, a move that could jeopardise the fragile ceasefire between the two countries.

The US president also said on Thursday that the military will heighten its efforts to remove explosives from the strategic waterway.

“I have ordered the United States Navy to shoot and kill any boat, small boats though they may be (Their naval ships are ALL, 159 of them, at the bottom of the sea!), that is putting mines in the waters of the Strait of Hormuz. There is to be no hesitation,” Trump wrote in a social media post.

“Additionally, our mine ‘sweepers’ are clearing the Strait right now. I am hereby ordering that activity to continue, but at a tripled-up level!”

Iranian officials have repeatedly promised that their country would defend itself and respond to any US attack.

Hormuz – which had been open without interruption before the war – has emerged as a major point of contention in this war.

Iran closed down the strait in response to the US-Israeli military campaign, and it is now suggesting that it has rights to the passage that links the Gulf to the Indian Ocean – parts of which go through Iranian territorial waters.

The closure of Hormuz has spiked oil prices, putting political pressure on Trump at home in the US, where the price of one gallon (3.8 litres) of petrol has surpassed $4, up from $3 before the conflict.


A satellite image shows a fleet of small boats at sea, north of the Strait of Hormuz near the Kargan coast, Iran, April 22 [File: European Union/Copernicus Sentinel-2/Handout via Reuters]


Dueling blockades

About 20 percent of the world’s oil and natural gas flowed through Hormuz before the war.

After a two-week ceasefire came into effect last month, Trump announced a naval siege on Iranian ports and kept it in place even after Tehran announced reopening Hormuz in response to the inclusion of Lebanon in the truce.

Iran has set lifting the blockade as a precondition for resuming talks with the US.

Trump extended the ceasefire that was set to expire on Wednesday, but Washington has kept its blockade on Iran-linked ships.

The Pentagon said on Thursday that the US military conducted a “maritime interdiction and right-of-visit” to a tanker carrying Iranian oil in the Indian Ocean.

Earlier this week, the US military also said it seized an Iranian vessel and ordered dozens of others to turn around.

Meanwhile, Iran has also captured foreign commercial vessels around the Hormuz Strait, which it said were in violation of naval regulations.

The duelling blockades risk re-igniting the war. The US has not set a deadline for the extended truce.

The White House said on Wednesday that Trump is “satisfied” with the siege on Iran.



Trump ordered to ‘shoot and kill’ any boat putting mines in Strait of Hormuz



Israel's war on Gaza leaves thousands of children with life-changing eye injuries



Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil was pursued and killed by Israel


Trump says Hormuz ‘sealed up tight’

Although Iran has all but halted vessel traffic in the waterway, Trump said on Thursday that the US has “total control over the Strait of Hormuz”, adding that the passage is “sealed up tight”.

The US president also reiterated his claim that the Iranian leadership is divided.

“Iran is having a very hard time figuring out who their leader is! They just don’t know!” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

“The infighting is between the ‘Hardliners’, who have been losing BADLY on the battlefield, and the ‘Moderates’, who are not very moderate at all (but gaining respect!), is CRAZY!”

Earlier in the day, Trump shared a post by conservative commentator Marc Thiessen, calling for the assassination of Iranian officials who oppose diplomacy with the US.

“If there are two factions in Iran, one that wants a deal and one that doesn’t, let’s kill the ones who don’t want a deal,” it said.

Despite Trump’s repeated claims, there has been no evidence of a rift within the leadership in Iran.

Although US and Israeli strikes killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and several top officials, there have been no major defections within the ruling system.

Last month, Khamenei was replaced by his son Mojtaba, who had been wounded in US attacks, according to the Pentagon.



Protester hurls red fluid at Reza Pahlavi during Germany visit


Mojtaba Khamenei is yet to make a public appearance since he succeeded his slain father, raising speculation about his health.

But Iranian officials, including the lead negotiators – Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf – have voiced a unified position in rejecting the US blockade.

Iranian leadership also agreed to the ceasefire and enforced it earlier this month.

On Thursday, Iran’s Foreign Ministry praised the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the ideologically driven military branch spearheading the war effort.

“We salute the noble defenders and guardians of the homeland, and honour the memory of the crimson-shrouded martyrs of the IRGC,” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said in a post on X, marking the anniversary of the establishment of the Revolutionary Guard.

Israeli strike kills five in Gaza, including three children



Israeli strike kills five in Gaza, including three children

Israel has committed 2,400 violations of the ‘ceasefire’ deal it struck with Hamas in October, Gaza’s Government Media Office says.

An Israeli air strike has targeted a group of civilians in northern Gaza, killing at least five Palestinians, according to Gaza’s civil defence agency.

“Five Palestinians, including three children, were killed in an Israeli air strike that targeted a group of civilians near Al-Qassam mosque in Beit Lahia,” local health officials said in a statement late on Wednesday.

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“Their bodies were taken to Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City,” it added, without specifying the age of the children. The hospital confirmed receiving the bodies.

Israel has committed 2,400 violations of the “ceasefire agreement” with Hamas in October, Gaza’s Government Media Office said. These included targeted strikes, arrests, blockades and forced starvation of Gaza’s residents.

More than 20,000 children were killed by Israeli forces in Gaza in two years of its genocidal war, according to a Save the Children report in September. The charity said that, on average, at least one child was killed every hour, over 1,000 of them under one year old, with thousands more suffering injuries, trauma or separation from parents.

By November 2023, the situation in Gaza was already described by United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres as a “graveyard for children”.

Last week, the gender equality organisation, UN Women, reported that an average of at least 47 women and girls were ⁠killed each day ⁠during the war in Gaza – more than 38,000 in total between October 2023 and December 2025, including over 22,000 women and 16,000 girls.

“Women and girls accounted for a proportion of deaths far higher than those observed in previous conflicts in Gaza. Those killed were mothers, they were daughters, sisters, and friends – deeply loved by those around them,” said Sofia Calltorp, the agency’s humanitarian action head. The agency reported “this suffering continues”, despite the supposed ceasefire.

Since the US-brokered “ceasefire” took effect in October, at least 786 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces, according to Gaza’s health ministry. At least 32 of those deaths were in this month alone, among them Al Jazeera journalist Mohammed Wishah, who was killed in a drone strike west of Gaza City on April 8.

Israel has also been accused of violating the “ceasefire” agreement by restricting the entry of agreed quantities of food, medicine, medical supplies and shelter materials into Gaza, where about 2.4 million Palestinians, including 1.5 million displaced, are living in desperate conditions.



***



Evil Beasts of Babylon, spawns of Moloch

👿👿👿



S'gor assembly erupts as PN moves to discipline DAP rep over 'treasonous' pig farm remarks










S'gor assembly erupts as PN moves to discipline DAP rep over 'treasonous' pig farm remarks


Published: Apr 23, 2026 3:56 PM
Updated: 6:46 PM


A shouting match reportedly broke out during Selangor assembly proceedings today, after Perikatan Nasional representatives attempted to raise an emergency motion to refer Seri Kembangan assemblyperson Wong Siew Ki for disciplinary proceedings.

This is over Wong’s call on the state government to consider adopting a modern pig farming system, which the PN representatives see as an affront to Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah’s decree that there shall be no further pig farming in Selangor.

According to Oriental Daily, the issue was raised today when Dr Afif Bahardin (PN-Taman Medan) stood up to raise an emergency motion. This was at 11.30am as David Cheong (Harapan-Kajang) was debating the royal address.


Dr Afif Bahardin


Afif sought to refer Wong to the rights and privileges committee for disciplinary proceedings to determine if disciplinary action, including potential suspension, was warranted.

He also asked Selangor speaker Lau Weng San, who was presiding over the session at the time, why his motion was not approved.

Lau reportedly replied that while his office has received the motion, he has yet to review the document and wants to study it before deciding whether to allow the emergency motion.


Failed intervention by opposition leader

Selangor opposition leader Azmin Ali (PN-Hulu Kelang) attempted to intervene and mediate, but inadvertently escalated the situation by claiming Wong’s remarks were not only insolent but amounted to treason against the sultan.

During the commotion, Abbas Salimi Azmi (Harapan-Seri Serdang) moved for Lau to exercise his powers to eject any assemblyperson causing a disturbance if order could not be restored.


Azmin Ali


The matter was briefly put on hold when deputy speaker Kamri Kamaruddin took over the chair.

Preakas Sampunathan (Harapan-Kota Kemuning) then cited the standing orders, accusing PN of misleading the house and demanding they retract the “treason” accusation.

However, the PN representatives stood their ground, leading to a shouting match between Azmin, Dr Ahmad Yunus Hairi (PN-Sijangkang), and Hilman Idham (PN-Gombak Setia) on one side, and Preakas, Tony Leong (Harapan-Pandamaran), and Abbas on the other.

The report said this left Cheong unable to continue with his speech.


Ex-appeals judge, lawyer question if N Sembilan chieftains accorded ruler due process










Ex-appeals judge, lawyer question if N Sembilan chieftains accorded ruler due process


Zikri Kamarulzaman
Published: Apr 23, 2026 2:33 PM
Updated: 5:57 PM



A former Court of Appeal judge and a senior lawyer have questioned whether the Negeri Sembilan chieftains had followed due process before they moved to oust Tuanku Muhriz Tuanku Munawir as state ruler.

The concerns stem from the wording of Article 10 of the Negeri Sembilan constitution - the law which allows the Undang Yang Empat to remove the ruler.

Specifically, Article 10 states there must be a full and complete inquiry before the undangs can make a decision to dethrone the Yang di-Pertuan Besar.

When declaring their decision to dethrone Tuanku Muhriz, the Undang Yang Empat had launched an investigation against the ruler on March 5 for alleged transgressions in his royal duties.

They deemed the unspecified transgressions to have been committed deliberately, thus besmirching the royal institution.

In an opinion piece published by The Edge, former appeals judge Hishamudin Yunus noted that while he is not privy to the allegations against Tuanku Muhriz or whether the chieftains had followed due process, Tuanku Muhriz had a right to be heard according to the principles of natural justice.


Former appeals judge Hishamudin Yunus


"On the assumption that there had been no due process carried out in the call for abdication, then the proclamation purportedly issued by the three undangs and (Sungai Ujong undang) Mubarak Thahak is not valid," he said.

Hishamudin is a Negeri Sembilan native whose great-great-grandfather, Wan Saeto Rubah, was once undang of Johol.


‘Not given notice’

Constitutional lawyer Malik Imtiaz Sarwar raised similar concerns.

"It does not appear that Tuanku Muhriz was given notice of the alleged defect or defects relied on by the undangs, nor was he afforded any opportunity to be heard.

"This raises a serious question as to how it is that undangs can be said to have conducted the 'full and complete enquiry' that Article 10 imposes as a pre-condition to their exercise of the power to remove the ruler," he said in a letter published on FMT.

Additionally, both Hishamudin and Malik said another reason the undangs' proclamation may be invalid is the fact that Menteri Besar Aminuddin Harun was not a party to the decision.

Article 10(2) states that after the undangs conduct their inquiry and decide to remove a ruler, the Yang di-Pertuan Besar will cease to be in power "provided that as soon as possible thereafter а proclamation to that effect shall be issued under the hands of the undangs and the menteri besar".

Hishamudin opined that without the menteri besar, the proclamation is legally unenforceable.


Negeri Sembilan Menteri Besar Aminuddin Harun


Aminuddin has rejected the proclamation, citing Mubarak's removal from office, while not commenting on the three other undangs support for Tuanku Muhriz's ouster.

Article 29 of the state constitution states that the undangs’ decisions are deemed to have “been duly exercised or performed if such powers were exercised or such duties were performed by at least three undangs or by as many of them as may be living at the time of the exercise of such powers or the performance of such duties.”

While acknowledging Article 29, Hishamudin said that Mubarak's participation in the proclamation makes its validity questionable.


Mubarak’s removal ‘invalid’

A faction of nobles and clansfolk in Sungai Ujong had moved to remove Mubarak as undang last May over unspecified transgressions, including acts which allegedly breached Islamic law and customs.

The move was then reported to have been accepted by the Negeri Sembilan Council of the Yang di-Pertuan Besar and the Ruling Chiefs (Dewan Keadilan dan Undang) during a meeting on April 17.

Former menteri besar Rais Yatim, however, claimed that during the council meeting, the undangs of Johol, Jelebu, and Rembau, as well as the Tunku Besar Tampin, had disagreed with Mubarak's removal.


Former menteri besar Rais Yatim


Rais argued that this made Mubarak's removal invalid. It is unclear if Mubarak was given a chance to explain himself.

However, his supporters had claimed that authorities had investigated the Sungai Ujong clansfolk's allegations against him and found no wrongdoing.

Further, Mubarak's camp alleged that two nobles who moved to oust him had also been removed from office over alleged corruption.

Malik said it must be established whether there was any basis for whether or not Mubarak was removed by the council on April 17.

"If this is the case, then the matter ends there.

"Although the menteri besar has confirmed the removal, further confirmation from the Negeri Sembilan Council of the Yang di-Pertuan Besar and the Ruling Chiefs may have a calming effect," he added.