Wednesday, June 10, 2026

The Assault on the Malay Nation: Erosion from Within


Murray Hunter
Jun 09, 2026



The Assault on the Malay Nation: Erosion from Within


The greatest threats to the Malay nation are not external conspiracies or minority communities, but internal dynamics of elite capture, ideological overreach, and policy failure






For decades, successive Malay-dominated governments in Malaysia have positioned themselves as the staunch guardians of the Malay race and its future. They wave the banner of Ketuanan Melayu and invoke protective policies as sacred trusts. Yet, beneath the rhetoric, a profound paradox unfolds: the very institutions claiming to safeguard the Malays have presided over their cultural fragmentation, economic pillage, and demographic twilight. The “Malay Nation,” far from being fortified, is under siege primarily from within.

The term “Malay” itself is a constitutional construct rather than a primordial racial essence. Before Merdeka, the Malay states of the peninsula Kelantan, Terengganu, Perak, Johor, and others, possessed distinct identities, dialects, customs, and adat systems rooted in the rich Nusantara tapestry. These were not uniform; they reflected centuries of interaction with Javanese, Sumatran, Bugis, Minangkabau, and other archipelago peoples, alongside Indian, Arab, and Siamese influences. Federation homogenized them under a broader “Malay” umbrella for political convenience, but in practice, it has meant the steady erosion of these unique heritages.

Take Kelantan as a poignant example. Once a bastion of vibrant Malay traditions, wayang kulit, mak yong, dikir barat, and syncretic spiritual practices, where the state has seen many of these customs curtailed or banned under the banner of religious purity.

What federal and state policies have not outlawed outright, social pressure has marginalized. Urbanization compounds the damage. As young Malays migrate to the Klang Valley, Penang, or Johor for jobs, traditional kinship networks fracture. Extended families that once formed the backbone of rural Malay society dissolve into nuclear units in concrete high-rises, severing intergenerational transmission of language, folklore, and values. The village (kampung) that defined Malay identity becomes a nostalgic memory rather than a living reality.

Perhaps the most insidious force reshaping Malay culture has been the state-endorsed shift toward a rigid, imported form of Islam. Successive governments, particularly from the 1980s onward, have mainstreamed Wahhabi-Salafi influences through funding, education curricula, and dakwah movements. Mosques and madrasas promoted puritanical interpretations that view traditional Nusantara practices such as grave visitations, saint veneration, keramat beliefs, and colorful festivals as syirik or innovation.

The result? A generation of Malays increasingly adopting Arab dress, mannerisms, and worldviews, distancing themselves from the syncretic, adaptive Islam of their forebears. Malay women who once moved with relative freedom in rural settings now navigate stricter social codes. Even the national language, Bahasa Malaysia, has undergone Arabization, with vocabulary and phrasing tilting toward Middle Eastern loanwords at the expense of indigenous richness.

This cultural transformation is no accident of globalization; it has been actively facilitated. While officials decry Western decadence, they have embraced a petro-dollar-driven ideological import that hollows out Malay distinctiveness. The old Melayu characteristics of tolerance, an artistic flare, and deeply connected to the sea and soil has faded into a more austere, identity-politics-driven archetype.

Economically, the story is one of betrayed promises. The New Economic Policy (NEP), launched in 1971 in the aftermath of May 13, 1969 was sold to the Malays as the vehicle for uplifting them from poverty and backwardness. Its architects spoke of eradicating the identification of race with economic function. In reality, the policy fixated on corporate equity targets aiming for 30% Bumiputera ownership, rather than broad-based income growth or capability building. This numerical fetish enabled visible Malay tycoons and GLC executives but often masked persistent household-level vulnerabilities.

Worse still, the NEP and its successors became instruments of elite enrichment. Privatization waves in the 1980s and 1990s created cronies more than genuine entrepreneurs. Affirmative action in contracts, share allocations, and university places frequently bypassed the truly needy in favor of the connected. Former MACC Chief Commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki himself highlighted that roughly 30 percent of government expenditure leaks through corruption, a staggering drain that disproportionately robs ordinary Malays, the supposed beneficiaries.

Decades of such leakage mean resources meant for rural schools, skills training, or SME support have instead funded luxury cars, overseas properties, and political patronage. Malays have been robbed in the name of their own advancement.

Today, the demographic indicator tells a sobering tale. According to the Department of Statistics Malaysia (DOSM), the Total Fertility Rate (TFR) for Malays stood at 1.9 children per woman in 2024. This is below the replacement level of 2.1 and continues a long decline driven by urbanization, delayed marriages, rising female education and workforce participation, and acute economic pressures with rising housing costs, stagnant wages, and living expenses in a high-cost, low-opportunity environment for many. While Malay TFR remains higher than other groups, the trajectory mirrors broader societal shifts toward smaller families. A nation that once boasted youthful vitality now confronts aging and slower natural growth.

The irony is bitter. Policies framed as racial defense have accelerated cultural assimilation into a foreign Islamic model, economic stratification that benefits a thin upper crust, and social changes that have undermined family formation. The pre-independence mosaic of Malay identities has been largely erased in favor of a standardized, politically useful construct. Kinship ties weaken, traditional arts wither, and the economic “uplift” leaves too many behind.

Malaysia’s Malay leaders must confront this uncomfortable truth: the greatest threats to the Malay nation are not external conspiracies or minority communities, but internal dynamics of elite capture, ideological overreach, and policy failure. Reviving the Nusantara spirit of diverse, adaptive, and grounded in local realities requires moving beyond equity quotas and identity slogans toward genuine human development, cultural confidence, and accountable governance. Without such a reckoning, the decline will not be halted by more of the same. The Malay Nation, as historically understood, risks becoming a hollow constitutional category rather than a thriving, living people.


NEW COLUMN - PETUA KALAH PRU (HOW TO LOSE THE ELECTIONS) - ROHINGYA

 

Monday, June 8, 2026

NEW COLUMN - PETUA KALAH PRU (HOW TO LOSE THE ELECTIONS) - ROHINGYA

Today I am starting a new column titled PETUA KALAH PRU or HOW TO LOSE THE ELECTIONS. 

This column is addressed to the monkeys, the siamang, the kera and the beruk. 


T
oday lets hear about the Rohingyas. 



Ok so nobody wants the Rohingyas. But the Rohingyas can be worth a lot of money.

Tidak ada siapa pun mahu Rohingya berada dalam negara kita. Tapi Rohingya menjadi anak kesayangan golongan korup dan perasuah yang eksploitasi duit Rohingya untuk dimasuk dalam kocek mereka. Sebab itu negara kita mempunyai ratus ribu (atau lebih) Rohingya. 

ROHINGYA ADALAH ANTARA SEBAB KERA, BERUK, SIAMANG DAN UNGKA KALAH PRU PADA 2018 dan 2022.

INSYA-ALLAH KERA, BERUK, SIAMANG DAN UNGKA AKAN DITENDANG KELUAR SEKALI LAGI.




Forget “illegal” temples, now it’s illegal Rohingya flats, claims a netizen





Forget “illegal” temples, now it’s illegal Rohingya flats, claims a netizen


By CS Ming




IN THE recent past, it is the Rohingya children learning to sing Negaraku. Then it was Rohingya migrants practicing silat.

What’s next for them? Apparently it comes in the form of a dilapidated flat in Sungai Tekali, Hulu Langat, Selangor.

A recent video circulating on social media captures the makeshift multi-storey structure in all its stark details.

According to netizen @dahfollowbelum who posted it on X, the building was allegedly constructed illegally by Rohingya migrants.

However, the exact ownership, legality and occupants of the structure have not been independently verified.

What is immediately apparent, however, is the building’s alarming appearance.

The structure appears to have been assembled using a patchwork of materials, with zinc sheets serving as part of the side facade.

Several support pillars appear visibly tilted, while water can be seen gushing from a protruding pipe at the top of the building.

The building looked less like a home and more like an accident waiting to happen.

And that was exactly what netizen @CharlesT777 pointed out in the comment section.

“Safety : ZERO. At anytime it can crash just like that. This is the type who watched two to three youtube videos and started building,” he said.

Another netizen lamented that the flat even has electricity and water supply. According to him, ironically Malaysians who renovate without a plan will be subjected to demolition.

Then there was @stephen171003 complaining that the Malays don’t give face to the Indian and Chinese but are more than happy to take in the Rohingya, Bangla and Pakistanis.

Also, @AsahPisau alleged that the Rohingyas turned an abandoned building into the illegal flat shown in the video.

“When the authorities come, just show the UNHCR card,” said a pessimistic @xanDer9ne, adding that this should stop any further intervention.

“The Rohingya are now also brave enough to construct illegal buildings,” pointed out @rdnaiman.

Prompted by the illegal flat, @RedtheNPC warned that soon the Rohingyas will have their own army and begin attacking the locals.

We have Sherlock Holmes among the netizens too:

Whether the building is indeed occupied by Rohingya migrants or not, the larger issue raised by the video is one of enforcement, safety and accountability.

A structure that appears unstable, assembled from improvised materials and potentially housing multiple occupants should concern authorities regardless of who lives inside it.

If the building is legal and safe, the relevant agencies can put public concerns to rest. If it is not, then swift action would be necessary before tragedy strikes.

For now, much of the discussion online remains driven by speculation, frustration and fear. But beyond the accusations and heated comments lies a simple question that deserves an answer: how did a building that looks like this come to exist in the first place, and who was supposed to be watching? —June 9, 2026


Johor MB’s exclusionary rhetoric betrays the people, exposes UMNO’s political hypocrisy





Johor MB’s exclusionary rhetoric betrays the people, exposes UMNO’s political hypocrisy


How can Onn Hafiz govern a state when tens of thousands of Malays, Chinese, Indians and people of various other ethnic groups support DAP?


Updated 5 hours ago
Published on 10 Jun 2026 9:15AM


The Chinese cannot used as a bargaining chip every time an election approaches. - June 10, 2026


AS a former Vice President of PKR and a veteran of Malaysia’s reform movement, I am compelled to speak out against the deeply irresponsible statement made by Johor Menteri Besar Datuk Onn Hafiz Ghazi, who declared that he would rather relinquish his post than sit at the same table with DAP.

This is not a statement of principle. It is a statement of political cowardice dressed as conviction — and the people of Johor deserve better.

1. “Bangsa Johor” Cannot Be Selectively Applied

Onn Hafiz invoked the spirit of “Bangsa Johor” to justify his refusal to cooperate with DAP, claiming his stance was not driven by racial sentiments. I challenge him to explain, then, what “Bangsa Johor” truly means — because DAP represents tens of thousands of Johoreans of all races who cast their votes through a free and democratic process.

As one commentator has rightly asked: as a politician, how can he govern a state when tens of thousands of Malays, Chinese, Indians and people of various other ethnic groups support DAP? To refuse to sit across the table from elected representatives is not a show of strength — it is a rejection of the very democratic mandate those voters placed their trust in.

The “Bangsa Johor” identity, so proudly championed by the royal household and the people of this great state, has always been rooted in unity and inclusiveness. Onn Hafiz has weaponised this noble concept for narrow electoral gain.

2. UMNO’s Blatant Hypocrisy: Partners in Putrajaya, Enemies in Johor

Onn Hafiz, as Johor UMNO and BN chairman, has announced that BN will contest all 56 seats in the Johor state election and will not form a government that includes DAP if given the mandate.

And yet — UMNO sits comfortably in the federal Unity Government in Putrajaya alongside the very same DAP. UMNO ministers attend cabinet meetings with DAP ministers. UMNO parliamentarians vote alongside DAP members in the Dewan Rakyat. They share the spoils of federal power.

So, which is it? Is DAP an unacceptable partner, or is it acceptable only when federal positions and cabinet seats are on the table? This glaring contradiction exposes UMNO’s statement for what it truly is: not a matter of values, but a cynical pre-election manoeuvre calculated to harvest Malay votes in Johor while continuing to enjoy the benefits of partnership with DAP at the national level.

The voters of Johor are not fooled.




3. The UEC Issue: UMNO Exploits Education for Electoral Advantage

Onn Hafiz’s exclusionary rhetoric must also be read alongside Johor UMNO’s ongoing politicisation of the Unified Examination Certificate (UEC) — a matter of education that has been deliberately inflamed as an electoral weapon.

Johor UMNO Youth has challenged DAP to bring the UEC recognition matter to the courts for a judicial review, framing DAP’s push for recognition as a reflection of the party’s anxiety and lack of strategy in maintaining Chinese voter support following its poor showing in recent state elections. This framing is deliberately provocative and tells us everything: UMNO is not engaging with UEC as an education policy matter. It is using it as ammunition.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim has stated clearly that the government’s move to recognise the UEC as a pathway to public universities does not threaten the national language, noting that more than 80% of UEC students already sit for the SPM Bahasa Melayu examination.

The Prime Minister has spoken. The facts are on the table. Yet UMNO continues to fan the flames. It is worth recalling that historically, both major coalitions — including BN under Datuk Seri Najib Razak and Pakatan Harapan under Anwar — had publicly signalled openness to considering UEC recognition as part of their outreach to the Chinese community.

Even PAS and Bersatu had once endorsed it under previous political arrangements. UMNO’s current ferocity on this issue is therefore not principled — it is purely tactical.

The Chinese community of Johor, who have called this state home for generations and contributed immeasurably to its development, deserve to have their children’s academic achievements respected — not used as a bargaining chip every time an election approaches.

4. A Call for Leadership Worthy of Johor

I have spent decades in public service and in the reform movement. I have seen leaders rise and fall. What distinguishes a true statesman from a mere politician is the willingness to govern for all the people, not just those who voted for you.

Johor is one of Malaysia’s most dynamic and strategically vital states, home to Malaysians of every background who work, build, and dream together. A Menteri Besar who publicly declares he will not even sit at the same table with a significant portion of their elected representatives is a leader who has already failed the people before the election has even been called.

I call on the leaders and voters of Johor to demand more. Demand leadership that unites, not divides. Demand accountability, not rhetoric. And demand an end to the cynical game of being partners in Putrajaya while performing outrage in Johor.

The people of Johor deserve a government that governs for all of them.




Datuk Dr Xavier Jayakumar Arulanandam

Former Vice President, Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR)

Former Minister of Water, Land and Natural Resources (2018–2020)

Yeoh touts working with Johari, but Razlan questions sincerity










Yeoh touts working with Johari, but Razlan questions sincerity


Published: Jun 10, 2026 3:00 PM
Updated: 5:04 PM



Amid crumbling ties between Umno and DAP, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Federal Territories) Hannah Yeoh highlighted that at the federal level, there is still a semblance of decency and cooperativeness.

However, an Umno leader close to party president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi claimed that Yeoh has not been sincere in working with the party.

In a Facebook post last night, Yeoh highlighted her working relationship with Investment, Trade, and Industry Minister Johari Abdul Ghani - who is also the Titiwangsa MP.

"Even though he (Johari) is the only Umno MP in Kuala Lumpur, we only have one WhatsApp group with all Kuala Lumpur MPs. No isolation.

"In managing the Federal Territories, I often get his views on various matters, including handling Ramadan bazaars, trader issues, Kampung Bharu development, and appointment of board members in the Federal Territories.

"From his experience, I have learned to hear differing views while coming up with better decisions for the people," the DAP lawmaker shared.

Yeoh said this in a veiled response to caretaker Johor menteri besar Onn Hafiz Ghazi, who declared he would rather relinquish his post than sit at the same table with DAP.

She said a leader should not be measured by who they reject, but by their ability to work with those who have different views for the people's benefit.


‘All talk’

The DAP minister's positivity, however, was rained on by Umno supreme council member Razlan Rafii.


Umno leader Razlan Rafii


Razlan claimed that the spirit of cooperation championed by Yeoh was not reflected at the grassroots level, alleging that neither the minister nor her predecessor had translated it into practice.

"For three years, not a single meeting was called. There was no respect from the Federal Territories minister to invite party leaders to exchange ideas.

"In fact, the Federal Territories Residents Representative Council, which was meant to be a cross-party platform at the grassroots, was not realised properly," he asserted.

Razlan - who is an aide to Zahid - added that if the spirit of cross-party cooperation at the top level is realised at the grassroots, the public would not be so easily swayed by divisive politics.


***


O Hannah, jangan buang mutiara lah, wakakaka


Bersatu to contest Negeri Sembilan polls under PN banner despite PAS split





Bersatu to contest Negeri Sembilan polls under PN banner despite PAS split


However, Negeri Sembilan PAS says no decision has been made on whether the party will contest using the PN logo


Negeri Sembilan Bersatu chief Hanifah Abu Baker said the party’s victories in the last state election were achieved on a PN ticket. (Facebook pic)


PETALING JAYA: Negeri Sembilan Bersatu will contest the upcoming state election under the Perikatan Nasional (PN) banner despite PAS’s decision to sever political ties with the party.

State Bersatu chief Hanifah Abu Baker said the party’s victories in the last state election were achieved on a PN ticket.

“With those victories, voters placed their trust in PN as their representatives in the state assembly,” he was quoted as saying by Utusan Malaysia.


“Their support should be taken into account … as PN prepares for the state election.”

Hanifah also said PAS’s move to cut political ties with Bersatu had confused voters, given that the party is still a component of PN.


He warned that it could undermine confidence among those who view the coalition as a viable governing alternative.

“There are clear signs that the coalition is gaining support from all levels of society, and this trust should not be wasted,” he said.

He expressed hope that issues arising from the split could be resolved through dialogue, describing this as one of the coalition’s strengths. He said it also aligned with the aspiration for Muslim unity often championed by PN leaders.

Meanwhile, Negeri Sembilan PAS commissioner Fairuz Isa said no decision had been made on whether the party would contest the state election using the PN logo.


He said the matter would be discussed by the party’s central leadership.

“Matters concerning the state election and the logo will be discussed by PAS’s top leadership … Negeri Sembilan Bersatu will abide by whatever decision the central leadership makes,” he said.

PN won five seats at the last Negeri Sembilan election in 2023, with PAS claiming three and Bersatu two.

The Negeri Sembilan legislative assembly was dissolved on June 5, paving the way for the 16th state election to be held within 60 days.


Annuar Musa: PAS to meet with Perikatan components, sans Bersatu, on coalition direction this week





Annuar Musa: PAS to meet with Perikatan components, sans Bersatu, on coalition direction this week



PAS central committee member and PN information chief Tan Sri Annuar Musa said PAS’ decision to end cooperation with Bersatu was ‘nothing personal’ and did not involve PN, whose position will be discussed with Gerakan and MIPP this week. — Picture by Hari Anggara

Wednesday, 10 Jun 2026 9:59 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, June 10 — PAS will discuss Perikatan Nasional’s (PN) position with Gerakan and the Malaysian Indian People’s Party (MIPP) this week, after ending its political cooperation with Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (Bersatu).

PAS central committee member and PN information chief Tan Sri Annuar Musa said the decision was “nothing personal”, adding that it only involved political cooperation between PAS and Bersatu, and did not involve PN as a coalition.

“PN’s position will be discussed together with its component parties, particularly PAS, Gerakan and MIPP. The discussion will also be held this week,” he said in a Facebook post.

Annuar said PAS remained committed to multiracial political cooperation and appreciated the positive attitude shown by Gerakan and MIPP within PN.


He said PAS would ensure that its next move in PN is based on the coalition’s constitution, and not on the “superiority” of any individual or party.

He also said party-level ties with Bersatu had ended, but relations between individual members would continue as usual, adding that positions held by individuals in PAS-led governments would not be affected for now as long as they supported and cooperated with PAS.


***


Dominic, we won't forgive you if you continue to ally Gerakan with PAS.


High Court orders Rosmah to pay Lebanese owner RM67.4m in missing jewellery suit





High Court orders Rosmah to pay Lebanese owner RM67.4m in missing jewellery suit



Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor was ordered by the High Court to pay RM67.4 million to Global Royalty Trading SAL over 43 missing jewellery pieces delivered to her in 2018. — File picture by Sayuti Zainudin

Wednesday, 10 Jun 2026 10:20 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, June 10 — The High Court today ordered Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor to pay RM67.4 million — the estimated value of 43 jewellery pieces delivered to her in February 2018 — to their Lebanese owner.

High Court judge Quay Chew Soon granted the suit filed by Global Royalty Trading SAL against her, which sought to recover the 43 jewellery items or their claimed value of US$14.6 million after the items were seized during a police raid at Pavilion Residences in 2018.

Quay said the court found Rosmah liable for the missing jewellery pieces.

“After a full trial, I allowed the plaintiff’s claim against the defendant.


“I ordered the defendant to pay the sum of RM67,461,027.37 to the plaintiff within one month from the date hereof,” he said when delivering his decision.

Quay said the court also dismissed Rosmah’s claim for indemnity against PDRM, which was brought in as third parties in the proceedings.

Global Royalty filed the suit in 2023, seeking the return of the items or payment for their value after claiming the items were supplied to Rosmah on a consignment basis but were never returned.


Court’s finding

Quay said the case was ultimately governed by four interrelated legal principles, namely the law on admissions under the Evidence Act; the legal effect of prior pleaded positions and inconsistent conduct in judicial proceedings; the law governing consignment arrangements and continuing proprietary interests; and the law of bailment under Part IX, Sections 101 to 134, of the Contracts Act.

“When those legal principles are applied to this matter, the defendant’s liability becomes inevitable,” he said.

Quay said this was because Rosmah’s own pleadings, previous positions taken in court and oral testimony established four central and undisputed facts.

“The 44 pieces of jewellery were delivered to and received by her; the jewellery was entrusted to her for viewing under a consignment arrangement; she neither purchased nor paid for the jewellery; and she failed to return 43 of the pieces.

“Those facts are decisive,” he said.

He said that once delivery, possession and non-return were established, the legal burden no longer rested on the plaintiff to speculate about what happened while the jewellery was in the defendant’s custody.

Instead, the law placed that burden on the defendant because the jewellery’s handling, movement and alleged disappearance were matters within her exclusive knowledge, he added.

The court also found that Rosmah failed to account for the plaintiff’s jewellery while it was in her custody, holding that the evidential burden shifted to her to show that the loss and non-return were not due to negligence or a breach of the required duty of care.

“I find that the defendant failed to discharge the duties and obligations imposed upon her.

Quay said Rosmah could not discharge the burden by merely asserting that a police raid occurred, that items may have been seized, that bodyguards handled the bags or that the police took possession of certain items.

“The defendant’s attempt to shift focus onto speculative explanations concerning the raid and seizure by the PDRM is untenable.

“The fact remains that the defendant failed to return the remaining 43 pieces of jewellery and cannot satisfactorily account for their fate. In law, that constitutes prima facie negligence,” he said.

Furthermore, the judge noted that Rosmah failed to call key witnesses involved in handling and moving the jewellery and other items from Seri Perdana to Unit 45 of the Pavilion Residences.

He said a critical aspect of Rosmah’s defence failed because she did not call the witnesses who were allegedly directly involved in handling and moving the jewellery.

“The defendant attempted to rely on unnamed security, bodyguards, staff and a butler to explain how the jewellery was packed, how the bags were locked, and how the jewellery was transported and safeguarded at Pavilion 45.

“However, none of those material witnesses were called to testify at the trial. Therefore, such an omission erodes the defendant’s case,” he said.

As Rosmah’s entire defence ultimately rested on the assertion that the jewellery was seized during the 2018 PDRM raid, Quay said the evidence showed only that one item was later identified in forfeiture proceedings and returned to the plaintiff, with no proof that the remaining 43 pieces were ever seized.

“The defendant’s allegation that the jewellery was seized by the PDRM is a positive defence raised to answer her failure to return the jewellery.

“The defendant therefore cannot discharge her burden merely by pointing to a raid by the PDRM and inviting the court to assume that the plaintiff’s jewellery must have been seized.

“The law requires proof and the defendant has failed to prove it,” he said.

Quay also said Rosmah did not deny signing the consignment note, and that her liability arose independently from her admitted acceptance of possession of the jewellery.

Lawyer Datuk David Gurupatham appeared for Global Royalty, while Rajivan Nambiar represented Rosmah.

Senior federal counsel Liew Horng Bin appeared for the PDRM.


***


Tough luck Rosmah, though I tend to agree with the late RPK's opinion that things could have "happened" during the police raid and seizure - wakakaka.


Chow: Penang seeking DoE input before deciding on Jelutong landfill rehabilitation project






Chow: Penang seeking DoE input before deciding on Jelutong landfill rehabilitation project



Penang Chief Minister Chow Kon Yeow said the discussion with the DoE is part of an ongoing process before any decision is made on the project. — Picture by Opalyn Mok

Tuesday, 09 Jun 2026 3:05 PM MYT


GEORGE TOWN, June 9 — The Penang government has met the Department of Environment (DoE) to better understand the environmental impact assessment (EIA) considerations for the proposed Jelutong landfill rehabilitation and Karpal Singh Drive reclamation project, Chief Minister Chow Kon Yeow said today.

He said the discussion with the DoE is part of an ongoing process before any decision is made on the project.

“We have met with the Department of Environment to understand the considerations regarding the EIA application for the project site. This process is still ongoing,” he told reporters after delivering his keynote address at the Penang Career Discovery Day x Penang HR Forward Forum 2026 here.

Chow said the state government’s decision-making process must be guided by verified information and proper procedures.

“We know there are NGOs that are impatient and have made various allegations against the state government,” he said.

“But I always stress that the decision-making process must be preceded by proper consideration of accurate information,” he added.


He said the state government must follow the proper process as any decision would have implications, particularly financial ones.

Recently, non-governmental organisation Protect Karpal questioned whether the developer of the Jelutong Landfill Joint Development Agreement (JDA) was receiving “exceptional accommodations”.

The group raised concerns over repeated extensions of time (EOT), revisions to payment structures and the scale of the proposed coastal reclamation plan.

It also questioned whether financial restructuring and continued extensions were justified despite repeated EIA rejections and delays in the commencement of the project.

Chow said the DoE has accepted another EIA application submitted by the developer.

“The state environment exco met with the DoE yesterday and he will present what was discussed to the state exco tomorrow,” he said.

Chinese apathy may see PAS take Putrajaya, says ex-MCA chief





Chinese apathy may see PAS take Putrajaya, says ex-MCA chief


Dr Chua Soi Lek says low Chinese voter turnout at GE16 could see PAS take over the government even without broad support


Former MCA president Dr Chua Soi Lek says PAS can realistically vie for 134 seats in the 222-seat Dewan Rakyat, with a simple majority of 113 needed to form government.


PETALING JAYA: Former MCA president Dr Chua Soi Lek has warned that PAS could come to power “by default” in the next general election (GE 16) if Chinese voters boycott the polls or deliberately spoil their ballots.

He said PAS was unlikely to secure federal power outright if Chinese voters turned out in full force, but voter apathy — particularly in Chinese-majority or marginal constituencies — could shift the seat arithmetic.

“I say PAS can come into power by default,” Chua told FMT in an exclusive interview. “What does ‘by default’ mean? When the Chinese boycott elections or cast spoiled votes.”


Chua said the issue was already being “debated quietly” among Chinese voters, with some Pakatan Harapan leaders insisting that PAS could take Putrajaya if voters do not back the coalition.



He said many Chinese voters were frustrated with PH and DAP, although DAP was still expected to retain its strongholds.


“You know, Chinese are disillusioned with PH (and) DAP, although they will still continue to (vote) for DAP by default,” he said.

Seat arithmetic

Chua said any discussion on PAS’s route to Putrajaya must start with the numbers.

“We have 222 parliamentary seats. In order to control the central government, either you join the others or you must have 113 — that magic number,” he said.


He said PAS was unlikely to make serious inroads into Sabah and Sarawak — which together account for 56 parliamentary seats — because its “religious and sometimes racial rhetoric” puts off many East Malaysian voters.

“So for PAS to penetrate (those seats), to me, is unlikely,” he said.

Chua said Malaysia still has 32 Chinese-majority parliamentary seats, where DAP is expected to remain strong.

“So 56 plus 32 is 88. In other words, PAS starts off with a handicap of 88 seats they are unable to get votes (for).”


That leaves them 134 seats in the 222-seat Dewan Rakyat that they can realistically vie for, he said. To win Putrajaya outright, PAS would need an 84% success rate.

“To me, unlikely — provided the Chinese come out to vote.”

He said voters should also understand that governments in Malaysia are formed based on the number of parliamentary seats won, not popular vote.


‘Low turnout’ risk

Chua said the real danger lay not in PAS suddenly commanding broad national support, but in the prospect of low Chinese voter turnout tipping the balance in mixed and marginal constituencies to its benefit and that of its allies.

“In a Chinese majority seat or even a marginal seat with a significant number of Chinese, (if) the Chinese boycott, and the Malays come out to vote, and they all vote PAS, they will come into power,” he said.

“So PAS can come into power by default.”


He said Chinese voters should not allow their frustration with PH or DAP to turn into abstention, adding that by rejecting all parties as corrupt or ineffective they could end up inadvertently helping PAS.

The Samsuri effect?

Chua also said Perikatan Nasional’s attempt to project Terengganu menteri besar Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar, popularly known as Dr Sam, as a more acceptable national figure remains untested among non-Muslim voters.

Samsuri replaced Muhyiddin Yassin as PN chairman earlier this year after the former prime minister relinquished the post.

“Dr Sam is an unknown factor.

“He is an unknown man. For somebody like me in politics for so long, I would say I don’t know him. What about the man on the street?”

His remarks come with Malay-party realignment talks resurfacing ahead of the Johor polls, with FMT reporting that an MP had suggested a collaboration between Umno, PAS and Hamzah Zainudin’s new faction.

Although presently centred on Johor, the proposal suggests a wider collaboration of Malay-based parties that could reshape the political landscape at GE16.

Chua said such manoeuvres make the Chinese turnout at elections even more important, as a more coordinated Malay vote, combined with lower Chinese participation in marginal seats, could see PAS in the driver’s seat even without broad national support.

“This is the warning that I have to give,” he said.


***


This time (GE16), it'll be best if Chinese put away their mahjong sets 😂😂😂





Kim, Xi unveil ‘far-reaching blueprint’ to deepen North Korea-China ties after Pyongyang summit





Kim, Xi unveil ‘far-reaching blueprint’ to deepen North Korea-China ties after Pyongyang summit



This picture taken on June 9, 2026 and released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on June 10, 2026 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (L) seeing off China's President Xi Jinping during the latter's departure from Pyongyang International Airport. — AFP pic

Wednesday, 10 Jun 2026 8:52 AM MYT


SEOUL, June 10 — The leaders of North Korea and China have adopted a “far-reaching blueprint” for bilateral ties during Xi Jinping’s recent visit to Pyongyang, the Korean Central News Agency said today.


China’s president made a rare visit to North Korea on Monday after hosting a series of world leaders, including US President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin, in Beijing.

“Comrade Kim Jong Un and Comrade Xi Jinping expressed satisfaction and deep emotion over the fact that they provided a far-reaching blueprint for the development of the relations,” KCNA, the country’s official news agency reported.



During the two-day visit, which Xi made with his wife, “the countries further deepened the revolutionary friendship and close comradely relationship and affirmed their steadfast will to develop the traditional DPRK-China friendly ties into a model of the most powerful and strategic relations,” the KCNA dispatch said.


As part of the visit, Xi and Kim toured the Central Cadres Training School of the Workers’ Party, where they discussed the training of party officials and planted a commemorative tree, before visiting the Friendship Tower memorial honouring Chinese soldiers who fought in the Korean War.

Kim later hosted Xi and their wives for a luncheon before accompanying the Chinese leader to the airport for his departure.


Following his trip, Xi sent Kim a letter of gratitude, in which he said the two leaders “made an in-depth exchange of views on the issues of mutual interest and achieved a series of important common understanding”, according to KCNA.

The talks, Xi wrote to Kim, “showed the firm determination of both sides to add luster to the traditional friendship, promote development and prosperity together and defend peace and stability in the region and the rest of the world”, the KCNA dispatch said.

Kim, whose country has been historically reliant on China, has drawn closer to Moscow in recent years while expanding his country’s nuclear weapons programme.

He boosted an alliance with Putin after sending troops to fight alongside Russian forces against Ukraine.

But China, Washington’s chief geopolitical rival, has been North Korea’s main trading partner by far for decades and a key source of diplomatic and economic support for a country hit by international sanctions.

Xi’s trip comes just weeks after he held talks with Trump, during which the White House said the leaders “confirmed their shared goal to denuclearise North Korea”. — AFP

US strikes Iran after Apache helicopter downed as Hormuz tensions threaten peace talks




US strikes Iran after Apache helicopter downed as Hormuz tensions threaten peace talks



Following the strikes, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi threatened to retaliate. — AFP pic

Wednesday, 10 Jun 2026 8:52 AM MYT


WASHINGTON, June 10 — US forces carried out strikes against Iran yesterday in what President Donald Trump said was retaliation for the downing of an American helicopter by the Islamic Republic a day earlier.


Iranian media said that following a series of explosions along Iran’s southern coast near the Strait of Hormuz, the situation was “now reported to be calm.”

Digital news outlet Axios reported that US forces had attacked several Iranian air defense systems and radar systems around the strait.


Following the strikes, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi threatened to retaliate.


“Despite its defeats on the battlefield, the U.S. opted to test our determination. Our Powerful Armed Forces will leave no attack or threat unanswered. Leave our region if you want to be safe,” Araghchi posted on X.

The US strikes came just hours after Trump had said negotiations to end the Middle East war were in their final stages—a claim he has made repeatedly in the past few weeks.


But after the downing of a US Army Apache helicopter on Monday, Trump said the United States was responding “in a strong manner” after “what they did with our helicopter last night,” in a telephone interview with ABC News.

“And I believe the response should be very strong, very powerful, and that’s what this one is,” he said.

US Central Command (CENTCOM) said American forces “began launching self-defense strikes against Iran, at 5 pm yesterday at the Commander in Chief’s direction” and “the mission is a proportional response to unjustified Iranian aggression.”

A shaky ceasefire between the warring parties has been in place since April 8, but it faced a major test when Iran and Israel renewed attacks over the weekend, before each side announced a halt.

Israeli attacks on Lebanon continued, however, and Lebanese officials said 11 people were killed in airstrikes on Tuesday on the historic city of Tyre in the south of the country.

The Israeli military also warned the entire city to evacuate.

An AFP correspondent saw residents of Tyre, including from the Christian quarter, fleeing and heavy traffic heading north after the Israeli warning.

Another correspondent in the coastal city of Sidon, further north, saw displaced people arriving from Tyre, some with belongings hastily strapped to the roofs of their cars.

Tehran has insisted a halt to the war must include a truce in Lebanon, which was drawn into the conflict when Iran-backed Hezbollah militants fired rockets at Israel on March 2.

Israel responded with an extensive campaign of airstrikes and a ground invasion that has killed more than 3,600 people. Exchanges of fire with Hezbollah have not stopped despite an ongoing truce.

Constant risk

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi urged foreign forces meanwhile to leave the Strait of Hormuz and surrounding areas, warning that they faced a risk of being caught in the crossfire if they remained.

“The Strait of Hormuz is NOT international waters but shared between Iran and Oman,” Araghchi said. “Foreign forces in proximity to our territory are at constant risk on account of their own human errors, plain accidents, or potentially being caught in crossfire.

“To reduce risk, best solution is for them to leave. We prefer language of diplomacy but speak other languages too,” he said.

The US Army Apache helicopter is the second crewed aircraft that Washington has confirmed was shot down by Iran during the war, following the loss of an F-15 fighter plane in April.

CENTCOM said the two crew members were rescued after their helicopter went down near the coast of Oman.

“The Soldiers were safely rescued within approximately two hours and are in stable condition,” CENTCOM said in a post on X.

A spokesperson said a naval surface drone helped rescue the crew members.

The US-Iran conflict has severely disrupted shipping via the Strait of Hormuz, through which about a fifth of global oil usually passes, while Washington has imposed a blockade on Iranian ports.

The price of the main US oil benchmark—West Texas Intermediate—jumped 1.4 percent shortly before Asian markets opened Wednesday, reaching $89.40 per barrel following the news of renewed US strikes.

Oil prices had retreated previously after Trump hinted at a deal with Iran in the coming days. — AFP


***


Wankee go home lah, you're in the wrong neighbourhood


Tuesday, June 09, 2026

Israeli strikes on Tyre have killed eight people & wounded 32

 


Lebanese official says Israeli strikes on Tyre have killed eight people

Lebanon’s health ministry said an Israeli airstrike on the southern city of Tyre before an Israeli military warning on Tuesday killed at least eight people and wounded 32 others, noting the toll was provisional.

The state-run National News Agency (NNA) had reported the strike not long before Israel’s military issued an evacuation warning for the entire city and surrounding areas ahead of strikes there.




Bersatu raises concerns over effectiveness of Perikatan chairman





Bersatu raises concerns over effectiveness of Perikatan chairman



Tuesday, 09 Jun 2026 | 11:48 AM MYT


PETALING JAYA: Bersatu has raised concerns over the effectiveness of Perikatan Nasional chairman Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar amid the party's tensions with PAS.

Bersatu information chief Datuk Tun Faisal Ismail Aziz said various disputes have emerged between the two parties but appropriate solutions have allegedly not followed.


ALSO READ: PAS calls it quits with Bersatu


"As PAS vice-president, Ahmad Samsuri is constrained in making final decisions because he must first refer to the PAS president and the party’s Syura Council.

“This has resulted in many key issues within Perikatan not being effectively resolved through coalition channels,” said Tun Faisal in a statement posted on Facebook today (June 9).

Late Monday (June 8) night, PAS president Tan Sri Abdul Hadi Awang announced that the party had decided to terminate its political cooperation with Bersatu.


ALSO READ: PAS can no longer remain under PN with Bersatu, says info chief


His announcement followed a special meeting of the PAS central working committee at party headquarters.

Tun Faisal also said he understood that Bersatu, Gerakan and the Malaysian Indian People Party (MIPP) had attempted to meet Ahmad Samsuri to seek clarification regarding Abdul Hadi Awang's recent public remarks.

However, he claimed that the effort had yet to receive a proper response.

He said this raised questions about Ahmad Samsuri’s effectiveness as Perikatan chairman in ensuring the coalition functions smoothly, makes decisions effectively and resolves internal conflicts among its component parties.


BN plays for power while DAP and Harapan absorb public blame











Mahathir Mohd Rais
Published: Jun 9, 2026 10:56 AM
Updated: 1:35 PM




COMMENT | When Johor caretaker menteri besar Onn Hafiz Ghazi says he would rather step aside than govern with DAP, it should not come as a surprise.

Umno and DAP have never been natural partners. For decades, they defined themselves in opposition to each other. That did not suddenly disappear after the last general election.

The current cooperation exists because of necessity, not alignment.

After a hung Parliament, political stability became the priority. On the advice of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, parties that once opposed each other formed a government. It was a practical decision to avoid prolonged uncertainty.


Practicality does not erase history.

BN did not enter this arrangement out of ideological agreement. It entered to remain relevant, to retain access to power, and to keep its political machinery alive. That is how seasoned political parties operate.


Wanita Umno exco Nurul Hidayah Ahmad Zahid takes a selfie with Selangor state exco from DAP, Jamaliah Jamaluddin, during the Unity Government National Convention circa 2023


The expectation that this relationship would evolve into something deeper was always misplaced.

Harapan ended decades of BN dominance in 2018, on a platform that framed BN as corrupt, unfit to govern, and associated with kleptocrats.

That narrative defined its rise. Harapan built its identity in direct opposition to BN. Long-term loyalty from a rival of that scale was never a given.

BN is not new to power politics. It has operated at the centre of government for generations. Even in defeat, it repositions. Within the current arrangement, it retains influence, rebuilds its networks, and stabilises its base.


Anger concentrates on those in charge

Public dissatisfaction with government policies rarely falls on BN. It falls on the leadership of the government, which is Harapan. That is the equation.

Small and medium enterprises are being squeezed from all sides. Costs keep rising, margins keep shrinking. E-hailing drivers are still asking for fairer fares, but nothing moves.

Diesel prices go up. Food prices go up. Daily expenses go up. Wages have increased, but not enough to keep pace with the cost of living. On the ground, it changes little for most.


Sabah students burn a drawing of Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim in June 2025


At the same time, businesses are dealing with higher wage bills and tighter cash flow. They are expected to absorb both sides, and many are already frustrated.

External factors like global conflict may explain part of the pressure, but that explanation does not always reach the ground.

What people experience is immediate, not theoretical. These decisions are made collectively within the government, but public anger is rarely distributed evenly. It concentrates on those in charge.

Even when policies are agreed across parties, the burden does not spread equally. The face of government carries it. The prime minister takes the hit, while others remain shielded.


The logic of realpolitik


When Onn and other BN state leaders speak with confidence, especially after moving to dissolve the state assembly, it reflects their position. They know exactly where they stand in the political structure.

Whether others recognise this reality is unlikely.

Statements that project desperation or surprise weaken a coalition. They suggest dependence.

Political partnerships require clarity, not illusion. Cooperation does not mean alignment. Support does not mean loyalty.

BN is acting in its own interest.


Screenshot during the Umno General Assembly in 2021


The real question is whether Harapan is playing the same game at all.

Long-term strength does not come from relying on a partner that has already defined its position. It comes from consolidating its own base, communicating its own direction, and standing on its own political footing.

The current situation is not new. It reflects how Malaysian politics has long operated.

This is not a breakdown of the system. It is the system working as intended. Power is shared. Blame is not.

Those who understand it adapt. Those who misread it react. In politics, reaction is not strategy.



MAHATHIR MOHD RAIS is a former Federal Territories Bersatu and Perikatan Nasional secretary. He is now a PKR member.


Zahid believes Chinese voters returning to BN










Zahid believes Chinese voters returning to BN


Published: Jun 9, 2026 3:49 PM
Updated: 8:07 PM


BN chairperson Ahmad Zahid Hamidi believed that Chinese voters are beginning to swing back to his coalition.

Likening Chinese votes to a pendulum on a clock, he acknowledged that for BN, the swing was coming back around.

“But there are no clocks where (the pendulum) only swings down, it also goes up.

“And I am confident, and I believe that Chinese voters, little by little, are returning to BN,” he said in an interview with Nanyang Siang Pau today.

The deputy prime minister also quipped how a once-strong party had won zero seats in a recent state election, likely referring to DAP being wiped out in the Sabah polls.




He said this also showed that Chinese voters were practical, and that they could also be practical in the next general election.

Zahid’s party, Umno, has had a poor rapport with non-Malays over the years, with party youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh infamous for making remarks that had racially charged undertones.

However, DAP and Pakatan Harapan have also been struggling with non-Malay support of late over various issues such as perceived pandering to conservative Malays in order to gain Malay support to the detriment of the coalition’s own base.


Long time to undo ‘DAP bogeyman’ view

Meanwhile, in an interview with China Press, Zahid said it would take more than three years to undo the Malay perception that DAP is a bogeyman.


Former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad


He said this was because a former prime minister had spent 22 years demonising the party, referring to Dr Mahathir Mohamad.

Zahid also said that competition in politics is normal and that there are no permanent friends or foes in this field.


Anwar symbolic, but PKR not short of capable leaders, Rafizi told










Anwar symbolic, but PKR not short of capable leaders, Rafizi told


Published: Jun 8, 2026 8:00 PM
Updated: 10:08 PM



Two PKR leaders have poured cold water on Rafizi Ramli's prediction that the party would not survive past the Anwar Ibrahim era.

According to PKR Women's vice-chief Loh Ker Chean and Puchong PKR division chief Zaihasri Jaafar, while the party has long been synonymous with Anwar and his political struggle, it has nurtured many capable leaders who can carry its agenda forward.

"Developing leaders does not only happen during elections, but rather, a continuous process. Even Rafizi himself is a product of PKR.

"The very fact that many political figures who were nurtured and developed by PKR continue to play important roles in the country's political landscape demonstrates that the party has consistently served as a platform for cultivating talent and leadership," she said in a statement.

Loh stressed that she is confident that PKR will continue to be relevant for the values that it fights for, instead of depending on any individual.


PKR Women's vice-chief Loh Ker Chean


Similarly, Zaihasri said it was inaccurate for Rafizi to describe the party as if it had failed to train the next generation of leaders.

He pointed out that PKR has gone through several generations of leadership since the party's inception in 1999, with many of its figures having become lawmakers and members of federal and state administrations.

"We must recognise that no leader lasts forever. Yet history has shown that movements built on enduring values will always find new leaders to continue the cause.

"PKR was not born from the comfort of holding power, but from the courage of ordinary Malaysians demanding change. As long as that spirit endures, the party will continue to nurture new generations of leaders prepared to carry the torch of the reformasi movement," Zaihasri said.


Bersama de facto leader Rafizi Ramli


Last night, Rafizi, who is Parti Bersama Malaysia de facto leader, said he had predicted that PKR risks dying out after the Anwar era.

According to him, this was due to the party’s bureaucracy and its failure to reinvent itself.