Monday, January 19, 2026

KOLABORASI AGUNG UNTUK MENYELAMATKAN TENGKOK DUA PEMIMPIN HAMPIR PADAM

 

Monday, January 19, 2026



KOLABORASI AGUNG UNTUK MENYELAMATKAN TENGKOK DUA PEMIMPIN HAMPIR PADAM


  • mahu satukan semua parti Melayu, Islam bawah 'kolaborasi agung'
  • kolaborasi agung itu dapat menyatukan roh dan perjuangan parti Melayu
  • menjadikannya sebagai satu gabungan besar.
  • "tidak mengganggu gugat kerajaan
  • "tidak akan ada agenda untuk 'tebuk atap' 
  • mengetepikan warna berbeza dalam kalangan parti Melayu 


MY COMMENTS:

  • Poo kanan poo kiri. Ini memang first class bullshit boleh gempak seantero dunia.
  • Tuan-tuan ini keadaan sebenarnya. 
  • Si penari lagu Tamil itu sudah tidak ada kawasan di mana dia boleh dijamin menang.  
  • Kerusi 'family' mereka di Pulau Pinang sudah melayang.
  • Kerusi kawasan tepi laut pun sudah melayang.
  • Sekarang kerusi kawasan Cina tanam halia pun sudah melayang.
  • Soalan besar adalah di mana dia boleh bertanding dan dijamin menang? 
  • The answer is: siapa pun tidak boleh jamin.
  • Kekawan parti Cina yang dulu sangat kuat sekarang sudah jadi sangat lemah.
  • Di Sabah baru ini parti Cina itu kalah 8 - 0. Lapan kosong.
  • Jadi kalau parti Cina rela 'hadiahkan' safe seat pun, tidak ada jaminan menang.
  • Lets say depa bagi laluan di Seputeh, tidak ada jaminan boleh menang Seputeh.
  • Bayangkan si penari lagu Tamil itu kalah. End of story.
  • Pemimpin seorang lagi memang khuatiri tengkok dia.
  • Kalau parti lawan menang kemungkinan besar kes DNAA dia akan timbul kembali.
  • This time tak ada orang yang boleh tolong dia.  
  • Kut-kut dia akan duk main terup dengan 'ex' presiden di Bamboo River Resort.
  • Inilah keadaan mereka yang sebenarnya.
  • Sabah sudah melayang.
  • PRN ENAM negeri (2023) depa kena tendang.
  • Di dua negeri depa masing-masing dapat ZERO kerusi. 
  • PRU 2022 depa semua kalah. Hung Parliament.
  • Akhir sekali depa dilantik ikut ketetapan Perlembagaan.
  • Selected bukan elected.
  • Si anak perempuan pun tewas kepada ostad putar alam.

Inilah keadaan mereka sebenarnya. Kemungkinan paling besar kedua parti mereka akan terkubur pada PRU 16 akan datang. Seperti Fukuyama kata 'End of History'.

This is where Bersatu dan Pas stop bullshitting dan perlu susun langkah dan strategi untuk menghadapi PRU.

Dato Sri Hamzah Zainuddin harus menerajui Bersatu dan PN. Pas mesti tukar nada dan rentak parti. Negara kita punyai 34 juta penduduk, di mana 40% atau lebih bukan Melayu (termasuk bumiputra Sabah dan Sarawak). Undi Melayu pula berbeza-beza. Jadi Pas tidak boleh membentuk kerajaan dengan undi Islam sahaja.  Walaupun sudah begitu lewat tapi Pas perlu duduk semeja dengan kesemua rakyat daripada pelbagai kaum, bangsa, bahasa dan agama dan tanya mereka secara ikhlas dan serius 'What can I do for you?' Untuk mewakili semua rakyat negara Pas perlu menukar imej parti kampong dan mengganti calon-calon ostad yang tidak menunjukkan kemahiran dan wibawa. Pas perlu jejak kaki di abad ke 21. 

Rewcastle Brown wants charge for defaming Terengganu sultanah dropped


FMT:

Rewcastle Brown wants charge for defaming Terengganu sultanah dropped

3 HOURS AGO
V Anbalagan

In representations to the AGC, the Sarawak Report editor says she is unlikely to appear in a Malaysian court


In December 2025, the Kuala Terengganu High Court set aside Clare Rewcastle Brown’s conviction and sentence to two years in jail for criminally defaming Sultanah Nur Zahirah.



PETALING JAYA: British journalist Clare Rewcastle Brown has asked that her criminal defamation charge involving Terengganu’s Sultanah Nur Zahirah be dropped on grounds she is based in the UK and unlikely to be present in a Malaysian court.

The Sarawak Report editor made the plea in representations filed with the Attorney‑General’s Chambers after the Kuala Terengganu High Court set aside her conviction and two‑year jail term for criminally defaming the sultanah.

Last month, Justice Radzi Harun ruled the conviction invalid as Rewcastle Brown was not physically present in court when facing criminal charges. He also directed that the case be reheard.


In a letter to the AGC sighted by FMT, Rewcastle Brown’s lawyers, Guok Partnership, said “a person can only be regarded as an ‘accused’ if brought before the court, which is not the case here”.

The letter also contended that the criminal charge ought to be withdrawn as Rewcastle Brown and two others have already been found liable by the Court of Appeal for defamation in a civil suit brought by the sultanah.

Sultanah Nur Zahirah had initiated the suit in 2018, claiming that Rewcastle Brown had disparaged her in her book, “The Sarawak Report: The Inside Story of the 1MDB Expose”, which tells the story behind its investigations into the 1MDB scandal.

The sultanah claimed the statement suggested that she was involved in corrupt practices, had interfered in Terengganu’s administration, and used her status to influence the establishment of the Terengganu Investment Authority (TIA), as 1MDB was previously known.

She further alleged that the statement could be construed to mean that she had helped Low Taek Jho, or Jho Low, secure his position as adviser to TIA.

In 2022, the High Court ruled that a statement in the book was not defamatory of the sultanah.

However, in December 2023, the Court of Appeal overturned that decision and awarded damages of RM300,000 and RM120,000 in costs against Rewcastle Brown, publisher Chong Ton Sin and printer Vinlin Press Sdn Bhd.

In September 2024, Rewcastle Brown and her co-defendants failed to secure leave to challenge the decision in the Federal Court.


Govt’s provision of new site for temple unprecedented, says Yeoh


FMT:

Govt’s provision of new site for temple unprecedented, says Yeoh


3 HOURS AGO
Kirthana Arumugam

The federal territories minister says approval to begin construction on the new site for the Dewi Sri Pathrakaliamman Temple was issued earlier this month


The relocation of the 130-year-old Dewi Sri Pathrakaliamman Temple in the Jalan Masjid India area has been the subject of controversy, with heated debate on the ownership of the land it sits on.


KUALA LUMPUR: The government’s provision of a new site for the relocation of the Dewi Sri Pathrakaliamman Temple in Masjid India is unprecedented, says federal territories minister Hannah Yeoh.

“This is unheard of, I think, this effort by the government to provide a new site,” she said at a press conference today.

Yeoh said Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) approved the building plans for the new site, located within walking distance of the original temple, last September. The land was gazetted in December as a non-Islamic house of worship.

She said approval to begin construction on the site was issued earlier this month and discussions are now focused on coordinating the relocation process and timing, taking into account religious ceremonies.

She also expressed appreciation to her predecessors in the ministry and Kuala Lumpur’s former mayors for 
She said the cooperation of all parties, including the temple committee and the developer, was crucial in ensuring a fair and amicable resolution.

The relocation of the 130-year-old temple has been the subject of controversy, especially over the past year, with heated debate on the ownership of the land it sits on.

Last year, DBKL said it had identified a new site for the temple and would not carry out demolition activities until the relocation process is completed.

On a separate matter, Yeoh said she chaired the first meeting of the Federal Territories Ministers’ Council with Kuala Lumpur MPs today, describing it as a move to institutionalise regular collaboration on city governance and policy decisions.

The council will meet four times a year, with the MPs centrally involved in decision-making affecting the capital.

Yeoh said DBKL presented its 2026 budget during the meeting, and that MPs would actively monitor its implementation to strengthen accountability and ensure effective use of public funds.

She said five monitoring committees were formed to oversee major development and service areas: hawker management, public housing, flood mitigation, road maintenance and traffic management.


Father jailed 16 years for slamming baby daughter to death


FMT:

Father jailed 16 years for slamming baby daughter to death


Investigations revealed the two-month-old died due to bleeding in the brain caused by blunt force trauma


The Shah Alam High Court heard that Danial Iman Sharif picked his daughter up and slammed her down on the floor.


PETALING JAYA: The Shah Alam High Court today sentenced a man to 16 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to causing the death of his two-month-old daughter by slamming her down four years ago.

Justice Aslam Zainuddin ordered Danial Iman Sharif’s prison term to take effect from the date of his arrest in July 2022, reported Bernama.

Danial was charged with causing his daughter’s death at his home in Bandar Tasik Puteri, Rawang, between July 30, 2022, and July 31, 2022.


The charge was framed under Section 304(a) of the Penal Code, which provides for a maximum prison sentence of 30 years and a possible fine upon conviction.

According to the facts of the case, Danial had an argument with his wife that led to a physical altercation on July 29, 2022.

Danial threw away his wife’s mobile phone before she went to sleep at about 2am, leaving their daughter with him in the living room.

While alone with the infant, Danial picked her up from a cushion on the floor and slammed her down, causing the baby’s body to hit the floor.

She began to cry and the wife, who woke up later, fed her.

At 4.30pm the following day, the wife heard the baby crying continuously and felt uneasy as this had never happened before.

Two days later, the accused yanked the victim’s hand, pressed her stomach, and slammed her onto a cushion on the floor because he was feeling stressed.

The baby’s head hit the corner of a table, injuring her.

The wife noticed that the baby’s lips were bleeding and her breathing was shallow. Danial then informed her that their daughter had “fallen” and hit her lips on a wooden pallet table.

She then asked the accused to take their child to a clinic.

Investigations revealed the cause of death was intracranial haemorrhage (bleeding in the brain) caused by blunt force trauma when the accused slammed her down on the floor.


‘Europe will not be blackmailed’: Sweeping retaliation on the cards after Trump’s Greenland threats





‘Europe will not be blackmailed’: Sweeping retaliation on the cards after Trump’s Greenland threats




By David Crowe
Updated January 19, 2026 — 12.17pm
first published at 5.45am



London: European leaders are warning of a “dangerous downward spiral” in relations with the United States in the dispute over Greenland, as they canvass a sweeping retaliation against President Donald Trump for threatening new tariffs on their exports.

However, the eight leaders are being careful to avoid any personal remarks that might inflame the dispute with Trump when the argument has the potential to wreck the NATO alliance.




Denmark’s prime minister says Europe won’t be blackmailed by Trump’s threat of tariffs against eight NATO member states.CREDIT:AP

Instead, they are blasting Trump’s policy move as “blackmail” and framing it as a test of sovereignty for them all.

“We stand in full solidarity with the Kingdom of Denmark and the people of Greenland,” says the statement from the leaders of the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark and the Netherlands.

“Building on the process begun last week, we stand ready to engage in a dialogue based on the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity that we stand firmly behind.

“Tariff threats undermine transatlantic relations and risk a dangerous downward spiral. We will continue to stand united and coordinated in our response. We are committed to upholding our sovereignty.”

A key point in the statement is the reference to “our” sovereignty, not just the borders of Greenland or Denmark. The European leaders see this as a bigger question because Trump is using economic coercion so nakedly against them.

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen sums this up in a message that welcomes the support from neighbours.

“Europe will not be blackmailed,” she writes. “At the same time, it is now even clearer that this is an issue that reaches far beyond our own borders.”

There is no sign, so far, of an urgent meeting of the leaders to show their unity against Trump. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has called Trump to urge him to stop the trade threats, while French President Emmanuel Macron has called counterparts to urge a tough response.




Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has said Greenland’s status is not up for discussion.CREDIT:AP

Macron is said to want European Union members to use their “trade bazooka” against Trump – a drastic sanction on US companies that could, in theory, stymie exports worth €93 billion (about $162 billion). The Financial Times said the EU members were discussing the option.

Outwardly, at least, the European strategy seems designed to avoid a sense of panic.

Trump is using tactics that convey drama and heighten pressure by setting a deadline of February 1 for new tariffs of 10 per cent on the eight countries. He says this will climb to 25 per cent on June 1.

The president seems have taken offence at a small military exercise by the eight nations to support Denmark in recent days, in an operation called Arctic Endurance. This involves about 15 personnel from France and the same from Germany, but only a single officer from Britain.

There is not much time for Trump to cool down, but he has delayed his tariff threats in the past.


‘No intimidation or threat will influence us – neither in Ukraine, nor in Greenland, nor anywhere else in the world when we are confronted with such situations’. Emmanuel Macron, president of France

This time, the European leaders may want to avoid the impression that they are rushing to compromise. Many of them have the chance to talk to Trump within days, when he attends the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte says he hopes to see Trump in Davos. There is no announcement, so far, of a broader summit on the sidelines of the Swiss gathering.

The future of NATO is at stake, and it looks like the easy option for the Europeans is to trade away Greenland to pacify Trump. But this would mean “selling” the 57,000 people of Greenland – an unconscionable and, frankly, impossible transaction.

This leaves the hard option of holding the line against Trump and rejecting his economic coercion. History suggests that if they cave to his tariff threat now, he will only use the same threat again.

Six months ago, Starmer struck a trade deal with Trump to avoid higher tariffs. Now, that agreement is obsolete because new tariffs are on the way. A separate “technology prosperity deal” from last September, announced when King Charles III gave Trump the full royal treatment during his state visit, is in limbo.

The European Union agreed to a trade deal with Trump in July, claiming it would create certainty in uncertain times. This requires a vote in the European parliament, but it is now on hold because of the threats over Greenland.

This is the trouble with trying to mollify Trump when he threatens tariffs. No deal sticks. So why do a deal?

The European leaders may end up copying the line taken by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

“We do not want a tariff war, but we are not afraid of one,” the Chinese government said last October, during one of several disputes with the US on trade.

For the Europeans, the lesson of the past year is that giving ground to Trump in one argument over tariffs will not bring any genuine certainty because there is likely to be another argument and another tariff threat.


Extreme move

While there is talk about Europe reacting with decisions on defence, such as threatening to withdraw their support for American bases in their countries, this would be an extreme move that would only weaken security for them all.

The danger to watch for is a decision by Trump to cut military support to NATO forces in Europe, forcing countries to commit more to the alliance. Republicans are declaring he has gone too far with his tariff threat against NATO allies, so they may attempt to restrain him from making things worse.

While the message from Europe may not change Trump’s mind, there is a chance that the counsel from Republican supporters could prevent him from greater damage to the NATO alliance.

The formal rejection from the eight European leaders adds to remarks in the hours after Trump announced his new move.

The most provocative is French President Emmanuel Macron, who appears to draw a parallel between American pressure over Greenland and Russian pressure over Ukraine.

“No intimidation or threat will influence us – neither in Ukraine, nor in Greenland, nor anywhere else in the world when we are confronted with such situations,” Macron says on X.

“Tariff threats are unacceptable and have no place in this context.”

Macron, like others, is taking a hard line. There is a chance that sanity might prevail: that Trump may relent on tariffs and accept a security deal on Greenland that gives him more military bases without full ownership.

This is an argument for Europe to hold firm without inflaming Trump – admittedly, an almost impossible balance with such a volatile president.

The alternative is the ruination of NATO. Trump may respond to a trade war by using force against American allies and seizing Greenland despite their protests. In this scenario, previously unthinkable, the alliance is broken and Europe is exposed. And everything depends on who, one day, replaces Trump.






To Dr Akmal and the NGOs, it is Time for outrage, Not Silence





OPINION | To Dr Akmal and the NGOs, it is Time for outrage, Not Silence


19 Jan 2026 • 10:00 AM MYT


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


Image credit: Bloomberg/Bernama


Not a single voice.


Eerie silence.


Where are the "voices" from those politicians and NGOs who often positioned themselves as the champion and protector of a particular ethnic or religious group's interests?


These voices are currently absent or silent when they are expected to speak out.


Previously, all of you made vocal claims about defending the nation, race and religion.


It is clear as daylight that the eerie silence from all of you had the ordinary rakyat doubting your commitment to the defence of the country, race and religion and whether your outrage are performative or politically motivated rather than genuine.


In the face of the arrests of the top personnel in the armed forces and the eerie silence from all of you, hypocrisy appears to be written on all your foreheads.


Your silence and inaction on the present issues clearly proved that your claim that the nation, race and religion are under attack are false.


Those claims are "clearly imagined" and "not real".


By keeping silent and not expressing outrage, all of you exposed yourself as fraudulent or illegitimate on the issues that all of you claimed to champion.


On 8 Jan 2026, it was reported that MACC has detained the former Malaysian Army chief and his two wives, as part of its probe into alleged corruption in procurement tenders.


Earlier on 6 Jan 2026, it was reported that MACC arrested and obtained a 5 day remand order for 17 company directors comprised nine men and eight women aged in their 20s to 60s, with their identities disclosed herein, suspected of involvement in a cartel linked to army procurement contracts where they allegedly paid bribes to senior army officers in exchange for supply and maintenance projects.


Even though the Army does not carry the title ‘royal’ (diraja) as do the Royal Malaysian Air Force and the Royal Malaysian Navy, the Supreme Commander of the Army is the YDPA.


And the YDPA said in Aug 2024 while officiating the Royal Commissioning Parade and Presentation of Certificates to ATM cadets, that soverignty and dignity of the country will be compromised if military officers are involved in corruption and abuse of power.


Coincidentally, the former Army Chief who was arrested by MACC was also at the said event when the YDPA gave that warning to all army personnel.


Corruption within a nation's defense forces is widely considered to be extremely damaging to national security and a severe breach of public trust, often carrying legal classifications and penalties equivalent to or overlapping with treason, sedition, or related serious offenses.


Isn’t the granting of citizenship under dubious circumstances in the heritage players scandal by FAM considered a threat because it can facilitate crime money laundering, fraud, terrorism, compromise national security, and undermine the integrity of the citizenship process, allowing potentially dangerous individuals access to a nation's benefits and protections?


Such practices raise concerns about identity concealment, financial crime and national sovereignty.


This scandal, would have gone unnoticed by the public had FIFA not announced on 26 Sept 2025 that forgery was involved in the naturalisation process of several players as Malaysian.


Are both issues NOT worthy for Dr Akmal and all those NGOs to voice their outrage and stage their mode of outrage by demonstrating publicly?


Both issues are a threat to the nation and race.


It is definitely more severe and deserved outrage from Dr Akmal and all those NGOs than flags hung upside down, which is a human error and not done intentionally.


Do not use the excuse that all of you are waiting for official investigations to be concluded before initiating or voicing your discontent.


All of you did not wait for official investigations to conclude on the socks and the hardware shop in Kepala Batas when voicing your outrage.


Don’t let the public perceive and view all of you as preferring to frame your outrage selectively and within familiar, predictable structures at the expense of genuine concerns for the issues that you claimed you are fighting for.


Failure to voice your outrage on these 2 issues that concern the country’s security and sovereignty will only lead all of you into mediocrity, drained of passion because all of you were paralyzed by fear.


Gobind to AG: Why draw out PAA fight in court when Parliament can just fix it






Gobind to AG: Why draw out PAA fight in court when Parliament can just fix it



Digital Minister Gobind Singh Deo attends a Dewan Rakyat sitting at Parliament in Kuala Lumpur on August 20, 2025. — Bernama pic

Thursday, 15 Jan 2026 4:47 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 15 — DAP chairman Gobind Singh Deo has urged Attorney General Tan Sri Mohd Dusuki Mokhtar to withdraw an application seeking to review a landmark Federal Court decision that found a key section of the Peaceful Assembly Act (PAA) unconstitutional.

In a statement today, Gobind pointed out that the government was already on the path of institutional and legislative reforms that inluded the specific law.

“As such, given that efforts are already underway to amend the Peaceful Assembly Act, we should take this opportunity to revisit and improve the provisions of the Act through Parliament instead of pursuing further litigation by way of review,” he said

The issue stems from a 2025 Federal Court ruling in the case of Amir Hariri Abdul Hadi, which found that Section 9(5) of the PAA — a provision that penalises organisers for failing to provide prior notice for assemblies — violates the fundamental liberties guaranteed under the Federal Constitution.


Yesterday, Communication Minister Datuk Fahmi Fadzil said the government has provisionally agreed to purse the amendments and could consequently propose that the AG discontinue the review application.

Gobind, who is also the minister of digital, confirmed that the matter was discussed at the Cabinet meeting yesterday.

He explained that the MADANI government is already proactively working on improvements to the PAA that extend beyond just Section 9(5).


A court review, he warned, would not only delay this process but would also limit the scope of reforms to only the specific legal points raised in the application.

He reiterated that Pakatan Harapan has consistently called for reforms to the PAA and that amending the Act aligns with the prime minister’s broader institutional reform agenda, which includes separating the roles of the AG and Public Prosecutor and introducing a Freedom of Information Act.


Japan PM Takaichi calls snap election three months after taking office





Japan PM Takaichi calls snap election three months after taking office


34 minutes ago
Koh Ewe


Toru Hanai/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Since taking office last October, Sanae Takaichi has enjoyed high public support


Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi will dissolve parliament on Friday, paving the way for an election next month that she hopes will give her a stronger mandate to govern.

It was an "extremely weighty decision" that would "determine Japan's course together with the people", Takaichi told a news conference. She also told voters to entrust her with running Japan.

The vote to elect the 465 members of the House of Representatives, the lower and more powerful house in Japan, will take place on 8 February.

Takaichi and her cabinet have enjoyed high public support since taking office last October.

Her Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) currently has 199 seats - including three held by its independent partners - in the House of Representatives, the most out of any party.

The LDP's coalition with the Japan Innovation party has just enough seats for a majority in the lower house.

A protege of former conservative PM Shinzo Abe and self-professed admirer of Margaret Thatcher, Takaichi, Japan's first female leader, is known as the country's "Iron Lady".

In December, her cabinet approved a record defence budget of nine trillion yen ($57bn; £43bn). This comes amid growing concern over China, with Tokyo describing its neighbour's military activities in the region as its "greatest strategic challenge".

Takaichi has found herself the target of China's ire since last November, when she made comments suggesting that Japan could respond with its own self-defence force if China attacked Taiwan.

The diplomatic spat that ensued has sent bilateral ties plunging to their lowest point in more than a decade.

Meanwhile, Takaichi has pursued closer ties with the US. During US President Donald Trump's visit to Japan last October, the two leaders heaped praise on each other and signed a deal on rare earths. They also signed a document heralding a new "golden age" of US-Japan relations.

On domestic policy, Takaichi is an advocate for heavy government-led spending to drive economic growth - a revival of the sort of stimulus measures that Japan saw under "Abenomics".

As of December, Takaichi and her administration have charted approval ratings of 60-80% in major polls.

But her snap election gamble comes with its own set of risks.

The LDP's leadership has been on shaky ground, and Takaichi is the country's fourth PM in five years. Her predecessors' terms were cut short by falling public support and scandals.

Her immediate predecessor, Shigeru Ishiba, also announced a snap election shortly after taking office - leading to one of the LDP's worst ever results and costing the party its majority in the House of Representatives.

Another challenge looms in the form of a new, consolidated opposition. Japan's largest opposition party, the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, formed a new centrist party with the Komeito party, the LDP's former coalition partner, last week.

The new party, the Centrist Reform Alliance, will challenge the LDP in the upcoming election.


Hadi rules out Unity Government, sets conditions for Zahid’s ‘grand collaboration’





Hadi rules out Unity Government, sets conditions for Zahid’s ‘grand collaboration’




PAS president Tan Sri Abdul Hadi Awang today said the party rejects unity models that he described as ‘man-made’ and silent in the face of injustice. — Bernama pic

Monday, 19 Jan 2026 2:50 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 19 — PAS president Tan Sri Abdul Hadi Awang today said the party rejects unity models that he described as “man-made” and silent in the face of injustice, stressing that PAS will only support unity based on Islamic principles.

In a Facebook post today, Abdul Hadi argued that PAS cannot join the current Unity Government, which he claimed embraces pluralism, liberalism and extremism.
Hadi is anti-pluralism



He likened such cooperation to “a ship already leaking badly, branded as ‘grand unity’ but sinking under its own contradictions.”

He added that true unity must be principled, accepting truth and rejecting falsehood, and led by God-fearing leadership.


“PAS seeks unity under a government that fulfils its duty of leadership as a trust from God, respected for its justice, and not one that wields power for wealth or throne,” he said.

Abdul Hadi also said unity must be anchored in Malay-Muslim leadership and extended to Malaysia’s plural society, stressing that leadership should be respected for its justice rather than feared for tyranny.

He added that discussions on unity should be guided by scholars well-versed in Islamic affairs, not by those he described as ignorant or misusing intellect.



His remarks came in response to Umno president Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi’s proposal for a “grand collaboration” announced at the close of the 2025 Umno General Assembly.

Zahid, who is also deputy prime minister, said the initiative aims to consolidate Malay-Muslim struggles without jeopardising the stability of the Unity Government.


Bleak Times in Copenhagen: Danes Feel Betrayed and Bewildered by Trump




Bleak Times in Copenhagen: Danes Feel Betrayed and Bewildered by Trump



The American president’s vow to get Greenland, the semiautonomous Danish territory, has thrown the tiny, pro-American Nordic nation into crisis.

Demonstrators on Saturday in Copenhagen. People gathered in different cities in Denmark and Greenland to protest against President Trump’s designs to take over the Arctic island.Credit...




By Elisabeth Bumiller
Photographs by Hilary Swift

Reporting from Copenhagen
Jan. 18, 2026


Henrik Bager, a Danish soldier who served with Americans in Iraq and Afghanistan, said President Trump’s vow to get Greenland from Denmark and his insults about Denmark’s military were “a punch to the gut.”

Rasmus Jarlov, a voluble center-right member of the Danish Parliament and the chairman of its Defense Committee, said that “we know full well that the Americans can destroy us,” but should Mr. Trump, who has not ruled out military force, attack a fellow NATO ally, “of course we will fight back.”

In the next breath, Mr. Jarlov said it was “absolutely so weird to be uttering something like that.”

Casper O. Jensen, a Danish pollster who has lived in the United States and calls it “close to his heart,” sounded like a jilted lover. “I thought we had a really good thing going on,” he said. “Apparently not.”

These are bleak times in Copenhagen, where Danes say they feel betrayed, bewildered and frightened by Mr. Trump’s threats to take over Greenland, the semiautonomous Danish territory and a source of national identity and pride. Greenland, 50 times the size of Denmark, has long made the tiny Nordic nation more of a player on the world stage.

Image
Henrik Bager, a Danish soldier, outside his home in Graested, Denmark.

Image
Company Sergeant Major Bager served in Afghanistan and Iraq.


“We’re not small when you add Greenland,” said David Trads, a political commentator and the author of three books on the United States, including his most recent, “America Turns the Clock Back.” “It makes us more important.”

Mr. Trump’s view is that the United States needs to take over Greenland because Russia and China pose a security threat in the Arctic, and because the island is essential for the “Golden Dome” missile shield he wants to build to protect the United States.

Denmark, NATO allies and most security experts say Mr. Trump already has all the access to Greenland that he needs given existing treaties and the willingness of Denmark, long one of the most pro-American countries in Europe, to do anything — short of giving up Greenland — that the president wants.

This past week in Copenhagen, where wall-to-wall television coverage of the crisis seemed to match the mood of the dark Scandinavian winter, Danes pored over every utterance from Mr. Trump.

By Saturday, thousands of Danes had packed Copenhagen’s City Hall Square before marching to the U.S. Embassy in protest, while hundreds demonstrated in Nuuk, Greenland’s capital. Hours later, Mr. Trump said he was putting new tariffs on Denmark and other European nations until they come to the negotiating table to sell him Greenland.


Thousands of Danes packed Copenhagen’s City Hall Square before marching to the U.S. Embassy in protest on Saturday.


Danes have been particularly stunned by Mr. Trump’s taunts that Denmark relies on “two dog sleds” to defend the Arctic island.

“It’s like fifth graders bullying the small guy in the corner,” said Company Sgt. Maj. Bager, the Danish soldier who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Danes in his unit died during his 2009 deployment to Helmand Province in Afghanistan, he said, and the rhetoric from the White House hurts.

“First time you get disappointed, then you get angry, and then you start feeling sad, you know?” he said. “I can’t remember when we haven’t been with you. You asked us to go. We went.” You asked us “to send airplanes, we sent airplanes.” Denmark, he said, “never said no.”


Too Crazy

Adam Price, the creator of “Borgen,” a Danish TV political drama that became an international hit, set its fourth and final season in Greenland. In episodes that aired in 2022 in the United States, a geopolitical struggle unfolds between the United States, China and Russia after large reserves of oil are discovered on the island.

Mr. Price likes to take real events and push them beyond what has actually happened. But in an interview this past week, he said that had he pitched a story line to Netflix that an American president was vowing to get Greenland from Denmark “one way or another” — the exact words of Mr. Trump — “I would have been laughed out of the pitching room.”


Adam Price, the creator of the “Borgen” TV series, in Copenhagen. He said that had he pitched a story line to Netflix that an American president was vowing to get Greenland from Denmark, he “would have been laughed out of the pitching room.”


“They would have said, ‘It’s too much, it is too crazy,’” Mr. Price said in his Copenhagen office, where a large photograph of sled dogs and icebergs in Greenland covers one wall. “I mean, you wouldn’t have an American president that would actually threaten a NATO ally.”

Many Danes believe Mr. Trump wants to own Greenland because, as he put it to The New York Times in an interview this month, “that’s what I feel is psychologically needed for success.”

Aaja Chemnitz, one of two members of Parliament who represent Greenland, said in an interview that “maybe you should take it up with his therapist if it’s a question of making sure that he feels better.”

Ms. Chemnitz, who said Greenlanders were having trouble sleeping for fear of an American invasion, was host last week to a bipartisan congressional delegation led by Senator Chris Coons, Democrat of Delaware, to Denmark. In her view, Mr. Trump is more interested in the minerals and oil in Greenland than anything else.

That sentiment was echoed by Oliver Haagensen, 21, a medical student at Aarhus University, who was skating the other day at an outdoor rink in Copenhagen’s Christianshavn neighborhood. Like everyone else, he was keeping up with the news on Mr. Trump. “He knows that Russia and China want the minerals and oil, and he wants to get there first,” Mr. Haagensen said.

There was some short-lived relief in Copenhagen after a meeting on Wednesday in Washington, where Denmark’s foreign minister, Lars Lokke Rasmussen, emerged from talks with Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Mr. Rasmussen said that although a “fundamental disagreement” remained with Mr. Trump and that the American president “has this wish of conquering Greenland,” there would be a “working group” to continue talks.

But on Thursday, Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, told reporters that the Danes and Greenlanders had agreed “to continue to have technical talks on the acquisition of Greenland,” which Denmark and Greenland said was not the case at all.


Mr. Trads, the political commentator, had been skeptical that the meeting would produce anything. On Wednesday over coffee near the Danish Parliament, he said that the only thing that Denmark had on its side against Mr. Trump was time.

The Danish government hopes that Mr. Trump’s party will lose the midterm elections, he said.

“If that doesn’t happen, then we’re just waiting for the three years to pass,” Mr. Trads said. “It’s a long time, but we don’t have anything else. So that’s the whole tactic, just to make sure it goes on and on and on, and somehow he is preoccupied with something else.”




Najib, Tommy Thomas settle memoir defamation suit


FMT:

Najib, Tommy Thomas settle memoir defamation suit


3 hours ago
Faisal Asyraf

The suit is withdrawn with no order as to costs and without liberty to file afresh after an amicable resolution is reached


Former prime minister Najib Razak had sued former attorney-general Tommy Thomas and publisher GB Gerakbudaya Enterprise Sdn Bhd over part of the contents of Thomas’s memoir.


SHAH ALAM: Former prime minister Najib Razak has settled his defamation suit against former attorney-general Tommy Thomas and publisher GB Gerakbudaya Enterprise Sdn Bhd over part of the contents of Thomas’s memoir.

The settlement was recorded before High Court judge Justice Khadijah Idris after lawyers for both parties informed the court that an amicable resolution had been reached.

“The terms of the consent judgment have been recorded by the court. As a result, the plaintiff’s civil suit is withdrawn with no order as to costs and without liberty to file afresh,” the judge said.


Earlier, Thomas told the court via his lawyer Alan Adrian Gomez that he was not aware of any evidence linking Najib to the murder of Mongolian model Altantuya Shaariibuu since the publication of his book in 2021.

“I stand by the statements and opinions expressed in Chapter 42 of my book, ‘My Story: Justice in the Wilderness’, that the statutory declarations of Sirul Azhar Umar and Azilah Hadri corroborated one another.

“I accept, however, that since the publication of my book in 2021, I am not aware of any evidence linking Najib to the murder of Altantuya, although I understand that investigations have taken place since the publication of the book,” he said.

Thomas added that he would include the statement if his book was reprinted or republished.

“In the event that my said book is further reprinted and or republished, the statement above shall be stated in the said book on the same pages as the publication of the impugned statements, currently appearing at pages 404 to 405,” he said.

Najib sued Thomas and Gerakbudaya over allegedly defamatory statements in Chapter 42, titled “Altantuya”, in Thomas’s book published in early 2021.

The former Pekan MP sought unspecified damages, the removal of words he claimed were defamatory, an apology, and a permanent injunction to restrain further publication of such statements.

Najib was represented by Shafee Abdullah while R Gokul acted for Gerakbudaya.

Thomas was also represented by Mervyn Lai and Haikaldin Mahyidin.


***


Personally I don't believe in the stories linking Najib with the late Mongolian, pursued fanatically by PKR with even one member photoshopping a 'Paris dinner' linking them - "someone" must have kacau up the "association" to smear Najib - naughty lah.


Rights groups condemn Saifuddin's justification for journo's arrest










Rights groups condemn Saifuddin's justification for journo's arrest


Dania Kamal Aryf
Published: Jan 19, 2026 7:00 AM
Updated: 1:11 PM




Human rights and media advocacy groups have condemned Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail’s justification for journalist Rex Tan’s arrest, which they described as “intimidation tactics” by the authorities, and a "disingenuous framing of state power”.

Speaking to Malaysiakini, the groups expressed serious concern over Saifuddin’s explanation that the police actions in Tan’s arrest were not an act of suppression, but merely “due process” to ensure compliance with the law.

“Summoning a cooperative individual for questioning past midnight and then ‘ambush’ arresting him is nothing short of a calculated tactic designed to intimidate, aimed particularly at activists and critics of the government.

“We saw this same weaponisation of odd hours last year with the arrests of activists Aidil Qayyum and Kamil Puteh, who were taken from their homes at 1am and 3am respectively, under the Sedition Act,” said Suaram executive director Azura Nasron.

She highlighted that similar “ambush” tactics were also used against student activists in Sabah in November last year, who had initially presented themselves at the police station to record statements, but were unexpectedly arrested instead.


Suaram executive director Azura Nasron


On Jan 17, Bernama quoted Saifuddin as commenting on Tan’s arrest, saying that although he respected freedom of speech, such freedom should also come with responsibility.

He explained that police were required to take action when receiving complaints, and acknowledged how Tan and his former employer, Free Malaysia Today, had also publicly apologised for the journalist’s “racially insensitive remarks”.

Tan was arrested and detained past midnight on Friday, under Section 4(1) of the Sedition Act, 1948 and Section 505 (c) of the Penal Code, which is related to making statements with the intent to cause alarm or fear.

He is also being investigated under the Communications and Multimedia Act (CMA), following his questions posed to British politician George Galloway at a public lecture on Palestine in Kuala Lumpur.

His remarks, which attempted to draw parallels between Palestinians and the Chinese Malaysian community, have been criticised as deeply insensitive and racially charged.

Tan’s lawyer, Rajsurian Pillai, later confirmed that he had been released after a one-day remand after being detained overnight at the Dang Wangi district police station lock-up.


Rex Tan (right) and his lawyer Rajsurian Pillai


Rajsurian had also questioned the police’s initial demands for a four-day remand and the CMA probe, as Tan did not post his allegedly seditious remarks online; instead, other individuals had done so based on video recordings from the forum.



Calls to repeal Sedition Act

Centre for Investigative Journalism (CIJ) executive director Wathshlah Naidu described the police’s initial request for a four-day remand as “extremely excessive”, and “punitive in nature”.

“This really calls into question the government and police’s actual motives, because it's extremely excessive and also seems rather punitive in nature – not only by arresting him, but by also requesting a four-day remand order,” she told Malaysiakini.

She also questioned the use of three separate legislations to justify the arrest.

“All these sets of laws have been extremely criticised before. CIJ has called for the repeal of these laws, especially the Sedition Act and Section 233 of the CMA, which have often been disproportionately used.

“We can see how it is again being misused in this instance,” she stressed.

Suaram’s Azura also echoed repeated calls to repeal the Sedition Act, describing it as a draconian legislation with “no place in a democratic society”.

“Instead of hiding behind the narrative of a ‘police duty’ to act on complaints, the home minister should be explaining why his government has allowed the Sedition Act to persist despite the clear basis to repeal it.

“By continuing to use the Sedition Act, the government reveals a profound political insecurity. It chooses suppression of discourse over the democratic resilience required to protect the very freedom it demands citizens exercise 'responsibly',” she said.


‘Mob culture’

Wathshlah further described the intimidation tactics involved in Tan’s arrest as legitimising an increasingly prevalent form of “mob culture”.


CIJ executive director, Wathshlah Naidu


She highlighted how Tan, prior to his arrest, had already been widely harassed, abused, and intimidated by the public - including being doxxed and receiving death threats.

“The numerous instances where his personal information was revealed online even before the police investigation show a mob culture that's very, very prevalent. For the police to act on this mob culture is rather worrying,” she said.

Further, she highlighted the need for these tactics to be challenged, pointing out how Malaysia otherwise risked growing into a society fearful of expressing critical thoughts and opinions.

She also acknowledged how Tan had already issued a public apology and taken the necessary actions to hold himself accountable, including offering full cooperation with the authorities.

She said the authorities could have still chosen to abide by fairer procedures by calling him in for questioning the following day, instead of arresting him past midnight and detaining him overnight.

Malaysia Media Council general secretary Teh Athira Yusof shared similar sentiments.

Teh stressed that media workers have always been cooperative and respectful of the authorities’ due process.

“The question here is not the police work itself, but how the reporter was treated.

“Perhaps, we want to know the urgency in arresting him at such hours, when Tan had already offered cooperation with the authorities from the start.

“However, the act of arresting Tan in the middle of the night and detaining him overnight despite his full cooperation is indeed alarming,” she added.


Journalistic censorship

Wathshlah questioned the need for state intervention in journalistic censorship, especially after the establishment of the media council last year.




She reminded that the council, which was designed to provide a mandate for the industry to self-regulate and for journalists to hold each other accountable.

“Critical questions to be raised about how the government views the media council, and I think we really need to ensure that the media council is given the right support and the right environment to be able to function effectively,” she highlighted.

“These police actions should be condemned, because they are completely unwarranted to target a young journalist who made a mistake and has already publicly apologised.

“The fear of censorship cannot keep going, and this culture needs to change.

“But it can only change if the government takes initiative to create a safe and enabling environment where people can be critical thinkers, voice out their opinions, and challenge the status quo, without a sense of continued fear.

“Such an environment is especially critical for media workers and human rights defenders to ensure that the authorities are held to the highest standard of accountability,” she stressed.


***   Madani my foot - and Saifuddin has been a disgrace


Akmal should stop worrying and learn to love DAP










S Thayaparan
Published: Jan 19, 2026 8:00 AM
Updated: 12:58 PM




“Therefore, I feel that the objective we wanted to achieve has already been achieved. There is no need to give an extra stab.”

– DAP secretary-general Anthony Loke



COMMENT | The very fact that Umno Youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh wants to “fight DAP habis-habisan” (to the death) and the prime minister says nothing in defence of Madani’s most important component should tell us everything we need to know about the danger of the DAP to the Malay uber alles crowd.

Right now, a journalist is being investigated for sedition for using the Palestinian issue to frame mainstream far-right ethnocentric policies of this country.

However, when PAS claimed that the Penang-led government's “systemic seizures” of Malay land and “… equating land ownership issues in Penang with the situation in Palestine and Israel”, the state did not react to what PAS claimed.

DAP MP Syahredzan Johan said at the time, “It is very surprising that PAS undermines the legitimacy of the Palestinian people’s struggle to fit their narrow political narrative”. Is it any wonder that the PAS youth chief wants to team up with Akmal? Both understand that they are Teflon when it comes to inciting racial and religious issues.

The reality is that the DAP has bent over for Umno at the cost of angering its base.

DAP lawmaker Teresa Kok, a target of Akmal, was even chastised by the prime minister over her comments on halal certification, even though her comments were, in fact, taking into account the hardship faced by small Malay businesses and the economic effects mandatory halal certification would have on them.


Teresa Kok


So, you see, even when DAP voices out concern, which would help the Malay community, it is demonised, and more often than not, the head of Madani would side with the far-right ethnocentric agitators who really do nothing for the Malay community.

This is why the Malay uber alles crowd does not want a local election. If non-Malays are seen taking into account the welfare of Malays in their areas, this would shake the ideological bedrock of the establishment.

Mind you, the capitalist, of course, does not want a local election because it would place power in the hands of the rakyat, and this would screw up the whole social contract, which has sustained the political class for decades.


Taking the hits

DAP representatives have been vilified. DAP representatives have had police reports made against them. DAP representatives have had their cars fire bombed. DAP representatives have been reprimanded by the prime minister of their coalition.




DAP representatives have had to make retractions and apologies. DAP representatives have been attacked by online mobs, who happen to also be the people who voted for them, and did you see DAP having a hissy fit and threatening to resign from all posts and abandoning Madani?

Why? Because the other thing the DAP is good at besides attacking the MCA is taking hits from their Malay uber alles partners. The party has always had a soft spot for folks they have deemed as tyrannical and detrimental to a vision of a united Malaysia.

DAP has worked with PAS. DAP has worked with Bersatu. Indeed, all these Malay uber alles parties owe a debt of gratitude to DAP, but they know DAP will never collect.

Even when it comes to Najib Abdul Razak, DAP was willing to work with him. Sure, now that he is in jail, DAP gets all uppity, but remember, in 2016, DAP said it was willing to work with Najib.

“I am prepared to work with any Malaysian to save Malaysia, not only (former prime ministers) Dr Mahathir Mohamad and Muhyiddin Yassin, but even with Najib if the prime minister is prepared to admit that he had led the country on a wrong tangent and that Malaysia must be saved with far-reaching democratic and institutional reforms,” said DAP veteran Lim Kit Siang.

What DAP brings to any kind of coalition is the majority backing of a voting demographic, and hence, they can claim to be the “voice” of the community on secular and egalitarian issues.

The fact that they have to downplay such aspirations proves how well they can play with weak factions of the Malay political establishment.


Not a threat

Akmal should learn from former minister Nazri Abdul Aziz, whose chequered past with Umno did not mean he did not understand the benefits of being sympathetic to DAP. Indeed, poor Gerakan had conniptions because Nazri understood how beneficial a relationship with DAP was.


Nazri Abdul Aziz


In 2018, Nazri said, “I said the voice of the Chinese after the 2013 general election is DAP. Is that wrong? I am friends with DAP because I respect democracy.

“I want to carry out tourism work in Seremban and in Penang. These are DAP areas. I cannot leave them aside.”

Akmal goes on about defending race and religion when even the top guys in Umno know that DAP is not a threat to Islam in this country. Here is Umno secretary-general Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki, just last year, who wanted to debunk the slander of Islam threatened:

"This is a fundamental matter that we must understand, so that all slander and accusations - as though Umno is selling out the country, Islam, and the Malay struggle to others - can be put to rest."

Indeed, so inept has DAP been when it comes to maintaining the secular line, and so eager has the party been to please their Malay/Muslim partners that it has bent over backwards for an overtly religious state. More importantly, while non-Malays condemn such appeasement strategies online, they remain a fixed deposit for DAP.

Honestly, you know why the Umno big cheese is so hesitant to work with snakes who have betrayed Umno? Because the Malay establishment, well, intelligent or cunning ones, understand that Malay uber alles types always fight with each other.

Take what happened in Perlis, for instance, which managed to fragment Perikatan Nasional.

This is what bugs Akmal so much. The fact that DAP is the best partner the far right can have as long as demographics allow.



S THAYAPARAN is Commander (Rtd) of the Royal Malaysian Navy. FÄ«at jÅ«stitia ruat cælum - “Let justice be done though the heavens fall.”