Saturday, March 07, 2026

Manja so much it ends up killing others












Zan Azlee
Published: Mar 7, 2026 3:49 PM
Updated: 6:49 PM




COMMENT | Look, I’m a parent, and I have to admit that I do manja (dote) my kids every now and then. It’s the Malaysian concept of spoiling our kids rotten.

We manja them by letting them stay up past midnight to watch a movie, we buy them smartphones and tablets, and, apparently, we now also hand them the car keys before they’ve even figured out how to drive.

But here’s the thing about being manja though. When it happens behind the wheel of a heavy piece of metal with wheels and an engine inside, it stops being affection and love and becomes plain stupidity and parental neglect.

You must have read the headlines by now, right?

Let’s start with the news that made everyone’s blood pressure go up this week. The 41-year-old mother in Negeri Sembilan was fined RM1,500 for allowing her 17-year-old son to drive her car without a licence. Yes, you read that right.

RM1,500 sounds like a lot of money. You can buy a lot of nasi lemak. It’s also a pretty decent weekend getaway to Port Dickson or even Malacca. But the problem here is that the offence actually caused a horrific crash that killed three teenagers.




Three lives gone, just like that. Three families who will never have a normal Hari Raya this year or ever again, and the price tag for the adult who essentially enabled the whole thing is only RM1,500.

That’s less than the price of a mid-range smartphone.


‘Feeling unwell’, ‘talk to my dad’


Even more recently, news in Kedah made the headlines when a 13-year-old boy was caught by the Road Transport Department (RTD) driving his father, who was in the passenger seat.

The boy’s defence was just pure gold. He told the RTD officers that he had no choice because his father was feeling unwell and couldn’t drive, but still needed to do some errands.





I’m very happy that the son has that sense of responsibility to help his father, but let’s just take a beat here. If you’re too sick to drive a car, as a father, the solution isn’t to promote your Form One kid to be the driver.

What does he actually mean by having no choice? We live in the era of a myriad of e-hailing apps like Grab and Bolt. We can also ask a neighbour or an adult relative to drive. If we really need to, we also have ambulances.

Whatever it is, it is sheer common sense to realise that a 13-year-old driving a car is a disaster.

This isn’t really a new phenomenon. Back in 2024, a 12-year-old kid in Puchong was caught joyriding in his father’s car with two of his younger siblings, who were six and four years old, in the back.





This one is my personal favourite because apparently, when a neighbour stopped them to give a warning, the kid just told her to speak to his father! Both father and son were eventually charged with underage driving and child neglect, respectively.


It’s about telling your kids ‘no’

I’ll admit that I’m far from being a perfect parent. My kids probably have enough dirt on me to write their own exposé in the media. But if there’s one thing I’m absolutely strict about is not allowing them to drive.

Come on! They are 15, 11, and seven years old. Of course, the answer would be no.

Being a parent isn’t about being your kid’s best friend or the cool father. It’s about being the person who says “no” to them so they live long enough to eventually say “no” to their own kids.

So why does this keep happening? It’s probably because of our “it’s okaylah” mentality. We apply it to everything, from politics to child rearing, without realising how dangerous it can be, and no excuse is justifiable.





“It’s okaylah. He’s just going to buy me santan at the shop.”

“It’s okaylah. It’s just in the taman. There aren’t a lot of cars around.”

“It’s okaylah. I’m sitting right next to him, I can pull the handbrake if anything happens.”

We can’t always rely on the authorities to curb this dangerous behaviour. The responsibility doesn’t start at a roadblock; it starts at home. It starts with a parent who will say “no” even when it’s inconvenient, or even when you’re “unwell”.

A car is not a toy. If you hand it to an unlicensed minor, it turns into a dangerous weapon that can end up killing people, as already proven. And RM1,500 is a pittance and a slap in the face to every family that has lost a child to a road accident.

If we don’t stop being so manja with our negligence towards our children and start treating these incidents as the huge parental failures they actually are, then we’re just waiting for the next horrible incident to happen.



ZAN AZLEE is a writer, documentary filmmaker, journalist and academic. Visit fatbidin.com to view his work.


***


Many offenders failed to consider the consequences and the repercussions, a few of which could result in the death sentence.

I remember a Sing case aeons ago where a road rage bully (ex boyfriend) was indeed sentenced to death.


Cracks in Bersatu, PN widen as Ronald expects the boot










Cracks in Bersatu, PN widen as Ronald expects the boot


Alyaa Alhadjri & Hariz Mohd
Published: Mar 7, 2026 8:00 PM
Updated: 11:00 PM



Ahead of a decision by the Bersatu disciplinary board on a show-cause letter issued to him, party vice-president Ronald Kiandee expects he will end up in the same boat as Hamzah Zainudin, who was sacked as deputy president and expelled.

Speaking to Malaysiakini, the Beluran MP repeated claims that the disciplinary board has been transformed into a “political tool” to advance the agenda of a select few.

“The party now seems to exist only to elevate the president as the prime minister candidate, and anyone who questions this agenda must be removed from the party.

“They have already done this to Hamzah and several other leaders,” he claimed, referring to an internal purge last month which saw Hamzah and 16 others sacked from the party over various alleged offences.

On Feb 14, a day after the decision, Ronald hosted a function in which Hamzah launched his “Reset” movement, attended by hundreds of supporters, which sparked further resignations nationwide.


Hamzah Zainudin


Before the function, Bersatu secretary-general Azmin Ali 😂😂😂 warned of disciplinary action against party members who attended any gathering in support of Hamzah.

“So, I am certain the same action (sacking) will be taken against others, including the 13 MPs who expressed support for Hamzah to remain as opposition leader,” said Ronald, who remains Bersatu’s parliamentary whip.


‘I’ll submit resignation letter to new PN chief’

Both Ronald and Bersatu Women’s chief Mas Ermieyati Samsudin told Malaysiakini they will not respond to the show-cause letter issued against them when the seven-day deadline expires today.

“Yes, I did not reply,” said Mas Ermieyati, who remains as Masjid Tanah MP but had resigned as the division chief.

In a social media post today, Mas Ermieyati also announced her resignation as Malacca Perikatan Nasional chief.


Bersatu Women’s chief Mas Ermieyati Samsudin


“I will submit my official letter to the new PN chairperson, Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar, in the near future.

“I am ready to cooperate with Malacca PN to offer the best proposal for the state,” she said, referring to the state election due this year.

Mas Ermieyati added that she will respect and cooperate with her successor appointed by the PN leadership.

“I am ready to cooperate with the replacement leader from any party within PN, including PAS, Bersatu, Gerakan, and MIPP, who is chosen by the leadership,” she said.


Hamzah’s next step?

Since his sacking, Hamzah has largely remained silent on his next political move, but last week reportedly hinted at a potential takeover of an entity named “Parti Keluarga Malaysia”.

The purported takeover was revealed after Berita Harian reported Parti Keluarga Malaysia founder Khairi Jaya as claiming that the move is “almost 90 percent certain” based on recent discussions with Hamzah and Tasek Gelugor MP Wan Saiful Wan Jan.


Tasek Gelugor MP Wan Saiful Wan Jan


Before the revelation, Parti Berjasa Malaysia (Berjasa) had dismissed rumours of Hamzah eyeing a takeover of the party. Two other Malay-based parties, Putra and Pejuang, also denied having such discussions with Hamzah.

“There has been no discussion between Hamzah and us for him to join Pejuang,” Pejuang president Mukhriz Mahathir told Malaysiakini today, while Putra president Ibrahim Ali denied making any offer to the parliamentary opposition leader.

Since then, Hamzah also reportedly voiced intentions to remain in cooperation with PN, a move dismissed by his “number one enemy”, Bersatu president Muhyiddin Yassin.

Responding to Muhyiddin, Hamzah questioned the Pagoh MP’s remarks, made during a recent interview with selected media organisations.


Bersatu president Muhyiddin Yassin


“He said I cannot become a PN member. Who is he to determine that?

“I want to ask him - if I can become a PN member, will he resign?

“If he says he will step down, I will try my best to become a PN member so that he can resign,” said Hamzah, who was a guest of honour at a function hosted by Bersatu Port Dickson last night, as reported by Sinar Harian.


‘Exodus shows Muhyiddin’s lack of support’

According to the Malay daily, Hamzah said he did not expect many leaders within Bersatu to support him after he was expelled from the party.

He insisted that the support indirectly shows that the party under Muhyiddin’s leadership no longer enjoys the backing of its division leaders.





“I was informed that more than 60 divisions have been dissolved.

“If I were the president, even if I were the party’s founder, if so many people have left, that shows the party no longer has the support of its division leaders,” he claimed.

Azmin and Bersatu information chief Tun Faisal Ismail Aziz had previously insisted that the divisions remain intact despite mass resignations, and new office bearers will replace those who left.

Meanwhile, the ties between Bersatu and PAS seem to be further strained as Muhyiddin and Samsuri took swipes at each other.

This came after Muhyiddin asserted that the PAS vice-president is not the opposition’s prime ministerial candidate.

The Pagoh MP’s remark prompted Samsuri to reply with a public statement saying that Muhyiddin was “also no longer the prime minister candidate”.


Britain ‘ready to support’ Saudi defence, says Starmer


FMT:

Britain ‘ready to support’ Saudi defence, says Starmer


The UK will send four Typhoon jets to Qatar and deploy HMS Dragon for defensive operations


Keir Starmer has come under fire from some opposition voices at home who accuse him of being too slow to respond to the Middle East war. (EPA Images pic)


LONDON: Britain is ready to help defend Saudi Arabia, prime minister Keir Starmer told the kingdom’s de facto leader in a call on Friday as the Middle East war escalates.

The conflict that began with US-Israeli strikes on Iran, killing the Islamic republic’s supreme leader, is now in its seventh day, drawing in nations beyond the region and causing havoc in the energy and transport sectors.

Countries around the Gulf have been hit by strikes, with Saudi Arabia – a longstanding rival of Iran – reporting it had intercepted a cruise missile and three drones on Friday.


Starmer spoke to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and assured him “the UK stood ready to support the defence of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia should it be needed,” the PM’s spokeswoman said.

“The leaders also discussed stepping up intelligence cooperation to support defensive operations and protect civilians,” the spokeswoman said.

Britain is sending four extra Typhoon fighter jets to Qatar to strengthen “defensive operations” and will also deploy HMS Dragon, an air defence destroyer, though it is not expected to sail until next week.

A British air force base in Cyprus came under attack from an Iranian-made drone on Monday – probably launched from Lebanon by the pro-Iranian group Hezbollah, according to the Cypriot government.

Starmer has come under fire from some opposition voices at home who accuse him of being too slow to respond to the Middle East war.


***


Au contraire, I believe Starmer is responding correctly, that is, cautiously and without undue haste. Why should the UK be involved in an Israeli-prompted war?


US downplays reports Russia gave Iran intel to help Tehran strike US assets




US downplays reports Russia gave Iran intel to help Tehran strike US assets

Pentagon asserts US forces are tracking Russian-Iranian operations amid escalating conflict in the region


US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth [File: AFP]



By Al Jazeera Staff, AFP and AP
Published On 7 Mar 2026



Washington has downplayed reports that Russia is sharing intelligence with Iran about United States targets across the Middle East amid the burgeoning US-Israel war on Iran, first reported by The Washington Post.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, in a CBS 60 Minutes interview on Friday, said the US is “tracking everything” and factoring it into battle plans when asked about the reports Moscow was aiding Tehran.

Since the war began on February 28, Russia has passed Iran the locations of US military assets, including warships and aircraft, three officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, told The Washington Post.

“It does seem like it’s a pretty comprehensive effort,” one of the sources told the newspaper.

Meanwhile, anonymous officials told The Associated Press news agency that US intelligence has not uncovered that Russia is directing Iran on what to do with the information, as the US and Israel continue their bombardment and Iran fires retaliatory salvoes at US assets and allies in the Gulf.

Hegseth said the United States is “not concerned” about the reports, also downplaying the possibility that Russia’s assistance could be putting US citizens in harm’s way.

“The American people can rest assured their commander-in-chief is well aware of who’s talking to who,” Hegseth said.

“And anything that shouldn’t be happening, whether it’s in public or back-channelled, is being confronted and confronted strongly.”

He continued: “We’re putting the other guys in danger, and that’s our job. So we’re not concerned about that. But the only ones that need to be worried right now are Iranians that think they’re gonna live.”

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt on Friday also claimed to reporters that “[the report] clearly is not making any difference with respect to the military operations in Iran because we are completely decimating them.”

Leavitt declined to say if Trump had spoken to Russian President Vladimir Putin about the reported intelligence sharing or whether he believed Russia should face repercussions, saying she would let the president speak to that himself.



Why did the US torpedo Iran’s ‘prize’ warship?



Indonesians protest Iran war, pressure president over US ties


First signs of Moscow’s involvement

Trump, for his part, on Friday evening berated a reporter for raising the matter of the report when he opened the floor to questions from the media at the end of a White House meeting about how paying student-athletes has recalibrated college sports.

“I have a lot of respect for you, you’ve always been very nice to me,” the US president said to Peter Doocy, the Fox News reporter.

“What a stupid question that is to be asking at this time. We’re talking about something else.”

The intelligence is the first indication that Moscow has sought to get involved in the war that the US and Israel launched on Iran a week ago.

Asked whether Russia would go beyond political support and offer military assistance to Iran, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said there has been no such request from Tehran.

“We are in dialogue with the Iranian side, with representatives of the Iranian leadership, and will certainly continue this dialogue,” he said on Friday.

Pushed on whether Moscow has provided any military or intelligence assistance to Tehran since the Iran war’s start, he refrained from comment.

Russia has tightened its relationship with Iran as it looked for badly needed missiles and drones to use in its four-year war against Ukraine. But the pair have long maintained friendly relations, even while Tehran has faced years of isolation from the West over its nuclear programme and its support of proxy groups in the Middle East.


Indonesian president’s US ties questioned amid public anger over Iran war





Indonesian president’s US ties questioned amid public anger over Iran war

Calls grow at home for leader of the world’s largest Muslim country to distance from Washington amid US-Israel war on Iran



Indonesia protests: President under pressure over ties to United States


By Al Jazeera
Published On 7 Mar 2026



When the United States-Israeli attack on Iran was launched last weekend, an unexpected peace broker stepped forward in the form of Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, leader of the world’s largest Muslim country.

The Indonesian Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced on social media: “Indonesia calls on all parties to exercise restraint and to prioritize dialogue and diplomacy.

“If agreed by both parties, the President of Indonesia is prepared to travel to Tehran to carry out mediation,” it said.

But President Prabowo’s offer to help mediate between the sides has provoked debate across Indonesia, coming at a time of increased criticism of his approach to foreign policy and warm ties with the Trump administration.

“I’m puzzled as to why this idea wasn’t vetted before being made public,” Dino Patti Djalal, Indonesia’s former deputy foreign minister and former ambassador to the US, said in a statement on Instagram.

“It is highly unrealistic,” Djalal said.

Others agreed, adding that the offer could further alienate Indonesians already wary of the president’s perceived cordial relationship with US President Donald Trump.

“It is clear that any negotiations between Iran and the US have completely ended, so to propose this seems to be not reading the room,” Ian Wilson, a lecturer in politics and security studies at Murdoch University in Perth, Australia, told Al Jazeera.

“Domestically, people are likely to interpret this as a further alignment with Trump and therefore Netanyahu,” Wilson said.

In recent months, Prabowo has faced domestic scrutiny after volunteering to deploy 8,000 Indonesian troops to Gaza as part of an International Stabilization Force under the umbrella of Trump’s Board of Peace (BOP) – a so-called “international peacekeeping” organisation of which Israel is also a member.

Indonesia does not have any formal diplomatic relations with Israel, and has long supported an independent Palestine.

Joining Trump’s board and offering to participate in the US president’s plan for Gaza has not gone down well domestically.

“Indonesia is being used to legitimise the BOP’s dystopian plan to divide Gaza into quadrants and bypass the role of the United Nations,” Wilson said.

“For Indonesia to be involved fundamentally betrays its longstanding tradition of being a principled voice for the Global South, and its approach to foreign policy, which historically has been deeply respected,” he said.



Indonesia to send troops to Gaza: Protesters demand president withdraw his involvement



Trump-Netanyahu’s 'war in search of a strategy'


‘Bebas-aktif’ – ‘independent and active’

Indonesia was one of the founding members of the Non-Aligned Movement during the Cold War, which saw the country adhere to a “bebas-aktif” or “independent and active” approach to foreign policy for decades, avoiding the major power blocs while actively working for peace and the national interest.

Over the years, this has included Indonesia’s attempts to broker peace in a number of global conflicts, including the Russia-Ukraine war.

But Indonesia’s membership of Trump’s Board of Peace amid Israel’s genocide in Gaza, and now the joint US-Israeli attack on Iran, could present an unprecedented test for Prabowo’s approach to foreign policy, experts said.

“The Foreign Ministry’s statement on the attack was regrettably naive,” said Sarbini Abdul Murad, director of the humanitarian group, Indonesia for Peace and Humanity.

While the president had offered to mediate, little was said about the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Sarbini said, pointing out that neighbouring Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim had condemned the assassination of Khamenei by US and Israeli forces.

“The death of Ali Khamenei went unanswered,” he said

“Indonesia is at a crossroads in its foreign policy,” Sarbini added.

Indonesia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Sugiono – who, like many Indonesians, uses a single name – said in a post on social media on Wednesday that Prabowo had expressed his deepest condolences to Iranian President Masoud Pezehkian on “the passing” of Khamenei.


‘Many Indonesians sympathise with Iran’

While Indonesia has entrenched support for Palestine, the relationship with Iran is rather more complicated.
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About 87 percent of the country’s 270 million population follows Islam, and the majority of Indonesia’s Muslims are Sunni.

Iran has the world’s largest Shia population, which follows a different branch of Islamic theology with differing views on aspects of Islamic political theory and history.

“Previously, there was anti-Shia sentiment among Sunni in Indonesia,” said Made Supriatma, a visiting fellow with the Indonesia Studies Programme at the ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore.

“However, many Indonesians sympathise with Iran. This is not always out of solidarity with fellow Muslims, but rather because of anti-Israel and anti-American sentiment, which has long been high,” Supriatma said.

Though many Indonesians support Iran, it is not on the same scale as Palestine, when thousands of people attended demonstrations across Indonesia at the start of the genocidal war on Gaza. Protests against the current war on Iran are mostly confined to “chatter on social media”, Supriatma said.

Many Indonesians have expressed sympathy for Iran and anger towards the US for what they see as an unprovoked attack on Iran, said Yohanes Sulaiman, a lecturer in politics, security and foreign policy at Indonesia’s Universitas Jenderal Achmad Yani.


A mourner poses next to a portrait of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in US-Israel strikes, during the signing of a petition committing to international justice values, held at the Iranian ambassador’s residence in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 5, 2026 [Bay Ismoyo/AFP]


But many are likely unaware of what is taking place inside Iran, including the “anti-regime protests” that recently shook the country, Sulaiman said.

Indonesian housewife Arisha Ishana said she had indeed not heard about any demonstrations in Iran. Despite this, Ishana told Al Jazeera that she supported Iran in the conflict “because they are fellow Muslims”.

Ramadhan, a barista, said he supported Iran’s right to defend itself.

“This conflict was not started by Iran, but by the US and Israel,” he told Al Jazeera, adding that his feelings were not guided by his faith as a Muslim.

“For me, it is not about religion, but about humanity,” he said.

He added that he had been particularly upset by the bombing of a girls’ school in Minab in southern Iran on Saturday, which killed 165 students and staff.



Iran mourns 165 girls, staff killed in US-Israel strike on Minab school


Prabowo to ‘evaluate’ Indonesian role in Gaza plan

Neither the US nor officials in Iran have publicly commented on Prabowo’s mediation offer, although the Iranian ambassador to Indonesia expressed diplomatic appreciation.

Speaking at a news conference on Monday, Ambassador Mohammad Boroujerdi welcomed the offer of mediation but explained that “no steps” had been taken to make it a reality, and lamented that negotiations would likely be fruitless.

“We believe that currently, no negotiations and discussions with the American government will be useful, because they are not bound and do not adhere to any outcomes,” Boroujerdi said.

With growing resentment towards the US among Indonesians generally, and Trump’s Board of Peace and Prabowo’s role in it specifically, researcher Supriatma said the president appeared to be trying to garner support from members of Indonesia’s political elite.

On Tuesday, Prabowo convened a meeting attended by former presidents, vice presidents and political leaders, reportedly to assess the geopolitical and economic impact of the Iranian conflict.

Following the meeting, which ran for more than three hours, according to official reports, Indonesia’s former Foreign Minister Hassan Wirajuda told local media that Prabowo was willing to “evaluate” Indonesia’s role in Trump’s peace board, following the latest events in Iran.

Supriatma said the president appears “cornered” by his own foreign policy decisions.

“He can’t explain why Indonesia needs to join the BOP and, in my view, he doesn’t have a clear stance on Indonesia’s position on the United States and Israel,” Supriatma said.

“His pro-American position and seemingly tolerant approach to Israel is indeed not popular in Indonesia,” he said.

“But how long will this last? That is the question,” he added.

“Can Prabowo maintain his current stance when footage of children dying from Israeli and American bombs is being widely circulated?”


Israel intensifies strikes on Lebanon with major raids on east


FMT:

Israel intensifies strikes on Lebanon with major raids on east


The strikes on Nabi Sheet in eastern Lebanon's Baalbek district killed at least nine people and wounded 17 on Friday


Smoke and flames rise following an Israeli airstrike on Dahieh, a predominantly Shia Muslim suburb in the south of Beirut. (EPA Images pic)


BEIRUT: Israeli air strikes battered Lebanon on Friday, including at least 12 in the eastern Baalbek district that killed nine people, the health ministry and state media said.

Lebanon has been engulfed by the expanding Middle East war after the Iran-backed group Hezbollah on Monday fired missiles at Israel to avenge the death of Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei.

Israeli strikes on Nabi Sheet in eastern Lebanon’s Baalbek district killed at least nine people and wounded 17 on Friday, the health ministry said in a preliminary toll, as state media reported at least 12 strikes on the area.


“Rescue and debris removal operations are ongoing” to search for missing people, the ministry added.

Earlier Friday, it had said that the war on its fifth day had killed at least 217 people.


Lebanese state media reported a renewal of Israeli strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs Friday afternoon, following night raids that left heavy damage in the area after residents fled en masse in response to Israeli evacuation warnings.

Israel says it has killed “over 70” members of the Iran-backed Hezbollah group.

A live broadcast by AFP showed plumes of smoke rising above buildings in Beirut’s southern suburbs, a typically densely populated area where Hezbollah holds sway.

Speaking to foreign ambassadors, prime minister Nawaf Salam said “the consequences of this displacement, at the humanitarian and political level, may well be unprecedented.”

According to Lebanese authorities, at least 217 people have been killed and 798 wounded since Israel’s expanded attacks on Monday, with more than 95,000 people displaced.

“Our country has been drawn into a devastating war that we did not seek and did not choose,” Salam said.

On Monday, the Lebanese government banned Hezbollah’s military activities after it launched rockets on Israel to “avenge” Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, pulling Lebanon into the Middle East war.

On Friday, in a message posted in Hebrew on the group’s Telegram channels, Hezbollah told Israelis to evacuate all localities “located within 5km of the border”.


UN

Israel has continued to strike dozens of areas in southern and eastern Lebanon, including Sidon, where five people were killed according to Lebanon’s health ministry.

An AFP photographer at the scene saw extensive damage in the targeted apartment and shattered glass on the street.

Rescue workers, meanwhile, recovered a body from under the rubble and collected body parts scattered around the area.

Further south in Tyre, home to a Unesco World Heritage site, the NNA reported a major strike.

Later on Friday, the Ghanaian military said that two of its UN peacekeepers were “critically injured” and one peacekeeper was “traumatised” when their headquarters in southern Lebanon was hit by two missiles, without specifying the source.

In a statement, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun condemned Israeli attacks on Lebanon which he said “continue to escalate”, adding that they had “even reached the point of a direct assault on Unifil”.


Southern suburbs


The Israeli military said Friday it had carried out 26 waves of strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs in the past four days.

It added that Hezbollah had fired around 70 rockets toward Israel since midnight and that the Lebanese group had launched coordinated attacks with Iran on Thursday.

Rubble and dust covered a main road in one neighbourhood of Beirut’s suburbs Friday, while the buildings surrounding it were heavily damaged, AFPTV footage showed.

After the Israeli evacuation warning on Thursday afternoon, there was a mass exodus from the area, whose population is estimated at between 600,000 and 800,000.

Mohammad, 39, a resident of the southern suburbs, fled with his family when the bombing began on Monday.

Returning on Thursday to check on his home and collect belongings just minutes before the Israeli evacuation warning, he said he “went down and found total chaos”.

Fatima al-Masri, 45, also escaped the southern suburbs and has been sheltering in central Beirut’s Martyrs’ Square for four days.

“We want to eat and drink… we want to go to the bathroom,” she said, adding that she “came here because the schools are full”.


Strikes on south

Since Monday, Israel has ordered the evacuation of hundreds of square kilometres of southern Lebanon and sent ground forces across the border.

The Israeli army chief on Thursday said he ordered forces deployed in southern Lebanon to expand their control inside the area.

Hezbollah, for its part, claimed on Friday new attacks against northern Israel, including one the day before on a naval base in Haifa.

Hezbollah also announced at dawn on Friday that it had targeted a cluster of Israeli vehicles advancing toward the town of Khiam, about 6km (four miles) from the border, and “forced them to retreat”.

It also claimed attacks on Israeli border posts in Lebanon.


Former Rafizi aide James Chai appoints lawyers as MACC seeks his cooperation in probe





Former Rafizi aide James Chai appoints lawyers as MACC seeks his cooperation in probe



James Chai, who is currently working in the United Kingdom, said he has appointed lawyers in relation to the MACC investigation. — Picture from Facebook/James Chai

Saturday, 07 Mar 2026 8:34 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, March 7 — An ex-aide to former economy minister Datuk Seri Rafizi Ramli has appointed two lawyers to assist him in relation to an investigation by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC).

James Chai, who is currently working in the United Kingdom, said his lawyers would contact MACC to arrange a session for him to give a statement to ensure the investigation is conducted professionally and fairly.

“I am ready to provide full cooperation to the MACC in accordance with the laws and procedures in place,” he said in a statement last night.

Earlier, MACC had asked Chai to immediately contact the investigating officer and return to Malaysia to assist in the investigation.

On March 4, the commission said it was trying to locate Chai to assist in its investigation.

MACC said investigating officers had made several attempts to contact him before issuing the notice, and that the phone number of one officer was blocked by Chai on WhatsApp on February 26.

Chai said the notice was the first time he became aware that the MACC intended to record his statement, adding that he had been waiting for an official notice since the agency published a notice seeking to locate him on March 4.

Regarding WhatsApp, Chai said the first message he received from any channel representing MACC came on the night of March 5, from users named “~Radio” and “~علي محمد”, requesting that he give a statement.

On the allegation that he blocked a number, Chai said he usually blocks suspicious or unknown numbers due to the prevalence of cyber scams, particularly scams involving individuals impersonating authorities.


FAM to face AFC disciplinary panel over heritage player case


FMT:

FAM to face AFC disciplinary panel over heritage player case


The Asian Football Confederation decision came after the international sports court reduced a penalty on seven players but maintained a fine on FAM


Seven foreign-born players were registered as naturalised players for the Harimau Malaya national team. (Malaysia NT pic)



KUALA LUMPUR: An international sports court decision on the Football Association of Malaysia and several naturalised players is being referred to the Asian Football Confederation’s disciplinary and ethics committee, the AFC said.

The AFC statement came in the wake of a decision by the Court of Arbitration for Sport to reduce a penalty on the seven players for falsifying naturalisation and eligibility documents.

The court ruled that the seven players shall receive a ban for 12 months from official matches only. A fine of 350,000 Swiss francs (about RM1.8 million) imposed by Fifa on FAM was held to be justified and proportionate.

The seven players involved are Gabriel Felipe Arrocha, Facundo Garces, Rodrigo Holgado, Imanol Manchuca, Joao Figueiredo, Jon Irazabal and Hector Hevel.

Perikatan chairman Ahmad Samsuri dismisses claims linking him to alleged ‘Bangkok Move’ meeting





Perikatan chairman Ahmad Samsuri dismisses claims linking him to alleged ‘Bangkok Move’ meeting



Perikatan Nasional (PN) chairman Datuk Seri Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar said speculation linking him to an alleged Bangkok political meeting is unfounded. — Picture by Sayuti Zainudin

Saturday, 07 Mar 2026 11:54 AM MYT


SHAH ALAM, March 7 — Perikatan Nasional (PN) chairman Datuk Seri Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar has denied claims that he was involved in a meeting in Bangkok that some parties have dubbed the “Bangkok Move”.

In a statement posted on Facebook last night, the Terengganu menteri besar said he had no involvement in any meeting linked to the alleged move.

“Referring to statements made by certain parties, I wish to clarify that I was not involved in any meeting in Bangkok referred to by some as the ‘Bangkok Move’, as reported.

“Any meeting or discussion associated with the matter did not involve me and has nothing to do with me,” he said.


Ahmad Samsuri also urged the public not to speculate or link his name to matters that did not occur.

“I hope all parties will not speculate or associate my name with matters that did not happen,” he said.

His denial comes after reports that Umno president Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi had met Opposition Leader Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainudin last year to discuss the possible unification of Malay and Islamic political parties.


Media reports citing political sources said Ahmad Zahid was also believed to have met Ahmad Samsuri and Perikatan Nasional deputy secretary-general Datuk Seri Takiyuddin Hassan, who is also PAS secretary-general.

The meeting was said to have taken place in early December during Ahmad Zahid’s working visit to Bangkok, Thailand.



US-ISRAEL ATTACKERS are destroying hospitals in Iran


From the FB page of:

Nury Vittachi



Stsdeorpon4ifh6hm10l1cl4gh50tcc4g3al7uclg6h88ch010t359f0i5f5 ·


US-ISRAEL ATTACKERS are destroying hospitals in Iran, the World Health Organization confirmed on Thursday.


Targeting of healthcare facilities is a war crime.


In the first days of the attack, there were 13 airstrikes on medical facilities in the country, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a press conference. At least four medical workers were killed and another 25 injured.


“An estimated 100,000 people have left Iran and in Lebanon, more than 60,000 people have been displaced,” he said. The numbers have grown dramatically since he spoke on Thursday.


MINIMAL CRITICISM

It is forbidden under the Geneva Conventions to attack medical stations, but after Israel destroyed virtually all Gaza’s hospitals with minimal criticism from its western allies, targeting healthcare facilities may have become part of its standard strategy.


The unexpected and unprovoked US-Israel war on Iran, which started last Saturday [28 Feb 2026] has been described as “manifestly illegal” by numerous professors of law.


But it is being supported with assets or in principle by the UK, Germany, France, Australia, Canada and other nations wanting to preserve “western supremacy” over the world.


Yet surveys indicate that the western public, and non-governmental organizations in many countries, strongly oppose the attack, which has killed an estimated 1,300 people, including 165 primary schoolgirls in the south of Iran.


The International Committee of the Red Cross said: “A deliberate attack on personnel, buildings or transport clearly carrying one of the protective emblems [such as a red cross or red crescent] constitutes a war crime.”





US and Israel attacking Iran at ‘record pace’, war monitor says




US and Israel attacking Iran at ‘record pace’, war monitor says

Airwars says first days of US-Israeli Iran strikes ‘hit significantly more targets than any campaign in recent decades’


Smoke rises following air strikes in a central area of Iran's capital, Tehran, on March 6, 2026 [AFP]



By Al Jazeera Staff
Published On 6 Mar 2026



The United States and Israel have attacked Iran at a pace that far surpasses other recent conflicts, research group Airwars says, as the US and Israeli governments have pledged to press on with their deadly bombardment.

In a report published on Friday, Airwars said the initial days of the US-Israeli assault against Iran resulted in “significantly more targets [hit] per day than any campaign in recent decades”.


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That includes Israel’s genocidal war against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, which began in October 2023, as well as the US-led campaign against ISIS (ISIL) in Iraq and Syria in 2014.

Airwars noted that US and Israeli officials said they struck about 4,000 targets across Iran in the first four days of their offensive, which began on Saturday.

“In 100 hours, the US and Israel declared hitting more targets in Iran than in the first six months of the US-led Coalition’s bombing campaign against the so-called Islamic State,” said the UK-based nonprofit, which investigates civilian harm in armed conflict.

“While comparisons between conflicts are often imperfect as militaries release varying amounts and types of information, this Iran campaign appears to be vastly outpacing any other recent US air war.”



US-Israel strikes on Iran trigger widening regional conflict


Friday’s analysis comes as US President Donald Trump appeared to reject the prospect of a compromise to end the war as he stressed that any deal with Iran must result in the country’s “unconditional surrender”.

“There will be no deal with Iran except UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!” the US leader wrote on his Truth Social platform.

“After that, and the selection of a GREAT & ACCEPTABLE Leader(s), we, and many of our wonderful and very brave allies and partners, will work tirelessly to bring Iran back from the brink of destruction, making it economically bigger, better, and stronger than ever before.”

The Israeli army’s chief of staff, Eyal Zamir, also said on Thursday that Israel would intensify its attacks against Iran, adding that the “next phase” of the war “will focus on undermining the Iranian regime”.

“We will increase attacks on the Iranian regime’s facilities and military capabilities,” Zamir said.

So far, at least 1,332 people across Iran have been killed in the US and Israeli attacks, according to the latest figures cited by Iranian state media outlets.

The assault has prompted retaliatory Iranian missile and drone strikes across the wider Middle East, including in several Arab Gulf states.

The Iranian attacks have killed at least six US service members as well as 11 people in Israel and three others in the United Arab Emirates.


***

The wanks and shailoks are in a frenzy, caused by fear of loss (and FACE, wakakaka) - hence the massive bombardment of everything and anything in Iran.

***


Iran war live: War enters second week


‘Who is he to decide?’ Hamzah questions Muhyiddin’s authority over new party’s possible move to join Perikatan




‘Who is he to decide?’ Hamzah questions Muhyiddin’s authority over new party’s possible move to join Perikatan



Then Bersatu deputy president Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainudin and Bersatu president Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin attend the party’s annual general meeting at Ideal Convention Centre (IDCC) in Shah Alam September 6, 2025. — Picture by Firdaus Latif

Saturday, 07 Mar 2026 10:54 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, March 7 — Former Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (Bersatu) deputy president Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainudin has questioned Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin’s authority to decide whether he can join Perikatan Nasional (PN) with his new party.

The Larut MP said remarks by the Bersatu president suggesting he could block Hamzah from joining the coalition made it appear as though Muhyiddin held sole power over the matter.


“He said I cannot be a member of PN. Who is he to decide?

“I want to ask him, if I can become a member of PN, will he resign?


“If he says he will resign, I will try my best to become a member of PN so that he can step down,” he told Sinar Harian after attending a Moreh Perdana event and the launch of the Negeri Sembilan ‘Gempur Rasuah’ programme organised by Bersatu’s Port Dickson division last night.


Muhyiddin had earlier said he would reject any cooperation between PN and Hamzah’s new political platform, saying he needed to be more cautious after what he described as a past betrayal.

Earlier this week, it was reported that Hamzah, who currently serves as Opposition Leader, is set to lead Parti Keluarga Malaysia after being expelled from Bersatu last month.


Hamzah also claimed he had not expected many Bersatu leaders — including 118 division chiefs — to support him after he was expelled from the party.

He said the development indirectly showed that the party was losing the backing of its grassroots leadership.

“I was informed that more than 60 divisions have already been dissolved.

“If I were the president, even if I were the party’s founder, but so many people had left, that would show the party no longer has the support of its division leaders,” he said, as reported by the national daily.

Hamzah added that Muhyiddin should emulate Umno founder Datuk Onn Ja’afar, who stepped down as president after seeing many party leaders no longer aligned with his views.


***


All above must be MUSIC to PMX's ears 👍👍👍😂😂😂

Chinese voters no longer loyal to any party, says MCA sec-gen


FMT:

Chinese voters no longer loyal to any party, says MCA sec-gen


4 HOURS AGO
Kirthana Arumugam

Chong Sin Woon says last year’s Sabah election showed voters will shift support if parties fail to deliver on promises


MCA secretary-general Chong Sin Woon said there is growing public dissatisfaction with DAP but warned it doesn’t automatically mean voters will back MCA. (Bernama pic)



KUALA LUMPUR: Voters, particularly those from the Chinese community, can no longer be regarded as guaranteed supporters of any political party, says MCA secretary-general Chong Sin Woon.

Chong said last year’s Sabah state election served as a clear warning that voters will not hesitate to punish those who fail to deliver on their promises.

“Voters’ support, especially that of the Chinese community, can no longer be taken for granted by any party.


“If promises are made but are not fulfilled, voters will surely teach us a lesson,” he said in his speech at the party’s 77th anniversary celebration today.

He added that public dissatisfaction with DAP had become increasingly evident in everyday conversations and on social media.


However, Chong cautioned that dissatisfaction with DAP would not automatically translate into support for MCA.

Looking ahead to the Melaka and Johor state elections and the general election, Chong said MCA must demonstrate full commitment to winning back voter support through sincere service and proactive efforts.

He said the party must work to ensure dissatisfaction with the current government could eventually translate into support for MCA but it should not rely entirely on the weaknesses of others.

“Instead, we must take the initiative, win back the support of every voter, and truly become a force that earns the trust and is chosen by the Chinese community,” he added.


Hamzah says Parti Keluarga Malaysia registration appeal now with ROS, outcome pending





Hamzah says Parti Keluarga Malaysia registration appeal now with ROS, outcome pending



Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainudin said Parti Keluarga Malaysia is awaiting the outcome of its registration appeal with the Registrar of Societies. — Picture by Sayuti Zainudin

Saturday, 07 Mar 2026 11:31 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, March 7 — Larut MP Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainuddin said he is still awaiting the outcome of an appeal to register Parti Keluarga Malaysia (PKM) with the Registrar of Societies (ROS).

The former deputy president of Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (Bersatu) said the party’s earlier registration process did not proceed due to several issues.

He said the party had since filed an appeal with the ROS and settled all related payments.

“It’s not that it failed, but when the time came there were certain matters that caused the party not to proceed then. They have since filed an appeal.


“They also showed me that all payments have been made, so now we just wait for the outcome of the appeal,” he told national daily Utusan Malaysia after attending a Moreh Perdana event and the launch of the Negeri Sembilan ‘Gempur Rasuah’ programme organised by Bersatu’s Port Dickson division last night.

Hamzah said he was unsure how long it would take for the appeal to be decided.

“I also don’t know when the approval will come. If we are good people, we just wait and be patient,” he said.


Earlier reports said Hamzah had confirmed he would take over Parti Keluarga Malaysia in the near future.

He said discussions had been held with the party’s founder Khairi Jaya and Tasek Gelugor MP Datuk Wan Saiful Wan Jan.

Previously, ROS director-general Datuk Mohd Zulfikar Ahmad said the party had attempted to register in 2022 but the application was rejected. He added that ROS has yet to receive a new application to re-register the party.


A war without a coalition: In the Iran war, US goes it alone like never before as allies balk





A war without a coalition: In the Iran war, US goes it alone like never before as allies balk



US President Donald Trump’s strategy toward other countries has been focused on intensely pressuring them to cooperate and loudly complaining when they say no. — Reuters pic

Friday, 06 Mar 2026 9:00 PM MYT


WASHINGTON, March 6 — When the United States fought the 1991 Gulf War, president George H.W. Bush boasted of building a broad coalition unseen in decades. When his son attacked Iraq in 2003, he faced wide criticism but secured several steadfast US allies.

Now, a generation later, President Donald Trump has attacked Iran, and he is barely even trying to make friends.


Trump launched the war alongside Israel, which had long pressed the United States to strike Iran’s ruling clerics.

Trump’s strategy toward other countries has been focused on intensely pressuring them to cooperate and loudly complaining when they say no.


Trump berated crucial ally Britain as “very, very uncooperative” and said of Prime Minister Keir Starmer: “This is not Winston Churchill we’re dealing with.”


The centre-left prime minister had restricted US warplanes to using two British bases and only for “defensive” purposes, saying he did not believe in “regime change from the skies.”

Trump threatened to cut off all trade with Spain after left-wing Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez refused to let US forces use bases.


The United States and Israel made no pretence of going through the United Nations before launching the war that quickly killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader.

“It essentially sends the message to the world that Trump’s United States sees itself above the law and doesn’t even think it needs to claim otherwise,” said Kristina Kausch, a deputy managing director at the German Marshall Fund.

She said the war only reinforced European perceptions of Trump, who has stunned the continent by threatening to seize Greenland from Nato ally Denmark.

“The degree to which there is US isolation or loss of soft power will depend on how disastrous the consequences of this decision,” she said of the Iran attack.

Refocusing on nation-state

Trump has withdrawn the United States from numerous international bodies, vowing to go it alone in an “America First” foreign policy and to re-emphasise the centrality of the nation-state.

Nadia Schadlow, who was deputy national security advisor in Trump’s first term, said the war showed how countries cannot rely on the United Nations when they believe security interests are at stake.

“I believe that the UN has value for collaboration, for discussion, for debate. But I don’t believe it can prevent wars, especially when one country is determined, and feels that it must act in the interests of its national security,” said Schadlow, now a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute.

“It seems that the decision-makers made a determination that security and surprise were critical and were more important than consultation.”

Rare unambiguous statements of support for the war came from the right-wing leaders of Argentina and Paraguay as well as from Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of Australia, which has fought alongside the US in every major war.

Albanese backed action “to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.” Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney voiced similar support, although he soon called for de-escalation.

French President Emmanuel Macron opposed the attack as running counter to international law, while German Chancellor Friedrich Merz voiced hope for an end to the Islamic republic while hoping the war will be short.

Washington has shown little interest in sensitivities of friendly countries.

The United States torpedoed an Iranian warship that had just paid a goodwill visit to India, a frequent US partner, killing at least 84 sailors off Sri Lanka, after Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth vowed to reject “stupid rules of engagement.”

Strategic benefit for China?

Iran, like Venezuela where Trump removed the president in January, had a privileged relationship with both Russia and China — which were unwilling or unable to defend their allies against US firepower.

China has also relied on the two countries for oil, although it had reduced its dependence.

But the war could also benefit China. US forces are rapidly using up bombs, missiles and other resources that could be used in a theoretical defence of Taiwan, which Beijing claims, and Beijing is able to observe US war operations in Iran, said Jacob Stokes, a senior fellow at the Centre for a New American Security.

Chinese strategists had described the first two decades of the century as a time of opportunity with the United States preoccupied in Afghanistan and Iraq, Stokes said.

“There is this potential for a grand strategic benefit, as Beijing is quite happy to see the United States get bogged down in the Middle East again,” he added. — AFP


MOF: Govt studying ways to maintain fuel prices as Middle East conflict pushes crude above US$100






MOF: Govt studying ways to maintain fuel prices as Middle East conflict pushes crude above US$100



The Ministry of Finance is currently examining appropriate measures to maintain oil prices at existing rates despite facing the challenge of surging global crude oil prices, which have now surpassed the US$100 (RM394) per barrel mark. — Picture by Ahmad Zamzahuri

Friday, 06 Mar 2026 8:14 PM MYT


IPOH, March 6 — The Ministry of Finance is currently examining appropriate measures to maintain oil prices at existing rates despite facing the challenge of surging global crude oil prices, which have now surpassed the US$100 (RM394) per barrel mark.

Political Secretary to the Minister of Finance, Muhammad Kamil Abdul Munim, said the current tension between Iran and the United States in the Middle East is expected to have a direct impact on the global oil supply chain and put pressure on the economic stability of many countries, including Malaysia.

“The government today is still closely monitoring these developments from time to time, ensuring that all economic planning can be handled and faced with a higher state of readiness.

“So far, the situation is still good, but we anticipate that there may be several important measures that the government needs to take to ensure that, at the very least, the local economic situation remains under control,” he said after officiating the Motorcycle Handover Ceremony under the Sejahtera Madani Initiative at the Sungai Tapah Community Hall here today.


He said this when asked how the government is managing subsidies and other related matters following the armed conflict currently occurring in the Middle East.

Muhammad Kamil stated that the government’s primary focus at this time is to ensure that the supply of basic necessities for the people — such as meat, chicken, rice, and sugar — is not severely affected by the closure of air or sea routes in the Middle East.

When asked about preventive steps or efforts the government might take to prevent price hikes for goods if oil prices rise, he said the Ministry of Finance is looking into how the government can maintain oil prices at their current levels.

“I think if the price surges significantly beyond our control, then we will have to face reality. But regardless, what is being done by the government today is an attempt to ensure that the price can still be well-controlled,” he said. — Bernama