Saturday, April 04, 2026

OPINION | There must surely be bigger fish to catch!





OPINION | There must surely be bigger fish to catch!


3 Apr 2026 • 5:30 PM MYT



Image credit: The Star/Asia News Network


There it was. Everyone seems to be patting themselves on the back for a job well done, and swift at that. Just three days after J and H were caught on tape with their pants down in compromising positions that did not leave much to imagination, 'justice' apparently was meted out. In those three, which must have felt like the longest days in their lives, the media had a field day. After a citizen's mobile phone footage appeared on social media, the mainstream media thought they were doing a public service by displaying the couple in different angles with their faces blurred, whilst their heads hung in shame. All details about them, right down to their names and date of birth, were laid bare.



Forgetting the line that they heard a hundred times over from the Book of John about only the one who had not sinned to cast the first stone, netizens had their two cents' worth of quirky jokes and uncalled-for comments about the accused's ethnicity.


In everyone's mind, the public had discovered something so profound, like the solution to the Israel/USA-Iran War. In reality, some random lady who had gone to perform ancestral worship at a Chinese cemetery, maybe she was the caretaker there, had caught the couple in action at the cemented part of the grave headrest. It had not been their first time caught in the act, apparently. Their mistake, besides exposing themselves in public, engaging in lewd acts, and not respecting the deceased, was to get caught. The world is an unkind place, and people are always looking for scapegoats to convince themselves that they are one step better than the person next to them.



If one were to dissect and scavenge through each other's closets, one is bound to find many skeletal remains. One is safe as long as he is not caught.


The next three days before the presentation at the court must have been torture. Cooped in prison for a non-criminal offence and being branded as public enemy number one is no joke. Hurled to court handcuffed and chained, like how Botak Chin was paraded in the 70s for the IGP to gloat, must surely be an overkill. Everyone got their thrills watching them.


A year's imprisonment for fornicating in public must surely be too excessive. No public was damaged, no public money was swindled, and no one, living or dead, was injured. It was merely a hokey pokey of two consenting frisky adults. No one heard complaints from the occupants of the premises.


J, with a stroke-stricken wife, longed for the intimate times with his other half. He must have met H, maybe in the same boat, with a similar need. Consenting to a quickie, they must have rushed to the nearest place of exclusivity, which was free, and they had gone many times before, the cemetery.



This reminded me of a story that happened a few years ago at a private golf course. The greens were repeatedly damaged by what everyone thought were wild boars from a nearby forest. The management decided to install CCTV cameras with night-vision capabilities to mark the area from which the wild boars originated and to inform the forest department accordingly. What they discovered later took them by surprise. The greens were damaged, not by beasts, but by beastly activities of golfers and their female caddies after dark. As the golfers were of high social standing, the management decided to discreetly inform the party involved and put the issue to bed.


That is the difference here. A person with deep pockets can summon the best legal representation to challenge any accusation and get away scot free on technicalities or some aberrant clause in the charge sheet. People with low incomes can just admit guilt. He may feel contented that his prior offences were not discovered. Conversely, he may feel that he deserved what he got because he had incurred the wrath of the Almighty. The world will move on.



In a world where moral standards are declining by the day, and smut is so freely available, surely engaging in carnal desires amidst the company of the departed souls does not require chains and bolts.


(P.S. After the sentencing, a lawyer volunteered his services to oppose the judgment. Malaysians probably have other juicy news to read and are least bothered by its outcome.)


The Latest: Iran launches missiles at Israel and Gulf states as explosions heard around Tehran





The Latest: Iran launches missiles at Israel and Gulf states as explosions heard around Tehran


3 Apr 2026 • 12:40 PM MYT

The Independent
The world’s most free-thinking newspaper







Iran fired missiles at Israel and some Gulf nations while explosions could be heard around Tehran and the central Iranian city of Isfahan on Friday, as the United States prepared to further reinforce its already significant military forces in the Middle East.

As the war that began Feb. 28 was to enter its sixth week, Israel, Bahrain, Kuwait warned about incoming missile fire, although it was unclear if anything was struck. Activists reported strikes around Tehran and the central city of Isfahan but it wasn’t immediately clear what was hit.

Iran’s attacks on Gulf region energy infrastructure and its tight grip on the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas transits in peacetime, has sent oil prices skyrocketing.

Oil prices surged while Asian financial markets rose moderately during cautious trading. Benchmark U.S. crude rose 11.4% to $111.54 a barrel. The price of Brent crude, the international standard, jumped 7.8% to $109.03 per barrel.



U.S. President Donald Trump said U.S. forces will keep hitting Iran “very hard” in the next two or three weeks.

The largest American aircraft carrier in service sailed out of Split, in Croatia and “remains poised for full mission tasking in support of national objectives in any area of operation,” the Navy’s 6th Fleet announced.

It was unclear where it was going. The USS Abraham Lincoln remains in the Arabian Sea and the USS George H. W. Bush aircraft carrier departed Norfolk on Wednesday to head to the Mideast.

Here is the latest:

Oil prices surge while Asian share prices rise moderately


Oil prices continued to surge on worries of a prolonged Iran war but the Asian markets that were open Friday rose moderately in cautious trading, while others were closed for the Good Friday holidays.

Benchmark U.S. crude rose 11.4% to $111.54 a barrel. The price of Brent crude, the international standard, jumped 7.8% to $109.03 per barrel.

The U.S. only relies on the Persian Gulf for a fraction of the oil it imports, but oil is a commodity and prices are set in a global market.

The situation is very different in Asia. Japan, for example, relies on access to the Strait of Hormuz for much of the nation’s oil import needs and would need to rely on alternative routes. But some analysts say Japan and oher nations are counting on an agreement with Iran to allow transports.

Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 gained 0.9% in Friday morning trading to 52,938.62. South Korea’s Kospi jumped 2.1% to 5,344.41. The Shanghai Composite sank 0.5% to 3,899.57. Trading was closed in Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Indonesia and India.



Wall Street, where trading is closed Friday, finished its first winning week since the start of the Iran war, although trading started out with a decline driven by a surge in oil prices.

Bangladesh implements austerity measures


Bangladesh is curtailing office hours and enforcing early closure of malls and shops beginning Friday to handle its energy crisis related to the war.

The country’s cabinet ordered 30% spending cuts for fuel and power at government offices, suspended some staff training and stopped purchases of new vehicles, ships and aircraft. Decorative lighting will not be allowed for celebrations.

Bangladesh, a nation of more than 170 million people, is seeking alternative fuel sources and $2.5 billion in external financing for imports, which account for 95% of its fuel.


Australia urges weekend motorists to refuel in cities

Australian Energy Minister Chris Bowen on Friday urged motorists getting away for a long weekend during the Easter holiday to fill up in cities because most of the nation’s fuel shortages are in rural areas.

Among 2,400 gas stations in New South Wales, Australia’s most populous state, 182 had run out of diesel by Friday.

In Australia’s second-most populous state, Victoria, 76 gas stations were out of diesel. In the remaining states ranked by the most populous first, Queensland had 75 stations without diesel, Western Australia had 37, South Australia had 28 and in Tasmania there were seven.

“For those Australians planning a road trip this weekend, given our shortages are predominantly in rural and regional Australia, it makes sense to fill up in the city to help the country if you can,” Bowen said in Sydney.

The government, which blamed regional shortages on panic buying and distribution problems, is concentrating on delivering fuel to farmers for planting crops.

One crew member rescued after US F-15 shot down over Iran while search continues for other pilot: report




One crew member rescued after US F-15 shot down over Iran while search continues for other pilot: report


A search-and-rescue operation is underway for the second pilot

Friday 03 April 2026 18:03 BST

One crew member rescued after US F-15 shot down over Iran while search continues for other pilot




One crew member has been rescued and the search continues for the second pilot after a U.S. F-15 fighter jet was shot down over Iran, according to reports.

The crew member was rescued by US forces, two US officials have told CBS News. Two sources tell CNN that the rescued pilot is alive and receiving medical attention.

Officials say one of the airmen of the F-15E Strike Eagle was ejected before the aircraft went down. U.S. officials are racing to recover the second pilot before Iranian forces can reach them. Israel is helping the United States with the search and rescue operation.


Meanwhile, an Iranian news anchor has urged residents to hand over any “enemy pilot” to police and promised a reward for anyone who did. An on-screen crawl earlier urged the public to “shoot them if you see them,” referring to social media footage circulating of what appeared to be U.S. aircraft in the area.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that President Donald Trump has been briefed on the development which comes as tension escalates between the United States and Iran. Over the past 24 hours, both sides have exchanged strikes targeting military and civilian infrastructure across the region.



open image in gallery
A U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle aircraft was shot down over Iran (File photo) (via REUTERS)


Iranian state-linked media outlets reported that helicopters were deployed to search for the downed jet’s crew, though there were conflicting accounts about their origin.


The Fars news agency said it was unclear who operated the aircraft, while Tasnim reported they were American and claimed at least one helicopter was forced to retreat after coming under fire. Tasnim also said a US C-130 Hercules aircraft was involved in the operation.

Mizan, an outlet affiliated with Iran’s judiciary, reported that an American rescue mission was active and published images it claimed showed U.S. aircraft in Iranian airspace.


​Iranian officials ⁠called on civilians to be on the lookout for ​survivors, according to Reuters. The governor of Iran's ​Kohgiluyeh ⁠and Boyer-Ahmad province said whomever captured or killed the crew “would be specially ⁠commended,” ​according to the semi-official ​Iranian news agency ISNA.

It would mark the first time the U.S. has lost aircraft in Iranian territory and marks a dramatic escalation in the war since it began five weeks ago.


The incident could represent a significant political complication for Trump, who suggested in a primetime address to the nation this week that the war was ending and that Iran's military capability had been all but destroyed. He nevertheless said the US-Israeli bombardment would continue for “two or three weeks.”



open image in gallery
The incident comes as the US and Israel continue to deliver strikes against Iran (AFP via Getty Images)


Shortly before the jet was shot down Friday, Trump posted on Truth Social:

“With a little more time, we can easily OPEN THE HORMUZ STRAIT, TAKE THE OIL, & MAKE A FORTUNE. IT WOULD BE A “GUSHER” FOR THE WORLD??? President DONALD J. TRUMP”

Iran’s attacks on Gulf energy infrastructure and its tight grip on the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas transits in peacetime, have roiled stock markets, sent oil prices skyrocketing, and threatened to raise the cost of many basic goods, including food.

Trump has threatened further escalation, warning of potential strikes on Iran’s energy grid if the strait is not reopened. Iranian officials have rejected negotiations under current conditions.

“Bridges next, then Electric Power Plants!” he wrote on social media late Thursday. “New Regime leadership knows what has to be done, and has to be done, FAST!”

On Friday, Trump celebrated the bombing of an Iranian bridge, as he warned on social media that there was “much more to follow.” Footage showed the moment the B1 bridge in Karaj, west of Tehran, was cut in half by the strike on Thursday. The attack killed eight people and wounded 95, Iranian news media reported.



open image in gallery
A view of the B1 bridge is pictured, a day after it was destroyed by a strike in Karaj, southwest of Tehran (AFP via Getty Images)


Today’s incident is the first U.S. or Israeli jet to have been shot down over Iran since the war started. Three U.S. F-15E Strike Eagle jets were downed by friendly fire over Kuwait in March. None of the aircrews were injured.


The hidden unemployment no one talks about



Murray Hunter
Apr 03, 2026


The hidden unemployment no one talks about


The “hidden unemployment” story is really about underemployment, skills mismatching in education, and precarious work opportunities, resulting in discouraged workers who follow other paths





My latest column in The Vibes


TODAY, Malaysia’s official unemployment rate is enviably low, sitting at 2.9% as of December 2025/January 2026.

This is the lowest official unemployment figure in over a decade.

However, these headline figures mask deep structural problems that economists and labour experts have been flagging for years.

The “hidden unemployment” story is really about underemployment, skills mismatching in education, and precarious work opportunities, resulting in discouraged workers who follow other paths.

This is often ignored in discussions about general unemployment.

Many associate low unemployment rates with being a very healthy situation in the labour market.

General economists would consider any unemployment figure under three percent and being optimal and indicate a buoyant economy, without any further investigation.

However, this approach hides many issues. The official rate of unemployment of 2.9 per cent means around 510,000 people are still actually unemployed.

In addition, the figure does not indicate that there are also around two million people who are underemployed, who are not included in the figure.

Some of these two million people are tertiary educated and are working in either low or semi-skilled jobs, i.e., jobs they were not trained for.

For more than a decade, many fresh graduates have been facing the problem of not being able to find jobs they are trained for and take other jobs, or they just disappear into the informal economy.

Consequently, they end up earning far below what their salary expectations were during their studies before graduation.





Many of these people enter the gig market working as Grab drivers or become retail staff.

Today, 1 in 4 Malaysians have undertaken gig or informal work with no minimum wage protection, no SOSCO/EPF, and many in a very volatile work environment.

The youth of today are becoming the lost generation. Ministry of Higher Education data shows that 232,000 new graduates enter a job market where there are only 127,000 available.

Skills mismatch has been a long-term issue that has never been corrected by the Ministry of Higher Education and universities.

This must become a priority in education planning.

This is part of a bigger problem where approximately 300,000 youths are unemployed.

The unemployment rate for 15–24-year-olds is between 10 and 10.3 per cent, much higher than the national average.

In addition, many of these people are working far fewer hours than they want, which is underemployment.

These people go into the informal sector, which is responsible for generating 55 per cent of GDP.

These people likely become self-employed in sole proprietorship businesses that are maybe only part-time and non-sustainable both in the medium and long-term.

These ventures are poorly capitalised, run on a ‘hand to mouth’ financial basis and have no access to capital for investment.

As a result, these businesses cannot grow and keep people on a subsistence income.

Looking at the corporate sector, we see it is now being heavily influenced by rapidly evolving artificial intelligence or AI, which is a massive threat to the reservoir of traditional jobs.

The banking sector is just one example of an industry quickly forging ahead with AI taking over the jobs of thousands of employees who once had full careers within a single bank.

Other industries are also following. People are being shredded in the corporate sector without the opportunity to retrain for other jobs or even enter other vocations, such as starting a small enterprise.

Industry 4.0, accompanied by AI are taking away skilled jobs in the manufacturing sector.

Gen “Z” is being pushed into the service industry.

However, they are now competing against foreign workers who are filling up available positions in tourism, nursing, and retail.

This pressure is continuous as the demographics of Malaysia are changing.

The fertility rate in 2024 was only 1.6, well under the replacement level of 2.1.

This has been occurring since 2013, which has made foreign workers the easiest solution for service sector employers. Malaysians have tended to be averse to low pay and long hours in places far away from their homes.

This brings up the issue of what possible remedies we have for the problems above. We must also consider the possibility that the current war in the Middle East may exacerbate the problem even more.

It is important that an entrepreneurship option is given to everyone as an alternative to employment.

This is particularly important in Malaysia, where the informal sector is 55 per cent of the aggregate economy.

This must take priority in both economic and education policies.

This is a very important scenario that will be taken up in the next article. – March 30, 2026


Friday, April 03, 2026

Trump Says 'A Little More Time' Needed To Open Hormuz, 'Take The Oil & Make A Fortune' - As Israel Hit Hard During Passover





Trump Says 'A Little More Time' Needed To Open Hormuz, 'Take The Oil & Make A Fortune' - As Israel Hit Hard During Passover



by Tyler Durden
Friday, Apr 03, 2026 - 11:45 PM


Summary

Trump: US needs "a little more time" to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, while floating the prospect of seizing oil amid potential island or ground campaign


Iran and Hezbollah fire 140+ rockets during Jewish Passover, with sustained barrages hitting Israel


French-owned vessel becomes first Western-linked/European ship to transit Hormuz since war began, signaling a tentative thaw after weeks of near-total shipping freeze


Iran targets Gulf infrastructure, including a Kuwaiti desalination plant, while UAE defenses intercept large-scale missile and drone waves and energy facilities face disruptions


* * *


'More Time' To Retake Strait, 'Make A Fortune': Trump

With some US Special Forces units already in the region, and with thousands more Marines and Sailors en route, and after Trump earlier floated at least two to three more weeks of major strikes on Iran, the president on Friday morning wrote on Truth Social that "with a little more time, we can easily OPEN THE HORMUZ STRAIT, TAKE THE OIL, & MAKE A FORTUNE...

This as the question of some kind of direct ground intervention, likely starting with strategic islands near the Strait, could be unfolding. Certainly the timeline has stayed open-ended and keeps getting extended with pledges of just 'a little more time'. Easily?



And this more specific threat was issued a day earlier, the same day as Iran's B1 bridge getting destroyed by a deadly double-tap strike...




Over 140 Rockets Rain Down During Passover in Israel

It's the Passover period in Israel, and Iranian and Hezbollah missiles have been unrelenting, with The Wall Street Journal documenting that they unleashed more than 140 rockets and missiles on Israel, citing the Israeli military - highlighting sustained firepower more than five weeks into the war, and after various estimates have claimed Iran's stockpile is diminishing.

Tehran fired roughly 20 missiles that penetrated Israeli territory, while Hezbollah launched over 120 rockets into northern Israel within a 24-hour window from early Wednesday to Thursday, Israeli military spokesman Nadav Shoshani said. The military described the barrage as an escalation on both fronts, also as this week the Houthis have become direct launches on Israel, having confirmed coordination in these waves with Tehran.

Reports of Iranian ballistic missile strikes having damaged water pipelines in Tel Aviv, causing flooding in several areas.


How Israel is destroying healthcare infrastructure in southern Lebanon




How Israel is destroying healthcare infrastructure in southern Lebanon


Israel's attacks on hospitals, medical centres and healthcare workers are fuelling displacement and a health crisis


A staff member at the Nabih Berri Governmental Hospital reacts to reports of a drone strike that killed the son of one of the hospital's workers on March 24, 2026 in Nabatieh, Lebanon [File: Adri Salido/Getty Images]



By Justin Salhani
Published On 3 Apr 2026


Beirut, Lebanon – Israel’s attacks on Lebanon are putting a massive strain on the Lebanese healthcare system, in what experts and analysts say is part of an effort to force people out of the south of the country.

One month into the latest intensification of strikes on Lebanon, Israel has killed 53 medical workers, destroyed 87 ambulances or medical centres, and forced the closure of five hospitals, according to Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health.

“Israeli strikes and blanket evacuation orders are cutting people off from care and shrinking the space for health services to function,” Luna Hammad, the Lebanon medical coordinator for Doctors Without Borders (MSF), told Al Jazeera, adding that MSF has seen “a documented pattern of attacks affecting healthcare”.



Lebanon faces growing displacement crisis

Next
27:18

Hormuz on edge: Trump’s Iran strategy under strain | This is America



The war on Iran faces a MAGA backlash | The Listening Post

28:18

US media divide deepens over Iran war narrative | This is America


Displacement fuelled by destruction of healthcare


On March 2, Israel intensified its war on Lebanon again after Hezbollah responded to Israeli attacks for the first time in more than a year.

The Iranian-backed group Hezbollah claimed the attack was retaliation for the US-Israel assassination of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei two days earlier. A ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah had ostensibly been in place since November 27, 2024, despite more than 10,000 recorded Israeli ceasefire violations by the United Nations, and the killing of hundreds of Lebanese.

Israel used the Hezbollah attack as justification to expand its strikes across Lebanon and to issue mass forced evacuation orders for the country’s south and Beirut’s southern suburbs, traditionally areas where Hezbollah has strong support. Now, 1.2 million people are displaced from their homes, while Israeli forces have begun an invasion of the south, with Israeli officials declaring an intention to occupy the region, set up a so-called security zone, and destroy more villages across the border.

Amid the destruction of southern Lebanon has been the devastation of the region’s healthcare infrastructure, including attacks on medical workers, ambulances, civil defence centres, and hospitals.



Tyre hospital 'hit five times' since start of Israel's attacks on Lebanon



“We have seen some health facilities directly attacked,” Dr Abdinasir Abubakar, the World Health Organization (WHO) representative in Lebanon, told Al Jazeera. He also mentioned the displacement of healthcare workers as part of the erosion of Lebanon’s healthcare sector.

On Tuesday, Jabal Amel University Hospital in Tyre, along south Lebanon’s coast, was struck for a fifth time. Five hospitals have been forced to evacuate in the last month.

Even before the war with Israel, Lebanon’s healthcare system was in poor shape due to compounding crises, including the 2019 financial crisis and the 2023-2024 war. But there has been increased strain due to Israeli attacks and mass displacement since March 2, 2026. Amidst the month-long United States-Israel war on Iran, there have also been Iranian strikes on Gulf countries, which have impacted shipping routes for crucial medicine and supplies.

The destruction of healthcare infrastructure has also spurred mass displacement, healthcare professionals say. It is all part of what they believe to be a wider strategy: to make south Lebanon uninhabitable.

“You can’t live somewhere that doesn’t have basic medical care, and of course it’s now created a strain on healthcare facilities here where people are displaced because you now have over a million extra people who are going to need the health system here,” a doctor who works on the ground treating the displaced in Beirut told Al Jazeera, asking that their name be withheld so that they could speak freely.



One month on, Lebanon reels from deadly Israeli assaults and displacement


Trend of killing medical workers

The vast number of displaced people also means healthcare facilities are under higher strain than before. Emergency room admissions have increased exponentially, according to Abubakar.

Dr Hassan Wazni is the general director of Nabih Berri Governmental Hospital in Nabatieh, in southern Lebanon. Israeli attacks have been intense in Nabatieh and the surrounding villages. Wazni told Al Jazeera by phone that many patients needing treatments like chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and dialysis have been transferred further north.

And then there are the direct attacks on the healthcare system, including medics. Some of those attacks include reports of double-tap strikes, where an initial strike occurs and a second follows after first responders gather.

On March 28 alone, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director-general of WHO, counted nine paramedics killed and seven wounded in five separate attacks. And while such attacks have increased in recent days, the pattern has a precedent, with Israel killing more than 107 first responders in Lebanon between late 2023 and 2024.

The attacks on Lebanon’s healthcare infrastructure and medical workers have been documented by Human Rights Watch (HRW), which has noted “repeated, apparently deliberate, attacks on medical workers in Lebanon”, according to Ramzi Kaiss, HRW’s Lebanon researcher. “This trend, the killing of medical workers, has not stopped despite more than 270 health workers and paramedics being killed as a result of Israeli attacks in Lebanon,” he said.

Medical workers and healthcare facilities are protected under international humanitarian law. Israel’s attacks on medics in 2024 were described as an apparent war crime by HRW.

The attacks on healthcare infrastructure during times of war are not new. Forensic Architecture, a research group investigating state violence and human rights violations, said Israel had conducted “systematic targeting of hospitals and healthcare workers” in Gaza. And Israel is not unique in targeting healthcare facilities.

“Attacks on healthcare have been consolidated over the last two decades, especially with the [United States-led] war on terror, and then from Iraq to Syria to Gaza and then now to Lebanon, it has become clear that hospitals are no longer consistently treated as protected spaces,” Omar Dewachi, author of Ungovernable Life: Mandatory Medicine and Statecraft in Iraq, told Al Jazeera. “When these hospitals are repeatedly hit across different conflicts with little accountability, it creates a sense that this is becoming increasingly normalised.”

Dewachi said that such attacks have compounding effects. Treatable injuries get worse, war wounds do not heal properly, and there are other “more long-term consequences”, he said, noting, “Many patients who survive these explosions end up with chronic infections that last for years and sometimes require multiple surgeries.”



Lebanon at breaking point, UN humanitarian chief tells Security Council


Continued impunity

The attacks are unlikely to cease, experts and analysts say, so long as the pattern of impunity continues.

“There’s been continued impunity for such acts and no accountability whatsoever,” Kaiss of HRW said. “Lebanon’s government has a responsibility to ensure that there can be accountability, to give jurisdiction to the ICC [International Criminal Court], and to allow it to investigate and prosecute war crimes that have been committed in the country, among them the repeated apparently deliberate attacks on medical workers and health facilities.”

In the meantime, medical professionals have called for international support to bolster and protect Lebanon’s healthcare.

“It should be protected under international law,” Abubakar said, adding that a de-escalation and ceasefire, “as quickly as possible”, was needed.

Wazni, the director of the hospital in Nabatieh, told Al Jazeera: “I don’t know how beneficial this will be, but we call for the respect of international law and international agreements, and to respect the safety of medical crews.”


***


Shailoks specialise in bombing children and health workers, thus schools and hospitals.


Over 100 US legal experts condemn strikes on Iran as possible ‘war crimes’




Over 100 US legal experts condemn strikes on Iran as possible ‘war crimes’


United States-based scholars sign open letter raising concerns about conduct, rhetoric during US-Israeli war on Iran


A picture released by the Iranian government's foreign media department shows graves being prepared for victims, mostly children, of a United States attack on a girls' primary school in Minab, Iran [Iranian Foreign Media Department via AP]



By Al Jazeera Staff
Published On 3 Apr 2026


More than 100 United States-based international law experts have signed an open letter condemning US and Israeli military strikes on Iran as a violation of the United Nations Charter and potentially amounting to “war crimes”.

The letter, published on Thursday, also said the conduct of US forces and statements by senior US officials “raise serious concerns about violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law”.


Recommended Stories




The scholars warned that the US-Israeli campaign, which began on February 28, was launched without UN Security Council authorisation and without credible evidence of an imminent Iranian threat.

“Force against another state is only permitted in self-defense against an actual or imminent armed attack or where authorized by the UN Security Council. The Security Council did not authorize the attack. Iran did not attack Israel or the United States,” the letter said.

The experts’ concerns fall into four areas: the legality of the decision to go to war; the conduct of hostilities; threatening rhetoric from senior officials; and what they describe as the dismantling of civilian protection structures inside the US government under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s “gloves off” approach to warfare.

The scholars highlighted a strike on a primary school in Minab, Iran, on the first day of the war that killed at least 175 people, most of them children, as well as attacks on hospitals, water plants and energy infrastructure.

“We are seriously concerned about strikes that have hit schools, health facilities, and homes,” the letter said.



Why Iran says its universities are being targeted



Hegseth’s ‘unprecedented’ language raises war crimes fears in Iran


‘Alarming disrespect’ for international law

The letter also condemned public statements by senior US officials, including President Donald Trump.

In particular, it noted a mid-March comment from Trump where he said the US may conduct strikes on Iran “just for fun”. It also cited comments from Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth from early March in which he said the US does not fight with “stupid rules ⁠of engagement”.

“Public statements by senior officials indicate an alarming disrespect for the rules of international humanitarian law accepted by states, and which protect both civilians and members of the armed forces,” the letter said.

It also added that the war is costing US taxpayers up to $2bn a day.

The letter was co-authored by prominent legal scholars including Yale Law School’s Oona Hathaway and Harold Koh, Philip Alston of NYU, and former Human Rights Watch chief Kenneth Roth.

The experts said that due to their connection to the US, their main focus was on the conduct of that government, but they “remain concerned about the risk of atrocities across the region”.

They also highlighted the “importance of equal application of international law to all, including countries that hold themselves out as global leaders”, expressing concern about the harm this war is doing to the international legal order and the system of international law.

The signatories are urging Washington to change course, writing: “We urge US government officials to uphold the UN Charter, international humanitarian law, and human rights law at all times, and to publicly make clear US commitment to and respect for norms of international law.”


Selangor MB to lead Malaysia’s Gaza aid mission, joins Global Sumud Flotilla 2.0 push





Selangor MB to lead Malaysia’s Gaza aid mission, joins Global Sumud Flotilla 2.0 push



Selangor Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Amirudin Shari will lead Malaysia’s humanitarian mission delivering aid to Gaza. — Bernama pic

Friday, 03 Apr 2026 5:40 PM MYT


SHAH ALAM, April 3 — Selangor Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Amirudin Shari, on behalf of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, will lead Malaysia’s 30-Container Humanitarian Mission to Gaza, as well as the Global Sumud Flotilla 2.0 delegation.

The Selangor Menteri Besar’s Office said the mission, organised by the Malaysian Consultative Council of Islamic Organisations (MAPIM), will deliver 30 containers carrying 374 tonnes of aid to Palestinians in Gaza, where conditions are increasingly dire.


“The Menteri Besar will depart on April 5 to lead the humanitarian delegation and ensure the containers are safely cleared in Cairo.

“He will also chair a special session at the Rafah border crossing to reaffirm Malaysia’s firm stance on the Gaza blockade, before overseeing the departure of the Sumud Nusantara delegation from the Port of Barcelona, Spain.


“Given the risks and challenges, the public is urged to pray for the safe and smooth passage of the mission led by Amirudin and all involved,” read the statement, emphasising that Selangor and Malaysia will continue to stand for justice for Palestinians still under siege by the Zionist regime. — Bernama


***


Will Dr Akmal, Wan Ahmad Fahsyal, Ridzuan Tee, Firdaus Wong, and other PAS MPs join him?



Russia sending second ship with oil to Cuba amid US blockade

 


Russia sending second ship with oil to Cuba amid US blockade

Announcement comes days after Russian tanker brought some 700,000 barrels of crude to Cuba in response to energy crisis.

Russia plans to send a second ship carrying oil to Cuba, the Russian energy minister has said, as the Caribbean nation struggles under a crippling United States blockade.

Energy Minister Sergei Tsivilev said on Thursday that the cargo was being loaded and would be brought to Cuba.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

“Cuba is in a total blockade; it’s been cut off. Whose shipment of oil made it? A Russian vessel broke through the blockade,” Tsivilev said, referring to a first Russian tanker that reached the island earlier this week.

“A second one is being loaded right now. We will not leave Cubans alone in trouble.”

His comments come just days after a Russian-flagged tanker carrying about 700,000 barrels of crude docked in Cuba’s Matanzas oil terminal on Tuesday, marking the first significant oil delivery to the country in about three months.

US President Donald Trump’s administration has imposed a fuel blockade of Cuba but granted a waiver to allow this week’s delivery for humanitarian reasons. It said such decisions would be handled on a case-by-case basis.

2:30
  • Now Playing
    02:30

Cuba has endured weeks of blackouts, fuel rationing and food shortages since the Trump administration earlier this year threatened to impose tariffs on any country that sold or provided oil to the country.

The blockade, which came into effect following the US abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in January, has been decried by Cuban officials as “cruel”.

In the capital Havana on Thursday, hundreds of people gathered on bicycles, motorcycles and small, three-wheeled vehicles to protest the US embargo.

“Yes to Cuba! No to the blockade!” the crowd shouted along Havana’s famed seawall, past the US Embassy and towards the downtown area.

“They are strangling us,” Ivan Beltran, 62, told the AFP news agency as he rode an electric tricycle with a photo of the late Cuban revolution leader Fidel Castro on the windshield.

During an official visit to St Petersburg on Wednesday, Cuban Deputy Prime Minister Oscar Perez-Oliva told Russian network RT that Havana and Moscow “have begun efforts to achieve stability in fuel supplies”.

He also said the two sides made progress in talks aimed at increasing the participation of Russian companies in oil exploration and production in Cuba.

Trump, who has repeatedly threatened to attack Cuba and remove its government, said on Sunday that he had “no problem” with Russia sending oil to the island.

“Cuba’s finished. They have a bad regime. They have very bad and corrupt leadership, and whether or not they get a boat of oil, it’s not going to matter,” Trump said.

Hegseth asks US Army chief of staff to step down


FMT:

Hegseth asks US Army chief of staff to step down


General Randy George was told to retire immediately as the US defence chief seeks someone aligned with Donald Trump’s vision


US Army chief of staff General Randy George is the latest senior officer to be ousted during Donald Trump’s second term. (EPA Images pic)



WASHINGTON: Secretary of defence Pete Hegseth has asked General Randy George to step down as chief of staff of the US Army, a US official said on Thursday.

The official confirmed a report from US broadcaster CBS that said George had been asked to take immediate retirement.

The reason for the request was not immediately known, but CBS quoted a source as saying Hegseth wanted someone who would implement his and Trump’s vision for the Army.


George is the latest senior officer to be ousted during Donald Trump’s second term, and his removal as the top Army officer comes with the United States engaged in a major war with Iran that the president has indicated could last for several more weeks.

During a nearly four-decade military career, George deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan multiple times and also served in positions including vice chief of staff of the Army and senior military assistant to Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin during Joe Biden’s term as president.


Trump has overseen a purge of top military officers, including the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, general Charles “CQ” Brown, whom he fired without explanation in February 2025.

Other senior officers dismissed include the heads of the Navy and Coast Guard, the general who headed the National Security Agency, the vice chief of staff of the Air Force, a Navy admiral assigned to Nato, and three top military lawyers.

The chief of staff of the Air Force also announced his retirement without explanation just two years into a four-year term, while the head of US Southern Command retired a year into his tenure.

Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth has insisted the president is simply choosing the leaders he wants, but Democratic lawmakers have raised concerns about the potential politicisation of the traditionally neutral US military.

You had a hand in causing Malay disunity, Dr M told


FMT:

You had a hand in causing Malay disunity, Dr M told


Yesterday
Chia Wan Rou

Leaders from Amanah, Umno and Bersatu pan the former prime minister for saying the Malays have only themselves to blame for their disunity


Former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad had said no single Malay party could dominate the political arena as the proliferation of parties had fragmented the Malays and set them against one another.



PETALING JAYA: Leaders of three Malay parties have panned Dr Mahathir Mohamad after the former prime minister said the Malays have only themselves to blame for their disunity and struggles.

Amanah Youth chief Hasbie Muda pointed out that the former prime minister founded Bersatu as an Umno splinter party, before leaving and setting up another offshoot, Pejuang, which further split the Malay votes.

“If Mahathir is truly committed to the unity agenda, he should prove it by returning to Umno,” Hasbie told FMT.


Separately, Umno Supreme Council member Puad Zarkashi said Mahathir failed to realise that he was the cause of Malay parties losing political dominance.

He said this disunity was caused by Mahathir’s desire to return to power after initially retiring from politics.


“When that failed, he was willing to split Umno and wanted to ‘kill off’ the party by creating Bersatu. In the end, he failed, and so did his last effort to establish a big Malay umbrella,” he said, referring to the now-defunct Gerakan Tanah Air (GTA) alliance.

The Rengit assemblyman also challenged Mahathir to set aside his ego and join Umno’s “Rumah Bangsa” initiative if he is genuine about uniting the Malay race.

“It would be the better and more rational move for him to rejoin Umno with his son, Mukhriz, and his loyal supporters, since Umno is now on the rise again,” said Puad.

Earlier today, Mahathir said no single Malay party could dominate the political arena as the proliferation of parties had fragmented the Malays and set them against one another.


“The fault lies with the Malays themselves,” the former prime minister said.

Mahathir – who previously led Umno, Bersatu and Pejuang – has launched several attempts to unite the Malays through the years.

He formed the GTA alliance, involving Malay parties, NGOs, academics and professionals, in August 2022 and contested the general election that year, but every candidate lost their deposit, including Mahathir himself.

On the other hand, Bersatu Supreme Council member Razali Idris said Mahathir’s statement was the “bitter truth”, citing the number of Malay political parties in the arena, such as Umno, PAS, Bersatu and Pejuang.


However, he said this failure should not be blamed on the Malays as a whole but leaders who engaged in power struggles before going on to form new parties.

“As a figure who had led the country as well as several political movements, Mahathir himself is not exempt from this (political) dynamic since he was involved with the establishment of parties like Bersatu and Pejuang,” Razali said.

The Terengganu executive councillor added that Mahathir was trying to distance himself from his past failures.


Death penalty for fatal corruption, not just drink driving?












Andrew Sia
Published: Apr 2, 2026 2:40 PM
Updated: Apr 3, 2026 11:00 AM




COMMENT | The Klang road tragedy has become racialised online, probably because the driver was Indian while the motorbike victim was Malay.

Some even attacked Transport Minister Anthony Loke. Is it because he is Chinese?

The blame has turned into racial stereotypes of a “drunk Indian”, while forgetting he was also high on dadah, or drugs, which are normally typecast with another racial group.

The video of the accident was horrific. My first instinct, like many others, was that more severe punishment was needed than the minimum 10 years jail and RM50,000 fine under Section 44 of the Road Transport Act.

These enhanced punishments were passed after several drink driving incidents in October 2020, when Peikatan Nasional was in power.

Now, some are calling for the death penalty.





Machang MP Wan Ahmad Fayhsal Wan Ahmad Kamal (formerly from Bersatu) said this will send a “clear message that human life cannot be taken lightly and any action endangering others will face the heaviest consequences.”

PAS Youth chief and Alor Setar MP Afnan Hamimi Taib Azamudden also demanded blood, or “a life for a life”. But why didn’t Bersatu and PAS push for heavier penalties, such as whipping or compensation for victims, when they were in power?

That most “Chinese” person, Ridhuan Tee Abdullah, poured oil on the fire, saying, “Yang tonggang arak si kapir, yang mati Melayu (Islam)... Noktahkan segera sebelum org Islam hilang sabar. (The kafirs ride on alcohol while the Malays die. End it before Muslims lose patience).”

His Facebook post got 43,000 likes and 5,500 shares.

With such fury, it’s not surprising that the driver has been charged with murder.


The accused of the fatal drink driving accident in Klang being brought to court to face a murder charge


But let’s be consistent. What about other dangerous, negligent, and corrupt behaviour that causes deaths?

Some are “high” on reckless riding or driving, while others are “drunk” on bribes. All have deadly consequences.


1. Mat Rempit

Motorcyclists made up two-thirds of 6,537 road deaths in 2025, with those aged 16 to 30 at the highest risk, according to the transport minister. In contrast, there were only 69 cases of fatal drink driving over 10 years (2011-2021), according to police statistics.

This is not to downplay the need to punish drunk drivers, but to ask: why isn’t there similar outrage against the notorious Mat Rempit?





So far, they have mostly killed or injured themselves (burdening the public health system), but if an innocent bystander is “murdered” by them, should the death penalty be imposed?

2. Logging and deadly landslides

Five people were killed in December 2021 near Bentong, Pahang, after deadly landslides laden with mud and logs.

I hiked in the steep hills near Karak a year later and saw that the forests had been cleared and replaced with farms and even a service road. Whole slopes had been washed away.


A landslide in Taman United, Kuala Lumpur, November 2025


It made me wonder who was responsible for this disastrous policy and what their punishment should be. Would PAS say “a life for a life”?

3. Dangerous lorry, bus drivers

We have become immune to news of bus and lorry accidents. A total of 203 bus-related accidents occurred in Malaysia from January 2023 to May this year, resulting in 39 deaths and 68 serious injuries.

The causes, said police, included overworked drivers chasing tight schedules, speeding on wet roads, brake failure, worn-out tyres, and yes, drugs.

News reports also point to drivers being hired despite multiple past traffic violations. Biasa la (normal la). Somehow, these don’t raise the same level of indignation as alcohol.

In September 2024, Loke said many long-distance bus drivers had tested positive for drugs.

In May 2025, nine FRU men near Teluk Intan were killed by a lorry driver with six past criminal cases for drugs, rape, and theft.





The carnage continues. In March, a trailer lorry smashed into three cars in Penang, causing serious injuries. The driver tested positive for syabu or methamphetamine.

A study revealed that fatal road accidents involving heavy vehicles like lorries have claimed 1,457 lives from 2019 to 2024. That’s one life lost every 36 hours. Luckily, deaths declined in 2025.

This is a recurring problem in Malaysia. Is it because we live in a “boleh kautim” culture where some “coffee money” can induce some officials to “close one eye” to broken rules?

In April 2025, a Road Transport Department (RTD) official in Malacca was jailed for bribing his fellow officers to ignore overloaded lorries, which is obviously a safety issue.

In July 2024, another RTD official in Kedah was charged with taking RM42,100 in bribes to overlook rules broken by a lorry company.





It’s also been alleged that Puspakom is “riddled” with corruption, where “runners” routinely secure “roadworthy” certificates with perfunctory inspections.

So, if we’re calling for drunk drivers to be hanged, what about bus and lorry drivers on drugs? What about corrupt officers who enable this bloodbath on the roads? What about transport companies that hire drivers with multiple misdeeds?

Some will blame Loke for this, but I do wonder, did he have the power to bust corrupt traffic cops or RTD officers? That seems to be under the jurisdiction of the police and MACC.

4) Rotten system

Finally, let’s come to government responsibility. In June last year, a tragic accident on the East-West Highway killed 15 UPSI students. Six months later, a Transport Ministry special task force released its findings.

Highways have guardrails to prevent vehicles from plunging into ravines. However, at the accident site, they acted not to save the bus, but as a giant “spear” piercing through the left side of the vehicle, causing 11 of the 15 deaths, lamented the report.





How did this happen? The spacing between guardrail posts was 3.8m, far over the 2m limit. The guardrail panels were installed against the flow of traffic, and multiple bolts were missing.

Instead of cushioning the bus, the end of the guardrail snapped and failed to fold upon impact, becoming a sharp, piercing object.

Yet two days after the accident, Works Minister Alexander Nanta Linggi defended the Public Works Department, claiming that the guardrails met “international safety standards”!

To worsen matters, due to dirt and a lack of maintenance, the reflectors on the guardrails were obscured, while the road had no reflective markings. This made it difficult for drivers to see the road edges.

Brake failure was the main cause of the bus losing control and crashing. Yet just two months before, the bus had passed an inspection by Puspakom.

The task force report concluded that only the driver and travel companies were punished, but not government departments or regulatory agencies, despite their failings.





However, few people remember the task force’s findings because it’s a “boring” road safety issue, rather than a fiery racial issue.

And now, we have the Klang accident being racialised. If we want to punish an Indian drunk-druggie driver for murder, the same should apply to bus and lorry drivers who cause fatal accidents when “drunk” on drugs.

Would Ridhuan declare that we should stop all this “sebelum orang Islam hilang sabar”? Most importantly, is there something wrong with the system that enables carnage on our roads to continue? Is it corruption? Negligence? Cronyism?

Will Wan Fayhsal dare to point the finger at the authorities for failing in their duty to enforce road safety rules?

Will he declare that the death penalty is needed to send a “clear message that human life cannot be taken lightly and any action endangering others will face the heaviest consequences”?

Or is outrage limited only to alcohol?



ANDREW SIA is a veteran journalist who likes teh tarik khau kurang manis. You are welcome to give him ideas to brew at tehtarik@gmail.com