Monday, June 01, 2026

A big DAP loss to let Marina who can bridge Malay, Chinese electorate to just walk out from politics?





A big DAP loss to let Marina who can bridge Malay, Chinese electorate to just walk out from politics?




JOHOR DAP chairwoman Teo Nie Ching has apparently been snubbed for overlooking the value Skudai state assemblywoman Marina Ibrahin has brought to the party, particularly her ability to win the hearts of her Malay electorate in her debutant term despite the wide perception of DAP as a “kafir” (infidel) party.
Political opinion pieces


This follows the leakage of an internal exchange dated May 30 between Marina and the National Wanita DAP chief which ultimately led the 38-year-old Marina to not wanting to contest in the upcoming Johor state poll and to eventually quit politics.

天下无不散之筵席,大家后会有期 😊😄

怀着谦卑及感恩的心情,我玛丽娜决定不会在来临的州选竞选任何议席,并完全退出政治舞台。

这项决定,是我在与一路陪伴、支持我的团队深思熟虑后所作出的选择。

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Bismillahirrahmanirrahim

Assalamualaikum Warahmatullahi Wabarakatuh dan Salam Sejahtera.

Dengan penuh rendah diri, saya, Marina Ibrahim, telah membuat keputusan untuk tidak bertanding dan berundur daripada arena politik.

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Apparently, the Chinese media has exposed how Marina – one of DAP’s nine Malay state assemblymen and three MPs – saw a bleak political future after Teo who is also the Kulai MP “instructed her to contest in the Tiram state constituency instead”.

“Come on … it’s not difficult to understand …. Skudai is indeed a non-Malay majority seat. It has been 31 years since the Chinese held the Skudai seat. All the (previous) state assemblymen are Chinese,” reacted digital creator Nabeel Naqie Six in a Facebook post.
Politics

Akhbar Cina dedah Marina tidak mahu pertahan DUN Skudai kerana Teo Nie Ching arah Marina tukar tempat bertanding ke Tiram. 😂

Kemon…boleh faham kot….
Skudai tu memang kerusi majoriti bukan Melayu.
Dah 31 tahun Cina pegang kerusi Skudai. ...

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It has been four terms since DAP held Skudai. In the 2022 Johor state election, Marina was the first Malay to win in Skudai.

Marina was able to contest because (DAP supremo Tan Sri Lim) Kit Siang accorded her a safe constituency and instructed Chinese voters to vote for a Malays of DAPig (political slur). Only then can we see that DAPig has a Malay leader. 

Editor’s Note: The Chinese media revelation was courtesy of mathematics and history author Megat Hisemudin Megat Kasim who himself studied at Taiwan’s National Cheng Kung University.

“Chinese newspapers revealed that the reason why Skudai state assemblywoman Marina Ibrahim didn’t want to contest to retain the Skudai state seat was because she was instructed by Teo to move to the Tiram seat held by BN (Barisan Nasional),” shared the old pupil of SJKC Chung Hwa Parit.



Crediting Marina, Nabeel praised her for having taken care of her constituency seriously with the exception of “DAPigs wanting to claim back Skudai (their safe seat) for its Chinese candidates. ”

“Marina was told to contest in Tiram. A traditional UMNO stronghold.  Imagine Skudai is an urban locale with 54.5% Chinese population (Malay 31.5%) while Tiram is a FELDA kampung with 60.1% Malay majority (Chinese 32.8%),” justified the influencer who detests populist politics

“It’s a suicide mission for Marina. She should run away. ”

Suicide mission aside, Teo’s contention that she would propose Marina as “chairman of a statutory body” should outcome of the Johor state poll did not favour her also left a sour note on both DAP loyalists and detractors alike.

“Johor DAP deeply appreciates leaders who are willing to make bold tactical moves for the party and we’ll always do our level best to walk through challenging terrains with them, especially when outcomes are uncertain,” penned the Deputy Communications Minister in a trilingual FB post.

[BM / English / 中文]

Saya menerima pengumuman Saudari Marina untuk tidak bertanding dalam pilihan raya negeri yang akan datang serta berundur dari arena politik dengan perasaan berat hati. Saya ingin mengambil kesempatan ini untuk merakamkan penghargaan atas perjalanan dan sumbangan beliau yang begitu bermakna sepanjang penglibatannya dalam perjuangan parti.

Bermula dari Kulai

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“If the offer to contest in a new seat has upset Marina in any way, I would like to officially record my regrets. It is, however, my responsibility as the Johor DAP Johor chairwoman to formulate the best possible strategy for the party facing the upcoming Johor state poll.”

“If the offer to contest in a new seat has upset Marina in any way, I would like to officially record my regrets. It is, however, my responsibility as the Johor DAP chairwoman to formulate the best possible strategy for the party in facing the upcoming Johor state poll.”

Little wonder Teo gets snubbed by both DAP loyalists and detractors for her rigidity. – June 1, 2026


Johor Harapan gears up for state polls










Johor Harapan gears up for state polls


Alyaa Alhadjri
Published: Jun 1, 2026 8:02 PM
Updated: 10:02 PM




Having anticipated the dissolution of the Johor assembly, state Pakatan Harapan said it is prepared to face the upcoming state election.

In a statement today, the coalition took note of Menteri Besar Onn Hafiz Ghazi’s announcement that the state assembly had been dissolved with immediate effect.

“From the outset, Harapan had anticipated that BN would dissolve the state assembly in the near future.

“As it turned out, the assembly sitting that had been announced for June 22 was entirely implausible,” the state chapter said through its communications director Sheikh Umar Bagharib Ali.

The statement was jointly issued by Johor Harapan and state Amanah chairperson Aminolhuda Hassan, Johor PKR chairperson Dr Zaliha Mustafa, and Johor DAP chairperson Teo Nie Ching.


DAP Senator Sheikh Umar Bagharib Ali


In the spirit of democracy, Johor Harapan said it will continue with its preparations for the election.

“Johor Harapan will also bring discussions to the Harapan central presidential council to formulate the next course of action,” it added.

The coalition stressed that it was ready to mobilise its resources to secure victory.

“For us, there is no such thing as an easy election. Harapan stands ready to mobilise its efforts to the fullest to win this state election,” it said.

The Election Commission is expected to announce the dates for nomination, early voting, and polling in the coming days.


BN previously won big

The last Johor state election was held on March 12, 2022, after then-menteri besar Hasni Mohammad sought the dissolution of the state assembly following the death of Kempas assemblyperson Osman Sapian, which reduced BN’s slim majority in the 56-seat legislature.

The election resulted in a landslide victory for BN, which won 40 seats and secured a two-thirds majority. Harapan won 13 seats, while Perikatan Nasional captured three.





Muda, contesting under the Harapan banner, won its maiden seat through its president Amira Aisya Abdul Aziz in Puteri Wangsa.

The 2022 polls were also notable for being the first state election to be held after the implementation of Undi18 and automatic voter registration, which expanded the electorate significantly.

However, voter turnout was relatively low at about 55 percent.

Johor’s current term was due to expire in early 2027, making the dissolution roughly eight months ahead of schedule.


***


Melaka and NS might as well join in, wakakaka


'Call me weak if you want' - Skudai rep defends 'strategic diplomacy'










'Call me weak if you want' - Skudai rep defends 'strategic diplomacy'


Published: Jun 1, 2026 5:16 PM
Updated: 7:33 PM


Skudai assemblyperson Marina Ibrahim has defended her approach to politics, rejecting claims she had switched allegiance or been "bought over" because of her willingness to work with the Johor government.

In a lengthy social media post, the DAP elected representative said her decisions were guided by discussions with her team and a commitment to resolving constituents' problems rather than engaging in constant political confrontation.

"Some people asked, 'Did you jump parties?' or 'Were you bought over?' No," she said.

Marina (above, left) said critics had formed negative perceptions of her because she was not vocal in attacking political opponents.

However, she argued that politics should be about solving problems rather than scoring political points.

"Politics is not about how effectively you attack others. It is about solving problems on the ground," she said.

Earlier today, the New Straits Times quoted Marina as declining to confirm the authenticity of a May 30 letter purportedly sent to Johor DAP chairperson Teo Nie Ching, before announcing her intention to retire from active politics ahead of the next election.


Johor DAP chairperson Teo Nie Ching


The letter purportedly showed Marina rejecting an offer to leave Skudai and contest the Tiram state seat, as well as a proposal that she be appointed to a government-linked entity should she lose.


Negotiation over confrontation

Citing Sun Tzu's “The Art of War”, Marina said the best outcomes were often achieved through cooperation and negotiation rather than conflict.

The DAP lawmaker does not believe the opposition should oppose every government initiative for political reasons.

"To me, when something benefits the people in my constituency, it is our responsibility to support it if it is good.

"But not to support blindly. More importantly, when there are weaknesses, we point them out and offer solutions," she added.


Skudai assemblyperson Marina Ibrahim


Marina said she regularly raised issues through state assembly debates, meetings and direct engagement with government officials.

She also stressed that being outside the state government did not mean every issue had to be addressed through confrontation.

"Many public problems can be solved through good working relationships, mature negotiations and the ability to build bridges between different parties," she said.


People first

According to Marina, residents were more concerned with resolving longstanding local issues than political disputes.

"Politics has its time, especially during elections. But helping people cannot wait for election season," she said.


Marina on the ground speaking to constituents on issues in their neighbourhood


The assemblyperson added that a politician's effectiveness should be measured by the number of problems solved rather than the number of conflicts created.

"You can call me weak or soft if you want. It doesn't matter.

"But to me, this is not a sign of weakness. It is a form of strategic diplomacy that allows more to be achieved for my constituency," she said.

Leading up to the Johor election, state mentri besar and Johor BN chief Onn Hafiz Ghazi declared that the coalition will contest all 56 seats against Harapan and others.

In response, Harapan said it would also contest all state seats.

Bersatu man dares PAS to go solo at polls





Bersatu man dares PAS to go solo at polls


Melaka Bersatu information chief says PAS should not ‘constantly blame and belittle’ its PN coalition partners


Melaka Bersatu information chief Hishamuddin Abdul Karim (left) said PAS information chief Ahmad Fadhli Shaari’s suggestion that his party and Bersatu contest future elections separately showed that the Islamic party was in a state of ‘unease and defensiveness’.


PETALING JAYA: A Melaka Bersatu leader has challenged PAS to contest elections alone, the latest salvo in an ongoing war of words between the two Perikatan Nasional founding members.

Melaka Bersatu information chief Hishamuddin Abdul Karim said PAS information chief Ahmad Fadhli Shaari’s suggestion that his party and Bersatu contest future elections separately showed that the Islamic party was in a state of “unease and defensiveness”.

“PN was built on mutual understanding and trust,” said Hishamuddin in a statement, adding that no single party should boast that it alone is the strongest and has contributed the most.


“If PAS is truly strong enough to stand on its own, then prove it to the people without constantly blaming and belittling its coalition partners.”

Earlier today, Bersatu vice-president Ahmad Faizal Azumu also said PAS was free to go its own way.


Fadhli had said there was little hope for harmonious cooperation if remarks that Bersatu lacked an effective grassroots network were easily dismissed.

He was referring to a viral video of a ceramah by Azmin Ali in Melaka on Saturday night, in which the Bersatu secretary-general pushed back against claims that his party lacked grassroots machinery and urged critics to “open their eyes and ears”.

However, Bersatu information chief Tun Faisal Ismail Aziz said Azmin’s remarks were not directed at PAS but certain people who had allegedly ignored explanations provided by party leaders and misrepresented decisions made by the PN Supreme Council.

Malaysia’s ban on Thai shrimp sparks alarm among Thai producers





Malaysia’s ban on Thai shrimp sparks alarm among Thai producers


The agriculture and food security ministry last month said it would temporarily restrict imports of five shrimp species from Thailand effective June 1


Thailand exports around 6,000 to 8,000 tonnes of shrimp to Malaysia each year. (Envato Elements pic)


PETALING JAYA: Thai shrimp farmers are urging their government to step in after Malaysia temporarily banned imports of five Thai shrimp species.

The Thai Shrimp Association and the Thai Shrimp Farmers Alliance yesterday submitted a letter to prime minister Anutin Charnvirakul seeking immediate help for shrimp farmers and coastal fishermen, reported Thai news website The Nation.

The groups said Malaysia’s decision had caused serious concern within Thailand’s shrimp production sector as the country is one of Thailand’s key export markets.


They said the short notice between Malaysia’s announcement and the enforcement date could hurt Thai exporters’ revenues and dent business confidence.

They also warned of domestic oversupply, which could force farmers and exporters to urgently divert shrimp to other markets or sell locally.


Thailand exports around 6,000 to 8,000 tonnes of shrimp to Malaysia each year, accounting for about 5% of total Thai shrimp exports.

The agriculture and food security ministry last month said it would temporarily restrict imports of five shrimp species from Thailand, effective June 1.

The measure covers black tiger shrimp, whiteleg shrimp, banana shrimp, brown shrimp and blue shrimp.

The ministry also said it would tighten import controls on sea bass from the country.

It said the measure was aimed at strengthening food safety controls, particularly to ensure shrimp and sea bass entering the local market comply with existing standards.


Restoring the Hindu-Buddhist foundations of Malay civilisation












Ranjit Singh Malhi
Published: May 31, 2026 10:00 AM
Updated: 9:35 PM




COMMENT | Malaysian school history textbooks must tell the story of the nation truthfully, inclusively, and in its full civilisational depth. Our rich multicultural and multireligious heritage should be a source of pride for all Malaysians.

To achieve this, history education must present a balanced and evidence-based account of the past rather than one shaped by selective narratives, omissions, or half-truths.

One major topic that deserves far more serious treatment is the Indianisation of the early Malay world from about the second century to the 14th century CE.

Current history textbooks have downplayed the influence of Indian civilisation on Malay kingdoms and society during this period, including its impact on kingship, court rituals, language, literature, law, religion, architecture, customs, and political vocabulary.

George Coedès, one of the foremost scholars of early Southeast Asian history, defined “Indianisation” as the expansion of an organised culture based on Indian ideas of royalty, Hinduism, and Buddhism, the Puranic tradition, Dharmasastra norms, and the Sanskrit language.

Importantly, Indianisation was not the result of Indian military conquest; it was a process of selective adoption and adaptation by Southeast Asian rulers and communities.

Local rulers embraced Indian ideas because they strengthened legitimacy, enhanced court culture, and connected their kingdoms to the wider civilised world of Asia.


Early Malay kingdoms were Hindu-Buddhist

From the early centuries of the Common Era, Indianised kingdoms emerged across the Malay Peninsula.

Among them were Langkasuka in the district of modern Pattani, Kedah Tua, Gangga Negara in the Kinta Valley, Chih-tu, Tan-tan, and other small coastal and riverine polities.

Ancient Kedah, known in Indian sources as Kadaram or Kataha, deserves special attention. It is among the earliest and most important centres of civilisation in present-day Malaysia.

Its temple ruins, inscriptions, ritual objects, Buddhist and Hindu artefacts, and evidence of maritime trade reveal a sophisticated early society deeply connected to the Indian Ocean world.


Impact on Malay kingship and governance

One of the most enduring Indian influences was on Malay political culture.

Early Malay rulers adopted Indian concepts of divine or sacred kingship. The local chief became a raja or maharaja.

Royal authority was no longer merely tribal or local; it was enhanced and legitimised through ritual, cosmology, and court ceremony.





The very word “raja” is of Indian origin. So too are many of the political terms that became central to Malay governance: negara, negeri, mahkota, putera, puteri, permaisuri, menteri, bendahara, laksamana, and duta.

Indian influence also extended into court ritual. The use of sacred regalia, ritual purification ceremonies, the five-tiered dais for royal installation ceremonies, and the role of court specialists, including the Seri Nara Diraja, who is responsible for proclaiming the appointment of the Malay ruler, all reflect the enduring influence of Hindu-Buddhist traditions and Sanskritic culture.

Chinese sources cited by Paul Wheatley in his book “The Golden Khersonese” are especially revealing.

In Chih-tu, usually located by scholars in the Kelantan region, several hundred Brahmans were said to have sat in rows at the king’s court. In Tan-tan, most likely located in Terengganu, eight high officers of state were reportedly Brahmans.

These accounts show that Indian religious specialists were part of the machinery of court, ceremony, and governance.

Our textbooks should rightfully state that the Malay monarchy did not emerge in a cultural vacuum.

Its pre-Islamic foundations were shaped significantly by Hindu-Buddhist and Sanskritic ideas before being later Islamised and adapted further under the Malay sultanates.


Language: the living archive of Indianisation


Perhaps the most enduring and visible evidence of Indian influence is found in the Malay language itself. Sanskrit and Tamil loanwords are embedded deeply in Malay vocabulary.

They cover governance, religion, family, literature, commerce, time, the body, ethics, and everyday life.





Words such as bahasa, agama, syurga, neraka, dosa, pahala, guru, siswa, sastera, pustaka, keluarga, suami, isteri, saudara, kepala, rupa, warna, utama, sempurna, and manusia all reflect Sanskrit influence.

Tamil contributed words associated with trade, food, domestic life, and social relations, including kedai, kapal, modal, kari, apam, kanji, bendi, putu, katil, peti, and kolam.


Literature, epics, and the Malay imagination

The influence of Indian civilisation extended beyond language into Malay literature and the performing arts.

The great Sanskrit epics, the Ramayana and Mahabharata, entered the Malay world and were adapted into local literary forms.

Works such as Hikayat Seri Rama, Hikayat Sang Boma, and Hikayat Pendawa reflect this deep engagement with Indian epic traditions.

Wayang kulit also bears the imprint of the Ramayana tradition, with characters such as Rama, Sita, Hanuman, and Ravana becoming part of the Malay cultural imagination.

These traditions were not copied mechanically. They were localised, reinterpreted, and absorbed into Malay storytelling, performance, and moral instruction.


Indianisation in daily life and social customs

Yet Indian influence was not confined to royal courts, palaces, and temples. It also filtered into social customs and daily life. Earlier school textbooks were more willing to acknowledge this.

Gilbert Khoo’s Sejarah Malaysia Tingkatan Satu, published in 1977, discussed Hindu-Buddhist influence on Malay society in government, royal installation, language, literature, arts, customs, and beliefs.

It also referred to customs such as melenggang perut, salting the lips of newborn babies, ear-piercing, and cremation as Hindu-influenced practices.


A man practising ritual piercing during Thaipusam in 2025


Chinese accounts of Chih-tu also noted cremation practices among both nobility and commoners. This suggests that Indianised religious practices had moved beyond the palace and entered broader social life, at least in some early Malay polities.

Some Hindu-influenced marriage customs also endured in modified form, including bersanding and berinai.

These customs later coexisted with Islamic practices, showing how Malay culture layered new religious meanings upon older cultural forms.


Ancient Kedah: the great missing chapter

Our current history textbooks have downplayed the significance of Hindu-Buddhist influence in the early history of Kedah, one of the principal cradles of civilisation in the Malay peninsula and an important centre of early Malay civilisation.

Archaeological remains clearly show that there was a Hindu-Buddhist polity in ancient Kedah, whose local rulers had adopted Indian cultural and political models.

Significantly, our earlier Form Four history textbook (second edition), published by Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka in 1979, provided a detailed and objective account of Hindu-Buddhist influence in ancient Kedah.

This includes facts such as “Kedah menjadi satu kerajaan berpengaruh India”, “Setengah-setengahnya [orang India] berkahwin dengan keluarga diraja”, and “fahaman Hindu tentang beraja tertanam di dalam sistem kerajaan tempatan”.

Indeed, the Federation of Malaya Annual Report 1957 (page 492) refers to evidence indicating the presence of substantial South Indian settlements in the vicinity of Kedah Peak between the fourth and 12th centuries CE.


Alor Setar, Kedah


Yet our historical imagination remains disproportionately centred on Malacca.

Malacca is undoubtedly important, especially in the Islamised phase of Malay history, but Malay civilisation did not begin with Malacca. Its earlier Hindu-Buddhist foundations deserve proper recognition.


Learning from Indonesia’s confidence

Malaysia should learn from Indonesia’s treatment of its Hindu-Buddhist past. It proudly embraces Borobudur and Prambanan as integral parts of its national heritage, even though Indonesia today is the world’s largest Muslim-majority country.

Unesco describes Borobudur as one of the greatest Buddhist monuments in the world, built in the eighth and ninth centuries under the Shailendra dynasty.

Indonesia does not see Borobudur as a threat to Islam or Indonesian identity. It sees it as evidence of civilisational greatness. That is the mature approach Malaysia needs.

Recognising the Hindu-Buddhist foundations of early Malay civilisation does not weaken Malay or Muslim identity. It deepens it by showing that Malay civilisation evolved through many phases: indigenous, Hindu-Buddhist, Islamic, colonial, and modern.

A confident nation does not fear its past. It studies it honestly.


Why current textbooks must change

The scant treatment of Indianisation in current Malaysian history textbooks is troubling because it deprives students of a fuller understanding of the multicultural foundations of Malaysian civilisation.


A history textbook, circa 2022


They should know that Hinduism and Buddhism once flourished in various parts of the Malay Peninsula and left a lasting imprint on its culture, governance, language, and worldview.

They should also understand that Sanskrit and Tamil contributed significantly to the enrichment of the Malay language, with many words and concepts still in use today.

They should learn that Malay kingship, court rituals, and political institutions were shaped in part by Indian religious, cultural, and political ideas.

They should be introduced properly to Kedah Tua, Bujang Valley, Langkasuka, Gangga Negara, Chih-tu, and other early polities.

This is not communal history. It is Malaysian history.


Restoring truth, not rewriting history

To restore Indianisation to its rightful place is not to diminish the later importance of Islam in Malay civilisation.

Islam transformed Malay society profoundly from about the 13th and 14th centuries onward, giving it new religious, legal, literary, and intellectual foundations.

But the coming of Islam did not erase the earlier Hindu-Buddhist layer. Many older words, customs, court practices, and literary forms survived in adapted form.

Restoring the Hindu-Buddhist foundations of early Malay civilisation is therefore not an act of communal assertion. It is an act of historical honesty.





It enables Malaysians to appreciate that our civilisation was enriched by many streams of influence, each contributing to the making of this nation.

A mature Malaysia must have the courage to teach its children the whole story - not only the parts that are politically convenient.


That is the history our children deserve to learn, and that is the foundation upon which a more truthful, inclusive, and united Malaysia can be built.



RANJIT SINGH MALHI is an independent historian who has written 19 books on Malaysian, Asian, and world history. He is highly committed to writing an inclusive and truthful history of Malaysia based upon authoritative sources.



Muslims lawyers fume at sight of alcohol, viral beer drinking contest at Selangor Bar members’ night




Muslims lawyers fume at sight of alcohol, viral beer drinking contest at Selangor Bar members’ night




SOME Muslim lawyers have apparently aired their grievances over the serving of alcoholic beverages at the recent Selangor Bar members’ Night 2026.


According to the Selangor Bar website, the event themed A Denim Affair: Confidential. Casual. Unforgettable which took place on May 23 at DoubleTree by Hilton @ i-City, Shah Alam was opened to its members and chambering students at RM150/ticket.




Pointing to what is presumably a beer drinking contest that ensued at the event, sharia counsel Nazrul Nazir who is a Selangor Bar member reckoned that it is appropriate for him to question “if the money that my law firm pays for the annual subscription fee is being used for this alcoholic beverage”.

“If yes, I don’t consent and consider as halal even a penny of the money I’ve paid to be used for that purpose,” the owner of his own practice Nazrul Nazir & Co rued in a Facebook post.

zrul Nazir
on Friday

Sebagai ahli Selangor Bar, wajar untuk saya bertanya samada adakah wang yang firma guaman saya bayar untuk Subscription Fee setiap tahun turut digunakan untuk hidangan minuman keras ini.

Jika ya, saya tak redha dan halalkan walau sesen pun duit yang saya bayar digunakan untuk tujuan tersebut.

Apart from that, saya tak rasa video sebegini sesuai ditayang di media sosial. Ianya secara tak langsung mencemarkan dan/atau menjatuhkan imej dan maruah profesion di mata orang awam. ...

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Apart from that, I don’t think this kind of video is appropriate to be posted on social media. It indirectly tarnishes and/or degrades the image and dignity of the profession in the eyes of the public.

May Allah forgive my sins and the sins of all Muslims.


‘Table grievances at AGM’

Fellow Muslim lawyer Zainul Rijal Abu Bakar wanted an explanation on the viral video of the beer drinking contest from the Selangor Bar committee.

“I no longer attend such events so I don’t know what happened,” reacted the principal at Chambers of Zainul Rijal on his FB page.

Zainul Rijal Abu Bakar
on Friday

Jawatankuasa Peguam Selangor patut menjelaskan mengenai video yang tular seperti minum arak ala-ala pertandingan minum arak yang berlaku di Selangor Bar Members Night 2026. Saya tak lagi hadir acara-acara sebegini sebab itu tak tahu apa yang berlaku. Jika benar ada program sebegitu ia amat memalukan walaupun tidak menggunakan wang yuran ahli. Pertandingan minum arak tidak menggambarkan seorang peguam yang professional. Kalau mereka nak minum bersendirian itu pilihan mereka.


“If it is true that there is such a programme, it’s very shameful even though it doesn’t use fees paid by members. Drinking contests don’t reflect the professionalism of the legal fraternity. If they want to drink alone (as opposed to doing so openly), that’s their choice.”

In a rebuttal, a non-Muslim legal practitioner who admitted that his firm has uploaded the so-called viral clip urged his Muslim counterparts to moot an EGM (emergency general meeting) to voice their grievances.

“If you genuinely believe alcohol should not be served at Bar events, then the solution is quite simple,” proposed Khoo Boon Han who is a partner at Tan. Norizan & Associates in a LinkedIn post.

Lihat profil Khoo Boon Han

Partner @ Tan Norizan & Associates | Business Development

Posted a video of a recent Selangor Bar event attended by my firm. Link as follows: https://lnkd.in/gPW558Ji The comments section is filled with people questioning why alcohol is being served at an organisation where many members are Muslims. The funny thing is this debate is older than some of our lawyers. It has surfaced countless times over the years. Motions have been proposed. Debates have been held. Members have voted. The position remains unchanged because the majority of members who bothered to turn up and vote decided so. For the record, I do not drink. In fact, if recreational alcohol disappeared from the face of the earth tomorrow, it would not affect my life one bit. To me, spending money on alcohol is no different from people saying my hobby of hanging flower is a form of hedonism. If you have the means and your religion permits, go ahead and enjoy it. If not, don't. But if you genuinely believe alcohol should not be served at Bar events, then the solution is quite simple. Propose the motion. Wake up early Attend the EGM Debate it. Convince the members. Win the vote. That is how institutions change. To those who wish to continue this tradition, have some spine and fight for those who wish to drink and be happy, Not by asking someone else quietly remove a social media post like this but continue condoning the tradition. P.S. BTW, Please don't make a complaint against me for this video or anything related thereto. I already have enough ASDB complaints to last me the next ten years. Pls I beg u #kbhsays

  • Tiada penerangan teks alternatif diberikan bagi imej ini

Propose the motion. Wake up early. Attend the EGM. Debate it. Convince the members. Win the vote. That is how institutions change.”

However, Khoo also reminded those who wish to continue this tradition to “have some spine and fight for those who wish to drink and be happy”,

“Not by asking someone else quietly remove a social media post like this but continue condoning the tradition.

For the record, I don’t drink. In fact, if recreational alcohol disappeared from the face of the earth tomorrow, it wouldn’t’ affect my life one bit.

To me, spending money on alcohol is no different from people saying my hobby of hanging flower is a form of hedonism. If you ‘ve the means and your religion permits, go ahead and enjoy it. If not, don’t.

The funny thing is this debate is older than some of our lawyers. It has surfaced countless times over the years.

Motions have been proposed. Debates have been held. Members have voted. The position remains unchanged because the majority of members who bothered to turn up and vote decided so.



Recount that a motion to ban alcoholic beverages at Malaysian and state Bar events was overwhelmingly rejected at the 79th annual general meeting (AGM) of the Malaysian Bar on in March 2025.

A senior lawyer told Free Malaysia Today (FMT) back then that about 400 members voted on the resolution which was the last of 14 motions debated at the AGM.

“Nearly 15 members spoke on the resolution but the proposal was overwhelmingly rejected,” revealed the lawyer.

HR Dipendra who voted against the motion insisted that Malaysian Bar and its state counterparts must remain secular.

Joining the chorus was human rights activist and lawyer Siti Kasim who expressed aghast at pious members who mooted the idea of blanket ban on alcohol consumption within the professional grouping.



Interestingly. this is not the first time such a proposal has been brought forward. In 2017, a similar motion was tabled, citing the multi-ethnic and multi-religious composition of the legal fraternity and the fact that many religions prohibit alcohol consumption.

That motion was also defeated by a thumping majority. – May 31, 2026