Sunday, March 22, 2026

In Tamim's world, law is negotiable












Mariam Mokhtar
Published: Mar 21, 2026 12:02 PM
Updated: 3:02 PM




COMMENT | Self-styled activist Tamim Dahri Abdul Razak first drew public outrage after a video emerged showing him repeatedly stepping on a Hindu sacred symbol - a trident, or soolam.

The reaction was immediate. Police reports were lodged. Protests were held. Community leaders warned of rising tensions.

Acts involving religious symbols are never contained to the individual. They resonate across entire communities.

At first, such incidents may appear isolated, but what we are witnessing here is not a one-off controversy. This is a clear progression, where the events escalate step by step.

First, the provocation: stepping on a religious symbol.

Second, the amplification: the act is filmed, uploaded on social media, and widely shared.


A screenshot of Tamim Dahri Abdul Razak stepping on a soolam


Third, the justification. After the public backlash, explanations emerged, with claims of ignorance that the object was mistaken for scrap metal, or that the site was not recognised as religious.

Finally, the escalation emerges in the form of demands, most notably a conditional offer to surrender tied to the demolition of temples deemed “illegal.”


Dangerous line


In short: provoke first, justify later.

If this situation is allowed to fester, compliance itself becomes conditional, and that is a dangerous line.

On the “Tanah Malaya” social media account, Tamim said he would return to Malaysia and surrender to the police only if the authorities demolished a list of allegedly “illegal” Hindu temples.

He wrote: “We, the strategists of Tanah Malaya, come from technical backgrounds instead of arts, and thus we are familiar with only one thing: problem solving.”

This framing goes beyond activism. It turns a legal process into a negotiation, where compliance with the law is tied to political demands.

Calling themselves “strategists of Tanah Malaya” and saying they deal only in “problem solving” sounds confident and technical, but there is irony here. You cannot solve a problem if you are the one defining what the problem is in the first place.




When that definition is disputed, it begins to sound less like problem-solving and more like self-praise dressed as expertise.

The attempt is to make compliance with the law conditional. It links a personal legal situation to an ideological demand, introducing a precedent where the law is treated as negotiable under pressure.


Tensions not new

This is not the first time Malaysia has faced such tensions.

In the case involving convert and controversial preacher, Zamri Vinoth, public perception was that early inaction allowed tensions to build, with enforcement only coming later when the risk of escalation had grown.

Whether that perception was entirely fair is secondary. What matters is the lesson it offers: delays in acting on sensitive, provocative incidents do not calm situations. They often inflame them.

Hesitation creates space for anger to grow, for narratives to harden, and for communities to feel unprotected.

If there is one lesson to be drawn, it is this: timely, consistent enforcement is essential.

When provocative acts are seen to gain attention or receive delayed responses, others may feel emboldened to act.


The demolished Hindu temple in Rawang Perdana


They do so not necessarily out of malice, but from the belief that they are defending legality, identity, or justice. This is how vigilantism begins, not as defiance, but as misguided justification.

Once individuals begin to take matters into their own hands, believing the law will bend or delay, the consequences become harder to contain. Recent incidents involving religious desecration have already set a public expectation: that action must be swift, enforcement must be firm, and standards must be equal.

If one case is handled decisively while another drifts, the issue is no longer about law.

It becomes about whose sensitivities are protected, and whose are not.

That perception alone is enough to fracture trust.


Rule of law cannot be conditional

Malaysia’s Federal Constitution, under Article 11, guarantees freedom of religion. It requires the state to:

  • protect all religious communities
  • act fairly and impartially
  • prevent acts that inflame tensions





Enforcement cannot bend to the pressure of any kind. Once it does, constitutional protections begin to feel conditional.

At its core, this issue is simple. No person alleged to have broken the law can be allowed to set conditions for compliance or hold enforcement hostage to demands.

The balance of authority must remain with institutions, not individuals negotiating with the law.

That is a line a functioning state cannot blur.

This is where leadership is tested. There will be pressure to manage sentiment, to avoid backlash, to respond tactically, but leadership is not about managing outrage. It is about upholding principles.

Politicians must act in accordance with the Constitution, which guarantees equal protection to all Malaysians.

This moment demands clarity. Not rhetoric. Not delay. Not negotiation.

The rule of law cannot be conditional. Provocation cannot be rewarded, and no individual can be allowed to hold the nation to pressure or make demands. We should draw the line now, clearly and firmly, because if it is not held here, it will be tested again.

Next time, containment may not hold.



MARIAM MOKHTAR is a defender of the truth, the admiral-general of the Green Bean Army, and the president of the Perak Liberation Organisation (PLO). Blog, X.


***


Remember the Kerling Indian Temple Incident in teh 1970's.


ICC Chief Prosecutor Khan cleared of sexual misconduct by judges



 

ICC Chief Prosecutor Khan cleared of sexual misconduct by judges: Report

Karim Khan has denied the allegations and took voluntary leave from his position in May.

Judges have cleared the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), Karim Khan, of all wrongdoing after an investigation into alleged sexual misconduct, Middle East Eye reports.

A report by Middle East Eye published on Saturday said a panel of three judges submitted a confidential report to the court’s oversight body, the Bureau of the Assembly of States Parties (ASP), on March 9.

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“The Panel is unanimously of the opinion that the factual findings by [The UN’s Office of Internal Oversight Services] OIOS do not establish misconduct or breach of duty under the relevant framework,” the report concluded, according to the sources cited by Middle East Eye.

The OIOS investigation was commissioned by the head of the ASP in November 2024 after a member of Khan’s office accused the prosecutor of sexual misconduct.

In August last year, a second woman came forward and alleged that Khan had abused his power over her while she was working for the British lawyer.

The woman had described his behaviour to UK newspaper The Guardian last year as a “constant onslaught” of advances.

Khan has denied the allegations and took voluntary leave from his position at the ICC in May, while awaiting the inquiry’s results. His deputy prosecutors have been in charge of his office in his absence.

According to Middle East Eye, the ASP met on Monday to discuss its response to the panel’s report. Under the court’s rules, if the bureau determines that no misconduct has occurred, the investigation should be closed.

The ASP has 30 days from receiving the report to make its preliminary assessment of the alleged sexual misconduct. Khan will then have 30 days to respond, and the bureau will have another 30 days to make its decision.

Khan declined to comment on the report, the outlet said.

The allegations of sexual misconduct came as Khan’s office was pursuing an investigation into alleged war crimes and genocide by Israeli officials and forces in Gaza and the occupied Palestinian territory.

Khan sought arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his then-defence minister, Yoav Gallant, over “criminal responsibility” for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

He also sought arrest warrants for Russian President Vladimir Putin and other Russian officials over the alleged unlawful deportation of Ukrainian children during Moscow’s ongoing war on Ukraine.



Iran war: What’s happening on day 23 of US-Israel attacks?

 


Iran war: What’s happening on day 23 of US-Israel attacks?

Trump threatens to hit Iranian energy sites if the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened within 48 hours; Tehran vows to retaliate.

United States President Donald Trump has threatened to “obliterate” Iran’s power plants if Tehran does not fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz within two days, as Israel launched new attacks on Tehran, with explosions reported in the east of the city.

Meanwhile, Iranian retaliatory attacks on Israel and regional countries have continued, with nearly 100 people injured in Iranian missile strikes on towns near an Israeli nuclear facility.

Israel had a “very difficult evening in the battle for our future”, said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after Iranian strikes hit the towns of Arad and Dimona.

Here is what you should know as the US-Israeli war on Iran enters day 23:

Iran
People look at a destroyed building in Tehran following an attack on March 21, 2026 [Alaa al-Marjani/Reuters]

In Iran

  • Israel launched new attacks on Tehran on Sunday, with explosions reported in the east of the city, following Iranian missile attacks on southern Israel.
  • Iran’s military threatened to attack all energy infrastructure linked to the US and Israel in the Middle East if its power plants are targeted, after Trump threatened new attacks.
  • The Iranian military announced intercepting a US-Israeli armed drone in the skies over Tehran before it could carry out any combat operations, according to the Tasnim news agency.
  • The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) claimed on Saturday its air defences shot down an Israeli fighter in Iranian airspace, the third such incident reported during the war. Israel did not confirm this.
  • Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisation said Israel and the US targeted the country’s Natanz nuclear site on Saturday in “criminal attacks”. Tehran also informed the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) about the attack, which confirmed no unusual radiation leak.
  • Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian called on the BRICS alliance, currently chaired by India, to “play an independent role in halting aggressions against Iran”. He also proposed establishing a regional security framework of West Asian countries.
  • Iran’s state broadcaster noted the death toll from the US-Israeli attacks has now topped 1,500, according to the Ministry of Health, and at least 20,984 people were injured, with seven hospitals evacuated and 36 ambulances damaged.

In the Gulf

  • Saudi Arabia intercepted nearly 60 drones from Iran, officials said, a majority of them targeting the country’s Eastern province, which houses the country’s energy facilities and resources.
  • The Ministry of Defence also said three ballistic missiles were launched towards Riyadh province. It said it intercepted one of those, while the others fell in an uninhabited area.
  • Saudi Arabia declared many of the Iranian diplomatic staff, including its military attache, persona non grata, ordering them to leave the country within 24 hours, after Qatar did the same on Wednesday.
  • In Bahrain, Iranian missiles targeted US bases after Iran’s state broadcaster claimed earlier attacks on al-Minhad base in the United Arab Emirates and Ali al-Salem airbase in Kuwait, which host US and British forces.
  • Bahrain’s military said its air defences shot down 143 missiles and 242 drones fired by Iran during the war.
  • Qatar’s Ministry of Defence noted a search operation after one of its helicopters suffered a technical malfunction during a routine duty and crashed in the regional waters.
US President Donald Trump waves while boarding Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on March 20, 2026, before departing for his Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida, where he will spend the weekend.
US President Donald Trump waves while boarding Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on March 20, 2026 [AFP]

In the US

  • Trump threatened to attack Iran’s energy sites in a post on Truth Social. “If Iran doesn’t FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 HOURS from this exact point in time, the United States of America will hit and obliterate their various POWER PLANTS, STARTING WITH THE BIGGEST ONE FIRST!” he wrote.
  • Trump claimed that the US is “weeks ahead of schedule” in its war on Iran and reiterated that Washington is not looking to make a deal with Iran, because “their leadership is gone, their navy and air force are dead, they have absolutely no defense”.
  • Trump repeated that Iran wants “to make a deal”; however, Iranian leaders have denied such earlier assertions. 😂😂😂
  • Admiral Brad Cooper, commander of the US Central Command, says the US military has dropped multiple 5,000-pound (2,270kg) bombs on an underground facility along Iran’s coast that it used to store antiship cruise missiles, mobile missile launchers and other equipment, thus undermining its ability to threaten the Strait of Hormuz.
An Israeli Orthodox Jew inspects the site of an Iranian missile strike in Arad on March 22, 2026.
An Israeli Orthodox Jew inspects the site of an Iranian missile attack in Arad on March 22, 2026 [AFP]

In Israel

  • Iranian missile attacks broke through Israeli defences in the south of the country, making direct impacts in the cities of Dimona and Arad, wounding some 100 people. The IRGC said it targeted Israeli military installations and security centres in the cities of Arad, Dimona, Eilat, Beersheba and Kiryat Gat in its most recent missile salvo. Tehran claimed more than 200 people were killed in the attacks; Israel reported no deaths.
  • PM Netanyahu said he is “strengthening the emergency and rescue forces currently operating in the field” after the Iranian attack in southern Israel.
  • The IAEA said it is aware of reports of a missile impact in the Israeli city of Dimona, adding that there are no indications of damage to the nuclear research centre in Negev.
  • Israel’s Ministry of Education cancelled all in-person classes across the country for Sunday and Monday. Israel’s Home Front Command banned gatherings of more than 50 people in the country’s south until Tuesday.
  • Israel’s military says it struck more than 200 sites in Iran and Lebanon over the weekend, targeting missile launchers, air defence systems and military bases.
  • Israeli military spokesman said Israel’s air defence systems were activated during the attacks, but failed to intercept some of the missiles, even though they were not “special or unfamiliar”. The spokesman said the military would investigate and “learn from” the incidents. 😂😂😂
  • Israel’s Ministry of Health said at least 4,292 injured people have been brought to hospitals since the start of the war.

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In Iraq and Lebanon


  • Hezbollah said it fired a barrage of rockets at Israeli soldiers patrolling in southern Lebanon. Two Israeli reservists were wounded in another Hezbollah mortar attack in northern Israel.
  • The Islamic Resistance in Iraq said it carried out 21 attacks against US bases across the country and the region in the past 24 hours.
  • Three drones were intercepted near Erbil airport, resulting in a fire in the vicinity. Another drone crashed in the al-Sayyidah area, southwest of the capital, Baghdad, with four people injured.
STRAIT OF HORMUZ - 17 JANUARY 2026 : A satellite view of Qeshm Island in Hormozgan Province, Iran, within the Strait of Hormuz region on January 17, 2026. (Photo by Gallo Images/Orbital Horizon/Copernicus Sentinel Data 2026)
A satellite view of Qeshm Island in Hormozgan province, Iran, within the Strait of Hormuz region on January 17, 2026 [Gallo Images/Orbital Horizon/Copernicus Sentinel Data 2026]

On the Strait of Hormuz

  • The UAE, Bahrain, the United Kingdom, France and Germany issued a joint statement, condemning what they described as Iran’s attacks on commercial vessels and civilian infrastructure in the Gulf.

    kt asks: WTF about US-Israeli attacks?

  • The statement accused Iran of the “de facto closure” of the Strait of Hormuz and called for an immediate halt to threats, mine-laying, and drone and missile attacks.

Joint US-UK Diego Garcia base

  • The UK accused Iran of launching ballistic missiles at the joint US-UK Diego Garcia base in the Indian Ocean, but said the attack was unsuccessful.
  • A senior Iranian official told Al Jazeera that Iran was not responsible for the missile attacks on Diego Garcia.
  • Diego Garcia, which is about 4,000km (2,500 miles) from Iranian territory, is one of the two bases the UK has allowed the US to use for “defensive operations” in the war against Iran. 😂😂😂

Republic of China Defence Delegation Visits U.S. F-16 Production Line Following Major Delivery Delays


Military Watch:


Republic of China Defence Delegation Visits U.S. F-16 Production Line Following Major Delivery Delays

Asia-Pacific , Aircraft and Anti-Aircraft



The Republic of China Ministry of National Defence has announced today that Deputy Minister of Military Affairs Hsu Szu-chien led a delegation to the United States to visit the F-16 Block 70 fighter production line in South Carolina to witness the aircraft complete its Lockheed Martin Acceptance Check Flight. The Ministry released a photo the delegation with an assembled fighter jet, which is the second F-16 Block 70 built for the Republic of China Air Force, and the first F-16C single seat variant. The Ministry indicated that delivery will began before the end of the year. The Republic of China Armed Forces are far the largest client for the F-16 Block 70, with an $8.2 billion order having been placed in 2019 for 66 fighters. The order was vital to financing the opening of a new F-16 production line in the United States and covering the costs of developing and serially producing the F-16 Block 70 variant.

Republic of China Defence Ministry Delegation with First F-16C Block 70
Republic of China Defence Ministry Delegation with First F-16C Block 70

The Republic of China Defence Ministry has repeatedly raised concerns over major delays to F-16 deliveries, which were initially intended to be completed deliveries in 2027. Premier Cho Jung-tai in October stated that the government did not rule out “taking legal action against the manufacturer,” although cautioning that the U.S. Foreign Military Sales process did  not provide for direct compensation claims. Production and systems integration issues in the United States have been a primary cause for delays. Only one fighter, F-16D number 6831, has been delivered so far. Data from the Taiwan Arms Sales Backlog Tracker in provided an indication of  major delays the supplies of a wide range of armaments, with outstanding backlogs having reached over $21.45 billion. 

Republic of China Air Force F-16B Block 20 Delivered in the 1990s
Republic of China Air Force F-16B Block 20 Delivered in the 1990s

Although the F-16 is widely considered obsolete, having first entered service 49 years ago in 1978, the Block 70 variant significantly improves on the original design with new composite materials, a more powerful engine, modern data links and precision guided weaponry, and the AN/APG-83 active electronically scanned array radar. Nevertheless, the sophistication of the capabilities fielded by the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA), with which the Republic of China Armed Forces remain in state of civil war, has raised serious concerns that the F-16 Block 70 will already close to two full generations behind before deliveries are complete. The Chinese mainland currently has two of the world’s most advanced fifth generation fighters in production, and is scheduled to lead the world by at least five years in fielding sixth generation fighters, with three separate designs already in flight testing.


***


Eventually the Wanks will provide the Taiwanese with some second-hand F-16s to make up for the inevitable delay in meeting its contractual obliogations.




Israeli Ground Forces Take Major Losses in Clashes with Hezbollah: Multiple Merkava Tanks Destroyed


Military Watch:


Israeli Ground Forces Take Major Losses in Clashes with Hezbollah: Multiple Merkava Tanks Destroyed

Middle East , Ground



The Lebanese paramilitary group Hezbollah has reported multiple successes during engagements Israeli Army units, including the destruction of multiple Merkava IV main battle tanks. While Israeli authorities have imposed strict censorship regarding possible losses, Hezbollah has published footage confirming many of its claims, including the destruction of multiple types of Israeli armoured vehicles. After Israel and the United States initiated a full scale military assault against Iran on February 28, Hezbollah the following day opened a second front against Israel, with footage in early March showing strikes on Israeli tanks. These ambushes have been conducted while Hezbollah launches rockets and ballistic missiles against a range of targets within Israel, forcing the country to carry out mass evacuations. The paramilitary group’s strikes appear to be closely coordinated with Iranian ballistic missile attacks. 

Hezbollah Radwan Force Personnel
Hezbollah Radwan Force Personnel

The latest setbacks to Israeli operations follow reports that Hezbollah had deployed its Radwan special forces for counteroffensives against Israeli Army units in Southern Lebanon. These elite units were notably not previously deployed for engagements with Israeli forces, and after having honed their capabilities for years to support counterinsurgency operations in Syria, they have been widely assessed to be highly capable. Hezbollah units have made extensive use of ambush tactics to launch coordinated attacks against Israeli armour, and on March 19 reported the disabling or destruction of six Merkava tanks between 12:05am and 1:30am during a series of engagements. Israel and the United States have both lobbied their strategic partner Syria to open a second front against Hezbollah, with a military buildup by Syrian Islamist militias having been staged on the Lebanese border to take pressure off Israeli forces.