Tuesday, January 06, 2026

What’s next for Venezuela’s vast oil reserves after Maduro’s fall?






What’s next for Venezuela’s vast oil reserves after Maduro’s fall?



Crude oil drips from a valve at a PDVSA oil well in the Orinoco belt near Morichal, Monagas state, on April 16, 2015. — Reuters pic

Tuesday, 06 Jan 2026 9:00 PM MYT


WASHINGTON, Jan 6 — Following are key facts about the oil and mining sectors of Venezuela, whose President Nicolas Maduro was captured by US forces on Saturday.


Reserves

Venezuela has the world’s largest estimated oil reserves but its crude output remains at a fraction of ​capacity due to decades of mismanagement, lack of investment and sanctions, official data shows.

Venezuela holds about 17 per cent of global reserves or 303 billion barrels, ahead of Organization ‌of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) leader Saudi Arabia, according to the London-based Energy Institute.


Its reserves are made up mostly of heavy oil in the Orinoco region of central Venezuela, making its crude expensive to produce, but technically relatively simple, according to the US government’s energy department.


In 2019, Maduro and Delcy Rodriguez, who was then the country’s vice president and is now acting president, announced a five-year mining plan ‍aimed at boosting mineral extraction as an alternative to oil production.

The year prior, Venezuela’s government released data on mineral deposits that used key mining industry terms interchangeably, including reserve and resource, making it difficult to ‌ascertain whether Caracas knew its full mining potential.


A reserve is an estimate of the volume of a mineral that can be economically produced. A resource is the volume of a mineral estimated in an entire region, whether or not it can be economically produced.

The 2018 report, which was billed as a “minerals catalogue” for potential investors and published on Venezuela’s mining ministry website, estimated coal reserves of roughly 3 billion metric tons and 407,885 metric tons of nickel reserves.

That same report estimated a gold resource of 644 metric tons, an iron ore resource of 14.68 billion metric tons - ‍while acknowledging much of that was a speculative estimate – and a bauxite resource of 321.5 million metric tons.

In 2021, Venezuela’s government published a map of mineral reserves based on data compiled in 2009. That map showed reserves of antimony, copper, nickel, coltan, molybdenum, magnesium, silver, zinc, titanium, tungsten and uranium, but did not list volumes.

The country does not appear to have sizeable reserves of rare earths, a grouping of 17 minor metals used to make magnets that turn power into motion. Rare earths are a subset of critical minerals.



A man wears a mask of US President Donald Trump during a protest against US strikes on Venezuela and the capture of President Maduro in Sao Paulo, Brazil on January 5, 2026. — Reuters pic



Production

Venezuela was a founding member of Opec with Iran, Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Its struggles with electricity production have repeatedly hampered mining and oil operations.

The country was producing as much as 3.5 million barrels per day of crude in the 1970s, which at the time represented over 7 per cent of global oil output. Production fell below 2 million bpd during the 2010s and averaged some 1.1 million bpd last year or just 1 per cent of global production. That was roughly the same production as the US state of North Dakota.

“If developments ultimately lead to a genuine regime change, this could even result in more oil on the market over time. However, it will take time for production to recover fully,” said Arne Lohmann Rasmussen from Global Risk Management.

If regime change is successful, Venezuela’s exports could grow as sanctions are lifted and foreign investment returns, said MST Marquee analyst Saul Kavonic.

“History shows that forced regime change rarely stabilises oil supply quickly, with Libya and Iraq offering clear and sobering precedents,” said ‍Jorge Leon, head of geopolitical analysis at Rystad Energy.

Trump told ‍Fox News on Saturday the United States would be very strongly involved in Venezuela’s oil sector.

The operational status of the mines tied to Maduro’s five-year plan is not clear. However, Maduro’s National Council for Productive Economy last month said national production of gold, coal and iron ore grew in the first three quarters of 2025, without providing figures.

Venezuela nationalised its gold sector in 2011. The government also controls iron and steel maker CVG.

Reuters reported last October that Venezuela had restarted coal production and aimed to export ​more than 10 million metric tons of the mineral in 2025. It is not clear whether the government hit that target. In 2019, the US Geological Survey estimated that Venezuela produced 100,000 metric tons of coal from 731 million metric tons of reserves.

Much of the country’s production of minerals, including nickel, bauxite, iron ore, and gold, has fallen alongside oil in the past decade.

The latest available data on Venezuelan bauxite from the USGS, for 2021, put production at 250,000 metric tons, down from 550,000 tons in 2017, while iron ore output was 1.41 million tons on an iron content basis, and gold production was 480 kg.

Output of alumina, the substance refined from bauxite that is used to make aluminium metal, was estimated by the USGS to be 80,000 tons in 2021, having dwindled from 240,000 tons four years earlier. Aluminium production was estimated at just 20,000 tons, down from 144,000 tons in 2017.



Venezuelan National Guards keep watch at the border between Venezuela and Brazil in Pacaraima, Roraima, Brazil on January 5, 2026. — Reuters pic



Joint ventures

Venezuela nationalised its oil industry in the 1970s, creating Petroleos de Venezuela ‌S.A. (PDVSA).

During the 1990s, Venezuela took steps to open the sector to foreign investment. Following the election of Hugo Chavez in 1999, Venezuela mandated majority PDVSA ownership of all oil projects. Exxon and Conoco departed Venezuela in the 2000s and their assets were expropriated.

PDVSA set up ventures in the hope of boosting production, including with Chevron, China National Petroleum Corporation, ENI, Total and Russia’s Rosneft.

Maduro threatened in 2023 to license ‍mines in a region subject to ownership dispute with neighboring Guyana.

Maduro’s government since at least 2016 had supported artisanal gold mining in the Venezuelan Amazon to bring in revenue.


Exports, refining

The United States used to be the main buyer of Venezuelan oil but since ‌the introduction of sanctions, China has ‍become the main destination in the last decade.

Venezuela owes about US$10 billion to China after China became the largest lender under late President Hugo Chavez.

Venezuela repays loans with crude transported in three very large crude carriers previously co-owned by Venezuela and China.

Two of those supertankers were approaching Venezuela ‍in December when Trump announced a blockade of all tankers going in and out of the country.

About a dozen oil tankers loaded with Venezuelan crude and fuel have left the country’s waters since the start of the year in apparent defiance of the US government’s ‍blockade on exports, according to documents seen by Reuters and industry sources including monitoring service TankerTrackers.com.

Trump told Fox News on Saturday that China would get the ⁠oil without elaborating. Russia has also loaned Venezuela billions of dollars but the exact ‍amount is not clear.

PDVSA also owns significant refining capacity outside the country, including CITGO in the United States, but creditors are battling to gain control of it through longstanding legal cases in US courts. — Reuters


Unsafe slope homes could trigger next landslide if DBKL fails to audit: Teresa Kok





Seputeh MP Teresa Kok ( third from left) said her recent visits to Taman United had highlighted potential risks associated with homes constructed on sloped terrain. - Facebook pic, January 6, 2026


Unsafe slope homes could trigger next landslide if DBKL fails to audit: Teresa Kok


The Seputeh MP has urged Kuala Lumpur City Hall to conduct a citywide audit of homes on or near slopes, warning that illegal extensions, poor drainage, and weak foundations could trigger another landslide like the 60‑metre collapse at Taman United last year



Sandru Narayanan
Updated 5 hours ago
6 January, 2026
4:00 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR – A citywide audit of houses built on or near slopes should be carried out by Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) amid growing concerns over public safety.

Speaking to Scoop, Seputeh MP Teresa Kok said her recent visits to Taman United had highlighted potential risks associated with homes constructed on sloped terrain.

“During my visit, I noticed a bungalow that had been extended illegally on a slope,” Teresa said.

“With the landslide that happened there, it became clear that the combination of poor drainage and underground water accumulation could endanger the property and even neighbouring areas.

“The foundation was quite slender. That is why this audit must be done now, before something else happens.”


Seputeh MP, Teresa Kok. – Bernama pic, January 6, 2026


She added that while not all structures directly contribute to landslides, these developments raise concerns that require careful attention.

“Even if the structure itself doesn’t cause a landslide, the situation should prompt caution. Homeowners should get a consultant to conduct a soil test to determine whether their property is safe enough to stay in,” she said.

Teresa also said the situation in areas like Bangsar underscores the need for preventive measures.

“It’s good to be careful, to check what we build and ensure safety. Homeowners also have a responsibility to make sure their homes are secure,” she added.

When asked whether newly appointed Federal Territories Minister Hannah Yeoh should prioritise the issue, Teresa Kok said she was unsure if it should be a top-level focus, noting that the minister has many pressing responsibilities.

“I don’t know if it’s something she should emphasise. Her plate is full, and there are many other issues more important for her to look into. Let her take one step at a time. But raising this issue is important because of incidents like the one at Taman United,” she said.

Teresa also criticised authorities for failing to act on repeated public complaints, particularly in hilly areas.

“Residents of the Taman United flats had on multiple occasions raised concerns about dangerous trees, stagnant drains and slope conditions, but no action was taken. This is not a new issue,” she said, adding that complaints had been channelled through Adu@KL as well as to her office.

She added that residents in her own constituency have not raised complaints about homes on slopes.

“Actually, in my constituency, there aren’t many houses built on slopes, so this hasn’t been a significant problem,” she explained.

Teresa warned that without proper oversight, illegal extensions and poor drainage could lead to more serious incidents.

“What happened at Taman United shows that a house built on a slope, with insufficient drainage and a weak foundation, could pose risks not just to itself but also to nearby areas, hence a citywide audit has to be done as soon as possible,” she said.

The call for greater oversight follows a 60‑metre landslide at Taman United along Jalan Sepadu 7 on November 24 last year, which buried vehicles and prompted the evacuation of residents from 104 housing units in nearby apartment blocks.

The collapse occurred behind Block B of the low-cost Taman United flats, crushing one car and toppling another, though no casualties were reported.

Firefighters and DBKL officers secured the area and relocated evacuees to the Sri Petaling Community Centre amid heavy rainfall and unstable ground conditions.

Authorities have since been monitoring the site and conducting clean-up and slope repair work, with assessments pointing to accumulated rainwater, weakened retaining structures and poor drainage as contributing factors to the slope failure. – January 6, 2026


Bersatu sacks Saifuddin Abdullah over ‘breach of party constitution’





Bersatu has sacked its Supreme Council member Datuk Seri Saifuddin Abdullah from the party, effective today. – Scoop file pic, January 6, 2026


Bersatu sacks Saifuddin Abdullah over ‘breach of party constitution’


The former minister says he will appeal against his expulsion

Scoop Reporters
Updated 1 minute ago
6 January, 2026
8:53 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR – Bersatu has sacked its Supreme Council member Datuk Seri Saifuddin Abdullah from the party, effective today.

According to a letter from the party’s disciplinary board dated today, the decision was made during a Supreme Council meeting yesterday.

The letter reportedly stated that Saifuddin had breached Clause 9.1.4 of the party constitution but did not specify the alleged offence committed by the Indera Mahkota MP.

The former minister was previously hauled up by the party’s disciplinary board following his calls for Bersatu president and then Perikatan Nasional (PN) chairman Muhyiddin Yassin to resign.

In making the call, Saifuddin also urged the resignation of other senior party members, including Datuk Seri Azmin Ali.

In addition, Saifuddin also called on Muhyiddin to clarify whether his son-in-law, fugitive businessman Muhammad Adlan Berhan, had indeed fled the country, following the circulation of pictures of him living abroad in luxury.

The stance caused the Bersatu Youth wing to call for immediate disciplinary action against Saifuddin. He was also then removed as Perikatan Nasional’s Pahang chief.

Saifuddin confirmed his sacking when contacted by Scoop and said he is appealing the decision. – January 6, 2026


***


In the old old days Saifuddin used to be my fave UMNO MP, wakakaka


Baltic Sea cable sabotage timeline: From Nord Stream to 2026 – who’s behind the attacks?




Baltic Sea cable sabotage timeline: From Nord Stream to 2026 – who’s behind the attacks?



A Border Guard helicopter and the Coast Guard patrol ship “Turva” seize the “Fitburg” vessel in the Gulf of Finland on December 31, 2025. — Finnish Police/AFP pic

Tuesday, 06 Jan 2026 9:00 PM MYT


STOCKHOLM, Jan 6 — The Baltic Sea region is on high alert after a string of power cable, telecoms link and gas pipeline outages since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, and NATO has boosted its military presence with frigates, aircraft and naval drones.

Police in the region have found that some incidents were caused by sabotage, while others were accidental or remain subject to ongoing proceedings.



January 2026: Lithuania-Latvia telecom cable


An undersea telecoms cable linking Sventoji in Lithuania to Liepaja in Latvia, two coastal towns some 65km apart, was damaged on January 2.


Latvian police later boarded a ship docked at Liepaja and initiated criminal proceedings.



The police said on January 5 they found no evidence linking the ship to the damage to the cable, which belongs to Sweden's Arelion, and that they were investigating the incident further.

December 2025: Finland-Estonia telecom cables, Sweden-Estonia cable


Finnish police on December 31 seized a cargo vessel en route from Russia to Israel on suspicion of sabotaging an undersea telecoms cable belonging to Elisa running from Helsinki across the Gulf of Finland to Estonia.

The vessel, Fitburg, was caught with its anchor in the water, and investigators found tracks suggesting it had been dragged along the seabed for “several tens of kilometres”, police said.

Investigators said the ship's 14 crew members were from Russia, Georgia, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan, and that one of them was held in police custody while three others were banned from travel while an investigation was ongoing.

Sweden's Arelion said that one of its cables running from Finland to Estonia was also damaged on December 31, and that a cable from Estonia to Sweden stopped working on December 30.



National Bureau of Investigation director Robin Lardot attends a press conference in Helsinki, Finland on December 31, 2025. — Lehtikuva/Reuters pic



January-February 2025: Sweden-Latvia and Finland-Germany telecom cables

An undersea fibre-optic cable connecting Latvia and Sweden's Gotland island malfunctioned on January 26, prompting a Nato and police investigation.

Sweden later seized and boarded the Maltese-flagged bulk vessel Vezhen on suspicion that it had caused the damage in an act of gross sabotage.

Bulgarian shipping company Navigation Maritime Bulgare said Vezhen's anchor had dropped in high winds and may have struck the cable, but denied sabotage.

A Swedish prosecutor later ruled the breach accidental and released the vessel.

December 2024: Power and internet cables

The Estlink 2 undersea power cable connecting Finland and Estonia was cut on December 25 along with four telecoms lines.

Finland seized the Cook Islands-registered Eagle S tanker on suspicion it caused the damage by dragging its anchor, adding that the ship was part of a “shadow fleet” circumventing Russian oil sanctions.

The Kremlin dismissed concerns about the seizure.

In October 2025, a Finnish court dismissed a case against the Eagle S captain and crew for lack of evidence.

November 2024: Baltic telecom cables

Two undersea fibre-optic communications cables located more than 100 nautical miles (about 200km) apart in the Baltic were severed on November 17 and 18, raising suspicions of sabotage.

Investigators zeroed in on Chinese bulk carrier Yi Peng 3, and a Reuters analysis of MarineTraffic data showed that the ship's coordinates corresponded to the time and place of the breaches.

China allowed representatives from Germany, Sweden, Finland and Denmark on December 21 to board the Yi Peng 3 along with Chinese investigators.

A Swedish inquiry found no conclusive evidence to suggest wrongdoing.



The seized vessel Fitburg is moored at the harbour in Kirkkonummi, Finland, on January 1, 2026. — Lehtikuva/AFP pic



October 2023: Balticconnector gas pipe and cables

A subsea gas pipeline, the Balticconnector, which links Finland and Estonia, was severed by what Finnish investigators determined was the Chinese container vessel NewNew Polar Bear dragging its anchor on October 8, 2023.

Estonian police suspected the ship of also damaging telecoms cables connecting Estonia to Finland and Sweden on October 7-8, before hitting the gas pipeline on its way to a port near St Petersburg in Russia.

The ship's captain appeared in court in Hong Kong in 2025 accused of causing “criminal damage” to the pipeline and cables.

September 2022: Nord Stream blasts

Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2, built across the Baltic Sea by Russia's state-controlled Gazprom to pump natural gas to Germany, were damaged in explosions in September 2022.

Some Western officials suggested Russia blew up its own pipelines, an interpretation dismissed by Moscow, which has blamed the United States, Britain and Ukraine for the blasts, which largely cut Russian gas off from the European market.

Those countries denied involvement. — Reuters


***


From Google:

In August 2024 media reported that in June German authorities issued a European arrest warrant for a Ukrainian national Volodymyr Z. living near Warsaw suspected of having used the yacht Andromeda together with two others to sabotage the Nord Stream pipeline.


Saifuddin Nasution hails Umno’s role in government stability and reform agenda





Saifuddin Nasution hails Umno’s role in government stability and reform agenda



Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh addresses party delegates at the World Trade Centre Kuala Lumpur on August 22, 2024. — Picture by Firdaus Latif

Tuesday, 06 Jan 2026 7:07 PM MYT


RAWANG, Jan 6 — Home Minister Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail said the role played by Umno in the Unity Government is very important, particularly in ensuring political stability and the smooth administration of the country.

Saifuddin Nasution, who is also Pakatan Harapan (PH) secretary-general, said the political maturity demonstrated by Umno as the largest Malay-based political party in the government has also helped strengthen unity and ensure the government functions effectively.

“Umno is currently the largest Malay-based party in the government with 30 Members of Parliament and holding eight full ministerial posts. This reflects Umno’s significant role in the Unity Government,” he said when met by reporters here today.

Saifuddin Nasution said the political stability enjoyed at present is clearly different from the previous term, which saw three Prime Ministers in five years, while the current government has maintained a single Prime Minister for almost three years of administration.


He said the stability has enabled the government to focus on reform agendas, economic growth and more orderly governance, reflecting national prosperity through positive economic indicators.

Commenting on Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s announcement to limit the Prime Minister’s tenure to 10 years, Saifuddin Nasution said the move sends a clear signal that national leadership is grounded in the principles of accountability and responsibility, while providing sufficient space to translate planned policies and reforms.

He also expressed full confidence in the wisdom of Umno’s leadership in positioning the party within the current political landscape, while stressing that the Unity Government remains united, stable and functioning well.

Last Saturday, Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Salleh, in his speech at the Umno Youth Special Convention at the World Trade Centre Kuala Lumpur (WTC KL), said Umno Youth rejects any attempt to seize power or engage in ‘backdoor manoeuvres’ that could cause the current government leading the country to fall. — Bernama

Photo of meeting with Muhyiddin reinforces speculation Samsuri is new PN chairman


theVibes.com:

Photo of meeting with Muhyiddin reinforces speculation Samsuri is new PN chairman


Previously, Abdul Hadi confirmed that the party would lead PN following Muhyiddin's resignation as chairman effective last Thursday.

Updated 2 hours ago · Published on 06 Jan 2026 3:42PM


The photo was uploaded by the Political Secretary to PAS President, Mohd Syahir Che Sulaiman via Facebook, today. - January 6, 2026



A PHOTOGRAPH of a meeting between former Perikatan Nasional (PN) Chairman Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin and PAS Vice President Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar, accompanied by the status 'Alhamdulillah, insya-Allah', has further strengthened speculation linking the Terengganu Menteri Besar to the shortlisted candidates for the PN Chairman position.

The photo was uploaded by the Political Secretary to PAS President, Mohd Syahir Che Sulaiman via Facebook, today.

Mohd Syahir, who is also the Bachok Member of Parliament, when contacted by Berita Harian, confirmed that the meeting between Muhyiddin and Ahmad Samsuri was held on the mandate given by PAS President Tan Sri Abdul Hadi Awang.

"Yes, Dr Sam met Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin on the mandate from the President.

"It was a 'casual meeting' (regular meeting) since Tan Sri Muhyiddin had just returned from abroad," he told BH.

Mohd Syahir, however, did not confirm or deny when asked whether the meeting was related to speculation that Ahmad Samsuri would be nominated to replace Muhyiddin for the position of PN Chairman.

He also announced that a PN Supreme Council meeting would be held in the near future but did not elaborate.

Previously, Abdul Hadi confirmed that the party would lead PN following Muhyiddin's resignation as chairman effective last Thursday.

The Marang MP said that a meeting on the new PN Chairman candidate was expected to be held soon and would also be attended by BERSATU leaders.

Two names have been proposed by PAS so far, namely its deputy president Datuk Seri Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man and Ahmad Samsuri.

Apart from PAS, BERSATU Deputy President Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainnuddin has also been mentioned among the candidates to lead PN. – January 6, 2026

Danish Prime Minister warns U.S. takeover of Greenland would threaten NATO


theVibes.com:

Danish Prime Minister warns U.S. takeover of Greenland would threaten NATO


Remarks follow renewed calls by U.S. President Donald Trump for jurisdiction over the strategic, mineral-rich Arctic territory, which is a semiautonomous part of the Kingdom of Denmark

Updated 38 minutes ago · Published on 06 Jan 2026 5:56PM


Frederiksen stresses that Trump “should be taken seriously” in his pursuit of Greenland and that Denmark will not tolerate threats to its territory - January 6, 2025


DANISH Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has warned that any attempt by the United States to take control of Greenland would mark the end of the NATO military alliance.

AP reported on Tuesday that her remarks follow renewed calls by U.S. President Donald Trump for jurisdiction over the strategic, mineral-rich Arctic territory, which is a semiautonomous part of the Kingdom of Denmark.

Speaking to Danish broadcaster TV2 on Monday, Frederiksen said, “If the United States chooses to attack another NATO country militarily, then everything stops.

“That is, including our NATO and thus the security that has been provided since the end of the Second World War.”

She stressed that Trump “should be taken seriously” in his pursuit of Greenland and that Denmark will not tolerate threats to its territory.

The warnings come in the aftermath of a U.S. military operation in Venezuela over the weekend aimed at capturing President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, an action that has heightened concerns in Denmark and Greenland. Frederiksen’s Greenlandic counterpart, Jens Frederik Nielsen, echoed her stance, insisting, “We are not in a situation where we think that there might be a takeover of the country overnight and that is why we are insisting that we want good cooperation.” He added, “The situation is not such that the United States can simply conquer Greenland.”

Trump’s renewed interest in Greenland, including his statement on Sunday that “let’s talk about Greenland in 20 days,” has fueled speculation about potential U.S. intervention.

The President also criticised Denmark’s efforts to strengthen Greenland’s security, mocking the addition of “one more dog sled” to the Arctic territory’s arsenal and claiming, “We need Greenland from the standpoint of national security, and Denmark is not going to be able to do it.”

Security experts, however, caution that claims of a Russian and Chinese presence near Greenland are exaggerated.

Ulrik Pram Gad of the Danish Institute for International Studies noted that “there are indeed Russian and Chinese ships in the Arctic, but these vessels are too far away to see from Greenland with or without binoculars.”

Denmark already hosts U.S. military operations in Greenland through the Pituffik Space Base, established under a 1951 defense agreement.

The facility supports missile warning, missile defence, and space surveillance for the United States and NATO.

On the mainland, Denmark maintains close military ties with Washington, including recent approval of legislation expanding U.S. troop access to Danish air bases, a move critics say diminishes Danish sovereignty.

The unfolding situation has drawn international attention, with European leaders voicing solidarity with Denmark and Greenland amid escalating tensions over the Arctic territory. - January 6, 2025


***


Carlsberg may be top-notched but frigg it, Clown just wants your rare mineral ores.


'As a good Muslim, I don't lie' - Zuraida insists meetings held with Guan Eng










'As a good Muslim, I don't lie' - Zuraida insists meetings held with Guan Eng


Farah Solhi
Published: Jan 6, 2026 4:44 PM
Updated: 8:58 PM




Former housing and local government minister Zuraida Kamaruddin has maintained today that she had two separate meetings with former finance minister Lim Guan Eng in 2018 and 2019 over a housing project for former plantation workers in Bestari Jaya.

Testifying in defence against Lim’s defamation suit, Zuraida told the Shah Alam High Court that she did not lie about the meetings where Lim had rejected her requests.

“There was a meeting. I’m not lying. Bismillahirahmannirahim, it is not a lie,” she said when grilled by Lim’s lawyer Sankara Nair during cross-examination.

Zuraida said that although no documentary evidence of the meetings was tendered in court, there was a WhatsApp conversation involving her, Lim, and the then housing and local government director-general Jayaselan Navaratnam, who she said was present during both meetings.

She said Lim did not agree to her request during the first meeting in October 2018.

At the time, she said, there was no new application for the project as it had already been approved by the previous government under former prime minister Najib Abdul Razak and included in Budget 2018.

Subsequent meetings with Lim were meant to follow up on the project, she added.

‘Honour manifesto’

However, Zuraida said she had bumped into Lim’s then political secretary Tony Pua before one of the meetings, during which Pua allegedly told her that the project would not be approved.

“(During the meeting with Lim) he told me that if we wanted to pursue the project, we had to change the mechanism from direct award to open tender, which was part of the manifesto of the government at the time,” she told the court.

She said the land belonged to Berjaya Group and that she later met the landowner to convey the change in mechanism.

“They wrote a letter agreeing to it, which led us to the second meeting,” she added.

Zuraida said she later followed up via WhatsApp, where she told Lim that the government needed to honour its manifesto, however, Lim’s response to the project remained negative during the second meeting.

Yesterday, Lim told the court that he had no recollection of the meetings and could not confirm any WhatsApp conversation with Zuraida, although he acknowledged that the phone number shown belonged to him.


Ex-finance minister Lim Guan Eng


Lim, 65, filed a defamation suit against Zuraida, the editor of online news portal MalaysiaNow and its owner, Mnow Media Sdn Bhd, in June 2024.

He claimed Zuraida had made defamatory statements about him over the housing project during his tenure as finance minister from 2018 to 2020.

The Bagan MP claimed that the statement was carried on MalaysiaNow, via the article “Zuraida dakwa Guan Eng tolak dua kali permohonan KPKT bina rumah pekerja ladang Bestari Jaya” published on the same date.

No black and white

In his testimony yesterday, Lim told judge Shoba Rajah that there were no documents to support Zuraida’s claims.

This was consistent with the testimony of Pua, who was called as Lim’s witness.

Pua said he distinctly recalled other proposals from the Housing and Local Government Ministry during the same period.

“These include a low-cost housing rental scheme that required the Finance Ministry’s guarantees, which progressed through ministerial discussions and officer-level presentations before being discontinued at the officers’ level as it was assessed to unduly guarantee profits to a private bank while exposing the government to losses.

“In these circumstances, I am confident that had a formal and legitimate application of the nature alleged existed and progressed beyond preliminary discussions, it would have come to my attention or that of my office,” he added.

Pua not called as Zuraida’s witness

Proceedings briefly turned heated during cross-examination when Sankara questioned Zuraida on why she did not call Pua as her witness, despite referring to him in her defence statement.

Her lawyer Nizamuddin Hamid objected, and the judge said the question was not significant and that Zuraida need not answer.

“Pua is a supporter of his statement, so how can I call him as a witness?” Zuraida said after brief arguments between parties.


Tony Pua


She also said she did not pursue legal action following Pua’s response to her statement published by MalaysiaNow in 2024.

“I did not make any statement (in response to Pua), but that does not mean I accept it,” she said.

Zuraida said she only spoke publicly about the project when the Kuala Kubu Bharu by-election drew near, after feeling compelled to respond to a statement by Housing and Local Government Minister Nga Kor Ming in April 2024.

At the time, Nga was reported as saying RM5.21 million would be allocated to upgrade public infrastructure under the Hulu Selangor Municipal Council and the Chinese New Village Project.

Zuraida told the court that she was offended by Sankara’s accusation that she had lied.

“As a good Muslim, I don’t lie,” she said.

“I was just stating the facts that I met him (Lim) twice and that he rejected my requests,” she added.

The court adjourned proceedings for the day and will resume tomorrow with Jayaselan taking the stand.


Daughter: Dr Mahathir’s condition after fall ‘serious, but not dangerous’





Daughter: Dr Mahathir’s condition after fall ‘serious, but not dangerous’



A general view of the National Heart Institute in Kuala Lumpur on January 22, 2022. — Picture by Yusof Mat Isa

Tuesday, 06 Jan 2026 6:30 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 6 — Former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad is in fine condition after being admitted to the National Heart Institute (IJN), according to his daughter Datin Paduka Marina Mahathir.

Speaking to Bernama, Marina said that while the matter is considered serious, it is not life-threatening, stressing that her father is doing well given his age.

“It is serious, but it’s not dangerous. For his age, everything is relative… he’s fine.

“We will get a fuller statement with more details out later. We have to get all the correct terms right,” she said at the IJN lobby here today.


Tun Dr Mahathir was admitted to IJN at about 9.30 am today after reportedly falling at his residence earlier in the morning.

His press secretary Sufi Yusoff, in a message shared via the official Dr M Media Updates WhatsApp group today, said the 100-year-old statesman was taken to IJN by ambulance and was reported to be conscious.

The former fourth and seventh prime minister was previously treated at IJN on July 13, 2025, due to fatigue, but was discharged on the same day.


Meanwhile, his press secretary Sufi Yusoff, in a message shared via the official Dr M Media Updates WhatsApp group, said after medical assessment, it has been confirmed that Dr Mahathir suffered a fracture in the right hip.

“Tun is expected to be admitted for the next few weeks for treatment and observation,” he said. — Bernama

US foes and allies denounce Trump’s ‘crime of aggression’ in Venezuela at UN meeting


Guardian:

US foes and allies denounce Trump’s ‘crime of aggression’ in Venezuela at UN meeting


US ambassador defends attack as ‘law enforcement’ action against an ‘illegitimate’ leader, not an act of war

The ‘Putinization’ of US foreign policy has arrived in Venezuela


David Smith in Washington
Tue 6 Jan 2026 05.57 AEDT


The US has faced widespread condemnation for a “crime of aggression” in Venezuela at an emergency meeting of the United Nations security council.

Brazil, China, Colombia, Cuba, Eritrea, Mexico, Russia, South Africa and Spain were among countries that on Monday denounced Donald Trump’s decision to launch deadly strikes on Venezuela and snatch its leader, Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, to stand trial in the US.


“The bombings on Venezuelan territory and the capture of its president cross an unacceptable line,” Sérgio França Danese, the Brazilian ambassador to the UN, told the meeting. “These acts constitute a very serious affront to the sovereignty of Venezuela and set an extremely dangerous precedent for the entire international community.”


Is there any legal justification for the US attack on Venezuela?

Read more


Trump’s UN ambassador, Mike Waltz, defended the attack as a legitimate “law enforcement” action to execute long-standing criminal indictments against an “illegitimate” leader, not an act of war.

The meeting in New York was convened just hours before Maduro was due to appear before a federal judge in Manhattan on charges including “narco-terrorism” conspiracy, cocaine importation and weapons trafficking – allegations he has long denied.


António Guterres, the UN secretary general, warned that the capture of Maduro risked intensifying instability in Venezuela and across the region. He questioned whether the operation respected the rules of international law.

“I am deeply concerned about the possible intensification of instability in the country, the potential impact on the region, and the precedent it may set for how relations between and among states are conducted,” Guterres said in a statement delivered to the council by UN political affairs chief Rosemary DiCarlo.

He urged Venezuelan actors to engage in “inclusive and democratic dialogue” and offered UN support for a peaceful way forward.

The meeting had been requested by Colombia, which delivered a carefully calibrated rebuke of Washington. The country’s ambassador, Leonor Zalabata Torres, condemned the US action as a violation of Venezuela’s sovereignty, political independence and territorial integrity.

“Democracy cannot be defended or promoted through violence and coercion, and it cannot be superseded, either, by economic interests,” she said. “There is no justification whatsoever, under any circumstances, for the unilateral use of force to commit an act of aggression.” She added that the raid was reminiscent of “the worst interference in our area in the past”.

Russia and China, both permanent security council members, were less restrained and called on the US to immediately release Maduro and Flores. Vasily Nebenzya, Moscow’s ambassador, described the intervention as “a turn back to the era of lawlessness” and urged the 15-member council to reject the methods of US military foreign policy.

Nebenzya, whose country is currently under US sanctions following its illegal invasion of Ukraine, added: “We cannot allow the United States to proclaim itself as some kind of a supreme judge, which alone bears the right to invade any country, to label culprits, to hand down and to enforce punishments irrespective of notions of international law, sovereignty and nonintervention.”

China’s representative, Fu Cong, echoed the charge, saying the US had “wantonly trampled upon Venezuela’s sovereignty” and violated the principle of sovereign equality. “No country can act as the world’s police.”

China demanded that the US “change its course, cease its bullying and coercive practices”, and “return to the path of political solutions through dialogue and negotiations”.

The Cuban ambassador, Ernesto Soberón Guzmán, told the meeting: “The US military attack against Venezuela has no justification whatsoever… This is an imperialist and fascist aggression with objectives of domination.”

European leaders appear torn in face of new world order after Venezuela attack

Read more


The security council meeting also heard from Venezuela’s ambassador Samuel Moncada, who described the US action as an “illegitimate armed attack lacking any legal justification” that included “the kidnapping of the constitutional president of the republic, Nicolás Maduro Moros and the first lady Cilia Flores.”

Moncada added: “No state can set itself up as a judge, party and executor of the world order … Venezuela is the victim of this attack because of its natural resources.”

For its part, the US insisted that there was “no war against Venezuela or its people”. Waltz told the council the operation was a law-enforcement action carried out in pursuit of long-standing indictments. “We are not occupying a country; this was a law enforcement operation,” he said, invoking the 1989 capture of Panama’s former leader Manuel Noriega as precedent.

Waltz cited Article 51 of the UN charter, which enshrines the right to self-defence, and said the evidence against Maduro would be presented openly in US court. He described the Venezuelan leader as “an illegitimate so-called president” and claimed that millions of Venezuelans, including exiles in Florida, were celebrating his arrest.

“I want to reiterate President Trump gave diplomacy a chance. He offered Maduro multiple offerings he tried to de-escalate. Maduro refused to take them.”

Experts, however, have questioned the legality of the operation, noting that it lacked UN security council authorisation, Venezuelan consent and a clear self-defence rationale. The UN charter obliges states to refrain from the use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of others – a principle repeatedly invoked during the meeting.

Yet the council, paralysed by divisions among its most powerful members, appeared no closer to a collective response. Any attempt to censure the US is certain to be blocked by its veto, one of five held by the council’s permanent members.


Dr Mahathir suffers hip fracture, expected to remain at IJN for several weeks





Dr Mahathir suffers hip fracture, expected to remain at IJN for several weeks



Dr Mahathir was admitted to IJN this morning following a fall at his home. — Picture by Raymond Manuel

Tuesday, 06 Jan 2026 5:21 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 6 — Former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad has sustained a fracture to his right hip following a fall at his residence early this morning and is expected to remain hospitalised for the next few weeks.

In a statement, Dr Mahathir’s office said medical assessments at the National Heart Institute (IJN) confirmed the injury.

“After medical assessment, it has been confirmed that Tun suffered a fracture to the right hip,” the statement said.

It added that he would be admitted for continued care.

“Tun is expected to be admitted for the next few weeks for treatment and observation,” the statement added.

Dr Mahathir, who is 100, fell at about 7.30am at his home and was taken by ambulance to IJN, where he was admitted at about 9.30am.

“He was taken to IJN, conscious, and was admitted at about 9.30am,” the statement said.

The incident and his admission were earlier confirmed by his press secretary, Sufi Yusoff.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim has offered his prayers for Dr Mahathir’s recovery.

In a Facebook post today, Anwar, who is on an official visit to Türkiye, said he and his wife, Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, were praying for the former prime minister’s well-being.

“Azizah and I pray for Tun’s health and a speedy recovery, God willing,” he said.


***


Like Anwar and no doubt Najib, let us all pray for Tun's swift recovery. Amin.


Which countries could be in Trump's sights after Venezuela?


BBC:


Which countries could be in Trump's sights after Venezuela?


3 hours ago
Tom Bennett


Getty Images


US President Donald Trump's second term is being shaped by his foreign policy ambitions.

He's followed through on threats against Venezuela by capturing its president and his wife from their heavily fortified Caracas compound in a dramatic overnight raid.

When describing the operation, Trump dusted off the 1823 Monroe Doctrine and its promise of US supremacy in the western hemisphere - re-branding it the "Donroe Doctrine".

Here are some of the warnings he's made against other nations in Washington's orbit in recent days.


Greenland

The US already has a military base on Greenland - Pituffik Space Base - but Trump wants the whole island.

"We need Greenland from the standpoint of national security", he told journalists, saying the region was "covered with Russian and Chinese ships all over the place."

The vast Arctic island, part of the Kingdom of Denmark, sits roughly 2,000 miles (3,200 km) to the north-east of the US.

It's rich in rare earth minerals, which are crucial for the production of smart phones, electric vehicles and military hardware. Currently, China's production of rare earths far outweighs that of the US.

Greenland also occupies a key strategic location in the North Atlantic, giving access to the increasingly important Arctic circle. As polar ices melt in the coming years, new shipping routes are expected to open up.

Greenland's Prime Minister Jens Frederik Nielsen responded to Trump by describing the notion of US control over the island as a "fantasy".

"No more pressure. No more insinuations. No more fantasies of annexation. We are open to dialogue. We are open to discussions. But this must happen through the proper channels and with respect for international law," he said.

Any US attempt to seize Greenland would bring it into conflict with another Nato member, likely putting the alliance in peril.

Why does Trump want Greenland and what do its people think?



Colombia

Just hours after the operation in Venezuela, Trump warned Colombian President Gustavo Petro to "watch his ass".

Venezuela's neighbour to the west, Colombia is home to substantial oil reserves and is a major producer of gold, silver, emeralds, platinum and coal.

It is also a key hub for the region's drug trade - most notably cocaine.

Since the US began striking boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific in September - saying, without evidence, they were carrying drugs - Trump has been locked in a spiralling dispute with the country's left-wing president.

The US imposed sanctions on Petro in October, saying he was allowing cartels to "flourish".

Speaking aboard Air Force One on Sunday, Trump said Colombia was being "run by a sick man who likes making cocaine and selling it to the United States".

"He's not going to be doing it for very long", he said. Asked whether the US would carry out an operation targeting Colombia, Trump replied, "It sounds good to me".

Historically, Colombia has been a close ally in Washington's war on drugs, receiving hundreds of millions of dollars annually in military assistance to counter cartels.


Iran

Iran is currently facing mass anti-government protests, and Trump warned overnight that the authorities there would be "hit very hard" if more protesters died.

"We're watching it very closely. If they start killing people like they have in the past, I think they're going to get hit very hard by the United States," he told reporters on Air Force One.

Iran theoretically falls outside the scope defined in the "Donroe Doctrine", but Trump has nonetheless previously threatened the Iranian regime with further action, after striking its nuclear facilities last year.

Those strikes came after Israel launched a large-scale operation aimed at decapitating Iran's capability to develop a nuclear weapon, which culminated in the 12-day Israel-Iran conflict.

In a Mar-a-Lago meeting between Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week, Iran was said to be top of the agenda. US media reported that Netanyahu raised the potential of new strikes against Iran in 2026.


Mexico

Trump's rise to power in 2016 was defined by his calls to "Build the Wall" along the southern border with Mexico.

On his first day back in office in 2025, he signed an executive order to rename the Gulf of Mexico the "Gulf of America".

He has frequently claimed Mexican authorities aren't doing enough to stop the flow of drugs or illegal immigrants into the US.

Speaking on Sunday, he said that drugs were "pouring" through Mexico and "we're gonna have to do something", adding that the cartels there were "very strong."

Trump said he's offered to send US troops to Mexico to combat cartels, but President Claudia Sheinbaum has publicly rejected any US military action on Mexican soil.


Cuba

The island nation, just 90 miles (145 km) south of Florida, has been under US sanctions since the early 1960s.

It held close relations with Nicolás Maduro's Venezuela, which reportedly supplied roughly 30% of Cuba's oil in exchange for doctors and medics travelling in the other direction.

With Maduro gone, Havana could be exposed if oil supply collapses.

Trump suggested on Sunday that US military intervention there wasn't needed, because Cuba is "ready to fall."

"I don't think we need any action", he said. "It looks like it's going down."

"I don't know if they're going to hold out, but Cuba now has no income," he added. "They got all their income from Venezuela, from Venezuelan oil."

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio - who is the son of Cuban immigrants - has long called for regime change in Cuba, telling journalists on Saturday: "If I lived in Havana, and I was in the government, I'd be concerned - at least a little bit".

"When the president speaks, you should take him seriously," he said.


***


Clown is just a marauding predator for oil and mineral sources, just a gluttonous pig ravenous for other people's properties.


Zahid: We won't be bitten by same snake twice, Umno to stay with govt










Zahid: We won't be bitten by same snake twice, Umno to stay with govt


Yiswaree Palansamy
Published: Jan 6, 2026 2:03 PM
Updated: 7:13 PM




Umno president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi has, for the time being, ruled out any return to past political arrangements with the opposition, stressing that the party will remain part of the coalition government until the end of the current parliamentary term and the 16th general election.

Speaking after Umno’s political bureau meeting last night, Zahid said the party had not confirmed any plans to revive old coalitions or political branding that had previously failed, warning against repeating costly political missteps.

He was referring to Muafakat Nasional (MN), a loose and short-lived political alliance formed between Umno and PAS in September 2019, aimed at consolidating the Malay-Muslim vote.

The decision, he said, was reached during an Umno political bureau meeting last night, during which Umno Youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh had presented the resolution reached at last week’s special convention.

During the convention, Akmal had urged Umno to leave the coalition government and assume the role of the opposition to rebuild its strength, stressing that Malay unity must begin with Umno and PAS as the two largest Malay-based parties.

“We do not wish to indulge in nostalgia by using any name that was previously proposed, and nothing has been finalised yet. That is why the details are important, as we do not want to be bitten by the same snake a second time in the same place.”

No ‘secret manoeuvres’

Speaking to reporters after addressing a gathering at the Rural and Regional Development Ministry today, the deputy prime minister also stressed that Umno would not engage in any form of “tebuk atap” manoeuvres to topple the current administration.

The term is often used to refer to covert engineering of defections or backroom manoeuvres to bring down a government or shift power, without going through elections.




“We discussed the issue of whether cooperation should be re-established between Umno-BN and the opposition, particularly between Umno and PAS. As we are aware, there were also suggestions that we should look for an appropriate time to leave the government.

“These matters were examined in detail. Although I listened to all the representatives from the states who put forward their respective views, this still requires careful consideration, as I have held a position from the beginning, and the party has also maintained its position from the start.

“We will never engage in secret manoeuvres against the present government. We will stand together with this unity government until the end of its term. Whenever that term is announced, it will be a sufficient term before the GE16 is held,” Zahid said.

Umno secretary-general Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki has since lauded Zahid’s remarks, noting in a Facebook post that the statement is the result of thorough and comprehensive discussions voiced by the party’s leadership.


Term limit a ‘game changer’

On a separate matter, Zahid also voiced approval for a proposed bill to limit the prime minister’s tenure to no more than 10 years or two full terms, highlighting that such a law is a “game changer” that will prevent a prime minister from “overstaying” their welcome.

“No matter how good they are, a prime minister who stays for too long will lead to saturation effects,” he added.


PM Anwar Ibrahim


Yesterday, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said the bill will be tabled in Parliament sometime this year.

Subsequently, Bersih chairperson Faisal Aziz said if the law is enacted, Malaysia will become the first country practising the Westminster model to impose a term limit on the prime minister’s office.

The Center to Combat Corruption and Cronyism (C4 Center), however, has cautioned that the positive impacts of such a bill might not be effectively realised if existing laws, which allow discretionary and arbitrary powers to be exercised, are not also reformed.


Trump’s abduction of Maduro escalates concerns over potential war with Iran


al Jazeera:

Trump’s abduction of Maduro escalates concerns over potential war with Iran


Experts say US military action in Caracas ‘gives momentum’ for conflict with Tehran and deals another blow to diplomacy


Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei says Iran 'will not give in to the enemy' [File: West Asia News Agency/Handout via Reuters]


By Ali Harb
Published On 5 Jan 2026


Washington, DC – Hours after the United States announced the abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, Israeli politician Yair Lapid issued a warning to Tehran: “The regime in Iran should pay close attention to what is happening in Venezuela.”

The forcible removal of Maduro from power came less than a week after US President Donald Trump met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and threatened to launch new strikes against Iran.

Although Washington’s tensions with Caracas and Tehran have different roots and dynamics, analysts say Trump’s move against Maduro raises the prospects of war with Iran.

“A new lawlessness makes everything less stable and war more likely,” said Jamal Abdi, president of the National Iranian American Council (NIAC).

“Whether Trump becomes enamoured with ‘surgical’ regime change, or gives Netanyahu a US imprimatur for similar actions, it’s hard not to see how this gives momentum for the many actors pushing for renewed war with Iran.”

He added that Maduro’s abduction could prompt Iran “to do something that triggers military action”, including developing its own military deterrence or preempting US or Israeli strikes.

Negar Mortazavi, a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy, also said the US actions in Venezuela show Trump’s maximalist aims, further dimming the chances of diplomacy.

“What I see and hear from Tehran is that they are not interested in negotiating with the Trump administration the way this administration signals that they want total surrender,” Mortazavi told Al Jazeera.

“So, not much chance for diplomacy at the moment, which then opens the path to the opposite road, that is conflict. Right now, Israel, Iran and the US are on a path to potential conflict.”



Bernie Sanders condemns Trump’s attack on Venezuela



Maduro’s wife suffered ‘significant injuries during abduction’: Lawyer


Abdi echoed that assessment. “This action reinforces every doubt and suspicion about US intentions, and gives more credence to those in Iran who say engaging the US is useless and [that] developing a nuclear deterrent is vital,” he told Al Jazeera.


Iran-Venezuela alliance


The US raid that abducted Maduro and brought him to the US came after months of intensifying rhetoric from Trump against the Venezuelan government.

US officials have accused Maduro of leading a drug organisation, and Trump and his aides have been increasingly arguing that Washington is entitled to Venezuela’s vast oil reserves.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio has also been emphasising Maduro’s ties to Iran, accusing Caracas, without evidence, of providing the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah a foothold in the Western Hemisphere.

Maduro is a close ally of Iran, and the two heavily sanctioned countries have been pushing to deepen their trade ties, which are estimated to be in the billions of dollars.

So, with Maduro gone, Iran’s small network of allies may shrink further, after the fall of leader Bashar al-Assad in Syria and the weakening of Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The Iranian government was quick to condemn the US attack on Venezuela, calling on the United Nations to intervene and halt the “unlawful aggression”.

“The US military aggression against an independent state that is a member of the UN represents a grave breach of regional and international peace and security,” the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement.

“Its consequences affect the entire international system and will further expose the UN Charter-based order to erosion and destruction.”



What might the US do next after Venezuela?


On Saturday, Rubio suggested that Maduro’s abduction carried a message to all of Washington’s rivals in the Trump era.

“​​When he tells you that he’s going to do something, when he tells you he’s going to address a problem, he means it,” the top US diplomat told reporters.

But Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei doubled down on his defiant rhetoric after the US raid in Caracas.

“We will not give in to the enemy,” Khamenei wrote in a social media post. “We will bring the enemy to its knees.”


Trump’s threats

Last week, Trump hosted Netanyahu in Florida and threatened to bomb Iran again if the country rebuilds its missile or nuclear programmes.

“Now I hear that Iran is trying to build up again, and if they are, we’re going to have to knock them down,” Trump said. “We’ll knock them down. We’ll knock the hell out of them.”

Israel launched a war against Iran in June, killing the country’s top military commanders, several nuclear scientists and hundreds of civilians.

The US joined in the attack, bombing Iran’s three main nuclear sites.

While Trump has often reiterated that the US strikes “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear programme and celebrated the war as a success, the Iranian governing system survived the assault.

Tehran responded with barrages of hundreds of rockets against Israel, dozens of which penetrated the country’s multi-layered air defences, and Iranian forces were able to keep firing until the final moments of the war, before the ceasefire came into effect.

Some critics argue that regime change was and remains Israel’s goal in Iran, and Trump appears to be increasingly buying into that objective.

On Friday, Trump warned that the US is “locked and loaded” and ready to attack Iran if the Iranian government kills protesters amid the ongoing but sporadic antigovernment demonstrations across the country.

He renewed the same threat late on Sunday. “If they start killing people like they have in the past, I think they’re going to get hit very hard by the United States,” the US president said.

So, could the US carry out a Venezuela-style government decapitation in Iran?

NIAC’s Abdi noted that Israel has already tried to kill the country’s top leaders, including President Masoud Pezeshkian, in June.



Spanish protesters rally near US embassy in Madrid over Venezuela attack


Trump also repeatedly threatened Khamenei with assassination, and Israeli officials confirmed that they sought to “eliminate” the supreme leader during the war.

“Iranian officials have said they accordingly have plans in place so that killing or removing senior leaders does not paralyse or topple the regime,” Abdi said.

“It would be far messier to run a ‘snatch and grab’ operation on Iran, given their ability to retaliate against US interests and personnel.”


Venezuela without Maduro

Even in Venezuela, removing Maduro has not translated into a regime collapse, at least for now.

On Sunday, Vice President Delcy Rodriguez, now Venezuela’s acting president, stressed that Maduro remains the country’s only leader and condemned the US attack.

She also suggested that Israel was involved in the abduction of Maduro, a vocal critic of the US ally.

“Governments around the world are shocked that the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela has become the victim and target of an attack of this nature, which undoubtedly has Zionist undertones,” Rodriguez said.

Trump responded by threatening the acting Venezuelan president, telling The Atlantic magazine that she would pay a “very big price, probably bigger than Maduro” if she did not acquiesce to US demands.

So, the US president’s plans for “running” Venezuela and taking its oil are not complete yet, and will likely require more military action.

“I doubt Venezuela can be a ‘one and done’ or a quick ‘in and out’ situation, which is Trump’s favourite model. His brand is that he engages in quick shows of force, not forever wars,” Mortazavi said.

She cited swift operations that Trump has ordered, including the killing of ISIL (ISIS) leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in 2019, the assassination of top Iranian General Qassem Soleimani in 2020, and the attack on Iran’s nuclear sites in June.

“Most Americans are tired of forever wars, especially in the Middle East, so the Trump administration knows they can’t sell more forever wars to Americans,” Mortazavi said.



Photo of Maduro bound and blindfolded posted by Trump sparks condemnation


But Trump has already floated the prospect of a ground invasion of Venezuela.

“We’re not afraid of boots on the ground,” he said. “We don’t mind saying it, but we’re going to make sure that that country is run properly. We’re not doing this in vain.”

Abdi said that a long-term US involvement in Venezuela could indirectly stave off war with Iran.

“There is also the possibility that the US gets bogged down in ‘running’ Venezuela and doesn’t have the bandwidth to wage, or to support Israel launching, the next Iran war,” he told Al Jazeera.

“Iran was next on the menu after the US invaded Iraq in 2003, and we know what happened there, and Trump may not want to pronounce ‘mission accomplished’ just yet.”


The oil question

Still, some critics – including Republican US Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene – have argued that if the US succeeds in controlling Venezuela’s oil resources, it will be able to offset energy market disruptions from a possible war with Iran.

“The next obvious observation is that, by removing Maduro, this is a clear move for control over Venezuelan oil supplies that will ensure stability for the next obvious regime change war in Iran,” Greene wrote on X on Saturday.

About 20 percent of the world’s oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran may push to shut down in the case of an all-out war.

Abdi said that Venezuelan oil “could theoretically provide some cushion” to the loss of exports from the Gulf region.

“But this would mean a lot of things going right for the US in Venezuela, and it is probably far too soon to make that judgement,” he said.


***


At the bottom of it all, is OIL OIL OIL and Wankee avarice


Zahid rejects ‘backdoor’ move, says Umno staying put in unity govt





Zahid rejects ‘backdoor’ move, says Umno staying put in unity govt



The Umno president said the party will remain in the unity government until the next general election. — Bernama pic

Tuesday, 06 Jan 2026 11:42 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 6 — Umno will remain part of the unity government until the next general election, party president Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said today, dismissing renewed calls from within the party for it to withdraw support and shift to the Opposition.

Ahmad Zahid, who is also deputy prime minister, said Umno would not abandon its coalition partners in the unity government and reiterated that the party had never considered engineering a so-called “backdoor” move.

“From the start, we have never considered quitting the current government, and we will remain part of this unity government until the end of its term,” he told a press conference at the Rural and Regional Development Ministry in Putrajaya, according to FMT.

He acknowledged that proposals had previously been raised — including suggestions from state representatives to revive cooperation with the Opposition, particularly PAS, under the now-defunct Muafakat Nasional framework — but said such ideas had been examined and rejected.


“There were discussions about reviving cooperation between Umno-BN and the Opposition, especially between Umno and PAS, including suggestions that we look for a suitable time to leave the current government,” he was quoted as saying by Buletin TV3.

“However, from the very beginning, both I and the party have maintained the position that we will never engage in a ‘backdoor’ move against the current government, and that we will remain with the unity government until the end of its term.”

His remarks come amid public calls by Umno Youth chief Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh for the party to withdraw its support for the unity government and join the Opposition bloc, citing what he described as repeated violations of “red lines” involving race, religion and royalty, or the 3R issues.


Thai army says Cambodia border strike wounds soldier, violates truce


FMT:

Thai army says Cambodia border strike wounds soldier, violates truce

The Thai side accused Cambodian forces of firing mortar rounds into Thailand’s Ubon Ratchathani province, wounding a soldier


A file picture of the Royal Thai Army soldiers on armoured vehicles. (AFP pic)



BANGKOK: Thailand’s army said Cambodian forces violated a 10-day-old truce on Tuesday, bombarding a border province with mortars that wounded one soldier.

“Cambodia has violated the ceasefire” on Tuesday morning, the Thai army said in a statement, accusing Cambodian forces of firing mortar rounds into Thailand’s Ubon Ratchathani province.

One soldier was wounded by shrapnel and being evacuated for medical treatment, it added.


The decades-old dispute between the Southeast Asian neighbours erupted into military clashes several times last year, with fighting in December killing dozens of people and displacing around one million on both sides.

The two countries agreed a truce on Dec 27, ending three weeks of clashes.


Cambodia’s defence ministry spokeswoman Maly Socheata declined to comment on the alleged strike on Tuesday.

The nations’ long-standing conflict stems from a dispute over the colonial-era demarcation of their 800-kilometre (500-mile) border, where both sides claim territory and centuries-old temple ruins.

Under the December truce, Cambodia and Thailand pledged to cease fire, freeze troop movements and cooperate on demining efforts along their border.

Bangkok also agreed to releasd 18 Cambodian soldiers held since July when deadly border clashes that month killed dozens of people.


Thailand freed the Cambodian soldiers on Dec 31, with its foreign ministry saying their release was “a demonstration of goodwill and confidence-building”.

Phnom Penh said last week it remained “hopeful” that their release would “significantly contribute to building mutual trust”.

The United States, China and Malaysia had brokered a truce to end the fighting between Cambodia and Thailand in July, but that ceasefire was short-lived.

In October, US President Donald Trump jetted to Malaysia to oversee the signing of a follow-on declaration, touting new trade deals after the neighbours agreed to prolong their truce.


But Bangkok suspended the agreement the following month, after Thai soldiers were wounded by landmines while on patrol at the border.

On Saturday, one week after the December truce went into effect, Cambodia called on Thailand to pull out its forces from several border areas Phnom Penh claims as its own.

The Thai military has rejected claims it had used force to seize Cambodia territory, insisting its forces were present in areas that had always belonged to Thailand.

While the two nations agreed late last month to stop fighting, they still need to resolve the demarcation of their disputed border.

Cambodia’s defence ministry said in a statement Tuesday morning that Phnom Penh had proposed a bilateral border committee meeting with Thai counterparts to be held in Cambodia’s Siem Reap province this month.

Bangkok has said previously that meetings to discuss border surveying and demarcation may need to be held by Thailand’s next government, following elections scheduled for Feb 8.


Akmal’s Umno–PAS push driven by personal ambition, risks weakening party unity, analysts warn





Umno Youth chief Datuk Dr Akmal Saleh speaking at the Umno Youth Convention, where his call for the party to leave the Unity Government drew criticism from political analysts. - Bernama file pic, January 6, 2026


Akmal’s Umno–PAS push driven by personal ambition, risks weakening party unity, analysts warn


Political analysts caution that Umno Youth chief Datuk Dr Akmal Saleh’s call to revive cooperation with PAS reflects personal political ambitions rather than party consensus, warning it could undermine Umno’s stability, multiracial identity, and position within the Unity Government



Sandru Narayanan
Updated 59 minutes ago
6 January, 2026
8:00 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR — Umno Youth chief Datuk Dr Akmal Saleh should stop pushing a narrow political agenda that risks undermining the party, political analysts said, following his call for Umno to leave the Unity Government and revive cooperation with PAS.

Speaking to Scoop, analysts described Akmal’s remarks at the Umno Youth Convention as politically unrealistic and out of step with the thinking of the party’s top leadership, warning that such rhetoric could weaken Umno and further erode Barisan Nasional’s multiracial foundation.

Their comments came after Akmal suggested that Umno should reconsider its role in the Unity Government, arguing that Malay interests were being sidelined and that renewed ties with PAS could strengthen the party’s position.

Professor Syaza Shukri of the International Islamic University of Malaysia said there was little indication that Umno’s senior leadership was prepared to act on the proposal, noting that the party currently enjoyed influence and stability within the government.


Professor Syaza Shukri of the International Islamic University of Malaysia. – LinkedIn pic, January 6, 2026


“At the leadership level, the approach is to manage the narrative — they listen to grassroots views but do not act rashly by leaving the government,” she said.

Syaza said calls for closer Umno–PAS ties reflected persistent unease among Umno supporters over cooperation with Pakatan Harapan, but warned that the strategy carried clear trade-offs.

“While Umno and PAS could continue promoting the Malay agenda, Umno also risks being seen as unable to move beyond identity politics,” she said.

She added that any formal cooperation with PAS would fundamentally alter Barisan Nasional’s positioning.

“BN would increasingly be viewed as Malay-centric, rendering its other component parties irrelevant,” she said.

Syaza also cautioned that leaving the Unity Government would place Umno in direct competition with PAS for Malay support — a contest she said currently favoured PAS — even though such cooperation could reduce fragmentation of the Malay vote.

She noted that the Unity Government could still function with the backing of GPS and GRS, albeit with those blocs wielding greater influence.


Associate Professor Awang Azman Pawi of Universiti Malaya. – Sosial media pic, January 6, 2026


Associate Professor Awang Azman Pawi of Universiti Malaya urged Umno to adopt a rational and measured approach rather than respond to internal pressure or populist sentiment.

He described the proposal to exit the Unity Government as impractical, warning that it could jeopardise Umno’s efforts to rebuild and remain electorally viable.

“From a political realism standpoint, Umno Youth’s proposal to leave the Unity Government is impractical and almost impossible to implement,” Awang Azman said.

“There is no strong indication that the party president or the Supreme Council is prepared to support such a drastic move.”

Awang Azman also highlighted the risks of reviving Umno–PAS cooperation, citing past difficulties under Muafakat Nasional and PAS’s current political alignment.

“The Muafakat Nasional experience showed that clashes of ego, seat negotiations and differences in political culture are difficult to reconcile,” he said.

“Any unilateral shift towards Malay-Islam politics would weaken Barisan Nasional’s multiracial credentials and place MCA and MIC under serious pressure.”


Senior political analyst Lau Zhe Wei of the International Islamic University of Malaysia. – Social media pic, January 6, 2026


Senior political analyst Lau Zhe Wei of the International Islamic University of Malaysia said Akmal’s remarks carried limited weight within Umno’s decision-making structure and were driven largely by personal political ambition.

“It is quite clear that he is making these statements to serve his own political agenda — nothing more than that,” Lau said, noting that Akmal was not part of the Cabinet.

Lau added that Umno Youth needed to recognise that contemporary politics was less about seat counts and more about influence and governance, arguing that Umno’s presence or absence in the Madani government would not fundamentally alter the current balance of power. – January 6, 2026