Friday, June 12, 2026

OPINION | Why No Snap General Election for Malaysia?



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OPINION | Why No Snap General Election for Malaysia?


12 Jun 2026 • 1:30 PM MYT



Picture from Google Gemini's Image Generation (Nano Banana)


Why No Snap General Election: The Ship Stays on Course


When Johor dissolved its assembly and called early polls, many expected Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim to hoist the same flag, dissolve Parliament, and hold a general election alongside it. But he firmly pulled the anchor tight and shut the gate: “I’m focusing on my job… That’s their decision. We have our priorities, we focus on our work,” he declared, sweeping all speculation away like leaves before a broom. This is no sudden turn; it is a calculated, steady choice rooted in politics, economics, strategy, and plain good sense. Here is why GE16 will not be called anytime soon.



First, the timing is a storm, and risks are like hidden reefs. The unity government was woven from many fragile threads; now UMNO and Barisan Nasional have chosen to walk alone in Johor, snapping a key strand of the old fabric. If Anwar were to call a national vote now, he would sail straight into choppy seas where every contest turns into a tangled web of multi‑cornered fights. His own PKR is like a river losing its current, bleeding support on all sides; DAP stands as a mighty oak whose branches have begun to thin under the weight of unfulfilled hopes; meanwhile, PAS rises like a swelling tide, turning once‑safe seats into slippery ground. A snap poll now would be like setting sail in a hurricane with a patched hull—risking the comfortable majority he still holds, and with it, his entire mandate. Why gamble the whole voyage when the destination is still far off? Parliament’s term only ends in late 2027; there is no need to rush toward the rocks.



Second, the economic wind is not blowing in his favour, and public patience wears thin. The cost of living remains a heavy stone in every household’s pocket, a burden that people carry daily. Fuel subsidies are a leaking barrel, inflation lingers like a damp fog, and long‑awaited reforms—full UEC recognition, deep institutional change—are still seen as a river that flows too slowly, never reaching the sea. Calling an election now would look like abandoning the ship mid‑voyage, running away from problems instead of fixing them. Voters punish leaders who chase power instead of progress; Anwar knows he must first harvest visible results, or face a backlash that could wash his government away. His words—“Now is time for work, not politics”—are not just a statement; they are a signal that he intends to build a solid foundation, not a house of cards.



Third, Johor is the testing ground, the map that will show the way. This state election is not just a separate battle; it is a mirror held up to the nation. If MCA rises as a new tree in urban soil, DAP’s shade shrinks, PAS sweeps through like a flood, and PKR crumbles like dry earth—all as forecast—Anwar will see exactly where his strengths lie and where his walls are weak. Why fight a national war blindfolded? He will wait to read the wind, mend his alliances, and reinforce his defences before risking the whole kingdom. To hold a general election together with Johor would be like marching into unknown terrain without scouts; it is a mistake no wise commander makes.



Fourth, the very soul of the unity government is stability, not restlessness. His coalition still commands over 150 seats—a broad, sturdy bridge across the political divide, strong enough to carry the nation’s weight. There is no fire in the engine room, no crack in the keel, no crisis forcing the ship to port. Early polls would be an act of desperation, a sign that the captain has lost faith in his own course. Anwar wants to be remembered as the leader who rebuilt Malaysia’s house, not the one who tore it down just to rebuild it faster. He will stay the course, finish the journey, and let his achievements—not fear—shine like beacons along the shore.



In short: no snap election. The anchor holds, the sails are trimmed, and the ship continues steadily toward its goal. Johor is but one harbour along the way; the full voyage is far from over


moykokming@gmail.com

OPINION | Dear Datuk Onn Hafiz, if no DAP then who? PAS? Bersatu? Bersama? PKR? MUDA? Amanah?



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OPINION | Dear Datuk Onn Hafiz, if no DAP then who? PAS? Bersatu? Bersama? PKR? MUDA? Amanah?


12 Jun 2026 • 8:30 AM MYT



Image credit: Facebook


You have publicly pledged that BN would not form a state government with DAP if BN is returned to power in the upcoming state election.


Your pledge is obviously made on the assumption that you believed BN / UMNO will secure enough seats to enable it form a majority on its own.



BN has no reason to call for an election when Johor’s state election is only due by June 2027, while Melaka’s is due by February 2027.


As a business weekly wrote, you are indeed highly popular among Johoreans as voters prefer your hands-on, down-to-earth leadership and close ties to the state royalty.



And BN is not threatened at all in Johor as it holds 40 of the total 56 seats in the Johor state assembly with the rest held by PH (12), PN (3) and MUDA (1).


It is common knowledge that your decision to call for an early election in the state appears less about Johor itself and more about gauging voter sentiment ahead of the 16th General Election.


All the political pundits and analysts including research houses have projected that BN is expected to secure approximately 38–42 seats, maintaining a comfortable supermajority in Johor.



What if the election results did not turn out as you had projected on the night of the election?


Instead of retaining those 40 seats and possibly securing new seats as projected, what if the impossible happen?


That BN/UMNO lose some of the seats where they are the incumbents in the coming state elections and what you managed to retain is insufficient for you to form a majority?


Impossible?


As they said, politics is the art of making the impossible possible.


It means politics is about doing what you can.



It is not about doing everything you want.


You are projecting that BN/UMNO will not only return with the 40 seats you currently held but probably with a few new seats thrown in.


Or to put it bluntly, you believe, under your leadership, Johoreans are returning in drove to support BN / UMNO and for the coalition to lead the state.


What if, under this scenario, the only political coalition that is prepared to work with you, on the easy to explain excuse that the cooperation is merely an extension of the national framework of the madani government, is PH which by the way, comprised of PKR and DAP?



Are you going to reconsider and withdraw your earlier pledge of not working with DAP and thus by extension, PH?


Since you have crossed out DAP and nothing would change your mind, the obvious choice then, as you need their cooperation to form a majority, would be working with PAS and Bersatu.


Are you ok with that i.e you are dead set against working with DAP but ok with working with either PAS or Bersatu or both?


Your clarification is much needed for clarity before election day.

The Iran War Is the “Nail in the Coffin” for Dubai by Jacob Shapiro - The World Isn't Ending (And Opportunity For Malaysia).

 

Friday, June 12, 2026


The Iran War Is the “Nail in the Coffin” for Dubai by Jacob Shapiro - The World Isn't Ending (And Opportunity For Malaysia).


DO READ MY COMMENTS BELOW.

The Iran War Is the “Nail in the Coffin” for Dubai 
by Jacob Shapiro - The World Isn't Ending.

The US-Israeli campaign against Iran is remaking the Middle East. And a casualty is Dubai’s positioning as the Switzerland of the Gulf—a stable intermediary that allows capital, goods, and information to move when politics gets in the way.

In stable, unipolar moments, those kinds of intermediaries fade into the background; in fragmented, multipolar ones, they become indispensable. 

Dubai looked like the model modern intermediary, a flexible, non-aligned hub optimized for a world of competing powers. So, what went wrong (apart from the obvious)? And what will replace it?

THE SITUATION

To understand what’s happening, a little history helps. For as long as there has been globalization, there has been a need for financial intermediaries.

It wasn’t always so.

Globalization’s first emergence was a product of creative destruction. Genghis Khan’s 13th century invasions of Eurasia disrupted power balances, leaving behind fragmented global power centers linked by ironically stable trade routes.

Source: World History Encyclopedia

That fragmentation enabled the rise of the OG global financial intermediaries: the Italian commercial republics: Florence, Venice, and Genoa. Their opulent and obviously decaying wealth today is an echo of their past importance. These were trailblazers in combining cross-border finance, banking, and legal norms that allow strangers to transact at scale. (Thanks to Genghis Khan ripping up the trade routes).

Their biggest advantage was… geography. They sat at the intersection of trade between the Christian and Muslim worlds, financing commerce (and even war) across sovereign boundaries.

Geography giveth and geography taketh away. The rise of a strong Ottoman polity, the decline of the Mongols, and the European Age of Discovery saw globalization go truly global as Europeans bypassed overland trade routes. Amsterdam rose and fell as a global financial intermediary; then rose the British Empire and its imperial nodes (Bombay, Alexandria, Singapore, Hong Kong).

As the sun set on the British Empire, the world turned “multipolar” once more. That fractious environment led to World Wars I and II, wars that seemed unthinkable to the wealthy and powerful during La Belle Epoque, when globalization seemed inevitable and fundamentally good. It also led to the rise of Switzerland as a different kind of global financial intermediary, a safe haven for capital when the global stage was too volatile.

Switzerland and Singapore today are the gold-standard safe-haven cloisters: legally reliable, politically neutral, geographically removed from conflict, and trusted by global capital.

The Gulf’s Unlikely Switzerland 

In the again-multipolar world—with its sanctions, tariffs, regulatory divergence—there is demand for optionality. Capital asks: Where can I go that isn’t fully subject to Washington, Beijing, or Brussels? In recent years, a popular answer was “Dubai.” 

In under half a century, the United Arab Emirates reinvented itself from a British-protected petro-kingdom into a modern economy with real diversification and outsized regional influence. GDP more than quadrupled in 20 years; GDP per capita nearly doubled. In 2025 alone, the UAE saw a net inflow of 9,800 millionaires with a collective investable wealth of ~$63 billion.

Source: New World Wealth

Here’s the rub: It’s over.

Yes, that’s melodramatic. The UAE will likely still function as a tax avoidance haven for Russian oligarchs or wealthy Indian industrialists. But its success over the last 20 years is a casualty of the US-Israeli campaign against Iran. The UAE will be like the cantina in the space port of Mos Eisley in A New Hope.

Moreover, the war is simply the nail in the coffin. For the last ~10 years, the UAE has been busy disqualifying its own success:

It was never going to achieve geographic distance from zones of conflict.

It has not disconnected itself from the US—the AED is pegged to the dollar.

It is leveraging its sovereign wealth to fund massive, high-risk projects tied to AI and technology in the US, to the profligate tune of almost $2 trillion.

Add to that, the UAE government is active in conflicts in Yemen, Ethiopia, and Sudan, pursuing imperial ambition rather than protecting and extending what made it attractive to capital (a Venetian error).

In fact, the UAE has botched strategic neutrality so badly that it has been the target of more Iranian missiles and rockets than Israel.

There is useful historical precedent. Lebanon was once on the path to becoming the Switzerland of the region. From an October 23, 1964 edition of Time Magazine:

"Lying fat and silky beneath the Mediterranean sun, Beirut is an oasis of prosperity in the Arab Middle East. Tiny Lebanon’s flamboyant capital sprouts new buildings like palm trees, boasts more Mercedes than mullahs, lures thousands of tourists and happily shares its year-round sunshine with courtesans in bikinis as well as desert Arabs in burnooses. But Beirut’s most beneficent climate is the climate of trade, the heritage of its Phoenician forebears. In the Levantine landscape nothing seems to grow faster or greener than the city’s banks. Beirut is the world’s newest and fastest-rising financial center. In the last decade it has expanded its banking business by 1,000%—and it shows no signs of slowing".

Spoiler alert: Lebanon was done within a decade, consumed by civil war and eventually an Israeli invasion. It never truly recovered and is in decline now. And Lebanon is a beautiful country. It is not a petro-kingdom in the middle of the desert.

Perhaps the negativity is unwarranted. Perhaps the US will crush Iran, or perhaps regime change will throw down the Ayatollahs. But the geopolitics is clear. It is not on the UAE’s—or any Gulf country’s—side.

Where to Next? 

Still… the world isn’t ending. The UAE success story will be replicated elsewhere. After all, the UAE had the right idea—open to multiple blocs, politically flexible, optimized for moving and parking capital—but it fumbled the policy; and due to its inherent geographic disadvantages, it did not have room for error. Switzerland and Singapore are obvious winners of the fallout. But for some other countries, an opportunity has emerged.

In order of speculativeness, a few contenders: 

Uruguay already plays a similar role at a regional level.

El Salvador lacks a long track record of stability, but the Bukele government has dramatically improved security. Its bet on Bitcoin is an attempt to create distance from the dollar system, and its geography offers an interesting mix of advantages.

Guyana discovered a “fairy tale” discovery of oil in the 2010s that is coming online.

Scotland would need London’s permission (unlikely)… but has some of these attributes.

These sound out there… but so would the notion of the UAE 50 years ago, and so would the notion of Singapore 200 years ago, and so would the notion of Venice in 1200.

The key is to focus on where political flexibility, legal infrastructure, openness to capital flows, and geographic positioning combine. The Mongols destroyed the world but created the opportunity for Venice. The Iranian mullas have destroyed what remained of the Persian Gulf’s tenuous balance of power since Gulf War 2.0, and with it the UAE’s promise.


MY COMMENTS: 

1. The 'liberalisation' of  Saudi Arabia will also have a significant impact on Dubai and the UAE. Without a doubt many wealthy Saudis travel to Dubai, Abu Dhabi etc for entertainment and other distractions that were not available in Saudi Arabia until recently. But Saudi Arabia is now 'opening up'.  So weekend junkie trips to the Gulf may not be necessary. Plus Saudi Arabia is the mother lode - the oil money is still there. If Saudi Arabia opens up some more, the capital flows will go towards Saudi Arabia, eclipsing the rest of the Gulf.

Dubai and the UAE were also a bridge between ayatollah Iran and the sane world. Translation: Plenty illegal ayatollah money was deposited in Dubai. 

(Some analysts estimate that Iranian-linked assets and business holdings in the UAE could total around US$50 billion (RM200 billion). These are estimates, not official figures).

But if there is a regime change in Iran (ayatollahs disappear) and Iran becomes normal again, much of these money will go back to Iran. The UAE and Dubai will lose the Iran business.)

2. This situation presents a great opportunity for Malaysia. But unfortunately our fellows are bodoh macam nak mampus, so the opportunities will go to waste.

Malaysia enjoys a fake (in content) but perceived as real reputation as a functioning financial system. Fake because we are not a world class financial center. And we will never be. 

The bodoh macam nak mampus fellows are more tuned into kampong issues than building up a real world class financial hub. You need world class corporate lawyers. Loan and bond documentation experts. You need world class bankers - not the bagi cukup kuota GLC lembus. And above all you need English. Sorry la brader. He/him is male, she/her is female ok. 

We will need world class accountants and that really exclusive club of bankers - the syndicate lenders and deal makers - in multi currencies. Meaning someone who can pick up the phone and call five other banks in Hong Kong and Singapore and close a syndicated loan. Again all this runs on English.

What happens if you can do this? You get a Singapore. You get a Hong Kong. You can even be a New York or London. 

But when banks are run by a look like me, talk like me, smell like me, eat with your mouth open like me cartel of village jockeys - you get what you get. A constipated financial system. Populated by bagi cukup kuota GLC lembus.

The Arabs destroyed the 1,000 year old Silk Road. Thereby forcing poverty upon themselves until today.

In 1453 they captured Constantinipole and cut off the Asian land route to the West - but made it accessible by paying taxes and tolls. 

So the Portugese sailed around the Cape of Good Hope (1487) 

And reached India by sea. 
In 1492 Columbus discovered the Americas. 
In 1492 Ferdinand and Isabella kicked out the last Arabs from Cordoba (Spain). 
1492 was a grand vintage.
The West went out and colonised the world.

  • Now it is the turn of the Chinese. 
  • They do not wish to colonise the world. 
  • The Chinese do not want you to become like them. 
  • The just need Arabs and Muslims to buy their prayer mats (sejadah). 
  • They need Africans to buy super colourful African style garments. 
  • They need Europeans to buy Italian fashion made by Chinese. 
  • They need Americans to buy made in China I-phones.
We must understand geography, history, (and now) technology. 
And how they present opportunities. 

'They destroyed the future': Palestinian anger at rise in Israeli demolitions in East Jerusalem





'They destroyed the future': Palestinian anger at rise in Israeli demolitions in East Jerusalem


4 hours ago
Yolande Knell
Middle East correspondent, in Jerusalem


BBC
The Awad family home in East Jerusalem is one of the properties being demolished


There is the loud din of a demolition below Jerusalem's walled Old City, and from a hillside I watch a large Israeli excavator tearing into a Palestinian house.

Some 59 properties have now been destroyed in the al-Bustan area of the Silwan neighbourhood since late 2023. With world attention diverted by the war in Gaza and now in Iran and Lebanon, there has been a dramatic rise in the number of Palestinians being pushed from their homes in Israeli-occupied east of the city.

"There is no future. They destroyed the future and everything else," says Fayez Awad, 58, who is sitting in the only remaining floor of his property when I reach him.


Fayez Awad sees no future after being affected by the demolitions


"We spent our whole lives building this house. This is all we managed to achieve in life. They brought us back to zero again, me and my children."

Holy to Jews, Christians and Muslims, Jerusalem is at the heart of the Israel-Palestinian conflict and competing claims to the land. Israel captured the east of the city, including its holy places, along with the rest of the West Bank from Jordan in the 1967 Middle East War and later annexed it in a move that is not recognised by most countries.

For some 20 years, Israel's Jerusalem Municipality has pursued plans to turn al-Bustan into a biblically-themed park, the King's Garden, to be run by a Jewish settler organisation. Recently, demolition orders enforced by Israeli courts have accelerated along the narrow streets here.

Settlements and the forced transfer of a population from occupied land are illegal under international law.

The Jerusalem Municipality told the BBC in a statement that it was working "for the benefit of all city residents" and that it aimed "to build a park in a zone that suffers from a severe shortage of open public spaces".


Reuters
Jerusalem is a holy city for Jews, Christians and Muslims


Palestinians point out that Israeli construction permits in East Jerusalem are almost impossible for them to get. According to the Israeli human rights group Bimkom, in 2025, only 7% of new housing approved in Jerusalem was for Palestinians, who account for some 40% of the city's population. People in al-Bustan say that their efforts to reach a compromise on alternative planning proposals were rejected by the local authority.

Half of the homes here have now been demolished. Many residents facing demolition orders are opting to take sledgehammers to their own properties to avoid hefty costs and fines imposed by the municipality which typically total tens of thousands of dollars.

"We're being given warnings that in the coming months they'll destroy the rest of the houses," says local activist Fakhri Abu Diab. His home was previously demolished, and he and his wife are now threatened with eviction from the caravan they set up by the rubble.

"Israel is using the geopolitical situation to finish the issue. It's very difficult and painful and the international community has left us all alone," Abu Diab goes on. "The municipality is waging a war of bulldozers against us and our presence

Israel has built about 160 settlements housing 700,000 Jews in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.


Fakhri Abu Diab's family home was demolished and now he faces eviction again


While most Israelis see all of Jerusalem as their united capital, Palestinians want the east as the capital of their hoped-for, future, independent state. The current Israeli government has pledged "to bury" the idea of Palestinian statehood – and is taking steps accordingly.

According to the UN, some 200 Palestinian households - about 900 people - are facing eviction cases filed against them in the Israeli courts, mostly by settlers.

Israel uses laws allowing takeovers of property owned by Jews before the state was created in 1948, so that settlers can move in. This is currently happening next to al-Bustan, in another part of Silwan called Batn al-Hawa. Palestinian families who have long lived there are now classed as "illegal squatters".

Israeli law does not allow Palestinians to claim back properties within Israel that they owned historically.

Silwan's proximity to a key holy site, the al-Aqsa mosque compound - or al-Haram al-Sharif as it is known to Muslims and Temple Mount to Jews – is central to its importance to Israeli authorities and settler groups. It is the holiest place in Judaism as well as the third holiest place in Islam.

"Silwan sits on a very important site called 'City of David'," says Yonatan Mizrahi from the Israeli anti-settlement NGO Peace Now, referring to an Israeli archaeological project. "Part of the plan is to create a touristic area that very much emphasises the Jewish narrative, the Jewish belonging to this land."


Israeli flags are flying where settlers live in the Christian and Muslim Quarters of the Old City


"We see more and more settlers coming in and unfortunately more and more Palestinians forced to leave."

In the Christian and Muslim Quarters of the Old City, Israeli flags mark buildings where settlers now live. A large one is mounted on the side of a religious nationalist Jewish school, or yeshiva, involved in another high-profile eviction case.

An original yeshiva here, set up in the early 20th Century, was abandoned in 1929 during major sectarian riots in the British Mandate period. But a Palestinian Muslim guard, Mohammed Basha Abdulghani, kept it safe in return for being allowed to live in part of the building.

Now, in a case brought by part of the Israeli justice ministry, Jerusalem courts have ruled that the dozen remaining members of the Basha family - most of whom are elderly - must leave. The current yeshiva argued that it needed additional space for its students.

"What will we do?" asks 76-year-old Mufid Basha, Abdulghani's son, in his tiny apartment. "We've nowhere else to go. This is the only home I've ever known."


Members of the Basha family must leave their home, an Israeli court order states


He recalls how his father was lauded when he handed over the key of the intact historic yeshiva after Israel captured East Jerusalem. Thousands of religious texts were discovered inside.

"He kept the books, kept the place - everything the same," Mufid Basha says. "And this is the gift that we get!"

The rabbi for the modern-day yeshiva declined to comment to the BBC.

Jerusalem's District Court recently issued a temporary injunction preventing the Basha family from being evicted while it considers their legal request for an appeal.

While Palestinians face being forced out of their homes in East Jerusalem, there is a shortage of places for them to move to within the city.

A recent Bimkom report also highlighted how a new land registration process introduced in East Jerusalem in 2018 was being used by the state as another tool for large-scale land appropriation and Palestinian displacement.

"Today, Palestinians in Jerusalem know that they are unsafe, unsafe even in their homes," says Aviv Tatarsky, a researcher with another Israeli anti-settlement NGO, Ir Amim. The group believes that Jerusalem should be a shared city for Israelis and Palestinians.

"With the Israeli government all restraints are off," Tatarsky continues. "They are rushing to cement a reality of a Jewish supremacy in the city that does not really tolerate Palestinian rights or maybe even Palestinian presence in Jerusalem."


AFP
The al-Bustan area is located in a valley below the al-Aqsa mosque compound


In recent weeks, Jerusalem district planners have approved a long-delayed, highly controversial project to build a vast ultra-Orthodox yeshiva at the entrance to Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood in East Jerusalem.

The Israeli government also set up an inter-ministry team to explore the seizure of dozens of Palestinian-owned properties by Chain Gate inside the Old City, an entrance to the al-Aqsa mosque compound or Temple Mount.

Back in al-Bustan, I join a tour of foreign diplomats. Local Palestinians are calling for the international community to stand up for international law and help them stay in their homes.

The European Union did recently issue a statement calling the situation "dire" in East Jerusalem and in Silwan in particular.

"The EU reiterates its strong opposition to Israel's settlement policy and activities," it read.

The last visit with the diplomats is to 97-year-old Yusra Qweider, who is unable to leave her bed. She has been displaced three times since 1948, when her family fled from Jaffa. Now her house of the past half a century faces an eviction notice.

"They want to kick us out of here," Yusra tells me. "I am sick and I can't walk. We are counting on God."


Netizen claims Rosmah is trying to buy Najib’s freedom through US$13 mil mansion transfer





Netizen claims Rosmah is trying to buy Najib’s freedom through US$13 mil mansion transfer


By CS Ming
42 minutes ago




JUST WHEN many Malaysians thought the chapter on the 1MDB saga was slowly fading into history, a fresh social media allegation has reignited public interest in the financial networks surrounding former prime minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak.


A video posted on X by social media user @lansvin alleges that a luxury mansion in New Jersey’s ultra-exclusive Margo Way, often described as part of America’s “Billionaire’s Row,” may be linked to efforts aimed at securing a pardon for Najib.


The property, reportedly valued at close to US$13 mil, has become the focus of intense speculation after claims emerged regarding a series of ownership transfers involving individuals allegedly connected to the former premier’s family and influential figures.

According to the allegations presented in the video, the mansion was initially purchased under the name of Daniyar Kessikbayev, Najib’s son-in-law.

The post further claims that the acquisition was directed by Rosmah while Najib was serving his prison sentence.


BREAKING material that arrived now to my hands! Corrupt former Malaysian PM Najib Razak’s wife funds a 13M$ mansion purchase for her son-in-law. A few weeks ago, the mansion is transferred to an associate of the royal family, while a pardon request is on their table for the Show more
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The controversy deepened with claims that, in May 2026, a confidential declaration of trust transferred ownership of the property to Daran Investments Capital Inc, a British Virgin Islands-registered company described as having opaque ownership structures.

The video further alleges that the company’s shareholder is Daing A. Malek Daing A. Rahman, an individual said to be closely associated with the Johor royal household.

At the time of writing, no official statement from US law enforcement agencies has been publicly released confirming the specific allegations contained in the social media post.

Nevertheless, the allegations have gained traction because they touch on themes that have long surrounded the 1MDB affair.

Prompted by the video, netizen @vishalshergill gave a short breakdown in the comment section about the situation in Malaysia.


Then there was @Eilameen12 stating that Najib is not in jail, but the media merely says that he is.

“I genuinely feel sorry for regular Malaysians who actually believe in justice,” added @DanielleRobdany.

Check out the hilarious photo comments too:


However, a sceptical @saifulimran pointed out an inaccuracy presented by the video.


Here we can note why public interest alone cannot substitute for evidence.

Social media has become increasingly effective at uncovering unusual corporate arrangements and property transactions.

At the same time, it is also a space where speculation travels much faster than verified facts.

Whether the New Jersey mansion ultimately proves to be a significant lead or merely another chapter in the endless swirl of online speculation is a question that only a transparent investigation can answer. —June 12, 2026