Monday, July 06, 2026

PAS members discreetly helping Bersatu in Johor, says Redzuan





PAS members discreetly helping Bersatu in Johor, says Redzuan


Ex-MP says PAS's rank and file are puzzled by their leadership's decision not to help Bersatu despite their oft-repeated call to 'unite the ummah'


Bersatu co-founder Redzuan Yusof said Bersatu has also been helping PAS’s 11 candidates in their election campaign in Johor.


PETALING JAYA: PAS’s election machinery is discreetly campaigning for the 16 Bersatu candidates ahead of the July 11 polls in Johor, despite the decision by the Islamic party’s central leadership not to support its Perikatan Nasional (PN) partner.

Bersatu co-founder Redzuan Yusof said he personally observed that cooperation between both parties at the grassroots level remained intact during the first week of campaigning.

Redzuan also said PAS’s rank and file were puzzled by their party leadership’s decision not to help Bersatu despite their oft-repeated call to “unite the ummah”, Utusan Malaysia reported.

“If it’s said that PAS’s machinery is not helping Bersatu in Johor, that’s not true. They are definitely present, quietly campaigning for Bersatu candidates.

“Most of them are puzzled by the PAS leadership’s approach; how they say they want to unite the ummah but refuse to cooperate with or help Bersatu in Johor,” he was quoted as saying.


Redzuan added that Bersatu has also been helping PAS’s 11 candidates in their election campaign.

The former Alor Gajah MP expects such grassroots cooperation to continue until polling day to help PN secure more seats on July 11.

PAS ended its political cooperation with Bersatu last month, although both parties remain PN components and are contesting the Johor election under the coalition’s banner.

PN is contesting 33 seats in the state polls, with Bersatu vying for 16, PAS 11, the Malaysian Indian People’s Party five, and Pejuang one.

PAS recently ordered its election machinery not to campaign for Bersatu in the Johor election, instructing it to focus instead on seats contested by the Islamic 
party and other PN components.

PH confident in Jementah, PN smells opportunity for upset





PH confident in Jementah, PN smells opportunity for upset


2 hours ago
Faiz Zainudin


The Jementah seat is one of seven marginal seats, won with a 714-vote majority in the 2022 Johor election


PH’s Ng Kor Sim is banking on her track record as the incumbent in Jementah, while PN’s Saifullah Abdul Wahab says PN has had a positive reception from voters.


SEGAMAT: Pakatan Harapan (PH) is confident of retaining the Jementah seat, although Perikatan Nasional (PN) believes it has a chance of pulling off an upset in the DAP stronghold, citing the likelihood of a split in the non-Malay vote.

PH candidate Ng Kor Sim acknowledged that the three-cornered contest in the July 11 election in Johor, involving Saifullah Abdul Wahab from PN and See Ann Giap from Barisan Nasional, would pose a challenge due to the expected split in non-Malay votes.

With non-Malay voters making up about 57% of the electorate and Malays accounting for almost 42%, Ng, who won the seat by a 714-vote majority in the state election four years ago, said she hoped her track record as the incumbent would help secure voters’ support.


She also expressed confidence that voters had become more mature and were no longer swayed by racial sentiments.

“I agree this is a challenge, but as an elected representative, we must serve everyone regardless of race or age.


“Voters today are wiser. They are no longer easily influenced by unfounded sentiments,” she told FMT, adding that her campaign was focused on development and local needs, particularly those of younger voters.

“Everyone matters – Malays, Chinese, Gen Z, Gen Y. They want to see the changes we can bring, not debates about race or religion,” she said.


PN eyes upset

Meanwhile, Saifullah said PN saw an opportunity to spring a surprise, citing the positive reception it had received and Jementah’s relatively balanced voter composition.


However, he said the coalition would not rely solely on Malay votes to wrest the seat from DAP.


“We are reaching out to everyone in Jementah – Malays, Chinese, Indians, and others – to support PN,” he said.

Saifullah said Jementah’s voter composition required a more inclusive approach, as more than half of the electorate is comprised of non-Malay voters.

“We want to secure as much support as possible from non-Malay voters, while also winning the backing of Malay voters,” he said.

FMT has contacted See for comment on the contest for the seat.


Pakatan’s performance in Johor depends on a ratio of one to five — Phar Kim Beng





Pakatan’s performance in Johor depends on a ratio of one to five — Phar Kim Beng


First Published: Monday, 06 Jul 2026 8:22 AM MYT


JULY 6 — Electoral politics in Johor cannot be understood solely through campaign speeches, party manifestos or the arithmetic of constituencies. There is another arithmetic at work in Johor, one that rarely appears in official statistics but influences political sentiments in profound ways.

It is the ratio of one to five.


For every one Malaysian Chinese working in Singapore, there can be as many as five adults in a household in Johor who depend, directly or indirectly, on that income stream. Parents, grandparents, younger siblings, unemployed relatives, and family members with irregular earnings often rely on remittances or financial assistance sent back from across the Causeway.

This reality is neither glamorous nor easy.

Contrary to common assumptions, very few Malaysians who commute or work in Singapore view such an arrangement as an enviable lifestyle. The early morning departures, long immigration queues, rising transport costs and emotional distance from families impose heavy burdens that accumulate over years.


Many leave home before dawn and return after sunset.

Some spend more waking hours in Singapore than in the homes they continue to finance in Johor.


The arrangement persists not because it is desirable but because it is necessary.



Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim addresses constituents in Bukit Gambir July 5, 2026 ahead of the Johor state election. The author argues that the state’s politics are deeply shaped by families dependent on Singapore-earned incomes, making economic opportunity and competent governance more important than political rhetoric. — Bernama pic



For many Malaysian Chinese households in Johor, the decision to work in Singapore is less an individual choice than a collective family strategy for economic survival and upward mobility.

The wages available in Singapore can be several multiples higher than equivalent jobs in Johor, even after accounting for exchange rates, transportation and living costs.

This income differential has quietly shaped the social structure of Johor for decades.

Entire communities in districts stretching from Johor Bahru to Kulai, from Skudai to Pontian, contain households whose economic fortunes remain tied to employment opportunities in Singapore.

The Malaysian Chinese community in Johor therefore experiences politics differently from many other constituencies in Malaysia.

Questions surrounding wages, housing affordability, educational opportunities, public transport, healthcare access and currency movements are not abstract policy matters. They affect family budgets immediately and directly.

When the value of the Malaysian ringgit weakens, many households benefit from stronger purchasing power generated by Singapore dollar earnings.

When housing prices rise sharply in Johor, however, these same families can feel trapped between increasing costs and limited opportunities for younger generations seeking to establish themselves locally.

This is where political parties, including Pakatan Harapan, need to appreciate the psychology of the diaspora more carefully.

The Malaysian Chinese diaspora is not merely a voting bloc.

It is an economic ecosystem.

Its members are simultaneously workers in Singapore, taxpayers in Malaysia, homeowners in Johor and voters in Malaysian elections.

Many retain strong emotional attachments to Malaysia even while earning their livelihoods elsewhere.

The assumption that they can be mobilised solely through political rhetoric misunderstands their priorities.

Delivering competent governance matters more.

Institutional predictability matters more.

Efficient public services matter more.

Affordable housing matters more.

The ability to create quality jobs in Johor matters most of all.

The success of Johor cannot rest indefinitely on exporting labour across the Causeway, however beneficial the arrangement has been for many families.

A mature economy ultimately seeks to attract talent rather than depend on sending it abroad.

The development of the Johor-Singapore Special Economic Zone represents an important opportunity in this regard.

If implemented successfully, it could create higher value employment opportunities that allow more Johoreans to remain closer to their families while continuing to enjoy internationally competitive incomes.

Political parties that understand this aspiration are more likely to succeed electorally.

Those that ignore it risk misunderstanding Johor entirely.

This lesson extends beyond Johor.

Large Malaysian communities reside in Singapore, Australia, the United Kingdom and other parts of the world.

The diaspora contributes financially, intellectually and professionally to Malaysia even while residing abroad.

Their perspectives increasingly shape the opinions of relatives and communities at home.

Politics in the twenty-first century therefore cannot be confined by geographical boundaries.

Diaspora politics is domestic politics.

For Pakatan Harapan, as for every major coalition in Malaysia, electoral success depends less on slogans and more on demonstrating that Malaysia can become a country where citizens choose to stay rather than feel compelled to leave.

The one-to-five ratio is not merely a demographic observation.

It is a reminder of sacrifice.

Behind every worker crossing the Causeway each morning is often an entire household hoping for security, stability and a better future.

Any political coalition that understands this reality will understand Johor better.

Any coalition that ignores it may find that the electorate understands the state far better than the politicians seeking to govern it.

* Phar Kim Beng is a professor of Asean Studies and director, Institute of Internationalisation and Asean Studies, International Islamic University of Malaysia.

Mohamad Hasan hints BN could shake up ‘traditional seats’ for Negeri Sembilan polls





Mohamad Hasan hints BN could shake up ‘traditional seats’ for Negeri Sembilan polls



BN deputy chairman Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan said the planned change in Negeri Sembilan is because the composition of voters in most constituencies hae changed significantly. — Bernama pic

First Published: Sunday, 05 Jul 2026 5:22 PM MYT


SEREMBAN, July 5 — Barisan Nasional (BN) is likely to make changes by no longer retaining “traditional seats” in the division of constituencies contested by the coalition in the 16th Negeri Sembilan state election.

BN deputy chairman Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan said the move was due to the composition of voters in most constituencies having changed significantly.

“We want to look again and, if possible, we want to modify it so that it gives component parties in the BN an opportunity to contest in constituencies where they feel they can win. Compared to the traditional way, for example, seats 1, 2, 3, 4 — these are yours.

“So, it does not provide space and also does not give voters the opportunity to choose. That is my view as the Negeri Sembilan BN chairman: do a seat swap because we must give voters an opportunity.

“If it is getting worse, why do we want to give the same party to contest in the same place? We may change seats, but we will try to accommodate as many friends as possible among BN components,” he said after officiating the Rembau Division Wanita, Youth and Puteri Umno delegates’ meeting here today.

Mohamad, who is also Umno deputy president, said previous election results would be used as a guide in assessing voter support patterns and demographic changes in each area before any decision was made.

However, he said any final decision regarding the distribution of seats and the list of candidates for component parties, including BN’s allies, was subject to the decision of the BN Supreme Council at the central level.


He said all division heads had been instructed to submit their respective lists of candidates according to the established procedure, with at least three candidates for each seat.

“We will do it immediately because we want to announce the names of the candidates on July 15 when we launch the BN election machinery. We don’t have much time left,” he said.

Mohamad said BN cannot afford any internal disputes ahead of the election because past experience has shown that several seats were lost due to sabotage by its own members.

Meanwhile, he did not rule out the possibility of defending the Rantau state seat, which he has held since 2004, but said the matter would depend on the party leadership’s decision.

The Election Commission (EC) has set polling day for the Negeri Sembilan state election on August 1, with nomination on July 18 and early voting on July 28. — Bernama

Trump's FIFA 'Peace Prize' did the trick





Fifa allows red-carded US star Balogun to play in World Cup after Trump personal phone call



Top scorer Balogun has been key to the USA’s progress in the tournament, netting three times, and his absence against Belgium would have been a blow to the team in the game in Seattle. — Getty Images via AFP pic

First Published: Monday, 06 Jul 2026 8:25 AM MYT
Last Modified: Monday, 06 Jul 2026 8:33 AM MYT


LOS ANGELES, July 6 — Fifa cleared US star striker Folarin Balogun to play in the World Cup co-hosts’ showdown with Belgium despite his red-card ban after a personal phone call from President Donald Trump, it emerged yesterday, igniting a furious row that has rocked the tournament.

Balogun had been set to miss today’s last-16 knockout clash with the Belgians after receiving a straight red card following video review for stepping on the foot of a Bosnian defender in a round-of-32 clash that the US won 2-0.

Under Fifa rules, a straight red card automatically triggers a one-game ban, which cannot be appealed by the player’s team.

But world football’s governing body said Sunday the ban will now be suspended for a year, in a stunning move for which no specific explanation was offered.


Two sources familiar with the matter told AFP that Trump personally called Fifa President Gianni Infantino asking him to review Balogun’s punishment.


“Thank you to Fifa for doing what was right, and reversing a great injustice!” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

The decision was immediately slammed by Belgian football officials, who released a statement saying they are “astonished” by a move that is in “direct contradiction” with Fifa’s own rules.


The Royal Belgian Football Association is “investigating all potential options” to “safeguard the legitimate rights of all participating teams and to protect the fundamental principles of fair play in our sport,” it said.

“I didn’t know that at the Fifa World Cup, the 5th of July is now the 1st of April, and that it’s April Fool’s Day,” added Belgium coach Rudi Garcia, at a press conference.

Trump spoke with Infantino on Wednesday, the same day that the red card was given, sources told AFP on condition of anonymity.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio also publicly called for the card to be rescinded.

The decision to suspend the ban was taken by Fifa’s disciplinary committee.

‘Boost’

Top scorer Balogun has been key to the USA’s progress in the tournament, netting three times, and his absence against Belgium would have been a blow to the team in the game in Seattle.

The stakes are huge for the co-hosts. Playing on home soil, a strong US start to the tournament has raised expectations to fever-pitch levels among the American public.

The co-hosts are targeting a historic run to at least the quarter-finals, which they have not reached since 2002, or even further.

Balogun himself had said Friday the red card ban was “something I have to just accept.”

But US players and officials welcomed the news Sunday.

“It’s a fair decision because it should have never been a red card,” said head coach Mauricio Pochettino, calling the punishment “too big” for an uninentional foul.

“It’s not that we are victims, but we are not the bad men, the mean ones here,” he said.

Star forward Christian Pulisic called the decision a “boost” while governing body US Soccer said it was “pleased.”

‘Surprise’

In its statement, Fifa pointed to “article 27 of the Fifa disciplinary code” which allows the suspension to be “suspended for a probationary period of one year.”

Balogun would serve the ban only if he commits another similar foul in the next year, it said.

There is some precedent for the decision.

Portugal superstar Cristiano Ronaldo earned a three-game ban for an elbow during qualifying last year, but had two matches of his ban suspended.

The move, which allowed Ronaldo to play in Portugal’s World Cup opener, drew criticism at the time.

“We’re not defending the national team or the federation. We are defending football, whether it’s ethics or integrity,” said coach Garcia today, as Belgium protested the latest U-turn.

Belgium goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois said it was “a bit of a surprise” that Balogun was cleared to play just a day before the match.

“Had it been done earlier, we’d have been able to be mentally more prepared, perhaps,” he said. — AFP

Jailed Gaza hospital chief in life-threatening condition, rights group says

 



Jailed Gaza hospital chief in life-threatening condition, rights group says

Elyas Abu Safia says his father can barely breathe or speak after more than 555 days in Israeli prison.


Palestinian doctor Hussam Abu Safia, appears via videolink at the Israeli Supreme Court hearing in Jerusalem, June 10, 2026 [Reuters]

The son of a prominent Palestinian doctor abducted and held by Israel without charge has issued an urgent appeal for his father’s release, warning that his health has sharply deteriorated after more than 555 days in prison, as a rights group warned that his life was in danger.

Elyas Abu Safia, the son of Dr Hussam Abu Safia, said in a video message on Sunday that his father, the director of Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza, showed signs of severe abuse after Israeli authorities transferred him to solitary confinement in a maximum-security prison.

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“The day before yesterday, the lawyer Nasser Odeh managed to visit my father, where he told us painful details about this visit,” said Elyas, who is also a doctor.

“My father was unable to breathe. My father was unable to speak,” he said, adding: “His face was disfigured from the marks of torture and pain, and the blood he endured inside the prison, especially after the last court session held in Jerusalem.”

Israeli forces arrested Abu Safia at work on December 27, 2024, as they intensified their attacks on northern Gaza’s healthcare system as part of the genocidal war against Palestinians in Gaza. Two months earlier, an Israeli drone attack killed another of his sons, Ibrahim, at the entrance of the hospital where he worked.

Elyas accused Arab and Muslim leaders of abandoning his father.

“You deprived us even of your voices, your solidarity and your support, which should have been there from the start of the detention,” he said.

“But sadly, your silence is a betrayal and a crime, and complicity in torturing my father and the hostages inside Israeli prisons,” he added.

2:34

    ‘The most shocking testimony’

    Physicians for Human Rights Israel warned that Abu Safiya’s life is in immediate danger after his transfer to the Rakefet section of Nitzan prison.

    The group said lawyer Nasser Odeh visited Abu Safia on July 2 and documented severe injuries, signs of assault, difficulty breathing and repeated loss of consciousness. It said guards brought him into the visit with his hands and feet bound and surrounded him with masked officers.

    Odeh also saw fresh bruises and injuries on Abu Safiya’s head, around his eyes, ears and neck. The wounds were so severe that the lawyer struggled to recognise him, the group said.

    “The information we received raises serious and immediate concerns for Abu Safiya’s life. The lawyer’s testimony is among the most shocking we have heard since the beginning of the war: a man detained without charge tells his lawyer that he believes they will kill him, after he arrived for the visit injured, suffering from difficulty breathing, and on the verge of losing consciousness,” Naji Abbas, director of the Prisoners and Detainees Department at Physicians for Human Rights, told the official Palestinian news agency Wafa.

    Israeli authorities have not filed charges against Abu Safia. They classified him as an “unlawful combatant”, a designation Israel has used to hold Palestinians for prolonged periods without trial.

    Physicians for Human Rights has demanded his release, along with other imprisoned Palestinian doctors. In March, United Nations experts also called on Israel to free Abu Safia immediately and ensure he receives medical care.

    He is one of 14 Palestinian doctors from Gaza currently held by Israel without charge.

    Photo of abused Palestinian detainee causes anguish for two Gaza mothers

     



    Photo of abused Palestinian detainee causes anguish for two Gaza mothers

    Disturbing image showing restrained detainee adds to agony of two mothers, each of whom is certain the man is her own missing son.

    A Palestinian man from Gaza lies blindfolded, stripped to his underwear and restrained face down on a cot while in Israeli custody in this picture released June 30, 2026 and obtained by Reuters on July 4, 2026. SOCIAL MEDIA/via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES. VERIFICATION: Reuters was not able to verify the location or date when the photo was taken, but no older versions of the photo were found posted online before June 30. Reuters was not able to verify the identity or welfare of the man in the photo, but the Israeli military said that the photo is authentic. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY


    A Palestinian man from Gaza lies blindfolded, stripped to his underwear and restrained face down on a cot while in Israeli custody [Social media via Reuters]

    A leaked photograph showing a Palestinian detainee blindfolded, stripped to his underwear and severely restrained has caused anguish for two mothers in Gaza.

    While the Israeli military has acknowledged the photo is genuine, it has not identified the man or disclosed where he is being held.

    That has added to the agony of the two mothers, Rana Abu Nassar and Joudeh Al-Ghou, each of whom is absolutely certain that the man being mistreated ⁠is her missing son.

    The photo was originally posted on Instagram by a user whose account appears to have since been deleted. It featured the words “good morning” written in Hebrew.

    In the screenshot, which had the words “good morning” in Hebrew written over it, the man’s hands are bound behind his back, his right foot tied to the bottom corner of a cot. A wooden rod is bound to the back of his body, running from his right foot up to his neck. His face is mostly obscured.

    The Israeli military said it had identified the incident and that an inquiry was under way. A spokesperson quoted by Reuters said that “those involved will be dealt with in accordance with the findings” and said that the treatment depicted in the photo “does not align” with the military’s values.

    Rana Abu Nassar, mother of Palestinian prisoner Osama Abu Nassar who is held by Israel, holds a mobile phone displaying a widely circulated image that she believes shows her son restrained while in Israeli custody, at her home in Al-Maghazi refugee camp, central Gaza Strip, July 3, 2026. The image has sparked a desperate search for the man's identity, with two Palestinian families claiming him as their son. REUTERS/Mahmoud Issa
    Rana Abu Nassar, mother of Palestinian prisoner Osama Abu Nassar [Mahmoud Issa/Reuters]

    Abu Nassar said that from the moment she saw the photo two days ago, she knew it was her son Osama.

    “I know the details of his body. He has swelling in his foot and scars on his leg – the same swelling on his left leg I saw in the picture,” she told Reuters.

    She said that was the first image of him she had seen since he was arrested in March in an area near ⁠the so-called “Yellow Line”, demarcating Israeli control within Gaza.

    His arrest on March 19 gained international attention because he was detained along with ⁠his one-year-old child, who was released the same day with what his family said were cigarette burn marks on his legs.

    His mother said Osama suffers from mental health issues and that a “normal person would not take his son to that area” near the “Yellow Line” where Israeli forces frequently open fire on Palestinians.

    Israel’s military rejected allegations that its forces abused Osama’s ⁠son. It said the marks on the boy’s legs were the result of warning shots troops fired to compel Osama not to approach the “Yellow Line.”

    Joudeh Al-Ghoul, mother of Palestinian prisoner Ameen Al-Ghoul who is held by Israel, reacts in Gaza City, July 4, 2026. REUTERS/Mahmoud Issa
    Joudeh Al-Ghoul, mother of Palestinian prisoner Ameen Al-Ghoul [Mahmoud Issa/Reuters]

    Joudeh Al-Ghoul, whose son Ameen was arrested in November 2023 while trying to travel from southern ⁠Gaza to the enclave’s north, also said she recognised the man in the image from the moment she saw it.

    “It’s him – his hair and chin. He is my son. A mother’s heart can recognise her son. I hugged the mobile phone and started crying,” she told Reuters from a displaced persons camp in Gaza City. “He is my son, my soul, my life.”

    The families’ plight highlights a broader crisis facing Palestinians in Israeli custody. Currently, some 1,200 Palestinians from Gaza are being held in Israel under the Internment of Unlawful Combatants Law.

    The controversial law allows for the unlimited detention of individuals suspected of participating, directly or indirectly, in hostile acts.

    Amani Sarahneh of the Palestinian Prisoners Society said that since the ‌image’s ‌release the organisation has submitted both men’s names to the military in order to try to get lawyer visits with them.

    “Visits do take place, but with great difficulty. The coordination process takes a very long time,” Sarahneh said.






    OPINION | The Malays Still Need Protecting After Decades, What Have Their Leaders Been Protecting?



    Malaysia's #1 Content Aggregator



    OPINION | The Malays Still Need Protecting After Decades, What Have Their Leaders Been Protecting?


    5 Jul 2026 • 1:00 PM MYT



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


    Tun, with respect: before you ask Malays to vote as Malays, answer this first in your 22 years in politics, and the fortune you built along the way, how many Malays did you personally lift up? Not the country in the abstract. Not slogans about Ketuanan Melayu or Tanah Melayu. Actual people. How many Malay entrepreneurs, professionals, or families can point to their success and say, "Tun Mahathir did this for me, from his own hands, his own money, his own mentorship"?



    If the answer is a long list, let's hear it. If it isn't, then the call to "protect the Malays" by voting along racial lines starts to look less like conviction and more like a fishing line cast every election cycle, baited with identity, reeled in for power.


    The same question belongs at Hadi Awang's door. You have spent decades telling Malays that voting for you protects Islam and protects the race. Fair enough but decades is a long time. How many Malays, under your influence and your party's rule in the states you've controlled, have actually been "spoiled" rather than uplifted? How many opportunities squandered, how many communities left no further ahead than when you started? If the protection was real, we should be able to see it. Where is it?



    Here's the part that really doesn't sit right with me: why does a majority need this much protecting in the first place?


    Malays are roughly 60% of this country. They are not a besieged minority clinging to survival in someone else's homeland. So when leaders frame every election as an existential fight to "protect" the Malays, I have to ask protect them from what, exactly? From the 40%? From competition? Minorities in this country don't hold the levers of government, the civil service, the GLCs, or the land. If anyone should be nervous about being out-voted or out-maneuvered, logically it isn't the majority.



    And here's the part that really undercuts the whole argument: the Chinese and Indian communities built what they have with none of this scaffolding. No quotas reserved for them in university intake. No guaranteed equity carve-outs in GLC land deals. No civil service preference. They grew their businesses, sent their children to university, and built generational wealth largely on their own precisely the "sink or swim" conditions that Malay leaders insist would be catastrophic for the Malays. If the absence of protection didn't stop them, the theory that Malays cannot survive without it deserves a much harder look.



    And Tun, you know this better than most, because you lived the contradiction yourself. In 2018, it wasn't Malay unity alone that put you back in Putrajaya for a second stint as prime minister it was Pakatan Harapan, a coalition anchored by DAP, a party with a Chinese and Indian-majority support base. You needed their votes, their machinery, and their trust to become PM. So when it served your political comeback, working across race was not a threat to Ketuanan Melayu it was the plan. It's only now, years later, that race has become the thing voters are told they cannot cross.



    And it's not as if the protections haven't already been built in, generation after generation. Malays have had preferential access to education from school intake to university quotas for decades. They've had preferential access to business licenses, government contracts, and public listings. And now, under the updated Properties Acquisition Guidelines, private companies buying GLC or GLIC properties worth RM20 million and above must hand over 50% Bumiputera equity, up from 30%. That's not a small adjustment that's a doubling down, a fresh injection of economic protection layered on top of everything that came before.



    So here's the honest question nobody in power wants to answer: if all this scaffolding has been in place for this long, why hasn't it produced the outcome it was supposed to produce? Why, after all these decades of privilege in classrooms, in universities, in start-up capital, in property, in equity do we still hear that Malays haven't "developed"? Even small businesses today have more grants, more set-asides, more government support earmarked for Bumiputera entrepreneurs than for anyone else. If a boost this large, sustained this long, still isn't enough, maybe the problem was never a lack of protection. Maybe it's worth asking what happened to all the protection that was already given and who, exactly, it actually benefited.


    Because if the answer is a handful of well-connected names who now stand on stage telling the rest of the Malays to vote out of fear, then the "protection" was never really about the community. It was about the people asking for the vote.


    Annan Vaithegi writes, “a leader's greatest achievement is not convincing people they are forever at risk, but building a society so capable that fear is no longer its political currency.”


    Sunday, July 05, 2026

    The implications of electoral fraud on the Johor State Election


    Murray Hunter
    Jul 05, 2026



    The implications of electoral fraud on the Johor State Election







    Information about an attempt to organize electoral fraud in the coming state election has come to my attention. This is a long-planned intervention which could be carried out by a contracted group who would work with elements within the civil service, sympathetic to the party’s cause. What is not known at this stage is which party is involved. The only thing that is known this party will be able to gain cooperation of select people on the ground.

    Malaysia’s electoral system has long been a subject of debate, with critics alleging systemic advantages for the incumbent through irregularities in voter rolls, alongside more direct claims of manipulation. As Johor prepares for its state election, concerns about potential irregularities have resurfaced, echoing patterns observed in past national and state polls. While no single party holds a monopoly on such accusations, opposition figures have also faced scrutiny over campaign practices.

    Malaysia’s electoral framework dates back to its independence era, with the Election Commission (EC, or SPR) tasked with managing voter rolls, constituency delineation, and polling. Early decades saw relatively smoother processes, but criticisms intensified as the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition, dominated by UMNO, consolidated power.

    Key issues included malapportionment (unequal voter numbers across constituencies, often favoring rural, Malay-majority areas that traditionally support BN/UMNO) and gerrymandering (redrawing boundaries to concentrate or dilute opposition votes). These practices have allowed coalitions to secure parliamentary majorities without winning the popular vote. In the 2013 general election (GE13), BN won 133 seats despite receiving only about 47% of the popular vote, while the opposition Pakatan Rakyat secured a plurality of votes.

    A landmark controversy is Project IC (or Project M) in Sabah during the 1980s–1990s under Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. A Royal Commission of Inquiry later examined allegations that hundreds of thousands of Muslim immigrants (primarily from the southern Philippines and Indonesia) were granted citizenship and identity cards to bolster BN’s voter base in the state, shifting its demographic balance. This “citizenship-for-votes” scheme allegedly turned Sabah into a BN stronghold. Similar claims of imported or “phantom” voters have persisted.


    Possible
    Methods of Alleged Electoral Manipulation


    Observers, including groups like Bersih (Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections), PEMANTAU, and international monitors, have documented recurring tactics:

    Phantom and Duplicate Voters: Inflated or manipulated electoral rolls with deceased individuals, duplicates, or non-residents listed. In GE13 and prior polls, opposition strongholds reported names missing or unauthorized registrations. The EC has faced accusations of poor maintenance of rolls, enabling “phantom voting.”

    Allegations of busing or flying supporters (sometimes from Sabah/Sarawak) to marginal constituencies. In 2013, claims included chartered flights for voters, including foreigners.

    Concerns over multiple voting, improper handling of postal ballots (often from military/police), and timing issues that disadvantage overseas or urban voters. It should be noted that the dipping of a finger of a voter in ink at the time of voting has eradicated this type of voting fraud.

    In GE13, blackouts occurred in several opposition-leaning counting centers, raising suspicions of tampering during tallying.

    Over the years, independent observers have frequently described Malaysian elections as “partially free but not fair.”

    Johor is an historically BN/UMNO stronghold with significant economic importance (including Iskandar Malaysia development), has seen competitive politics. The upcoming polls feature contests involving PH, BN, and others amid federal-state dynamics and royal influence.

    Current concerns of informers mirror historical ones. There are reports of campaign offences (e.g., illegal posters), digital sabotage, fake accounts spreading misinformation, and warnings from ministers about deepfakes or coordinated online efforts. Muda has raised specific allegations of election offences.

    While these appear lower-level so far (hundreds of complaints, mostly posters), vigilance is urged regarding voter rolls, polling-day logistics, and potential “phantom” activity in tight seats. This is were any attempts to sway the election with voter fraud could occur. Only a few hundred to a couple of thousand votes in these seats will be enough to alter the electoral outcome.

    People must be aware.


    OPINION | Mahathir's Race-Based Politics Again? A Statesman Unites a Nation, Not Just One Race



    Malaysia's #1 Content Aggregator



    OPINION | Mahathir's Race-Based Politics Again? A Statesman Unites a Nation, Not Just One Race


    5 Jul 2026 • 3:00 PM MYT



    Image Credit: Kpost | Illustration generated by Chatgpt


    A true statesman is remembered for bringing people together, strengthening national unity, and building a future that benefits every citizen regardless of race, religion or background.


    History often judges leaders not only by the roads they build or the economies they manage, but by whether they leave behind a more united nation.



    Former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad has once again stirred controversy after urging Malay voters to support only Malay candidates in future elections, regardless of political party. In his Facebook post, Mahathir argued that Malays must remain loyal to fellow Malays if they wish to preserve Malaysia as "Tanah Melayu", warning that failure to do so could eventually leave Malays "stateless."



    Such remarks have reignited long-standing criticism that Mahathir continues to rely on racial narratives to mobilise political support, even decades after leaving office. Many would agree that portraying elections as a racial struggle risks deepening divisions in Malaysia's already diverse society rather than encouraging cooperation among its people.


    Malaysia's Constitution already recognises the special position of the Malays and Bumiputera while simultaneously protecting the legitimate rights of all other communities. The country's founders envisioned a nation where different races could coexist under one flag, with political leaders serving every Malaysian instead of championing only one ethnic group.



    Many believe that asking voters to choose candidates solely based on race undermines democratic values. Elections should ideally be contests of integrity, competence, vision and public service - not ethnicity. A capable representative should earn support because of leadership qualities and policies, regardless of racial background.


    Mahathir himself has repeatedly acknowledged that Malay disunity has weakened the community. During his political career, he led several different parties, including UMNO, Bersatu and Pejuang, while political realignments contributed to further fragmentation within Malay politics. Some observers therefore argue that blaming others for Malay divisions overlooks the role that constant political splits have played over the years.



    Beyond race, Mahathir has also earned a reputation for publicly criticising many of his own political successors, often questioning their leadership after they assumed office. This pattern has contributed to prolonged political instability, with successive administrations facing relentless attacks from their predecessor instead of receiving constructive support during national challenges.


    Supporters may view Mahathir as a defender of Malay interests. However, his detractors may argue that repeatedly framing politics through racial lenses risks alienating fellow Malaysians and weakening the sense of shared national identity that is essential for long-term stability.



    Malaysia's future will ultimately depend not on which race wins an election, but on whether its leaders can inspire confidence across every community. Great leaders protect the interests of all citizens. A true statesman builds bridges between races, strengthens national unity, and leaves behind a legacy that future generations can proudly inherit - not one remembered for deepening divisions in an already diverse nation.


    By: Kpost

    Ramasamy: DAP can be against Bossku receiving royal pardon but PMX is a recipient, too





    Ramasamy: DAP can be against Bossku receiving royal pardon but PMX is a recipient, too


    By Prof Ramasamy Palanisamy
    03/07/2026




    DOES it really matter whether the DAP has a stand or not on former premier Datuk Seri Najib Razak?


    Recently, DAP’s secretary-general Anthony Loke Siew Fook said the party would not compromise on the stand it has taken on Najib. DAP supports the court decision that convicted Najib in the 1MDB scandal.


    It is perfectly alright for DAP to hold on to this so-called principled stand. Nobody is asking DAP to water down its position.

    The question is really not whether Najib should have been convicted or not but whether he should be pardoned by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.

    Editor’s Note: The issue was sparked by former DAP Skudai state assemblywoman Marina Ibrahim who recently cried foul over what she alleged as double standards on Najib after a party leader supported the idea of granting him a royal pardon as well as allowing him to serve his sentence under house arrest.

    Marina Binti Ibrahim
    last Tuesday

    Penat.

    Penat mendengar perkara yang sama berulang kali.

    Setiap kali pilihan raya semakin hampir, isu Najib pasti akan dimainkan semula. Cakap pasal benda lain lahh..

    ...See more

    Artikel terjemahan dari 南洋商报 Nanyang Siang Pau yang bertajuk,“人民是棋子,下棋的是政客! 玛丽娜手撕从政者“大局观”.Rakyat ialah buah catur, yang menurunkan catur ialah para ahli politik! Marina mengoyak-ngoyak pemain politik yang “melihat gambaran besar”

    Ketika kempen pilihan raya negeri Johor bermula sepenuhnya, Marina, bekas ADUN Skudai yang baru-baru ini mengumumkan persaraannya telah mengeluarkan kenyataan panjang hari ini mendedahkan kisah dalaman di sebalik keputusannya untuk "berhenti sepenuhn...

    See more
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    Of course, there are talks and, lately, rumours that Najib stands a chance of being fully or partially pardoned, including the possibility of serving the remainder of his sentence under house arrest.

    When it comes to the question of a royal pardon, DAP has no say. It is the prerogative of the Agong.


    Where are DAP’s principles?

    If DAP is so adamant and principled on Najib’s position, it should not forget that Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim was also a convicted person.


    DAP secretary-general Anthony Loke Siew Fook (left) with Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim


    He could become the head of government because he received a royal pardon. If DAP has such a principled stand on Najib, why did it form a coalition government with Anwar as the PM?

    Should DAP given its principled stand on not having any relationship with convicted individuals take the decision to end its cooperation with Anwar?

    Both Anwar and Najib were convicted but Anwar was pardoned. Shouldn’t Najib also be considered for a royal pardon?

    Is DAP against the exercise of the royal pardon is something over which the party has no say whatsoever?

    It is perfectly alright for the party to have a firm stand on Najib but it should not talk about principles. DAP sacrificed its principles a long time ago.


    Prof Ramasamy Palanisamy


    If UMNO was that objectionable to the DAP, why are both parties in the same federal government? Shouldn’t DAP be thinking of quitting the government?

    Whatever happened to DAP’s sacrosanct principle of “Malaysian Malaysia” – the political mantra that was often invoked in the past to defend the rights of non-Malays?

    Is it still part of DAP’s constitution? Or has it been sacrificed in the pursuit of power, position and perks?

    If DAP could be removed from the electoral map of Sabah in the recent elections, the question is whether the party can hold its ground in Peninsular Malaysia. – July 3, 2026



    Former DAP stalwart and Penang deputy chief minister II Prof Ramasamy Palanisamy is chairman of the United Rights of Malaysian Party (Urimai) interim council.