Thursday, January 01, 2026

UEC: What it means to take an exam your own country won't accept










UEC: What it means to take an exam your own country won't accept


Ayesha Sheik Mazrul
Published: Jan 1, 2026 9:30 AM
Updated: 5:09 PM




For a generation of Malaysian students, preparing for the Unified Examination Certificate (UEC) has become an exercise in navigating dual realities.

They pour hours into study, sit for examinations widely recognised by universities and employers abroad, and yet find the qualification lingering in a policy twilight at home.

Several states, including Penang, Sarawak, Sabah, and Selangor, have taken the unprecedented step of recognising the UEC for purposes such as entry into state‑owned universities, state scholarships, and even civil service eligibility, offering a glimpse of inclusion that the federal system stubbornly withholds.

At the federal level, the story is markedly different. The UEC is still not recognised as a qualification for entry into Malaysia’s public universities, a position that policymakers justify based on alignment with the national education policy.

Among the chief concerns cited are mastery of Bahasa Melayu and the successful completion of compulsory subjects, such as history, in the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) - benchmarks that the national framework holds essential for citizenship, civic participation, and social cohesion.


SPM results


This disconnect leaves students in a limbo where their hard‑earned qualifications open doors internationally and in parts of their own country, but remain insufficient for broader national acceptance.

Trilingual studies, dual syllabuses

At Tsun Jin High School in Kuala Lumpur, Yong Zi Ni, 18, and Chong Jae Fang, 17, navigate this reality quietly, moving between subjects taught in three languages and a timetable that rarely eases.

Contrary to common assumptions, neither Yong nor Chong described their decision to take the UEC as a “political statement”.

“I did not so much ‘choose’ UEC, but I chose to attend a Chinese independent school. So naturally, UEC became my main pathway in education,” Yong said, adding that attending a Chinese-type primary school led to her current choice, where she could continue her education in her mother tongue.


(From left) Yong Zi Ni, Chong Jae Fang, and their teacher San Son Cheng


Chong, on the other hand, said taking the UEC is not a rebellious act to challenge the nation’s education system, but rather a question of choosing the most suitable education for her moving forward.

“It’s not something that I want to do because I want to go against the rules. I think it’s more of preparing yourselves for a pathway.

“You’re preparing yourselves for your future through a pathway that either you are more familiar with or that you’re more comfortable with,” she said.

At their school, sitting for both SPM and UEC is compulsory. That means learning the same subjects - mathematics, sciences, history - through different syllabuses, in different languages, often on the same day.
For context, the UEC is a standardised test administered by the Malaysian Independent Chinese Secondary Schools Working Committee (MICSS) since 1975.

The committee is represented by members of the United Chinese School Committees’ Association (Dong Zong) and the United Chinese School Teachers’ Association (Jiao Zong). The two associations are also jointly known as Dong Jiao Zong.

UEC subjects are taught and examined in Chinese, while SPM requires answers in Malay or English. The constant switching, they said, is one of the biggest challenges while learning.


Leaders of Dong Jiao Zong meeting Education Minister Fadhlina Sidek in October 2024


However, despite the trilingual difficulties, both students take it as a benefit, as they gain a more comprehensive understanding in their studies, linking knowledge from both syllabuses to create a broader vision.

Adapting to restricted options

For many outside the system, the most striking aspect of the UEC is its lack of recognition by public universities and the civil service.

For students taking the exam, that reality is neither new nor shocking, as they were acutely aware of the implications but still made a deliberate choice to sit for the certificate.

That sense of being excluded is familiar to Tan Dick Xin, a 2020 UEC graduate from Hin Hua High School in Klang, Selangor, who recently finished her studies at a local private university when the public debate surrounding UEC reignited.

“I can’t say I feel excluded (from the UEC debate) now. But if this had happened while I was applying to universities, I would certainly feel that way.

“I guess the anger would come from the fact that public universities can recognise a Chinese high school diploma, but not us,” she said.


Tan Dick Xin


Like many UEC candidates, Tan and her family had planned early for private or overseas education. Her father already set aside funds, understanding that the UEC had narrowed her options domestically.

She eventually completed a private degree, navigating requirements that sometimes still demanded SPM credits as a backup.

Tan pointed out that many UEC graduates opt for semi-private institutions like Tunku Abdul Rahman University of Management and Technology (TAR UMT) due to its affordability, especially when combined with loans or scholarships.

“I can say that mostly for people who take UEC, they already know that they will end up at an overseas or private school.

“Some say we are rich, but we are just really planning carefully. That’s just what we have to do,” she said.

Who recognises the UEC?

According to a 2025 list by Dong Zong, the UEC is recognised by 268 institutions in 15 countries and territories worldwide, of which 98 are based in the United Kingdom.

Others include Australia (33), Japan (19), Canada (17), New Zealand (15), China (12), Hong Kong (12), Singapore, Ireland, Macau, the Netherlands, Taiwan, the US, and Russia.

In addition to these, it said some UEC graduates have also managed to gain acceptance in Thailand, India, Italy, and Germany.


READ MORE: Unified Examination Certificate: Are the criticisms justified?


According to the list, 23 institutions of higher learning in Malaysia recognise the exam.

In universities where they are accepted, the UEC is generally considered equivalent to the STPM or the UK’s GCE A-Level. Thus, they can be used for admission into foundation, diploma, and bachelor’s degree programmes.

UEC holders are accepted in government teachers’ training colleges if they also have a credit in SPM BM and a pass in SPM History and English. Such graduates may only enrol in programmes that lead to a career in SJKC schools.

For entry into the public service, the UEC is generally not recognised. Sarawak, however, accepts UEC holders into its state civil service, provided that candidates have also obtained a pass in Bahasa Malaysia at SPM level.

In Penang, the state government has, in practice, recognised the UEC in limited contexts, most notably for recruitment into state government-linked companies (GLCs) and for certain state-level roles linked to the state administration.

However, this does not amount to blanket recognition of the UEC for all state civil service positions, as appointments remain subject to federal public service rules, with recognition confined to areas where the state exercises discretion.

Malacca, by contrast, has never formally recognised the UEC for entry into its state civil service. Although a 2018 announcement raised the prospect of possible acceptance, this was never translated into an operative policy through the required state and federal processes.

The state, therefore, continues to adhere to standard federal civil service requirements, without any special provision for UEC holders.

The Selangor government, meanwhile, moved to recognise the UEC in 2015, during Azmin Ali’s tenure as menteri besar.

However, this recognition was limited to entry into certain state-linked educational institutions, such as Universiti Selangor (Unisel) and other colleges under the state’s purview.

Recognition in this educational context does not automatically extend to appointments within the Selangor state civil service.

Records of the Selangor state assembly showed that the 2015 decision formalised UEC recognition solely for the purpose of further education at selected state institutions, and did not include recognition of the certificate as a qualification for employment in the state public service.

Further clarification from assembly proceedings indicates that appointments to the Selangor civil service, whether on a permanent or contract basis, remain subject to the regulations of the federal Public Service Department (PSD) and the relevant national service circulars.

Applicants are therefore required to hold qualifications recognised by the Malaysian Qualifications Registry (MQR) and the Higher Education Ministry.

Why federal govt won’t recognise UEC

The BN-led federal administration addressed this issue in numerous public statements, including through written replies in the Dewan Rakyat.

In one such reply dated March 16, 2016, the Higher Education Ministry said the cabinet had decided on Nov 6, 2015, that “the government could not recognise the UEC at this time because it is not based on the national curriculum and is not in line with the national education philosophy. This is the reality that has to be accepted because it is linked to national interests and sovereignty.”


Dewan Rakyat


The reply also stated that the Education Ministry had given three reasons for the non-recognition, which were in line with the cabinet’s decision.

It said Malaysian independent Chinese secondary schools do not follow the national education policy, while the UEC examinations are not monitored by the Education Ministry or any entity recognised by the government.


READ MORE: Ex-task force chair likens UEC debate to ‘political rabbit hole’


The curriculum used in the UEC is also not equivalent to the national curriculum and examinations, said the ministry.

It added that the UEC BM subject is not equivalent to its SPM counterpart, and the UEC did not cover enough Malaysian history.

The debate over UEC recognition resurfaced in Malaysia recently following social media remarks by DAP deputy chairperson Nga Kor Ming, who revealed that his party would meet with Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim to seek recognition for the exam.

He made the same statement at an independent high school fundraising dinner in Taiping, a day before the post. Nga’s remark reignited backlash against DAP and allegations that the party is seeking to undermine the Malays and pressure Anwar.


Nga Kor Ming


Anwar later weighed in on the issue, saying that as long as the priority of mastering the Malay language is upheld, he has no objection to other languages - whether English, Chinese, Tamil, or Arabic - being taught. This, he added, extends to the UEC, which uses Chinese as its medium of instruction.

He reminded all parties that any demands touching on religious or racial sensitivities must consider the constitutional position of the national language.

‘No less Malaysians’

For all three interviewees, one misconception hurts more than others: the idea that sitting for UEC makes them less Malaysian.

The national debate surrounding UEC, often framed around identity, loyalty, and race, feels distant from their daily reality, as the exam is just another educational milestone rather than a pursuit of identity for them.

“What hurts me the most is actually the feeling that people are talking about us, but not talking with us.

“We are not going to divide this country. We are just trying to learn, to grow, and to build the country in another way. In another cultural lens,” Yong said.

The 18-year-old actively participates in public speaking and forum competitions in both Malay and English, and said such generalisations are unfair and disconnected from reality.

Tan reiterated the same sentiments, adding that claims that the UEC promotes cultural separatism are untrue, as the syllabus doesn’t push any form of “Chinese culture agenda”.

“I saw this video on YouTube that brought up a really good point. He said that we actually don’t know what we are fighting for.

“For students like me, UEC students, we actually just want a chance to go to a public university,” she said, adding that public debates on the issue remain unproductive and do not offer any tangible solution.

For Chong, the ongoing debate often feels disconnected from students’ lived realities, adding that the long-running debate just views students like her as symbols rather than people, and how that can get emotionally exhausting.

However, all she can do now is move on, as the future will still arrive despite protracted debates.

“I think, as students, it’s more important to build (towards) your goals and focus on what you’re working on right now.

“If you dwell too much on these discussions, it can affect you emotionally or cause unnecessary stress. So it’s important to have a clear mindset and just move forward in your own way,” Chong added.


***


UEC barred since 1975 by one man

Now the govt finds kerbau to justify that one-man's decision




Viva El Fei-Lo Fei-Tut-Tut


FMT:

Sanusi gets blessings from ulama council chief to be PN chairman


4 hours ago
Anne Muhammad

Ahmad Yahaya says Sanusi, who is PAS election director, is feared by rivals and has a good grasp of politics


PAS’s ulama council chief said Kedah menteri besar Sanusi Nor would be able to woo the youth, who will be kingmakers in the next general election.



PETALING JAYA: PAS election director Sanusi Nor has received the PAS ulama council chief’s blessing to be named as the next Perikatan Nasional (PN) chairman.

In a Facebook post, Ahmad Yahaya claimed that many had suggested that Sanusi, the current Kedah menteri besar, succeed Muhyiddin Yassin.

Muhyiddin stepped down from the post on Dec 30. He had led the coalition since Aug 7, 2020, when it was officially registered.

The former prime minister’s decision to vacate the post came in the wake of the political crisis in Perlis, which saw PAS’s Sanglang assemblyman Shukri Ramli resigning as menteri besar and Bersatu’s Kuala Perlis assemblyman Abu Bakar Hamzah replacing him in the post.

Ahmad Yahaya.


Ahmad, who is also the Kedah PAS commissioner, said he agreed with the proposal to name Sanusi as the next PN chairman.

When contacted, Ahmad told FMT that Sanusi was feared by his rivals and had a good grasp of politics.

“He is well known and approachable. He is also accepted by people from various backgrounds.



“He is also able to woo the youth, who will be kingmakers in the next general election.”

PAS has yet to propose a candidate to succeed Muhyiddin, according to the party’s youth chief Afnan Hamimi Taib Azamudden and Wanita chief Nuridah Salleh.

Meanwhile, the party’s deputy president, Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man, said the matter would be raised at PN’s Supreme Council, which comprises the heads of the other parties.


MIC to continue serving community, with or without govt posts


FMT:

MIC to continue serving community, with or without govt posts


The party's deputy president, M Saravanan, says the party’s mission 'transcended' political appointments


MIC deputy president M Saravanan said the party’s central working committee would convene to determine its future direction.



PETALING JAYA: MIC deputy president M Saravanan said the party will continue to serve the Indian community, regardless of whether it has ministerial posts in the current administration.

In a statement, Saravanan said the party’s mission “transcended” political appointments.

“With or without positions in government, MIC will continue to serve the Indian community with sincerity and resolve.”


He said this in response to criticisms levelled against the party in the wake of Bersatu president Muhyiddin Yassin’s resignation as Perikatan Nasional chairman.

MIC had been flirting with the prospect of quitting Barisan Nasional and joining the opposition coalition after being allegedly mistreated by BN’s main party, Umno.

Saravanan himself had said the party felt sidelined and like an “unwanted guest” in the unity government.

He also previously lamented that MIC had not been given any posts in the government, including in GLCs, despite having senior political figures like himself as party leaders.

In November, MIC delegates resolved at their annual general meeting to let the party’s president and central working committee (CWC) decide whether to leave or remain in BN.

Yesterday, FMT published a letter by a reader who pointed out that MIC was not even considered in the recent Cabinet reshuffle and questioned what would happen to the party’s grand plan now that Muhyiddin was no longer at the helm of PN.


Today, Saravanan said the party’s CWC would convene to determine its future direction, ensuring its strategies remained aligned with the evolving needs of the community.

“MIC will continue to operate with trust, compassion and integrity. Our focus is on delivering tangible benefits and upholding our responsibilities to the people.”

He also called for unity among Malaysian Indians, saying it was the key to their collective success.


***


My visitor TS should serve MIC insteAD OF SUCKING sATANYAHU DINGALING, WAKAKAKA

Navy’s Super Lynx helicopter makes emergency water landing off Melaka, crew safe






A Super Lynx helicopter belonging to the Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN) made an emergency water landing off Klebang Beach, Melaka, last night. – Facebook pic, January 1, 2026


Navy’s Super Lynx helicopter makes emergency water landing off Melaka, crew safe


The chopper went down off Klebang Beach during a demonstration flight, with all four crew rescued and reported stable in hospital


Scoop Reporters
Updated 4 hours ago
1 January, 2026
8:46 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR – A Super Lynx helicopter belonging to the Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN) made an emergency water landing off Klebang Beach, Melaka, last night.

In a statement, the RMN said the incident occurred at 10.50pm last night while the aircraft was conducting a demonstration flight in conjunction with the 60th anniversary celebration of the Malaysian Army special forces (GGK).

“There were four aircrew members on board the aircraft at the time of the incident, and all were rescued and taken to Melaka Hospital for further examination.

“All crew members are conscious and in stable condition, and are currently under medical observation,” it said.

The statement added that the RMN had taken immediate action by arranging a salvage operation for the aircraft, and that a board of inquiry has been established to determine the cause of the incident.

“The RMN also advises the public not to circulate videos of the incident out of respect for sensitivities and to ensure the smooth conduct of the investigation,” it said. – January 1, 2026


Fei-Lo has made it





The suggestion to appoint Kedah Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Muhammad Sanusi Md Nor as Perikatan Nasional (PN) chairman following Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin’s resignation has drawn interest from several party leaders. – Scoop file pic, January 1, 2026


PAS leaders back Sanusi for PN chairman after Muhyiddin quits


Perlis political upheaval fuels calls for new leadership in opposition coalition


Scoop Reporters
Updated 20 seconds ago
1 January, 2026
12:46 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR – The suggestion to appoint Kedah Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Muhammad Sanusi Md Nor as Perikatan Nasional (PN) chairman following Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin’s resignation has drawn interest from several party leaders.

PAS central Ulama Council chief Datuk Ahmad Yahaya said Muhammad Sanusi, who currently serves as PN’s director of elections, should be seriously considered for the role.

“Jan 1, 2026. I see that many parties are suggesting Sanusi as chairman of Perikatan Nasional. It is an interesting proposal and I agree,” Ahmad Yahaya wrote on his social media page.

Muhyiddin, who is also president of Bersatu, officially stepped down as PN chairman effective Jan 1, 2026, after leading the coalition since its registration on Aug 7, 2020.

Calls for a PAS leader to assume the PN chairmanship have been raised previously, including by PAS youth chief Afnan Hamimi Taib Azamudden. Tensions between PAS and Bersatu have intensified following the political upheaval in Perlis, which saw the resignation of PAS state assemblyman for Sanglang, Mohd Shukri Ramli, as Menteri Besar.

PAS Selangor Youth chief Ustaz Sukri Omar also backed the proposal, saying the youth wing “agrees with the proposal to make Datuk Seri Muhammad Sanusi Md Nor as Perikatan Nasional (PN) chairman.”

Observers say the PN leadership transition could reshape coalition dynamics, particularly in the run-up to upcoming state and national elections.– January 1, 2026


***


Will he now leave Penang alone, wakakaka.


MCA Pouring Fuel on a Burning UMNO–DAP Relationship





OPINION | MCA Pouring Fuel on a Burning UMNO–DAP Relationship


31 Dec 2025 • 5:00 PM MYT


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



Image credit: Sinar Daily / Utusan / Focus Malaysia


Politics, according to Clausewitz, is war by other means. And war, as history repeatedly reminds us, is the highest and most unforgiving form of competition—one in which victory is rarely shared and survival often comes at another’s expense.


In any contest, for one side to win, another must lose. In politics and war alike, success is frequently built on the weakening, humiliation, or destruction of an opponent.


Nowhere is this logic clearer than in Malaysian Chinese politics, the long-contested arena between MCA and DAP. For decades, MCA dominated this space, shielded and empowered by its alliance with a strong UMNO under Barisan Nasional. DAP, during that era, was the perennial challenger—loud, persistent, but locked out of real power.


That historical balance has since collapsed. Over the past decade, fortune has turned decisively in DAP’s favour. Election after election, DAP has expanded its dominance, while MCA has endured defeat after defeat, shrinking to the margins of political relevance. Today, MCA faces a nightmare scenario: not only losing elections, but potentially losing UMNO itself—its long-time patron and protector.


Even more alarming for MCA is the emerging possibility of an UMNO–DAP accommodation. What once seemed politically impossible now looks conceivable. Should MCA drift further into irrelevance or exit BN altogether, UMNO and DAP could find common cause, formal or informal, leaving MCA politically orphaned.


Faced with this existential threat, MCA has been watching closely for opportunities. This December, it believes it has found two.


The first is DAP’s disappointing performance in the Sabah state election, which reignited the party’s pressure for the recognition of the Unified Examination Certificate (UEC)—a demand that predictably inflamed UMNO’s sensitivities.


The second is Najib Razak’s legal setback, when the High Court dismissed his judicial review application related to house arrest in the SRC International case. While Najib’s conviction is a matter of law, the political fallout has been shaped by perception—particularly the reaction of DAP leaders.


DAP Puchong MP Yeo Bee Yin’s Facebook post describing the court decision as “another reason to celebrate this year end” struck a nerve within UMNO. Senior UMNO figures, including secretary-general Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki, openly questioned whether the party should continue cooperating with partners who showed such “arrogance and insensitivity”.


This simmering anger recently boiled over when UMNO Puchong announced it was severing ties with Pakatan Harapan in the Puchong parliamentary area, citing Yeo’s refusal to apologise within a given timeframe.


Enter MCA.


Rather than calming tensions, MCA chose to escalate them. Former MCA vice-president Ti Lian Ker publicly mocked UMNO Puchong’s move as “toothless”, deriding it as nothing more than “purring like a house cat”. According to Ti, the divisional boycott was politically irrelevant, changing nothing at the federal or state level and doing absolutely nothing to weaken DAP’s grip on Puchong.


According to Ti , UMNO should not “roar like a tiger in Kuala Lumpur and then whimper at the division level”.


He said Asyraf had “thundered” with his warning that Umno would not tolerate arrogance and insensitivity.


“That was the language of confrontation. That was chest-thumping. That was a political roar.


“So here’s the question: after roaring like a tiger at the national level, why is Puchong Umno left purring like a house cat?” Ti said to pour petrol on the flame that is burning the UMNO- DAP relationship.


Ti pointed out—accurately—that Yeo Bee Yin won Puchong with a staggering 57,957-vote majority. Cutting ties at the divisional level, he argued, only made DAP look untouchable and UMNO look weak, reactive, and powerless.


His message was clear: if UMNO is serious, it must act nationally, and challenged UMNO to match its national rhetoric with real action.


This was not commentary. It was provocation.


MCA sees a spark—and it wants to turn it into a fire that burns down any budding UMNO–DAP rapprochement. By ridiculing UMNO’s half-measures, MCA is daring UMNO to escalate the conflict, to sever ties more decisively, and in doing so, push DAP further away.


This is politics as war.


For decades, a powerful MCA backed by an even more powerful UMNO did everything it could to bring DAP to its knees. Now that DAP stands ascendant and likely intent on doing to MCA what MCA had done to it previously, it would be naïve to think that MCA will quietly accept its own marginalisation. To survive, MCA must weaken DAP’s alliances—particularly with UMNO and PKR.


At present, MCA sees a narrow opening. If it can help unravel UMNO’s relationship with DAP, it may simultaneously weaken its rival and rebuild its own relevance to UMNO. Killing two birds with one stone is not just desirable—it is necessary.


Whether MCA has the political skill to pull this off remains to be seen.


UMNO and DAP are not naïve players. Both understand exactly what MCA is trying to do. But politics is not about preserving relationships; it is about winning power. If UMNO, DAP, or both conclude that their cooperation no longer improves their electoral prospects, they will look for a reason—any reason—to walk away.


In that context, MCA’s mocking may serve a useful function. Not as a cause, but as an excuse.


If MCA, UMNO, and DAP all find pathways to winning by burning the UMNO–DAP relationship, then the obvious question arises: who loses?


The most likely answer is Anwar Ibrahim and the Madani government.


An escalation between UMNO and DAP threatens the stability of the governing coalition and, by extension, Anwar's own place in Putrajaya itself.


If Anwar intervenes however, he risks having to make painful concessions to either or both sides, at his expense. If he does not intervene, on the other hand, tthe bickering could spiral, costing the government its coherence—and possibly its majority.


Either way, Anwar appears set to lose. The only question is whether he loses big or loses small.


But politics, once again, is war. And Anwar is not a minor combatant. He is the biggest fish in the Malaysian political pond. If UMNO and DAP believe they have trapped him into choosing between two losses, they may be gravely mistaken.


If past experience is any guide, Anwar will find a way to flip the board—turning his supposed dilemma into a choice between winning big or winning small, while forcing UMNO, DAP, MCA—or some combination of them—to swallow defeat so that he may taste victory.


For now, the fuel has been poured, the fire is burning, and all that remains is to see how the cookies crumble.


Anwar still PM if BN exits, but will Umno survive?










Anwar still PM if BN exits, but will Umno survive?


Zikri Kamarulzaman
Published: Dec 31, 2025 7:00 AM
Updated: Jan 1, 2026 11:57 AM




Threats from certain quarters in Umno to quit the Madani coalition and join forces with PAS are in danger of falling flat.

While there remains unhappiness in the party over DAP celebrating former Umno president Najib Abdul Razak being kept in jail, the cards are not stacked in Umno’s favour.

First, the party does not have leverage if it wants to pull off an exit in the near future before the current government term ends.

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim commands the support of 153 MPs, and if Umno/BN and its 30 MPs quit, the former will still be in power with 123 MPs.

Anwar can quickly stabilise the government by giving more ministerial posts to GRS, as well as to smaller allies like Warisan, Parti Bangsa Malaysia (PBM), and independents supporting him.

Secondly, BN is bound by a memorandum of understanding (MOU) signed by all government parties in December 2022.


Pakatan Harapan chairperson Anwar Ibrahim at a BN event in 2023


One of the clauses in the MOU compels signatories to ensure that all MPs in their respective parties vote for Anwar and the government in confidence or budget votes.

MPs who don’t comply are considered to have resigned as a lawmaker, according to the MOU.

Third, the hopes of Umno gaining power by reviving Muafakat Nasional (MN) are also slim.

While PAS had, for a moment yesterday, expressed inclination towards going solo or reviving MN, such sentiments evaporated after Muhyiddin Yassin decided to quit as Perikatan Nasional chief.

This has opened the window for PAS to take over the PN leadership.

As International Islamic University Malaysia political science associate professor Syaza Shukri puts it, if PAS can take over PN, then it doesn’t need Umno or MN.

Further, she said, leaving the Madani coalition is not beneficial for Umno.

“Umno would have to leave the government and at this point, again, although there are unhappy voices, Umno benefits more from being in power,” she told Malaysiakini.

Umno-Harapan ties

Sunway University political scientist Wong Chin Huat expressed a similar view when contacted.

He said Umno and PAS both compete for the same electoral market, and it would be more ideal for Umno to crush PAS than work with it.

“Umno would be acting against its best interest to join PAS now. With Umno holding only 26 (parliamentary) seats against PAS’ 44, Umno would be condemned to be PAS’ junior partner.

“No matter how much Umno leaders shout to declare their love for Najib, they won’t be stupid enough to subject their party to PAS’ control. They won’t want to be Bersatu 2.0,” he said.


Umno and PAS collaborated in 2019


Wong added that the benefits of Umno staying with Pakatan Harapan are obvious, in that as long as Harapan can’t win more Malay support, it would need Umno.

Waning power

Umno’s political fortunes have been in decline since 2004.

Back then, Umno had 50 percent of the Parliament seats, while BN controlled almost 90 percent.

However, after the last general election in 2022, Umno only accounts for 12 percent of MPs.

At present, the top leadership under Umno president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi is betting on support from Harapan to keep BN afloat, and even to claw back seats.

This strategy has had mixed results thus far, with BN being wiped out in Kedah during the 2023 state election, while its share of state seats in Sabah also diminished in last month’s polls.

Harapan also suffered badly in the Sabah election, with DAP losing all its seats.


Trump tells France it can ‘keep’ George Clooney as row brews over actor’s new passport





Trump tells France it can ‘keep’ George Clooney as row brews over actor’s new passport



Actor George Clooney and Amal Clooney host their annual fundraiser ‘The Albie Awards’ in London October 3, 2025. — Reuters pic

Thursday, 01 Jan 2026 11:28 AM MYT


PARIS, Jan 1 — US President Donald Trump piled on criticism Wednesday of a decision to grant Hollywood superstar George Clooney French passports after a junior government official in Paris labelled the move a “double standard”.

An official decree seen by AFP on Monday showed that 64-year-old Oscar winner Clooney, his wife Amal Alamuddin Clooney and their two children had become French citizens.

Trump, whose administration has backed anti-immigration parties in Europe, said that Paris was welcome to the “Ocean’s Eleven” star, a long-term Democratic supporter, fundraiser and a vocal critic of the president.

“Good News! George and Amal Clooney, two of the worst political prognosticators of all time, have officially become citizens of France which is, sadly, in the midst of a major crime problem because of their absolutely horrendous handling of immigration,” Trump said on his Truth Social network.


The news of Clooney and his family becoming French comes ahead of language requirements for citizenship being toughened for everyone else under new immigration rules from January 1.


A junior member of President Emmanuel Macron’s government had also criticised the decision to award passports despite Clooney speaking poor French.

“Personally, I understand the feeling of some French people of a double standard,” Marie-Pierre Vedrenne, a junior interior minister, told the France Info radio station.


“We need to be careful about the message we’re sending.”

Her boss, Interior Minister Laurent Nunez, and the foreign ministry however defended the decision.

The civil code states that “French nationality may be conferred by naturalisation, upon the proposal of the minister of foreign affairs, to any French-speaking foreigner who applies for it and who contributes through their distinguished service to France’s influence and the prosperity of its international economic relations.”

But Clooney has admitted that his French remains poor despite hundreds of lessons.

Under the new immigration rules from Thursday, applicants will need a certificate showing they have a level of French that could get them into a French university. They will also have to pass a civic knowledge test.

Clooney has a property in southern France and said he has hailed French privacy laws that keep his family largely protected from international media intrusion.

“I love the French culture, your language, even if I’m still bad at it after 400 days of courses,” the actor told RTL radio — in English — in December.

His wife, an international human rights lawyer and dual UK-Lebanese national, speaks fluent French.

‘Meets the conditions’

Clooney bought the Domaine du Canadel, a former wine estate, near the Provence town of Brignoles, in 2021. He said it is where his family is “happiest”.

Nunez, the interior minister, said he was “very happy” with the actor and his family becoming French, saying the country was lucky to have them.

The French foreign ministry said the passport allocation for the Clooneys “meets the conditions set by law” for naturalisation.

The family “followed a rigorous procedure including security investigations, regulatory naturalisation interviews at the prefecture, and the payment of tax stamps,” the ministry added.

It highlighted the Clooneys had a French home and they “contribute through their distinguished service to France’s international influence and cultural prestige” through the actor’s role in the film industry.

This “can only contribute to maintaining and promoting France’s position in this essential economic sector”, it said.

Amal Clooney is “a renowned lawyer” who “regularly collaborates with academic institutions and international organisations based in France”, the ministry added.

Around 48,800 people acquired French nationality by decree in 2024, according to interior ministry figures.

Clooney is not alone in wanting a French passport.

Hollywood director Jim Jarmusch announced on Friday that he was also applying, telling French radio that he wanted “a place to where I can escape the United States”. — AFP


***


I wonder whether our Michelle Yeoh is a French citizen???


Rafizi Ramli: 1MDB Case Has Split Malaysia, Calls for Reflection





Rafizi Ramli: 1MDB Case Has Split Malaysia, Calls for Reflection


31 Dec 2025 • 3:00 PM MYT


FlyingBird
Passionate about sharing authentic local news



Sinar Harian


The 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) case has sparked deep divisions across the country, according to former PKR deputy president Rafizi Ramli, who described the legal battle as highly charged and emotionally fraught.


Speaking in the aftermath of the High Court’s ruling, Rafizi said the case has polarized Malaysians, with opinions sharply divided over the outcome. The former lawmaker, long critical of the sovereign wealth fund controversy, urged the public to come to terms with the strong emotions surrounding the matter.


He emphasized that individuals have the right to either accept or reject the High Court’s judgment, which saw former prime minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak convicted on all 25 charges of abuse of power and money laundering. The court sentenced Najib to 15 years in prison and imposed a fine totaling RM11.387 billion.


Rafizi highlighted that while citizens are entitled to continue defending Najib, they cannot compel others to share the same perspective. He noted that such differences of opinion are likely to persist, reflecting the enduring complexity of the case.


“This case is loaded with emotion. It is up to each of us to reconcile with it, so that future generations can draw meaningful lessons from this long 1MDB episode,” Rafizi said.


The ruling has also drawn public reactions from Najib’s family. His daughter, Nooryana Najwa, expressed that the court’s decision cannot diminish her father’s decades of service, dedication, and commitment to the nation. She urged supporters to remain resilient, stressing that hope and strength must be maintained even in the face of legal setbacks.


Observers have noted that the verdict, while legally conclusive, has further highlighted the political and social rifts in Malaysia, exposing underlying tensions among supporters and critics alike. Analysts suggest that the 1MDB case will continue to influence public discourse and political alignments for years to come, serving as a defining moment in Malaysia’s modern political history.


Rafizi’s remarks underscore a broader call for maturity and reflection among Malaysians, advocating for civil discourse and measured responses as the nation navigates the aftermath of one of its most high-profile corruption cases.


PAS wants to restore Islam as the core of governance, says Kedah MB





PAS wants to restore Islam as the core of governance, says Kedah MB



The Kedah menteri besar added that PAS’ struggle to gain control of the country’s political system must continue consistently and with determination. — Picture by Shafwan Zaidon

Thursday, 01 Jan 2026 11:47 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 1 — PAS will continue its struggle to reclaim control of the country’s leadership and dominate the political system to restore Islam as the primary foundation of governance.

In a Facebook post yesterday, PAS central election director, Datuk Seri Muhammad Sanusi Md Nor, said only Islam can save the country and the world from oppression and injustice caused by a system of governance not based on Islamic teachings.

The Kedah menteri besar added that PAS’ struggle to gain control of the country’s political system must continue consistently and with determination.

“Therefore, the struggle to take over the country and regain control of the political system must be carried out by PAS with full commitment, regardless of the circumstances.


“Have faith — only Islam can save this world. Beyond that, most systems are corrupt and expose humanity to injustice and oppression,” he said.

Muhammad Sanusi, who is also the Kedah Perikatan Nasional (PN) chairman, said the absence of Islamic guidance in governance ultimately allows a country to be dominated by parties that do not make Islam the basis of politics.

As an example, he claimed this situation occurred under the current administration led by Pakatan Harapan (PH) and Barisan Nasional (BN).


“Leaders who govern but do not adhere to Islam will eventually be dominated by others who do not make Islam the foundation of politics,” he said.

Muhammad Sanusi said PAS must continue to create space for Islam to flourish as a system of governance, while ensuring justice and security for non-Muslims.

“We are noble and safe with Islam. Our hearts are pure with Islam. We do not oppress anyone; we act justly, without discrimination, and do not deny the rights of any citizens while in government. That is the principle of Islam,” he said.

He added that Islam prohibits oppression, discrimination, and denial of rights, and demands respect for others as long as the rights and dignity of Islam are not violated.

However, he said there are boundaries that cannot be crossed if anyone attempts to erode the rights of Muslims.

“When they have lost reason and disregard feelings, trying to undermine our rights, we too have feelings. This is the boundary line — do not cross here because we have never crossed over there,” he said.


***


quote:
We do not oppress anyone; we act justly, without discrimination, and do not deny the rights of any citizens while in government.
unquote:

... and one of the first thing hew did as MB Kedah was to ERASE (yes, "erase") an 100-year old Indian shrine near the railway station in Alor Setar - Podah😡😡😡


PAS poised to take PN helm - but who will lead the coalition?

 









PAS poised to take PN helm - but who will lead the coalition?


Zarrah Morden
Published: Dec 31, 2025 8:00 PM
Updated: 11:00 PM




Now that Bersatu president Muhyiddin Yassin has resigned as the Perikatan Nasional chairperson, speculation is rife that PAS is set to take over in leading the coalition.

The Islamist party has so far kept mum on exactly which of its leaders would replace Muhyiddin, who has led PN since its formation in 2020.

Whoever leads the coalition will also likely become PN’s prime minister candidate in the 16th general election. However, this is not an ironclad rule.

Malaysiakini breaks down who the frontrunners are and why they’re eligible.


An unlikely senior

Yesterday, an unnamed Bersatu politician, while dismissing rumours that the opposition coalition is on the verge of collapse, told Malaysiakini that PAS will likely lead PN.

Looking at PAS’ leadership lineup, its president Abdul Hadi Awang might seem the obvious choice, but he turned 78 in October and underwent a medical procedure involving his heart in June.


Abdul Hadi Awang


His health issues are not new, as last year in February, Hadi’s aide said the Marang MP’s absence from the Dewan Rakyat opening ceremony was due to his recovery from health issues as well as follow-up treatments.

At the same time, PAS spiritual leader Hashim Jasin was quoted by Free Malaysia Today as saying that doctors have advised Hadi against travelling due to his heart problem and several other ailments.

Hadi has also excluded himself as a PN prime ministerial candidate, telling a press conference during the PAS muktamar in September that leaders must be healthy and below the age of 70.

Thus, he is likely to leave the job to a younger leader.


A seasoned option

A possible option could be PAS deputy president Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man.

During the muktamar, PAS Youth chief Afnan Hamimi Taib Azamudden named Tuan Ibrahim as his first choice for the prime ministerial position, citing the latter’s popularity within the party.


Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man


The Kubang Kerian MP is also the PN deputy chairperson, so a promotion could be seen as a logical step forward.

As he only turned 65 in August, he does meet Hadi’s age qualification as well.

Another potential point in his favour is his experience in a federal position - he served as the environment and water minister from 2020 to 2022.

He also seems to be viewed favourably within Bersatu, as then-supreme council member Wan Ahmad Fayhsal Wan Ahmad Kamal said in January that Tuan Ibrahim’s good relationship with the Pahang palace made him an ideal prime ministerial candidate.


Vouched by Dr M

One more name that tops the lists of PAS leaders poised to take on additional responsibilities is Terengganu Menteri Besar Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar.

Samsuri, popularly known as Dr Sam, has served as the state leader since 2018, when he made his entry into politics by winning the Ru Rendang state seat.

Prior to that, he served as Hadi’s political secretary, starting in 2008.

The 55-year-old PAS vice-president gained attention as a possible national leader as early as December 2023, when two-time former premier Dr Mahathir Mohamad said he had the qualifications to become a prime minister.


Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar


Mahathir made the remark during the Kemaman by-election, where Samsuri was running under the PN banner.

At the time, there was speculation that PN was grooming Samsuri to become a prime minister candidate, while others believed that it was merely a tactic to hype up support from voters.

Like with Tuan Ibrahim, Wan Fayhsal pointed to Samsuri as another potential prime minister with a good relationship with the royals.

Samsuri was previously the PN treasurer-general, but he resigned in December last year, two days after a coalition supreme council meeting to confirm appointments to fill the roles of secretary-general, women’s chief, information chief, and supreme council members.

The meeting saw Bersatu retaining all six major positions in PN, despite PAS requesting that the secretary-general post be given to Takiyuddin Hassan, who is also the PAS secretary-general.

Outside of that, Samsuri is popularly viewed as a technocrat due to his background as an aerospace engineer.


Most federal experience

PAS aside, there is one Bersatu politician who could end up leading PN: Hamzah Zainudin.

The Bersatu deputy president is at the centre of the party’s internal crisis, as there have been efforts to oust Muhyiddin as the party president and install Hamzah in his place.


Hamzah Zainudin


PAS reportedly backed the efforts to elevate Hamzah, although the Islamist party has denied such claims.

However, Hamzah said he is willing to wait for Muhyiddin to hand over the presidency when the latter is ready.

Of all the names listed here, the 68-year-old opposition leader has the most experience in a federal administration:


  • Deputy housing and local governance minister (2008 to 2009),
  • Deputy plantation industries and community minister (2009 to 2013),
  • Deputy foreign affairs minister (2013 to 2015),
  • Domestic trade, cooperatives and consumerism minister (2015 to 2018), and
  • Home minister (2020 to 2022).


Hamzah began his political career in Umno but resigned in December 2018 to join Bersatu.

Notably, he has held his position as the Larut MP since 2008.


Issues remain

Although Muhyiddin’s resignation has soothed PAS’ ire at Bersatu’s involvement in usurping the role of the Perlis menteri besar, greater issues remain, such as the opposition’s prime ministerial candidate.

Other issues within the coalition that are unlikely to be resolved with a new PN chairperson include Bersatu’s ongoing faction war, as grassroots leaders continue to call for Muhyiddin to step down as the president in favour of Hamzah.

It also remains to be seen whether a new coalition leader will improve the relationship between Bersatu and PAS.


Stop blame game, says Perlis PAS chief after claim by head of ulama wing


FMT:

Stop blame game, says Perlis PAS chief after claim by head of ulama wing


YESTERDAY
Faiz Zainudin

Ahmad Ali says the statement by Ahmad Adnan Fadzil that 'certain leaders had failed to discharge their responsibilities effectively' is his personal view


Perlis PAS chief Ahmad Ali urged all party members and leaders in the state to remain calm, refrain from making accusations, and focus on fulfilling their responsibilities. (Facebook pic)



PETALING JAYA: Perlis PAS commissioner Ahmad Ali has dismissed a wing chief’s claim that the political turmoil in the state was due to failure by “certain individuals to discharge their responsibilities effectively”.

Perlis PAS ulama council chief Ahmad Adnan Fadzil had earlier alleged that those tasked with negotiating with the Perlis palace on behalf of PAS regarding the change of menteri besar had failed to do so effectively, although he did not mention any names.

Ahmad said Adnan issued the remarks without consulting the party leadership, despite previous advisories that no individual should make statements independently, to avoid creating confusion or exacerbating the situation.


“The statement made by the Perlis PAS ulama council chief appears to be his personal view and does not represent the party or the Perlis PAS leadership.

“Earlier, I had advised PAS members, especially leaders in Perlis, not to make statements based on personal opinions. They should first consult me, the state leadership, or the PAS central leadership,” he told FMT.

Ahmad also urged all PAS members and leaders in Perlis to remain calm, refrain from making accusations, and focus on fulfilling their responsibilities to ensure the party’s success.

“Everyone must follow party directives. God willing, we can achieve a harmonious resolution for the party. Stop the unhealthy blame game that does not benefit the party.

“I am confident that Perlis PAS, together with the state PN leadership, will emerge stronger after this,” he said, noting that the party was awaiting guidance from the central leadership on the next steps to pursue.

Earlier, Adnan said he had been informed that “in the final moments before the announcement of a new menteri besar from Bersatu, the Perlis ruler was still open to the possibility of a PAS candidate filling the role”.

However, he said, the PAS assemblymen failed to “play their proper role” when the Perlis ruler presented them with this option.

He said the political turmoil in the state did not involve any element of betrayal and that it was unfair to place the blame squarely on Bersatu over what transpired.

The political crisis in Perlis saw PAS’s Sanglang assemblyman Shukri Ramli resigning as menteri besar and Bersatu’s Kuala Perlis assemblyman Abu Bakar Hamzah replacing him.

Eight PN assemblymen – three from PAS and five from Bersatu – had allegedly submitted sworn statements to the Perlis ruler withdrawing their support for Shukri.


Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Why Muhyiddin’s Fall Was Inevitable — and Necessary

 





OPINION | Why Muhyiddin’s Fall Was Inevitable — and Necessary


31 Dec 2025 • 10:30 AM MYT



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



Image credit : Focus Malaysia


Muhyiddin Yassin’s removal as opposition leader did not begin with the Perlis crisis, nor with internal maneuvering within Perikatan Nasional. It began much earlier—with a fundamental misunderstanding of what leadership demands when one is losing.


When Muhyiddin appeared listless and detached at the Turun Anwar rally in Kuala Lumpur in July, it merely confirmed what had long been evident: he was a man profoundly ill-suited for the role he occupied. The Turun Anwar Rally was supposed to Muhyiddin's event. If Anwar was to turun, as the rally demanded, it was Muhyiddin that would have replaced him. Despite that, Muhyiddin was far from being the man of the rally. Even 100 years old Mahathir, who was not even a part of the opposition camp, outshined Muhyiddin in the rally.


From that moment on, the writing on the wall was that it was only a matter of time before Muhyiddin was to fall .


In truth, the writing on the wall had already been appeared years before that.


Muhyiddin is not without ability. He is competent leader, but he is just not a competent leader in the circumstances that the opposition is in at the present moment. Muhyiddin is best described as a coordinator, caretaker, a manager, a man who can preserve order when conditions are favourable. He is effective at smoothing tensions, balancing factions, and maintaining internal peace—but only when the coalition he leads has already ascended to the top.


To a coalition that is only trying to ascend to the top however, his leadership can only be described as pointless, clueless and lethargic.


That is precisely why his leadership failed.


The Wrong Man for the Wrong Moment

The Malaysian opposition today is not in a position of strength. It is not consolidating power; it is struggling to survive. It faces a government that is in a position of advantage that has increasingly strengthened itself over the past 3 years.


In facing such an opponent from a position of disadvantage, what an opposition requires is not tranquility, but agitation. Not balance, but confrontation. Not administration, but mobilisation. Not a gentleman, but a conqueror.


A losing coalition must be restless. It must feel urgency in its bones. It must be driven by anger, impatience, and a sense that time is running out. Above all, it needs a leader capable of converting frustration into motion.


Muhyiddin could do none of this.


Instead of sharpening the opposition’s edge, he dulled it. Instead of heightening urgency, he imposed calm. Instead of provoking action, he enforced order. What he mistook for stability was, in reality, paralysis.


Harmony as Decay

There is something deeply unnatural about peace in a time of defeat.


Under Muhyiddin, the opposition became oddly serene while steadily losing ground. This serenity did not reassure its members; it alienated them. Rank-and-file leaders could sense decline, yet saw no fightback. Over time, harmony ceased to feel virtuous and began to feel suffocating.


When a leader refuses to channel frustration, that frustration does not disappear. It mutates.


It turns into defiance.


And so, resistance began to emerge—not openly at first, but quietly, locally, and then unmistakably.
Perlis and the Collapse of Authority

The events in Perlis were not an aberration. They were the logical culmination of a leadership vacuum.


When Bersatu leaders in Perlis moved to unseat a PAS chief minister—despite PAS being a principal ally—it was not simply a tactical gamble. It was an act of open insubordination. A declaration that central authority no longer mattered.


What followed exposed the truth Muhyiddin could no longer conceal.


PAS acted decisively, expelling its own representatives without hesitation. Muhyiddin, however, could not bring himself to discipline the Bersatu figures who instigated the revolt.


At that moment, power revealed itself.


Muhyiddin still held titles, but he no longer commanded obedience. He could speak, but his words carried no weight. He could instruct, but his instructions could be ignored with impunity.


A leader who cannot discipline his own party is not a leader at all.


PAS understood this immediately.


The Unnatural Order of Perikatan Nasional

Politics, like nature, has its own hierarchy. Strength gravitates upward. Authority flows from power.


Within Perikatan Nasional, PAS is the dominant force. Bersatu is not. By the natural order of things, PAS should lead.


Yet Malaysian politics exists in a fragile equilibrium where the strongest party often cannot assume leadership without destabilising the nation. This is why DAP, despite being Pakatan Harapan’s most powerful component, ceded leadership to Anwar Ibrahim.


But such arrangements can only survive if the chosen leader possesses sufficient gravitas to naturalise the imbalance.


Anwar succeeded because he brought with him history, charisma, struggle, and authority. He made an unnatural hierarchy feel organic.


Muhyiddin did the opposite.


His weakness did not conceal the imbalance within PN—it magnified it. Every indecision, every failure to act, every compromise made the unnatural order more visible, more intolerable, and more unstable.


Under his leadership, PN drifted into confusion, lethargy, and self-doubt.


Why His Fall Was Inevitable

PAS may have tolerated Muhyiddin at the beginning, hoping he would grow into the role. But patience erodes when defeat becomes habitual—especially when those defeats feel self-inflicted.


Repeatedly, opportunities slipped away. Momentum dissipated. Victories were transformed into losses not through force, but through hesitation.


Eventually, PAS was forced to confront a simple, brutal question:


Why should we respect the authority of a man whose own party no longer does?


There was no answer—because none existed.


And so Muhyiddin’s removal was not a coup, nor a betrayal. It was a correction. A reversion to political reality, an inevitable naturalization of an unnatural order.


A Necessary End

Muhyiddin’s downfall was not tragic. It was instructive.


It demonstrates a timeless truth: leadership is contextual. The skills that preserve peace are not the skills that win battles. A man suited to maintaining order cannot always be the man who overturns it.


By clinging to a role he could not fulfil, Muhyiddin delayed the inevitable—and deepened the dysfunction.


His removal, painful as it may be for Bersatu, is the only way to restore coherence to the opposition. It is the only way to realign leadership with power, authority with strength, and form with function.


In that sense, his fall is not only inevitable.


It is necessary.


How deep and widespread is the rot in the armed forces? Or it is just another day in boleh-land?





OPINION | How deep and widespread is the rot in the armed forces? Or it is just another day in boleh-land?


31 Dec 2025 • 10:00 AM MYT


FLK
Used to do a bit of work in corporate restructuring, corporate undertaker



Bloomberg.com https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-12-28/malaysia-army-chief-placed-on-leave-amid-investigation-bernama


`Army chief put on leave pending corruption probe’ – the headline in an online news portal is truly unsettling and shocking to many.


For this, the country has to thank Badrul Hisham Shaharin, also known as Chegubard, who exposed this issue publicly.


Reportedly, the MACC started its investigation in Dec 2025 and found that from 2023 to 2025, there were 158 army procurement projects that exceeded RM500,000 and 4,521 projects below RM500,000 with several companies frequently awarded high-value contracts.


This Army Chief was appointed to the post only in September 2023 and before, he was the deputy between April and September 2023.


Based on the timeline investigated by MACC, it appears that it covers the period that includes the time when he was the Deputy Chief also.


What about the period before that when he was the Chief of Staff at the 3rd Malaysian Infantry Division HQ from 2016 to 2017, then Commander of the 5th Malaysian Infantry Brigade from 2018 to 2020 and Commander of the Western Field from 2021 to 2023?


Did the rot start from that time?


Can’t imagine how much he would have received and robbed the soldiers of better welfare if he was not investigated and continued for a further 5 years in his role until his mandatory retirement age of 60?


In Aug 2025, it was reported that military personnel apparently leaked operational intelligence to smugglers, facilitating the entry of contraband, including drugs, cigarettes, and various goods from neighbouring countries valued at approximately RM5 million per month into Malaysia.


The officers arrested by MACC reportedly are all from the Malaysian Armed Forces’ intelligence division.


In June 2020, 2 officers and 3 ATM personnel together with 18 policemen and civilians were arrested as part of a human smuggling syndicate in Johor.


When a top military official sells intelligence, it poses grave and far-reaching threats to national security, endangers lives and severely damages a country's relationships with allies. Such acts are considered a profound betrayal and carries severe legal penalties, including life imprisonment or even the death penalty.


This latest corrupt act that permeates even those put in charge of securing the nation, revealed right after the judgment handed down by the Courts on PM6 in the 1MDB case, shows corruption is really deeply entrenched at all levels of government.


When one diseased head is cut off, a new one emerged.


From top to bottom, right to left, front to back, you named it, which department is 100% clean?


In this case, for sure it is not the job of a single person.


His subordinates and suppliers are definitely involved.


What saddens the ordinary rakyat is that it appears corruption in Malaysia are not a series of isolated scandals.


It appears that it has become so deeply entrenched in the political and economic fabric of this country.


It cuts across race and religion.


From banking scandals to the global embarrassment of 1MDB, the pattern is clear. Corruption is not the exception but the norm, woven into the DNA of governance and business alike in this country.


Getting rid of corruption in the country is like trying to eliminate mosquitoes in its forests.


How many can they arrest when everyone from top to bottom is corrupted?


Removing one corrupt leader only allows another to rise in their place.


Does PMX has the political will and resolve to break this cycle?


The public should 'support' Ong Kian Meng's Grand Amnesty proposal





OPINION | The public should 'support' Ong Kian Meng's Grand Amnesty proposal


31 Dec 2025 • 3:00 PM MYT


FLK
Used to do a bit of work in corporate restructuring, corporate `undertaker



For illustration purposes only; Image Credit: Sinar Daily


DAP’s Ong Kian Ming was quoted to have said his stance on a full pardon for the country’s x PM was influenced by the “grand amnesty” proposal first mooted by Khairy Jamaluddin on the 20 August 2023, in a Keluar Sekejap episode.


In a Facebook posting, Ong Kian Meng said the grand amnesty would include not only a full pardon for PM6 but also the dismissal of ongoing cases against former finance minister LGE and PM8, Syed Saddiq and the Estate of the late Daim Zainuddin thus making room for a ‘political reset’ where the process of going after our political rivals using the instruments of the state once one side is in power is stopped.


He said this could be part of the process for greater political maturity that is much needed for this country.


1stly all those names mentioned by Ong Kian Meng i.e LGE, Syed Saddiq and Daim, are politicians or were politicians before.


It is a widely held expectation that politicians should have high morals and integrity when they, as public officials, are entrusted with significant power and resources to serve the public good and their actions have important consequences for society.


Because of the public trust they hold, they should be above reproach.


And if they are of unsound character, then they are not worthy of trust.


The politicians are serving the people and they are paid for entirely by the taxes of the people.


If the politicians are claiming they are more deserving of the position than the hundreds of thousands of others who want it, then it is not unreasonable for Malaysians to expect them to act like it.

Advertisement


We demand the same from everyone be it the civil servants, the people in law enforcement, BOMBA, teachers, lawyers, accountants, IT professionals and a myriad of other workers.


All the above politicians are charged or accused for misusing public funds.


A politician who misuses public funds has violated a fundamental public trust and they should face appropriate consequences.


Consequences are intended to serve justice, deter future misconduct, and maintain integrity in the government.


That is the cornerstone of democratic governance and anti-corruption efforts.


If politicians in Malaysia are angels, we wouldn’t need laws and rules.


Politicians should start showing some respect and start being honest about their expensive habits and their corrupt practices.


For the last few decades, there is no accountability or responsibility for the way politicians and the government they led wastes our money that is why we are in the fiscal mess we are in now.


The politicians acted and behaved like they are given carte blanche on the use of public monies.


For political maturity to happen and practised in Malaysia, the public expects the politicians to engage in governance with foresight, integrity and a focus on the common good, moving beyond self-interest and divisive tactics, prioritising competence and national welfare over identity-based or fear-based politics.


The absence of corruption and the responsible handling of public funds are fundamental to political maturity and good governance.


It involves prioritizing public service over personal or party gain, demonstrating accountability and integrity, and building public trust in institutions.


Ong Kian Ming also reasoned that It is not easy for any 72-year-old to serve time in prison, more so if he is a former Prime Minister and a member of the Malaysian aristocracy and if he is any of Najib’s children or grandchildren, thinking about how their father and grandfather was sitting alone in the Kajang prison while most other people are enjoying their year end break and celebrating the holidays with their family and friends.


There are 117,211 male and 11,705 female that are in prisons across the country as at 16 Oct 2025.


The children and grandchildren of these prisoners are also thinking of them during this festive period and for sure it was not easy for these prisoners and probably some of them are as old or older than 72 years old.


As set out in the Constitution, Article 8, we all must be held to the same standards and same punishment.


If the 72 year old is given a full pardon for stealing public funds, shouldn’t the 117,211 male and 11,705 female prisoners, also be given a full pardon and be released back to their families and society?


Again, by his reasoning, all those bankrupts, regardless of age, should be also released from their bankruptcy immediately.


Their only offence? They failed to repay debts due to their creditors.


They did not STEAL or MISUSE PUBLIC FUNDS.


Their failure to repay their debts did not result any of their creditors closing their businesses or operations.


All the above, prisoners and bankrupts probably caused pain and suffering to the victims of their acts and there is no excuse for that.


But their acts did not cause sufferings to 32 million Malaysians who are now burdened with the repayment of the outstanding debts.


In the case of the 72 years old, he stole public funds which are meant for public projects and enhancement of the lives for every Malaysian.


The total population of Malaysia, 32 million people.


If the funds had been properly applied and used, future generations of Malaysians including Ong Kian Ming’s children and grandchildren might not necessarily need to join the exodus wagon known as brain drain that has plagued this nation perpetually for so many years.


9 judges namely the High Court judge, 3 Court of Appeal judges and 5 Federal Court judges have unanimously found the 72 years old guilty based on facts and evidence adduced in court and sentenced him appropriately.


Ong Kian Ming’s call for a full pardon now is truly insulting to these 9 judges.


By his own reasonings, the country might as well do away with the laws and Courts.


It is a widely held and frequently discussed public perception in how justice is administered and enforced, particularly in high-profile cases involving influential individuals that in Malaysia that there are "two sets of laws," one for the elite and one for ordinary rakyat.


And Ong Kian Ming, being an x MP, not only reinforced this perception but confirmed it that it is indeed true.


The voting public has no one to blame except for themselves for we are the one who put them there.


We are now paying the price for the 2 sets of laws.