Monday, May 25, 2026

What is the Oreshnik missile that Russia has fired at Ukraine?





What is the Oreshnik missile that Russia has fired at Ukraine?


January 10, 2026
2:40 AM GMT+11
Updated May 24, 2026



Service members take part in what Russian Defence Ministry says is the deployment of the Russian nuclear-capable hypersonic Oreshnik missile system in Belarus, at an unidetified location in this still image from video released December 30, 2025. Russian Defence Ministry/Handout via REUTERS


Jan 9 (Reuters) - Here's what to know about this weapon.

WHAT IS IT?

The Oreshnik, whose name means Hazel Tree, is an intermediate-range hypersonic ballistic missile that Russia has fired only once before against Ukraine, in November 2024.


WHAT IS SPECIAL ABOUT IT?

Experts say the novel feature of the Oreshnik is that it can carry multiple warheads capable of simultaneously striking different targets - usually associated with longer-range intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).

The missile is based on the RS-26 Rubezh, which Russia had originally developed as an intercontinental missile.

Like many Russian weapons systems, it is capable of carrying nuclear as well as conventional warheads, although there was no suggestion of any nuclear component to the overnight attack.

Ukraine said an Oreshnik that Russia used in an attack in January flew at about 13,000 kph (8,000 mph).

Vladimir Putin has claimed that the Oreshnik is impossible to intercept and that it has destructive power comparable to that of a nuclear weapon, even when fitted with a conventional warhead.

Some Western experts have said those claims are exaggerated. In December 2024, a U.S. official said the weapon was not seen as a game-changer on the battlefield, calling it experimental in nature and saying Russia likely possessed only a handful.

Since 2024, Russia has put the Oreshnik into serial production and also supplied it to its ally Belarus.


WHAT WAS THE IMPACT OF THE STRIKE?

The destructive impact in January was limited because the missile - as in 2024, when Russia fired it for the first time - was fitted only with dummy warheads, not explosives, a senior Ukrainian official told Reuters. The official said it struck a state enterprise in the western city of Lviv, causing "minor penetrations of concrete structures" and leaving craters nearby.


WHY USE DUMMY WARHEADS?

Security experts said the point of Moscow's action was not to cause massive destruction but to send a warning signal at a key juncture in the war: that Russia has a powerful, nuclear-capable hypersonic missile that it could use to strike Ukraine or a European member of NATO.

Kyiv's European allies said Moscow was trying to intimidate them in an attempt to scare them away from backing Ukraine. Russia is angry at British and French plans announced this week to send troops to protect Ukraine in the event of a ceasefire in the war. It says European troops would be legitimate targets.

Some political experts said Moscow could also be keen to flaunt its military strength after blows to its prestige since the start of this year - notably the U.S. toppling of Putin's ally, President Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela, and the U.S. seizure of a Russian-flagged oil tanker in the North Atlantic.


ARE MORE ORESHNIK LAUNCHES LIKELY?

Experts assess that Russia has limited stocks of the new missile and will use it sparingly, meaning it will likely refrain from further launches if it judges that its message has been heard by the West.


KELANTAN CHILD PORN: LEBAI LIWAT MENGGANAS LAGI

 

Monday, May 25, 2026

KELANTAN CHILD PORN: LEBAI LIWAT MENGGANAS LAGI

 





  • ustaz pleaded not guilty in Pasir Mas magistrates’ court, Kelantan 
  • four charges involving sexual assault of two boys, producing child porn
  • Faiz R. 31, entered plea before magistrate Bernama reported
  • 1st, 2nd charges, sexually assaulting 8-yr-old boy at Madrasah Kuning, Jeli 
  • 3rd, 4th charges, sexually assaulting six-year-old boy
  • and producing child porn involving the child in Kampung Layat, Jeli 
  • Section 14(a) of Sexual Offences Against Children Act 2017, 20 years jail
  • Section 5 of same Act up to 30 years’ jail, six strokes of rotan 
  • court denied Faiz bail and fixed June 10 for mention of the case


My Comments: I have said this before, this is becoming a pandemic. Maybe the liwat people are encouraged to aspire for higher things in life.

CAN RAFIZI RAMLI DO IT?

 

Monday, May 25, 2026

CAN RAFIZI RAMLI DO IT?

 


Folks, you must read my comments at the bottom. This is from Free Malaysia Today.




Letter to the Editor

Malaysia is facing deep political disillusionment, and Rafizi Ramli’s reformist approach will be tested on whether it can restore public trust in politics beyond rhetoric.

From Ghazalie Abdullah

Malaysia may be entering a dangerous political phase where public disappointment is no longer a temporary frustration but something deeper and more corrosive.

For years, Malaysians have lived through an exhausting cycle of political upheaval, collapsing coalitions, recycled slogans, and endless promises of reform.

Governments changed. Alliances fractured and reassembled. Former enemies became partners before turning into rivals once again. Yet, despite the constant political movement, many ordinary Malaysians increasingly feel that little in their daily realities has truly improved.

The issue confronting the country today may therefore run deeper than governance failures, corruption scandals, or political instability. Malaysia could well be facing a crisis of political credibility itself.

Across the country, frustration is becoming more emotional than ideological. Young professionals struggle with rising living costs and uncertain futures. Graduates enter a workforce that often offers limited mobility.

Businesses remain cautious amid prolonged economic unpredictability.

Even older Malaysians who once placed their hopes in reform politics now view the political landscape with growing scepticism.

This is precisely why the latest developments involving Rafizi Ramli and Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad are attracting attention beyond ordinary party manoeuvring.

The significance lies not merely in political realignment but in what it may represent psychologically.

Malaysians are no longer simply questioning governments. Increasingly, they are questioning the entire political architecture that has shaped the country for decades.

For more than a decade, Rafizi has occupied an unusual space in Malaysian politics. Unlike many politicians whose influence is built on patronage, personality cults, or emotional populism, Rafizi attempted to build his reputation around policy analysis, institutional critique, and economic interpretation.

Even his critics would acknowledge that he introduced a more forensic and intellectually driven style into national political discourse.

While many politicians relied on rhetoric and slogans, Rafizi often tried to steer conversations towards governance systems, economic structures, institutional accountability, and long-term national competitiveness.

That distinction matters.

Modern societies are not transformed by slogans alone. They progress when citizens believe their leaders are capable, credible, and forward-looking.

One of Malaysia’s greatest challenges today may not simply be economic uncertainty but the slow erosion of national confidence itself. The growing belief that meaningful change is no longer possible.

Against this backdrop, any new political movement associated with Rafizi will inevitably attract attention because it appears to promise something different.

If it resonates with the public, it may be less because of personality politics and more due to its attempt to shift the conversation away from endless racial anxieties, coalition arithmetic, and political survival towards competence, governance, and institutional trust.

But Malaysians are also far more cautious today than politicians sometimes realise.

The public has witnessed too many political “reboots” that ultimately repackaged old habits with new branding.

Voters today are more politically literate and emotionally guarded. They recognise performance politics. They understand marketing. They know when “change” is merely cosmetic.

This means Rafizi and any future political movement around him will face a very high standard of public scrutiny.

Malaysians no longer want impressive speeches alone. They will closely observe whether such leaders behave differently when confronted by power, criticism, and political compromise.

That is where the real test begins.

Can a new political movement genuinely rise above Malaysia’s deeply tribal political culture? Can it resist the pull of personality politics and communal calculations? Can it remain intellectually honest when honesty becomes politically inconvenient?

More importantly, can it restore dignity and trust to public leadership?

Because beneath all the political noise lies a far more human yearning. Most Malaysians are not searching for political saviours or perfection.

They simply want a reassurance that intelligence, integrity and competence still matter in national leadership.

Timing may also favour such a recalibration.

Malaysia’s younger electorate is increasingly evaluating leadership through practical realities rather than historical loyalties.

Many are less emotionally attached to traditional political machinery and more concerned about economic mobility, digital competitiveness, institutional trust, education standards, and quality of life.

They are globally connected, technologically aware, and far less patient with political narratives that appear detached from economic reality. That creates both opportunity and danger.

The opportunity lies in the possibility that a genuinely reform-minded political movement could reconnect younger Malaysians with a sense of national purpose and future optimism.

But the danger is equally serious. If yet another reform movement fails to deliver meaningful change, public cynicism may deepen even further.

And once cynicism becomes embedded in a society, it becomes extraordinarily difficult to reverse.

Ultimately, the larger national question may not be whether Rafizi succeeds politically in the conventional sense. Elections will come and go. Coalitions will continue to rise and fracture.

The more important question is whether he can help Malaysians recover their belief that politics can still produce wise, principled, and future-focussed leadership capable of elevating the national conversation beyond fear, race, and perpetual crisis management.

And perhaps that is the deeper question confronting Malaysia today: whether the country still dares to believe that politics can produce hope instead of merely managing disappointment.

Ghazalie Abdullah is a former TV3 news presenter and an FMT reader.

The views expressed are those of the writer and do not necessarily reflect those of FMT.

My comments :  I'm not sure if this is the same Ghazali Abdullah the PR guy. If so, hi bro. Astute piece of writing. 

Here is my take. In 2018 when UMNO got kicked out the feeling was that even if you letak kasut (fielded a pair of slippers as a candidate)  the pair of slippers would have defeated UMNO/BN and won the vote.

I thought that such an event would never come around again. But lo and behold, my view is that for the next polls even if you fielded a pair of old smelly stockings, the pair of smelly stockings will be able to defeat the Pakatan Harapan fellows, especially PKR. 

And for the first time in the history of Malaysia the Rear Admiral can lose the elections in ANY still yet to be determined constituency.  (As I have said before Beijing North is not available). 

  • Rafizi Ramli is organising his new multi racial Parti Bersama in double quick time. 
  • Hamzah Zainuddin is organising his new multi racial party as well.
  • I have heard rumours of at least one other new party in the making. 
  • The next round of general elections are going to be a free for all. 
  • Parliamentary democracy at its best. 
Because when people lose hope in the status quo,  democracy provides aspirants who think they can a better job to try their hand. This is democracy at its best.

Believe me folks, the PH fellows are going to get kicked so hard they are going to fly off  past the moon. 

Penultimately here is a message to the bookies and illegal gambling operators. You can bet all your money that the PH will get kicked out at the next GE. This is a certainty. The biggest money will of course be whether the Rear Admiral can win any seat?   Personally  I dont think so.

We may not know who is going to win the general elections but certainly the PH jokers are going to get kicked out. They will be flying past the moon.

Back to Rafizi Ramli - today I heard something interesting. A friend of mine called. He is a senior lawyer, Tamil in his mid 60s. He has joined Rafizi's party Bersama. Considering that he has not been politically active before it is a major vote of confidence in Bersama. I hope Rafizi will not let him down. Meaning folks are placing much faith (and their hopes) in Rafizi's venture.  It is likely that others may feel the same way.

My message to Rafizi and gang is state clearly what do you wish for the people. Please provide details. 

Avoid mother-goose type statements. Things will be good, tomorrow will be better than today, we will bring good things etc. Also known as platitudes.  

I would like to hear more precise language like:

1. we will abolish the Sedition Act
2. we will seriously amend the MCMC Act and the Defamation Acts (libel/slander)
3. we will abolish the toll roads system
4. we will drastically reduce all import duties, taxes and levies on ALL imported vehicles (internal combustion engines, EVs etc)
5. we will abolish all APs
6. we will abolish all government granted monopolies and oligopolies
7. we will completely liberalise the banking and finance industry
8. we will revamp the education system (Maths and Science in English)
9. we will drastically reduce the numbers of foreigners in the country
10. we will restrict the term of all Members of Parliament and State Assemblymen to two terms only. 
11. we will maintain the Affirmative Action programs to help the bumiputras but we will abolish all quotas and restrictions against the non-bumis.

If Rafizi Ramli can be more precise it will serve him better. 


Cattle market empties as fear grips Eid preparations in India’s West Bengal





Cattle market empties as fear grips Eid preparations in India’s West Bengal


Tensions rise in the key state, won by the right-wing BJP this month for the first time, as political shift disrupts Eid al-Adha traditions


Few buyers have been visiting the Dhulagarh cattle market outside Kolkata this year before Eid al-Adha [Ritwika Mitra/Al Jazeera]



By Ritwika Mitra
Published On 25 May 2026


Kolkata, India – Less than a week before Eid al-Adha, the sprawling Dhulagarh cattle market on the outskirts of Kolkata, the capital of India’s West Bengal state, has a deserted look.

Traders are huddled in groups under a tin shade while more than 200 head of cattle readied for sale before the Muslim festival remain tied to bamboo poles in the open, braving the summer heat.

But there are no customers in sight.

A Hindu seller, who had come to the market from East Midnapur district, 130km (81 miles) southwest of Kolkata, tells Al Jazeera he has taken out multiple high-interest loans to buy his stock for the festival, which falls on Wednesday and Thursday. In a state with nearly 25 million Muslims, or 27 percent of its population, it should be an occasion for good business.

But, he says, this year is different.

“Who will buy a cow? People are living in fear,” the Hindu seller says on condition of anonymity because he fears reprisals from the authorities.


Livestock for sale at the Dhulagarh cattle market outside Kolkata [Ritwika Mitra/Al Jazeera]


For decades, the Dhulagarh cattle market was visited by sellers – almost all of them Hindus – and Muslim buyers to prepare for a ritualistic sacrifice to mark Eid al-Adha. Besides a goat or sheep, many Muslim families often pool together money to sacrifice a steer, buffalo or camel and divide the meat in seven equal shares for the “qurbani”.

Although a 1950 law prohibits public slaughter of cattle, the culturally diverse state of West Bengal has long been ruled by Marxists or centrist political forces that chose not to implement it strictly. The state and its capital became thriving food hubs, famous for the several beef and meat delicacies sold on carts along its bustling streets and in its many restaurants.
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But all that changed on May 6 when Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu majoritarian Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) stormed to power in West Bengal for the first time.

A week after the elections, new Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari, the highest elected official in the state, ordered the strict implementation of the 1950 law, which prevents any cattle slaughter without a valid certificate from a government official declaring the animals “fit for slaughter”. The butchering must be carried out only in a municipal slaughterhouse or one identified by the local administration. The law also mandates that all animals to be slaughtered must be above 14 years of age.

Many Hindus, mainly belonging to privileged castes, consider cattle sacred animals, and their slaughter is banned in most Indian states. Since 2014 when Modi became prime minister, self-appointed cattle vigilantes backed by the BJP have lynched dozens of Muslims and Hindu cattle farmers and traders across the country on suspicion of carrying or consuming beef.
‘Burgers have no religion’

After the BJP’s electoral win in the state, beef traders across West Bengal have reported a sharp decline in sales as a climate of fear engulfs the eastern state’s meat sellers, restaurateurs and roadside food vendors.

The Burger Shop, a Kolkata-based restaurant, announced it had stopped offering its well-known beef burgers. “Our burgers have no religion. But politics sure does,” it posted on Instagram.

“On May 14, we learnt that our [beef] vendor had shut shop. He was called to the local police station and asked to temporarily shut his business. We could not immediately find another vendor so we had to pause the beef burgers. Our loyalists have expressed disappointment, and beef did account for a huge part of our business,” restaurant co-owner Utsha, who goes by her first name, tells Al Jazeera.

Most meat sellers, especially Muslims, have closed their shops as live cow prices dropped from 400 rupees (about $5) a kilo (2.2lb) to as low as 150 rupees ($1.70).

“We had been running our meat shops for 60 years, and we hold licences for it. In the decades that we have stayed in Kolkata, we have always seen peace. … But in the past few weeks, we have seen things turning topsy-turvy,” Mohammad Hasim, 65, who owns two meat shops in the city’s New Market area, tells Al Jazeera.

“Suppliers are scared. Also, there is hardly any demand from the small eateries which sell beef dishes and buy raw meat from us. These days, we close our shops by 1.30pm and head home. Earlier, we would make sales till around 7pm.”


Beef shops at Kolkata’s New Market have barely any customers [Ritwika Mitra/Al Jazeera]


Haider Ali, 62, who runs a licensed beef shop in the same market, says eateries were not taking raw materials from him “out of fear”.


‘High losses’

Back at Dhulagarh cattle market, three Hindu sellers pondered their economic plight.

“Though we have managed to sell some cows, we have still suffered high losses,” one says, adding that for every unsold animal, they lose about 5,000 rupees ($53). These men otherwise work as construction labourers for the rest of the year to earn their livelihoods.

Among the sellers at Dhulagarh is Sundor, a Muslim cattle trader, who goes only by his nickname. He says he has taken out a loan of a million rupees against his mother’s jewellery to buy cattle for the festival.

“As a family, we make around 10 to 15 lakh rupees (1 million to 1.5 million rupees, or $10,500 to $15,750) during the festive season. This year, I have not sold even one of my 25 cows. What will I do now? I am really scared,” Sundor tells Al Jazeera, adding that he sold nearly 100 last year.

Defending the move to regulate cattle slaughter, BJP spokesman Debjit Sarkar tells Al Jazeera that “the laws which were not being followed earlier are being strictly implemented now”.

Jayasimha Nuggehalli, a lawyer and former member of the Animal Welfare Board of India, says cattle slaughter prohibition laws in India are often presented as animal protection measures.

“But their design and implementation are more closely linked to questions of identity, trade and rural livelihoods than to comprehensive animal welfare policy,” he tells Al Jazeera.

“What we are seeing in states such as West Bengal is part of a broader trend in which cattle and meat regulation has become a site of political contestation, building on earlier policies in states that have long imposed restrictions or bans on cow slaughter.”



What does nationalist BJP's victory in West Bengal mean for India's democracy?


Curbs on street prayers


It is not just the government crackdown on beef trade or consumption that has spooked Muslims before Eid al-Adha.

Residents in many Muslim neighbourhoods across West Bengal say they have been ordered by newly elected BJP legislators to not offer “namaz”, or daily prayers, on the streets – a practice common across South Asia as most mosques are not able to accommodate all the people coming during Friday or Eid prayers.

In the otherwise crowded Mullick Bazaar and Park Circus areas of Kolkata, which are frequented by Muslims before the festival, traders say there was barely any business.

“The markets are empty. It has never been like this,” says a man who runs a lungi shop in Mullick Bazaar and refuses to share his name, fearing reprisals from the authorities.

Prominent activist and writer Harsh Mander tells Al Jazeera the BJP has come to power to fulfil an “ideological project”.

“For the past 100 years, the RSS [Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, or National Volunteer Corps] has never reconciled with the idea of equal citizenship of people of Muslim identities in this country,” he says, referring to the BJP’s ideological fountainhead, which was founded in 1920 along the lines of European fascist parties with the aim of creating an ethnic Hindu state in India.

The RSS today presides over dozens of Hindu supremacist groups, and counts millions of Indians, including Modi and other key BJP leaders, as lifetime members.

“They [the RSS] have clearly stated that either Muslims should leave or stay as second-class citizens without rights and political and social space. What the BJP is doing now is fulfilling that agenda. Now it is an open war on your own citizens,” Mander says.


***


Opposite in Malaysia where Muslims reign supreme. If anyone in Malaysia feels sorry for the bullied/oppressed Muslims in India, please spare a thought for the feelings of the minority Hindus in Malaysia.




Viral Threads post of bus driver casually pouring drink while driving sparks police investigation in Taiping






Viral Threads post of bus driver casually pouring drink while driving sparks police investigation in Taiping



Police are investigating a viral video showing a driver pouring liquid into a bottle while driving a bus, which was shared by a social media user on Threads last Thursday. — Picture by Choo Choy May

Monday, 25 May 2026 4:57 PM MYT


IPOH, May 25 — Police are investigating a viral video showing a driver pouring liquid into a bottle while driving a bus, which was shared by a social media user on Threads last Thursday.

Taiping district police chief ACP Abd Malek Ismail said the Traffic Investigation and Enforcement Division of the Taiping district police headquarters had received information regarding the video, which was recorded by one of the bus passengers before being uploaded on social media.

“Initial checks found that the exact location of the incident has yet to be identified. However, based on conversations in the comments section, the account owner expressed concern that the incident occurred near the area after the Menora Tunnel, which posed a risk to passenger safety,” he said in a statement.

Abd Malek said police are also still tracing the bus company involved as well as the actual route taken by the bus, adding that the case could be investigated under Section 42 of the Road Transport Act 1987 for reckless and dangerous driving.


Meanwhile, he urged members of the public, including the Threads account owner who uploaded the video, to come forward to assist in the investigation, adding that efforts were underway to trace the account owner to obtain further information.

Earlier, a 22-second video went viral on Threads showing an express bus driver allegedly driving in a dangerous manner while attempting to open a plastic packet containing liquid and pour it into a bottle while driving. — Bernama

Financial issues behind delay in Air Itam-Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Expressway project, says Penang CM






Financial issues behind delay in Air Itam-Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Expressway project, says Penang CM



Penang Chief Minister Chow Kon Yeow said the project concessionaire was facing financial issues but they have been given an extension until next year to complete the project. — Picture via Facebook/ChowKonYeow

Monday, 25 May 2026 5:06 PM MYT


GEORGE TOWN, May 25 — Penang Chief Minister Chow Kon Yeow has admitted that the delay in the completion of the Air Itam-Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Expressway was due to financial issues.

He said the project concessionaire was facing financial issues but they have been given an extension until next year to complete the project.

“There are delays but works are still in progress, the final deadline is April next year,” he said when asked to comment on the delay in the project which physically started in 2021.

The RM851 million Package Two highway stretches about 6km.


The project started in February 2021 and was initially expected to be completed in 2025.

The project is being undertaken by Consortium Zenith Construction (CZC) under Penang Infrastructure Corporation (PIC).

When asked about criticisms that the project had dragged for 14 years, Chow said the contract was only awarded in 2020 before physical works started in 2021.


When asked if the concessionaire had run into financial difficulties due to the Covid-19 pandemic, he said that pandemic was long over.

“Covid has already passed. We cannot continue using the same excuse,” he said.

Back in November last year, PIC said the project was given an extension of time (EOT) in 2023 for the completion date of October 31, 2026.

A second EOT was approved in mid last year for the completion date set on April 12, 2027.

Suhakam: Officers instigated Taiping Prison riot, detainees' human rights violated










Suhakam: Officers instigated Taiping Prison riot, detainees' human rights violated


Farah Solhi
Published: May 25, 2026 4:48 PM
Updated: 6:49 PM



The riot involving over 100 inmates at Taiping Prison in January last year, which resulted in a detainee's death, was instigated by the prison management and staff themselves, the Suhakam public inquiry panel concluded.

Presenting the findings today, Suhakam chairperson Hishamudin Yunus said the panel identified several physical violations by the prison staff against the inmates during the incident, including punching and kicking them, as well as pepper-spraying those sitting in a line with both hands handcuffed.

“The prison officers’ justification of such violations, where they claimed to use ‘minimum force’ that does not cause death to maintain security, was completely unacceptable.

“The staff who ‘went crazy’, triggered during the detainees’ transfer operation, clearly showed that the interpretation of ‘minimum force’ was only used as an excuse and defensive in nature to justify acts that exceeded the limits of the law and violated human rights,” Hishamudin said.

Suhakam previously initiated a public inquiry on alleged human rights abuses in Taiping Prison, following the death of Gan Chin Eng, with the inmate said to have died after a warden purportedly assaulted him during a riot on Jan 17, 2025.


Suhakam chairperson Hishamudin Yunus


Hishamudin led the panel together with Suhakam’s commissioner Farah Nini Dusuki.


Baton used, medical negligence

Hishamudin said prison officers involved in the riot had beaten the inmates repeatedly, irresponsibly, and indiscriminately, using weapons including batons, which caused serious injuries to them, such as lacerations to their heads and broken hands.

He further said that several instances of negligence occurred after the incident, including delay in medical treatment, misdiagnosis and misuse of equipment for medical examination.

The panel also identified fraud in inmates' medical record documentation.

“There were notes written by the prison’s medical staff on the inmates’ medical cards regarding the cause of injury, and that their referral to the hospital contains inaccurate, biased and misleading information.

“Among the identified notes were ‘hostile inmate started riot’, ‘inmates claim alleged fall’, ‘refuse/uncooperative, was pulled to the corner’.

“There is no record of any violence committed by prison staff or the weapons used that caused injuries to the inmates, despite the medical staff being at the scene when the incident happened,” said Hishamudin.

The act of falsifying and manipulating the inmates’ medical records, Hishamudin said, showed “dual loyalty” practices by the prison’s medical personnel.





“The panel emphasised that the responsibility to provide medical care that is independent and uninfluenced by pressure or any institutional interests lies entirely with medical staff.

“Medical officers, in particular, have a duty to prioritise the health of patients of all circumstances, regardless of the detainees’ status as prisoners,” Hishamudin added.

Apart from physical violations, the panel also found that the prison had violated the inmates’ human rights under Articles 5 and 8 of the Federal Constitution, as well as the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhumane and Degrading Treatment or Punishment.


Inhumane, degrading treatment


The panel also ascertained that the inmates had received inhumane and degrading treatment after the incident, where they were denied basic facilities and welfare such as access to personal hygiene, clean clothes, a mattress and blankets.

“The inmates were blocked from having contact with outside parties to prevent their families from being informed of the incident.

“We (the panel) also found that several police reports lodged by the prison officers against the inmates contained false and inaccurate information, which did not reflect the actual incident.

“The police reports indicated that the detainees initiated the provocation, acted aggressively and attacked the prison staff. (But) On the contrary, the panel found that the incident on Jan 17, 2025, was caused by the prison officer’s own action.”

Hishamudin said the panel found there were various facts which could lead to the conclusion that extreme violence was inflicted on Gan by the prison officers, which led to his death.





Despite no eyewitness nor direct evidence to support this finding, Hishamudin said, facts presented during the inquiry proceedings, as well as circumstantial evidence, clearly show the deceased’s injuries were the result of violence.

They also found that the deceased did not receive medical attention and that he was “delayed” at the prison’s main gate for about 35 minutes or more before he was brought to the Taiping Hospital, about 2km away from the prison.

Subsequently, the panel ruled that the prison committed medical negligence and neglect on Gan, which is a breach of duty of care by the prison officers that directly contributed to the deceased’s death.


Bad prison management


Apart from violence and human rights violations, the panel identified the prisons’ poor administrative management in transferring detainees from Block B to E as another contributing factor to the incident.

Hishamudin said the prison’s management decision to place the inmates in Block E was the trigger for human rights violations against them.

During the public inquiry proceedings, Prison Department’s commissioner general Abdul Aziz Abdul Razak said the inmates refused to move to the block because of its improper toilet facilities, which use bucket toilet systems, and the Public Works Department had also said the blocks were not safe to occupy.





In the panel’s findings, Hishamudin said the block’s condition, which included structural damage, the use of a toilet bucket system, dirty cells, and overflowing water into the cell during heavy rains, required comprehensive repairs.


Panel’s recommendation

The panel outlined several recommendations to ensure such violations and incidents do not recur, including for authorities to investigate the incident independently and for officers involved to be charged immediately.

“We recommended that the authorities investigate the incident, as the previous investigation was only focused on Gan’s death.

“The police must ensure the investigation is transparent, conducted promptly and without bureaucracy, given the seriousness of the offence.

“The authorities should also investigate the false police reports lodged by the prison officers.

“We also recommend that the Health Ministry and the Malaysian Medical Council conduct a thorough investigation and take appropriate action against the prison’s medical officers for breaching their ethics as health workers.”

The panel, Hishamudin added, also recommended that the prison management eliminate the toilet bucket system in all prison institutions, as it contradicts human rights principles.

“The basic needs of inmates should be met consistently, including aspects of personal hygiene, prison environment, and access to basic facilities,” he said.


Only 10pct of Kedah paddy farmers begin planting amid water supply fears, rising costs










Only 10pct of Kedah paddy farmers begin planting amid water supply fears, rising costs


Published: May 25, 2026 3:08 PM
Updated: 5:08 PM


Only 10 percent of 56,000 rice farmers in Kedah have begun planting activities for the season, said Paddy Farmers Brotherhood Organisation (Pesawah) chairperson Abdul Rashid Yob.

Although dry sowing is typically carried out between April and early May, he said many farmers in the country’s rice bowl state are delaying planting due to concerns over water supply and rising operating costs.

Speaking to Berita Harian, Abdul Rashid said farmers were caught between the risk of flooding if rainfall continues and the possibility of water shortages during the coming dry spell.

"Despite the current rain, the water level in the dams, especially the Muda Dam, is not stable enough to allow large-scale water releases for rice field irrigation purposes.

"Now we see that some rice farmers have started to process the soil, but the entire planting schedule is still delayed. There is water in the rice fields because of the rain, but the water level in the dam is not yet high.

"If the weather forecast is correct, the rain will only occur intermittently this month before decreasing again in June and is expected to become drier around July," he explained.

According to a report by The Star today, Muda Dam is among the hardest hit by the ongoing drought in northern Peninsular Malaysia, with the balance storage reportedly falling to 8.37 percent.

Kedah produces more than 40 percent of white rice in Malaysia, which is consumed about 2.5 million tonnes annually.


Pesawah chairperson Abdul Rashid Yob


On May 5, Bernama reported Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim as instructing the Royal Malaysian Air Force and the Fire and Rescue Department to increase cloud seeding operations in northern peninsular states due to the ongoing dry spell.


Farmers’ woes

Commenting further, Abdul Rashid said some rice farmers are using pumps to obtain water from nearby rivers, but this step has added to the already rising operating costs.

"Farmers are struggling because the cost issue has not been resolved.

"Oil prices are fluctuating, operating costs are increasing, and this has affected farmers' motivation to continue planting," he said.

He added that government measures such as the ploughing incentive were insufficient to address the sector’s structural problems.

"I understand that other sectors have received an extension of the diesel subsidy, but rice crops are still facing a cost problem without a long-term solution that has increased by more than 50 percent.

"If rice-related machinery also receives diesel fleet cards, I am sure many rice farmers will start ploughing their fields," Abdul Rashid said.

Bernama reported Anwar as saying earlier this month that paddy farmers would receive an advance payment of RM200 per hectare under the ploughing incentive special aid programme.





On May 14, Bernama also said Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi had announced the start of the southwest monsoon, which would last until September, bringing hotter and drier weather as well as lower rainfall distribution.

This intersects with the El Niño phenomenon, which the Malaysian Meteorological Department yesterday warned could reduce rainfall across Malaysia.

The Star reported the department as saying that El Niño could intensify due to rising sea surface temperatures in the eastern regions of the Pacific Ocean, along with weakened easterly winds and global warming.

The issues come amid concerns regarding the impacts of rising fertiliser costs due to the escalating conflict in West Asia.

Malaysia is also grappling with challenges over its self-sufficiency in food security and the resilience of its food systems.


DAP MP warns Anwar's anti-hate call will mean little without firmer govt action










DAP MP warns Anwar's anti-hate call will mean little without firmer govt action


Published: May 25, 2026 3:37 PM
Updated: 5:37 PM


A DAP lawmaker has cautioned that Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s call for Malaysians to reject hatred and slander will ring hollow unless the government acts more firmly, swiftly, and consistently against extremist narratives as well as racial and religious provocations.

Asserting that he is voicing the criticism of the government’s “greatest weakness” as felt by “many Malaysians”, Klang MP V Ganabatirau highlighted a negative perception against the government’s supposedly lacklustre response during previous incidents affecting the Indian community.

In particular, he highlighted the 2024 controversy involving socks bearing the word “Allah” found in a KK Mart convenience store, the use of derogatory racial terms against Indians, and attacks on religious sensitivities via the labelling of Hindu temples as “illegal”.

“When insensitive controversies and hate-driven remarks surfaced… the response was often seen as delayed, inconsistent or insufficiently firm.

“This allowed extremist voices to grow louder and created the perception that intolerance and provocation were being normalised in public discourse,” the Selangor DAP deputy chairperson said in a statement today.




He emphasised that a peaceful and multiracial Malaysia cannot be sustained if hate speech, religious bigotry, and incitement are treated “selectively or according to political convenience”.

The government, he said, must demonstrate moral courage and apply the law fairly and consistently against any individual or group that threatens national harmony - regardless of race, religion, or political affiliation.

“The silent majority has always believed in moderation, mutual respect and coexistence.

“What Malaysians seek now is not merely rhetoric against extremism, but firm and principled action (which) reassures every citizen that unity, justice and inclusiveness remain the true foundation of our nation,” the parliamentarian added.

His remarks today come after the prime minister called on the peace-loving majority to speak up against narratives of hatred and slander being propagated by a minority group in the country.

Speaking at a May 23 event in conjunction with Wesak Day, Anwar said the current situation reflects a “tyranny of the minority”, where a small group of loud, angry individuals who spread slander attempt to impose their will on the majority of the people.


Racial issues

Ganabatirau’s statement also echoes sentiments expressed by former PKR deputy president Rafizi Ramli, who recently said the government could do better at addressing racial issues, citing Anwar’s supposedly misplaced focus on placating unity government partner Umno.

During the KK Mart socks controversy, Umno Youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh and other quarters had urged Muslims to boycott the retail chain.

Rafizi, who has since resigned from PKR to lead Parti Bersama Malaysia, further highlighted the government’s lack of an effective mechanism and narrative leadership to counter extremist agendas.

In response to Rafizi’s claims, National Unity Advisory Council member Tajuddin Rasdi opined that Anwar is not solely to blame for failing to keep the rising racial and religious tensions in check.


Former PKR deputy president Rafizi Ramli


Tajuddin also insisted that Rafizi had hardly addressed any racial or religious issues at all when the latter was the economy minister, accusing him of failing to deal with any cases of religious or racial tensions caused by individuals and the opposition in his podcasts.

“As usual, Rafizi is in his classic mode of blaming others, especially his former boss, without any concrete execution on his own part,” the professor of Islamic architecture said in a statement to Malaysiakini.

He added that Rafizi should be aware of how Anwar’s intervention in such issues could become political fuel to be exploited by the opposition.