Saturday, December 20, 2025

Putin vows no more wars if West treats Russia with respect


BBC:

Putin vows no more wars if West treats Russia with respect

1 hour ago
Paul Kirby and Laura Gozzi


Alexander NEMENOV/AFP

Putin has offered little sign of compromise to end the war, although talks are set to continue in the US


Russia's President Vladimir Putin has said there will be no more wars after Ukraine if Russia is treated with respect - and claims that Moscow is planning to attack European countries are "nonsense".

In a marathon televised event lasting almost four and a half hours, he was asked by the BBC's Steve Rosenberg whether there would be new "special military operations" - Putin's term for the full-scale war.

"There won't be any operations if you treat us with respect, if you respect our interests just as we've always tried to respect yours," he asserted.

His remarks were in line with a recent comment in which he said Russia was not planning to go to war, but was ready "right now" if Europe wanted to.

He also added the condition,"if you don't cheat us like you cheated us with Nato's eastward expansion".

He has long accused Nato of going back on an alleged 1990 Western promise to then Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev before the fall of the Soviet Union. Gorbachev later denied the remark had been made.


Malaysian Chinese Contributions - Koon Yew Yin


Koon Yew Yin's Blog



Koon Yew Yin, 19th Dec 2025



I am 93 years old. When I was 10 years old, my grandfather passed away at 83 years old. That means my grandfather passed away 166 years ago in 1859.





When he was 25 years old, he migrated from Guangzhou, China with his younger brother to start a timber sawmill to produce railway sleepers. His timber sawmill was diagonally opposite the Pudu Jail in Kuala Lumpur. Gradually he brought more people from his village to produce more railway sleepers as demand increased. The demand for railway sleepers was increasing so rapidly by the Malayan Railway because of the railway extension. Malayan Railway started operations in 1885, with the first line being the short, 13km route between Taiping and Port Weld (Kuala Sepetang) in Perak, built primarily to transport tin from mines to the port for export. This initial success paved the way for the expansion of Malaysia's railway network under British colonial rule.




In fact, at that time most of the houses were made of timber and there was no electric chain saw. All timber planks were sawn by hand saws.

At the meantime, my father expanded the timber business by making coffins out of the big logs of wood. Chinese believed the coffins are their permanent homes. When they die, their children would buy the best coffins for their parents.

He named his coffin shop Fook Tai Hin 福大輿壽板店 The coffin shop still exists after more than 100 years and it is managed by one of my grand nephews. It is located in Kepong, K.L.

I remember a framed up old Chinese saying at my grandfather’s timber sawmill:



This means you will not be rich if you work for some body. You should do business to be rich.

Gradually more and more Chinese migrated to Malaya to do business or work in the tin mines and Rubber estates because at that time Malaya was the largest producer of Tin and Rubber in the word.

As of 2025, ethnic Chinese make up about 7 million people in Malaysia, representing roughly 20–21% of the national population. Their contributions span economy, education, culture, and international relations, making them one of the most influential minority groups in the country.


Malaysian Chinese Contribution:

My biggest contribution was I co-founded Mudajaya, IGB and IJM Corporation Bhd in 1983, 42 years ago. The current market capitalisation of IJM Corp is Rm 7,915 Million.

Commerce & Industry: Historically dominant in trade, retail, and manufacturing. Many of Malaysia’s largest conglomerates (banks, property, plantations, logistics) are Chinese‑owned.

SMEs: Ethnic Chinese entrepreneurs run a majority of small and medium enterprises, vital for employment and exports.

Finance: Strong presence in capital markets, contributing significantly to GDP growth.
Malaysia Annual GDP (1957–2025)




1957 (Merdeka): RM 5.1 billion

1970: RM 12.3 billion

1997 (Asian Financial Crisis): RM 282 billion

2008 (Global Financial Crisis): RM 741 billion

2020 (COVID-19 pandemic): RM 1.34 trillion

2024: RM 1.9 trillion


Steady Growth: Malaysia’s GDP expanded more than 370 times since independence.


Timeline of Malaysia’s Trade Surplus

Pre‑1997: Malaysia often had trade surpluses, but the Asian Financial Crisis disrupted flows.

1998 onward: Since the recovery from the crisis, Malaysia has consistently maintained a surplus every single year.

2024: Trade surplus stood at RM 204 billion, marking the 27th consecutive year of surplus.

2025 (latest): October 2025 alone recorded a surplus of RM 19 billion, continuing the streak.


2. Education

Chinese Independent Schools: Provide alternative education pathways, producing bilingual graduates in Mandarin, Malay, and English.

Scholarship & Academia: High representation in universities, especially in science, engineering, and medicine.


3. Culture & Society

Festivals: Chinese New Year, Mid‑Autumn Festival, and Hungry Ghost Festival enrich Malaysia’s multicultural identity.

Cuisine: Chinese food (dim sum, noodles, Hainanese chicken rice) is central to Malaysian culinary heritage.

Language: Mandarin and dialects (Hokkien, Cantonese, Hakka, Teochew) are widely spoken, adding linguistic diversity.


4. International Relations

China–Malaysia Ties: Ethnic Chinese communities act as cultural and business bridges, strengthening bilateral trade and diplomacy. Diaspora Networks: Malaysian Chinese abroad (Australia, Singapore, UK, US) contribute remittances and global linkages.


Strategic Implications


Economic Backbone: Despite being a minority, their role in commerce and industry is disproportionate to population size.

Demographic Decline: Lower fertility rates and emigration may reduce their share, raising questions about long‑term representation. Cultural Integration: Contributions help sustain Malaysia’s multicultural balance, but also highlight challenges in ethnic politics.

Bottom Line: Malaysia’s ~7 million ethnic Chinese are central to the nation’s economy, education, culture, and global connectivity. While their population share is declining, their contributions remain vital to Malaysia’s prosperity and identity.


My personal opinion:

I am nearly 93 years old and I was a-co founder of Mudajaya, IGB, IJM and several unlisted companies. Over the years, I have seen many ethnic Chinese, including my children have migrated to Singapore, UK, Australia, U.S. Canada etc. Almost all of them are working for some money to survive and have little or no saving. They forgot



This means you will not be rich if you work for some body. You should do business to be rich.

I have been to almost all the countries around the world. Malaysia offers the best opportunity to do business. Open your eyes, you can see almost all the shops and factories are dominated by the Chinese. I prefer to live and die in Ipoh, Malaysia.


'Traitors, failures, tricksters' - sparks fly as info chiefs clash










'Traitors, failures, tricksters' - sparks fly as info chiefs clash


Published: Dec 19, 2025 6:14 PM
Updated: 10:10 PM



PKR Youth information chief Danish Hairudin fired back at his Bersatu counterpart, Harris Idaham Rashid, for suggesting that Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim lacked the nerve to call a snap general election.

Harris claimed that this was due to Pakatan Harapan being nearly wiped out in last month’s Sabah election.

Rejecting Harris’ assertion that Anwar and Harapan are losing public support, Danish argued that it is Bersatu that is gripped by panic, having lost both relevance and direction.

Revisiting events in 2020, when Bersatu’s withdrawal led to the collapse of the Harapan government, Danish said: “The party that speaks the loudest about political courage is the same party that brought down the government, betrayed the people’s mandate, and left the country in economic disarray.”

“Now, after failing to govern, they attempt to act as political commentators while pretending to forget their own poor track record,” he added, referring to Bersatu president and Perikatan Nasional chairperson Muhyiddin Yassin’s 17-month tenure as prime minister.




Ironically, Bersatu and PN performed no better in the East Malaysian state, matching Harapan’s dismal haul of just one seat in last month’s state polls.

‘Bersatu diverting attention from own failings’

Danish also dismissed Harris’ attempt to link the Sabah election outcome to alleged failures in national leadership as a “cheap trick to cover up Bersatu’s failure to build public confidence not just in Sabah but across the country”.

“As support dwindles, false narratives are created to divert attention,” he said.

He also claimed that the Anwar-led Madani government is now repairing the damage inherited from its predecessors, including Muhyiddin’s “backdoor government”, which he alleged failed to manage the economy, stabilise politics, or safeguard the welfare of the people.

“Today, the economy is growing consistently, inflation is under control, and investor confidence is rising. These are facts, not perceptions,” he added.




Defending Anwar’s decision not to call for early polls, Danish said it reflected responsible leadership that prioritises public interest and economic stability.

“Only leaders who fail to govern see elections as a tool for self-preservation rather than a solemn duty to the nation,” he said.

Danish further challenged his Bersatu counterpart to name the party’s economic achievements during its time in government.

“If there are none, then end the political theatrics and give way to a government that is actually working... The people today are wiser. Slander may be loud, but Bersatu’s record of failure speaks louder,” he added.

Danish also stressed that PKR Youth will continue to defend Anwar’s leadership and the Madani government against attacks that are “hypocritical, vengeful, and unfounded”.

Alarm in DAP

Earlier, Malaysiakini quoted Harris as claiming that the Sabah election results had rattled Anwar, prompting the prime minister to delay calling the next general election to rebuild his support base.




On Wednesday, Anwar said the general election is “still a long way off” and that his focus remains on implementing reforms.

The Sabah polls nonetheless sounded alarm bells within Harapan, particularly for DAP, which suffered an uncharacteristic rejection from Chinese voters, losing all eight seats it contested.

Following an emergency meeting, DAP’s central leadership announced a six-month timeframe to work with Anwar on implementing reforms - a long-standing clarion call of the coalition, first formed as Barisan Alternatif, for more than two decades.


Bangladesh court questions M'sia's 10 conditions to supply workers










Bangladesh court questions M'sia's 10 conditions to supply workers


B Nantha Kumar
Published: Dec 19, 2025 8:00 PM
Updated: 11:00 PM




A High Court in Bangladesh has questioned the validity of the Malaysian government’s new 10-point criteria for private agencies to send workers here.

In an order issued yesterday, the court directed the Bangladesh government to explain within 10 days why the criteria set by Malaysia should not be declared unlawful.

The order was issued by a bench comprising judges Fatema Z Nizib and Fatema Anowar after hearing a writ petition filed by three Bangladeshi worker recruitment agencies, including Afiya Overseas.

Malaysiakini has sighted a copy of the court order.

When contacted, Afiya Overseas’ lawyer, Atikur Rahman, confirmed the matter.

“Yes, as Afiya’s lawyer, I can confirm that the court has ordered the Bangladesh government to respond to this issue within 10 days,” he told Malaysiakini.


Bangladesh High Court


Earlier, the agencies challenged the 10 eligibility conditions which were set by Malaysia and announced to agents in Bangladesh by its Ministry of Expatriates’ Welfare and Overseas Employment on Nov 18, 2025.

In their arguments, the applicants claimed the conditions were biased and unreasonable, effectively excluding a large number of legitimate recruitment agencies.

They argued the criteria benefited only a small number of large companies and opened the door to monopolisation in the migrant worker industry.

The applicants also contended that the approach ran counter to the principles of fair competition and was inconsistent with existing legal precedents.

The requirements

Among the key requirements is that an agency must have at least five years of licensed operations with a satisfactory track record.

Agencies are also required to prove that they have sent at least 3,000 workers overseas in the past five years.

In addition, they must have experience sending workers to at least three different countries during the same period.

Other criteria include holding a valid licence from the Bangladeshi authorities and certificates of good conduct issued by destination countries.

The High Court subsequently ordered the government to respond and defend the legality of the policy within the stipulated timeframe.

The Foreign Ministry, in an Oct 27 letter, informed embassies of migrant worker source countries on the 10 criteria for agencies supplying workers to Malaysia.

The letter sighted by Malaysiakini also requested the respective governments to submit a list of agencies capable of meeting all the conditions by Nov 15, 2025.


Foreign Ministry


Wisma Putra later clarified that any questions regarding the criteria and migrant worker recruitment should be referred to the Human Resources Ministry.

“Wisma Putra takes note of inquiries regarding the diplomatic note sent to the embassies of several source countries on the rationalisation process of migrant worker recruitment agencies.

“This step is part of the government’s initiative to strengthen ethical and transparent migrant worker recruitment practices.

“In this matter, Human Resources is the lead ministry responsible for formulating and setting policies related to migrant worker recruitment,” it said in a media statement.

Other requirements include positive testimonials from at least five international employers, ownership of a large permanent office (≥10,000 square feet) that has been operational for at least three years, and having an in-house training centre.

Allegations of exploitation

On July 31, Malaysiakini reported that Bangladesh agreed to halt investigations into allegations of syndicates exploiting Bangladeshi nationals seeking work in Malaysia.

The probe’s cessation was believed to be at the request of Malaysian officials.

More than 480,000 Bangladeshi workers entered Malaysia between 2022 and 2024 through 103 agencies licensed by both governments.

This was criticised by Malaysian and Bangladeshi NGOs as allegedly exposing workers to exploitation and debt bondage after paying recruitment fees of up to RM25,000.


Friday, December 19, 2025

Fadhli asks PM if ex-aide should be branded guilty too, following remarks










Fadhli asks PM if ex-aide should be branded guilty too, following remarks


Published: Dec 19, 2025 11:37 AM
Updated: 3:14 PM


Summary

  • PAS information chief Ahmad Fadhli Shaari accuses Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim of pre-empting justice by implying Albert Tei’s guilt before a court verdict.

  • He questions why the same logic is not applied to Anwar’s former aide, Shamsul Iskandar Akin, who has been charged with taking bribes from Tei.

  • Fadhli also criticises Anwar for allegedly applying moral standards selectively and questioned the premier’s handling of Tei’s whistleblower protection request.



PAS information chief Ahmad Fadhli Shaari has fired a scathing remark at Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, asking whether the premier was pre-empting justice by indirectly branding Albert Tei as guilty, before any court decision.

In a statement today, the Pasir Mas MP also questioned whether Anwar’s former political aide, Shamsul Iskandar Akin, who was recently charged in court alongside Tei, should be labelled similarly if the same logic were applied.

On Dec 4, Shamsul was slapped with four charges of taking RM176,830 in bribes from businessperson Tei.

He was accused of taking kickbacks in his capacity as Anwar’s political secretary at the time, to help Tei’s companies obtain mineral mining licences in Sabah. Tei claimed trial to four charges for giving the bribes to Shamsul.


Shamsul Iskandar Akin


The next day, Shamsul pleaded not guilty at the Shah Alam Sessions Court over one charge of receiving bribes totalling RM64,924 from Tei, while Tei also pleaded not guilty for allegedly bribing the former.

“I am not siding with Tei, but we are also obliged to be fair. Is the prime minister pre-empting justice in court by portraying Tei as having stolen money or obtained any gains or benefits that would confirm his guilt?

“If so, can we also say that his former political secretary is a ‘hardened recipient of bribes’ when he has only just been charged in court?” Fadhli asked in his Facebook post.

He also accused Anwar of selectively applying moral standards, alleging that the latter continued to cooperate with and praise allies from Gabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS), who were implicated in receiving bribes from Tei.


Albert Tei


“Does Anwar consider recipients of bribes to be more noble and pure than givers of bribes?” Fadhli asked.


‘Bribers turned into heroes’


Fadhli was responding to Anwar’s statement, in which he said there was growing confusion in the country, with thieves and corrupt individuals being treated as whistleblowers and elevated to the status of “heroes”.

Speaking in the Senate on Dec 16, Anwar said that “someone” who steals RM1 billion but later cooperates with MACC to recover a fraction of the amount should be described as a “hardened thief” rather than a whistleblower.

He also said there now exists a “culture”, even among politicians themselves, where “individuals who openly admit to bribing political leaders” are glorified.

He did not explicitly name anyone, but appeared to be alluding to Tei.




The prime minister also announced that the government intends to amend the Whistleblower Protection Act 2010, and that it is expected to be tabled early next year.

While Fadhli welcomes the proposed amendments, he questioned whether the premier was genuine, highlighting that Anwar had previously turned down Tei’s plea to seek protection as a whistleblower.

“According to records, Tei, as a whistleblower, exposed the Sabah corruption scandal in early November last year, and his lawyer had sent a letter to the prime minister at the time.

“Unfortunately, the prime minister rejected his application for protection in a short period of time, even without any investigation being carried out by the authorities,” he said.

‘Anwar’s silence implies truth’

Fadhli further questioned whether Anwar was willing to substantiate his claims in court, warning that making unproven accusations could be deeply embarrassing if unsupported by evidence.




“Can the prime minister be called to court and present evidence consistent with his argument?

“If he fails, then I do not know where he would put his face. It would be something deeply embarrassing,” he added.

Fadhli also pointed out that to date, Anwar has yet to deny his alleged involvement in the corruption allegations involving Tei and Shamsul, as alleged by a woman linked to Shamsul, Sofia Rini Buyong.


READ MORE: Anwar must face probe if 'order to record' video proven authentic: PKR MP


“In the absence of an official denial from Anwar, it implies that what Sofia said is true,” he added.

In the recordings, the woman can be heard telling Tei that Anwar had given his blessings for the Sabah politicians to be secretly recorded.

She also claimed that Shamsul had met with MACC chief commissioner Azam Baki at an undisclosed time to ask the graft buster to “settle” the Sabah mining scandal case involving Tei, prompting calls for the commission and Azam to be recused from the probe on Shamsul.

The woman was initially accused of being a proxy to Shamsul, but she later denied the matter.





In a second video clip released early last month, Anwar was linked to the support letter scandal involving Shamsul.

The clip that was again shared on the Pejuang Tun Dr Mahathir Facebook page shows the same woman with her face blurred, saying that a single support letter was issued for six contractors.

“Actually, as for your information, when Anwar came up in the first and second times, many asked for support letters from him. He did not want to sign. He asked Shamsul to sign it all.


READ MORE: 'Plot twist': Firm in Shamsul's alleged support letter denies seeking project


“First and second year. Shamsul. All were signed by Shamsul. Meaning for 2023 till 2024, all were signed by Shamsul on the orders of the boss,” the woman was heard saying.

The woman also alleged that this was conveyed to her by Shamsul himself. She, however, claimed that the matter was a standard procedure and not out of the ordinary.

On Nov 19, Anwar told the Dewan Rakyat that he reprimanded Shamsul for issuing the support letter.


Akmal, MCA Youth urge review over Christmas decoration ban










Akmal, MCA Youth urge review over Christmas decoration ban


Published: Dec 19, 2025 7:04 PM
Updated: 10:04 PM



Malacca state executive councillor Dr Akmal Saleh has described the ban on Christmas decorations in halal-certified hotels and food premises by the state Islamic religious department as unfair.

Taking to Facebook, he said having Christmas decorations in kitchens does not make the halal-certified food and beverages not permissible.

“I call for this matter to be reviewed. For example, if a non-Muslim restaurant owner who has halal certification wants to put up Christmas decorations, what’s wrong with that?

“I have also discussed this matter with several muftis, and they agree that halal certification depends on the source of the food and how it is prepared. Decorations have nothing to do with it.

“So, I raised the matter earlier with state exco for religious affairs Rahmad Mariman and urge the Malacca Islamic Religious Department (Jaim) to revisit this directive,” said the Umno Youth chief.

Earlier, Malacca DAP Youth said while it respects the importance of halal certification to the Muslim community, the directive goes beyond Jaim’s authority by regulating cultural expressions of other communities.


Christmas decoration


“It also creates confusion for businesses and threatens Malacca’s tourism-driven economy and reputation as an inclusive destination,” said the state party wing.

In the directive issued on Dec 16, sighted by Malaysiakini, halal-certified kitchens and hotels cannot have Christmas decorations as it was deemed a religious festival, not a cultural one.

The directive mentioned that it could raise issues in relation to the faith of Muslims.

The letter was signed by Jaim director Azhan Samat @ Limat, who is also the state halal verification panel chairperson.


On that note, Akmal said that even if a non-Muslim prepares food and beverages in a church using halal sources and prepares them using proper means, the food is still considered halal.

“Whether a type of food or beverage is halal or not depends on its source and how it is prepared,” he said.

Lacking common sense

Meanwhile, Malacca MCA Youth chief Tee Tian Leng said the directive not only lacks common-sense judgment, but also runs contrary to the spirit of celebrating diversity.

“As a tourism state, Malacca should, more than others, exemplify the values of diversity, inclusiveness, and openness.


Tee Tian Leng


“The state’s appeal has never been limited to its heritage buildings alone. It lies in a city experience shaped by inclusiveness, diversity, and festive vibrancy.

“Visitors come to Malacca expecting liveliness, lights, and a festive mood - not a city that deliberately remains neutral and detached during festive seasons,” he said in a statement.

Tee urged Jaim to revisit the directive and consider the diverse spirit of public holidays, the realities of a tourism state, and the maturity of Malaysians.

“This is to avoid Malacca being perceived nationally and internationally as a state that is overly sensitive towards festive celebrations and lacking confidence in multicultural coexistence or the strength of one’s own faith.”


‘I deserve it?’: Australia’s ‘Bondi Hero’ overwhelmed by RM6.7m global outpouring





‘I deserve it?’: Australia’s ‘Bondi Hero’ overwhelmed by RM6.7m global outpouring



Ahmed al Ahmed, who tackled a gunman during the Bondi Beach shooting, was overwhelmed after receiving more than A$2.5 million in donations from supporters worldwide. — Picture via X

Friday, 19 Dec 2025 3:36 PM MYT


SYDNEY, Dec 19 — A man credited with saving lives for wrestling a gun from one of the alleged attackers during a mass shooting at Australia’s Bondi Beach received a cheque for more than A$2.5 million (RM6.74 million) today, after tens of thousands of people contributed to a donation website.

Ahmed al Ahmed hid behind parked cars before charging at one of the gunmen from behind, seizing his weapon and knocking him to the ground. Ahmed suffered gunshot wounds after apparently being fired on by a second perpetrator and remains in hospital after undergoing surgery.


Ahmed, a Muslim father-of-two, was presented with an oversized cheque at his St. George hospital bed by Zachery Dereniowski, a social media influencer and co-organiser of the GoFundMe page, videos posted online showed.

More than 43,000 people worldwide contributed to the fundraising, including billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman who gave A$99,999 and shared the fundraiser on his X account. Australia’s prime minister and the state premier have visited Ahmed in hospital to praise his bravery.


When handed the cheque, Ahmed asks, “I deserve it?” to which Dereniowski says “every penny”, the video shows.


When asked what he would say to the people who donated, Ahmed said: “To stand with each other, all human beings. And forget everything bad ... and keep going to save life.”

“When I saved the people I (did it) from the heart because it was a nice day, everyone enjoying celebrating, with their kids, woman, man, teenager all, everyone was happy and they deserve, they deserve to enjoy,” Ahmed said, raising his uninjured fist in the air.


“This country (is the) best country in the world, best country in the world, but we’re not going to stand and keep watching — enough is enough. God protect Australia. Aussie, Aussie, Aussie.” The tobacco store owner did not say what he planned to do with the money.

Ahmed, 43, left his hometown in Syria’s northwest province of Idlib nearly 20 years ago to seek work in Australia.

Fifteen people were killed and dozens wounded on Sunday after two gunmen opened fire at people celebrating Hanukkah, the Jewish festival of lights at the famous beach. Authorities allege a 50-year-old father, who was shot dead by police, and his 24-year-old son, who was critically wounded, carried out the attack. — Reuters

How Trump’s Venezuela embargo could put Taiwan at risk





How Trump’s Venezuela embargo could put Taiwan at risk



A US Marine Corps MV-22B Osprey approaches for landing at Mercedita International Airport amid ongoing military movements in Puerto Rico, December 18, 2025. — Reuters pic

Friday, 19 Dec 2025 9:00 PM MYT


WASHINGTON, Dec 19 — Donald Trump’s decision to impose a partial blockade on Venezuela marks a dramatic escalation in US pressure on Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, but it also risks undermining a top US policy goal: deterring a potential Chinese naval encirclement of Taiwan.

The US president yesterday ordered the “total and complete blockade” of all sanctioned oil tankers entering and leaving Venezuela, a move aimed at choking the Maduro government’s main source of income.



But the action immediately raised questions under international law about whether it amounts to an act of war.

In the Indo-Pacific, military planners have long feared that China might use a naval blockade to coerce democratically governed Taiwan to accept Beijing’s rule.


While China considers Taiwan its own territory and would be unlikely to lean on international law to justify military action toward the island, experts say Beijing could exploit a US blockade of Venezuela to undercut any American efforts to drum up international diplomatic opposition to such a move in the Taiwan Strait.


“If the US blockades to change political outcomes in Venezuela, China can justify coercive measures against Taiwan on so-called security grounds,” said Craig Singleton, a China expert at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington.

“The legal contexts differ, but the propaganda opening is real,” he said, adding that precedent in international relations is set not only by law, but also by narrative.


“When Washington blurs terms, it weakens its ability to call out coercion elsewhere,” he said.

The blockade is the latest step in a recent US military buildup that has included more than two dozen strikes on alleged drug boats to pressure Maduro and other senior Venezuelan officials, who the Trump administration says are linked to drug traffickers.

Maduro has alleged that the US action is aimed at overthrowing him and gaining control of the OPEC nation’s oil resources, which are the world’s largest crude reserves.

“President Trump is prepared to use every element of American power to stop drugs from flooding into our country and to bring those responsible to justice,” a White House official said in response to Reuters’ questions without addressing the Taiwan issue.

China, the biggest buyer of Venezuelan crude, has sided with Venezuela, saying today that it “opposes all acts of unilateralism and bullying and supports countries in defending their sovereignty and national dignity.”

China practices blockades

Beijing has repeatedly signalled that a de facto naval blockade could be a central element of a campaign to gain control of Taiwan.

China’s military has practised blockade-style drills with increasing frequency in recent years around the island, whose government rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims.

To an international audience, Chinese officials would probably portray such a move around Taiwan as a domestic quarantine or law enforcement matter.

Beijing rejects any parallels between Taiwan and other nations, including Ukraine, which is combating a Russian invasion.

Nonetheless, Taiwanese officials have said a Chinese blockade of Taiwan would be an act of war and have far-reaching consequences for international trade.

Washington, which has long opposed unilateral changes to the status quo over Taiwan, would also argue that Chinese naval encirclement of Taiwan would amount to a blockade.

The Trump administration’s national security strategy released earlier in December called deterring conflict over Taiwan a priority due to its strategic location and economic importance.

Isaac Kardon, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who studies China’s maritime power, said Beijing would want to prevent the US from building a global coalition to oppose Chinese action toward Taiwan.

International concern about a US blockade of Venezuela would be useful for China’s effort.

“Ultimately, the US is doing a lot of damage to the normative quality of the rules,” Kardon said.

“That is a major blow to the credibility of international law to restrain other actors.”

Kardon said US action on Venezuelan tankers could open the door for China to take similar actions, such as interdicting Taiwan-bound vessels carrying vital natural gas supplies.

“Everything about it muddies the waters,” he said.

Protracted deployment to the Caribbean of US naval assets could also undermine US military readiness and its ability to respond to a crisis in the Taiwan Strait, experts told Reuters.

‘Realpolitik’


Wartime blockades are permitted under international law, but only under strict conditions.

Milena Sterio, a maritime law expert at Cleveland State University’s law school, said a full US blockade of Venezuela would likely be illegal absent clear evidence that the US was in armed conflict with the country.

“A US blockade would undermine our ability to criticise a Chinese blockade of Taiwan,” Sterio said.

“The same rules of international law apply to all states and it would be inconsistent for the US to criticise others for doing what we are doing.”

But Michael Hunzeker, an expert on Taiwan’s military deterrence at George Mason University, said he was sceptical that Trump’s actions would hurt the effort that really matters: building US allied support for counter-blockade efforts in a crisis over Taiwan.

Any reference by allies to Venezuela in that context, Hunzeker said, would likely be rhetorical justification for a realpolitik decision to remain on the sidelines.

“I highly doubt that this episode will significantly reshape how they assess those interests,” he said.

Assange Brings ‘Instrument of War’ Case Against Nobel Foundation

 



Assange Brings ‘Instrument of War’ Case Against Nobel Foundation

WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange has filed a criminal complaint against the Nobel Foundation, accusing it of misusing Nobel Peace Prize funds by awarding them to Venezuelan opposition figure Maria Corina Machado, who has publicly called on the US to attack her own country.

The complaint, dated Wednesday and submitted to Sweden’s Economic Crime Authority and War Crimes Unit, where the Nobel Foundation is based, argues that Alfred Nobel’s will legally restricts Peace Prize funds to purposes that promote peace and bars their use to advance war or foreign military intervention.

Disbursing prize money to Machado violates that mandate and could constitute a crime under Swedish law, Assange contends, while warning that the Nobel Peace Prize could be used as an “instrument of war.”

The complaint cites a series of public statements in which Machado endorsed potential US military intervention in Venezuela, while defending Washington’s use of force amid its heavy military buildup in the Caribbean. Assange pointed out that she had justified US strikes on boats off Venezuela’s coast, which have killed 95 people to date. The US maintains it is targeting “narco-terrorists,” while the UN has condemned the strikes as “extrajudicial killings.” – RT

Our Take: Reading through the source, it’s actually a pretty impressive document.

Not only does it accuse Maria Corona Machado of serious crimes like “facilitation of war crimes and crimes against humanity,” it also accuses all 30 members of the Nobel Board of Directors, providing the specific criminal code citations and full legal names of the accused.

US Stands Between EU and Frozen Russian Assets

 



US Stands Between EU and Frozen Russian Assets

The EU’s insistence on seizing Russian central bank assets stands in the way of US President Donald Trump’s attempts to resolve the Ukraine conflict, Politico and The Times have reported, citing officials in Washington.

EU leaders are meeting in Brussels on Thursday to debate using an estimated €210 billion ($246 billion) in Russian assets to back a so-called “reparations loan” for Kiev – a move Moscow has condemned as “theft.” Belgium, where most of the assets are held, has demanded that the legal risks be shared among bloc members.

“The EU’s problem isn’t really Belgium, it’s Trump,” Politico wrote on Wednesday. The US administration’s “backchanneling with capitals” has led to Italy, Bulgaria, Malta, and the Czech Republic joining the group of EU nations opposing the grab, the outlet wrote.

Even if the money is successfully seized, “the Europeans are going to have to give it back,” The Times cited a source close to the US discussions as saying. The frozen Russian funds are seen by Washington as a “crucial part of Trump’s proposed settlement plan,” it wrote on Wednesday.

Trump has proposed that Russia’s assets be unfrozen and invested in US-led reconstruction efforts in Ukraine, as well as joint projects with Moscow, according to an early draft published by the media last month. – RT

Our Take“The EU’s problem isn’t really Belgium, it’s Trump,” Politico wrote on Wednesday. The US administration’s “backchanneling with capitals” has led to Italy, Bulgaria, Malta, and the Czech Republic joining the group of EU nations opposing the grab, the outlet wrote.

President Trump is coordinating with Our Girl Meloni to encourage EU nations to defect and prevent Russia’s seized European assets from being plundered.

Soon I suspect that President Trump and President Putin will be openly allied against their common enemies in the western hegemony.
– GhostofBasedPatrickHenry

Why Fadhlina Will Never Become a Better Education Minister — No Matter How Many Chances She Gets





OPINION | Why Fadhlina Will Never Become a Better Education Minister — No Matter How Many Chances She Gets


19 Dec 2025 • 6:00 PM MYT


TheRealNehruism
An award-winning Newswav creator, Bebas News columnist & ex-FMT columnist



Image credit: Sinar Harian


Education minister Fadhlina Sidek has said she is grateful to be retained in Anwar Ibrahim’s Cabinet despite numerous calls for her to resign . In a familiar display of political diplomacy, she acknowledged the criticisms levelled against her, described fact-based and constructive criticism as an essential part of a healthy democracy, and promised that she would strive to do better for the education system and for Malaysia’s children.


“I would like to record my gratitude and appreciation for the trust placed in me to continue serving the ministry,” Fadhlina said during an engagement with media representatives here.


“God willing, we will strive to do better, and most certainly do what is best for our education system and for our children.”


It is all very gracious. It is also, unfortunately, almost certainly untrue.


Why?


Because I am willing to bet one ringgit and thirty cents that Fadhlina will not get better as education minister. I don't think she will, mot because she is lazy, malicious, or ill-intentioned—but because she is already as good as she can possibly be. And that level, quite simply, is not good enough.
Why she will not get better

The reason I am quite that Fadhlina will not get any better is brutally simple: if she could have been better, she would already have been better.


Three years is more than enough time to assess how a person fares in a job of this magnitude.


Fadhlina is not a 12 years old, that you need more than 3 years to see how she will fare in something. At the level that Fadhlina is in - the pro level - 3 years is more than enough to see whether one has a got what it takes, or one simply doesn't, and Fadhlina clearly doesn't have it.


In almost every human endeavour that does not end in failure, the same pattern holds true. At the beginning, you are bad. Over time, if you have a natural aptitude—or what we might call a knack—you improve. Slowly at first, then faster. Progress itself becomes motivating. Improvement feeds confidence; confidence feeds further improvement.


If, after years of doing something, you are still floundering, still reactive, still overwhelmed, it usually means one thing: this thing is not meant for you.


This is not an insult. It is simply reality.
Talent, knack, and uncomfortable truths

In life, there is such a thing as talent or knack. Some people have it for certain things; others do not. No amount of motivational slogans can change that.


I would never have been good at sports. With effort, discipline, and persistence, I might have become middling—perhaps even above average in some areas. But excellence was never on the table. I do not have the physical aptitude for demanding athletic performance, and I accept that.


Everybody must learn to accept not only their potential, but also their limitations. This, in fact, is one of the clearest marks of maturity. Only children can afford to believe that they can become anything they wish, that their abilities have no limits. As we grow older and our potential gradually reveals itself, we begin to see more clearly where we can truly excel—and, just as importantly, where we cannot.


If you have a knack for something, even if you start badly, you will get better and better the more you do it. If you do not, you can still improve with grit and hard work—but you will always hit a ceiling. And that ceiling will be far below those who possess both talent and a willingness to work.


Anyone who has ever seriously tried to excel at anything knows this to be true. No one is excellent at everything.


Ironically, this is precisely what schools are meant to help us discover: where our strengths lie, and where they do not. That our education minister appears unable to grasp such a basic truth about human potential—one that should be self-evident to anyone in the education sector—is deeply troubling.
Fadhlina as education minister: a fish out of water

When I look at Fadhlina Sidek, I do not see someone with a knack for education policy, system design, or pedagogical reform. And I am fairly certain I am not alone. Across the country, parents, teachers, and even students sense it instinctively.


This does not mean she is incompetent across the board. On the contrary, she might do reasonably well as the minister for women, family, and community development. She appears to understand social vulnerability, advocacy, and community-level concerns. There, she might even excel.


But as education minister, she is a fish out of water.


Because she lacks a natural grasp of the education ecosystem, I am quite sure that she will struggle to understand why problems occur or what she has to do to move things forward. And if you cannot understand why something is happening, you cannot prioritise correctly. You cannot know where to focus your energy, resources, or political capital. You cannot distinguish between surface-level symptoms and structural rot.


In such a situation, the minister becomes dependent on advisers who do have the knack. Explanations must be simplified, repeated, diluted. Even then, comprehension comes slowly—often too slowly for decisive action.


The worst possible time to be mediocre

If the education sector were in a calm, stable phase—if classrooms, curricula, and student psychology were largely unchanged—perhaps a hardworking but untalented minister could muddle through.


But that is not the world we are living in.


Today, teachers and parents are struggling to understand children whose minds are shaped more by TikTok, YouTube, and algorithmic feeds than by family, school, or community. Attention spans are collapsing. Authority structures are eroding. Moral frameworks are being outsourced to influencers.


At the same time, artificial intelligence is poised to upend education itself. Classrooms, textbooks, assessments, and even the role of teachers may look radically different in a decade—perhaps even sooner.


To navigate this, Malaysia does not need a minister who is merely willing to “learn on the job.” It needs someone with deep intuition, intellectual clarity, and strategic foresight.


Expecting Fadhlina to thrive in this environment is like expecting a non-swimmer to survive a raging current that even strong swimmers fear.


So why was she retained?

Given the murder, rape, and bullying cases in schools that have occurred under her watch, and the widespread calls for her resignation, why was she retained?

I can think of only two answers.


First, there is the comforting illusion that people inevitably improve if you just give them time. This belief often stems from a poor understanding of how competence and excellence actually develops. It assumes that with enough patience, you can make a monkey swim like a fish or a fish climb a tree like a monkey—provided you motivate them hard enough.


This is an oddly egoistical idea that many Malaysians cling to: the belief that sheer willpower, encouragement, or political backing can override nature, aptitude, or God-given disposition.


Second, and more troubling, is the possibility that improving the country is not the government’s primary objective. Instead, decisions may be driven by internal political calculations, factional balance, or personal loyalty—rather than by what best serves students, teachers, and parents.


This is one of the defining differences between first-world and third-world governance. In first-world countries, decisions are generally made to improve systems and outcomes. In third-world countries, decisions are often made to satisfy the preferences and survival needs of those in power.


By retaining Fadhlina as education minister, Malaysia sends an uncomfortable signal: for all our rhetoric about reform and progress, in substance, we still behave like a third-world country.


And our children will pay the price for that illusion.


***


But I luv her hot pouty juicy lips, wakakaka


So is PMX plotting DAP’s political harakiri or is DAP power crazy as claimed by rightists UMNO, PAS?





So is PMX plotting DAP’s political harakiri or is DAP power crazy as claimed by rightists UMNO, PAS?






CONTRARY to concerns of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim having succumbed to “power crazy DAP” in his latest Cabinet reshuffle exercise, Madani critics feel that it is the former who is charting the demise of the party with the most seats in the Pakatan Harapan (PH) coalition yet subserviently plays second fiddle in the Madani government.


The best counter to rightist groups which include PAS and UMNO is one by avid big biker Leon Wen who is made to wonder if newly minted Federal Territories Minister Hannah Yeoh “is a political scapegoat” or is she “PMX’s boldest chess move to win the thinking middle”?


Editor’s Note: Segambut MP Yeoh made history on Monday (Dec 15) as the first Chinese and the first non-Muslim minister to hold the Federal Territories portfolio since the post and its various iterations were first created in 1976 (Source: Malaysiakini).


“The hard conclusion is this is not a stupid gamble but a calculated gamble (by PMX) that performance can change perception and efficiency can change sentiment,” he penned in a Facebook rant.

𝗦𝘁𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗲𝗴𝗶 𝗔𝗻𝘄𝗮𝗿 𝗣𝗥𝗨𝟭𝟲: 𝗠𝗮𝗶𝗻 𝗥𝗶𝘀𝗶𝗸𝗼 𝗔𝘄𝗮𝗹, 𝗞𝘂𝘁𝗶𝗽 𝗨𝗻𝘁𝘂𝗻𝗴 𝗟𝗲𝘄𝗮𝘁 - 𝗠𝗲𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗿𝗶 𝗪𝗶𝗹𝗮𝘆𝗮𝗵 𝗣𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗲𝗸𝘂𝘁𝘂𝗮𝗻

I̲n̲t̲r̲o̲:
𝘈𝘭𝘢𝘮𝘢𝘬… 𝘋𝘔 𝘮𝘢𝘴𝘶𝘬 𝘣𝘦𝘳𝘵𝘢𝘭𝘶-𝘵𝘢𝘭𝘶 𝘮𝘢𝘭𝘢𝘮 𝘯𝘪. 𝘚𝘦𝘮𝘶𝘢 𝘵𝘢𝘯𝘺𝘢 𝘱𝘢𝘴𝘢𝘭 𝘣𝘦𝘯𝘥𝘢 𝘴𝘢𝘮𝘢 — 𝘏𝘢𝘯𝘯𝘢𝘩 𝘠𝘦𝘰𝘩 𝘱𝘶𝘭𝘢𝘬 𝘬𝘢𝘭𝘪 𝘯𝘪.
𝘈𝘥𝘢 𝘺𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘣𝘪𝘴𝘪𝘬, 𝘢𝘥𝘢 𝘺𝘢𝘯𝘨 𝘫𝘦𝘳𝘪𝘵: 𝘯𝘪 𝘬𝘢𝘮𝘣𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘩𝘪𝘵𝘢𝘮 𝘬𝘦? 𝘋𝘈𝘗 𝘯𝘢𝘬 𝘥𝘪𝘩𝘢𝘯𝘵𝘶𝘬𝘢𝘯 𝘣𝘢𝘭𝘪𝘬 𝘬𝘦?

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“If he succeeds, he doesn’t only win GE16 (16th General Election) but changed the political axis of Malaysia.

“If he falters, FT will become the epicentre of the biggest racial attacks in the GE16 campaign.

“While PMX is confident in Hannah’s abilities and competence which many still don’t see (she is fluent in Bahasa Malaysia and adapts very well to the Malay culture), the key question here is whether there’s ample economic power and enforcement to defend PMX’s strategy (against opposition onslaught)?”

Two extreme views

As backdrop, PAS Sura state assemblyman Dr Tengku Muhammad Fakhruddin Tengku Md Fauzi has branded the Cabinet reshuffle as “robbing hope”, hence the entire exercise “is not reformasi but reforbasi” while alluding to DAP deputy secretary-general Yeoh’s portfolio swap to FT Minister as “most worrying”.

“Is this a subtle message that the voices and concerns of urban Malays are no longer relevant?” the medical doctor-turned-full time politician hit out.

“ROMBAK KABINET ATAU ROMPAK HARAPAN? INI BUKAN REFORMASI, INI REFORBASI.”

PMX umum kabinet baharu. Rakyat tunggu nafas segar.
Yang sampai… bau hapak lama.

...See more

“Is this a sign that issues of affordable Malay housing, Malay small-scale hawkers or urban Malay youth squeezed by spiralling cost of living will continue to remain at the edge of the radar?”

In addition to PAS, UMNO secretary-general Dr Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki has also questioned the very fact that both the FT Minister and her deputy (Tawau GRS MP Datuk Lo Su Fui) are of Chinese descent.

“What is the fate of urban Bumiputera? Is this a precursor to local government elections?” asked the MARA (Majlis Amanah Rakyat) chairman and former UMNO Youth chief while laying bare ground sentiments from PMX’s Cabinet reshuffle.

R ASYRAF WAJDI DUSUKI
on Tuesday

KABINET MADANI: FAKTA DAN SENTIMEN

1. Dari segi komposisi kaum

MENTERI: 

...See more

He further shared that based on race composition, there are 17 Malay ministers, Chinese (five), Indian (two), Sarawak Bumiputera (five) and Sabah Bumiputera (three) while the deputy minister line-up comprises 10 Malays; Chinese (five), Indian (two), Sarawak Bumiputera (seven) and Sabah Bumiputera (six).

Committing political suicide

Aside from Leon Wen, another Madani critic is similarly of the view that the latest Cabinet reshuffle reflects PMX’s pandering to the right tendency.

“With most DAP’s leaders demoted (ie Penang DAP chairman Steven Sim Chee Keong takes over the ‘rather Malay-centric’ Entrepreneur Development and Cooperatives portfolio) and given not important portfolios, Anwar is planning for DAP’s exit from Madani,” observed Yang Gor Condor Returns (@YangGorHero).

With most DAP’s leaders demoted and given not important portfolios, Anwar is planning for DAP’s exit from Madani. He feels with Umno, GPS and GRS, he doesn’t need DAP. He also feels DAP is the burden for him to chase after the conservative Malays support which he really want!
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“He feels with UMNO, GPS and GRS, he doesn’t need DAP. He also feels DAP is a burden for him to chase after the conservative Malays support which he really wants!”

Added the self-proclaimed independent analyst and foodie: “(He) always wanted to be accepted and recognised as a Malay and Muslim hero but the Malays and Muslims don’t accept a sod*m*ser as leader!

“This is his greatest frustration! So he might reduce DAP hoping (that) he can win support from the Malays and Muslims!”



A presumably PKR leftist (belonging to former deputy president Datuk Seri Rafizi Ramli’s faction) concurred that PMX “is working against the minority and trying hard to get Malays favours”.

“Yet, still he’s losing both votes,” penned amir aiman (@amimanera73) on X. “ALL HIS ECONOMIC POLICIES IF READ BEYOND SURFACE VALUE WILL AFFECT THE CHINESE THE WORST.”


Anwar is working against the minority and trying hard to get Malays favours. Yet, still he’s losing both votes.
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Well, Madani critic ad tech consultant Pemikir Malaysia (@pemikirmsia) summed up best:

“Steven Sim has proven himself and delivered. He is replaced by an ex-MIC guy (Datuk Seri R, Ramanan) who joined PKR less than five years ago with next to no ability nor credentials.

“Reformasi  Reformanan ” – Dec 19, 2025

Steven Sim has proven himself and delivered. He is replaced by an ex MIC guy who joined PKR less than 5 years ago with next to no ability nor credentials. Reformasi ❌ Reformanan ✅
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Main image credit: Malaysiakini