Friday, April 17, 2026

One country, two realities that are completely misaligned, cautions Dr Wee over petrol, diesel prices






By YASMIN ABDUL LATIF
Thursday, 16 Apr 2026 | 9:54 PM MYT





PETALING JAYA: The sharp disparity between petrol and diesel prices has raised questions over the consistency of Malaysia’s fuel pricing policy, says MCA president Datuk Seri Dr Wee Ka Siong.

In a Facebook post, Wee said there are “two realities” that do not align, noting that while subsidised RON95 remains among the cheapest in the world at RM1.99 per litre, diesel in Peninsular Malaysia is among the most expensive globally.


“One country, two realities that are completely misaligned,” he said on Thursday (April 16).

Wee expressed concern that while diesel is usually cheaper or comparable to petrol in most countries, the opposite is true in Malaysia. He also questioned the significant price differences between Peninsular Malaysia and East Malaysia.


He noted that diesel prices in the Peninsula are reportedly higher than in several energy-importing nations, including China, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Thailand and Indonesia.

“Countries without oil resources are able to manage prices better than us. Why can’t we? What exactly is our strategy?” he asked.

Wee emphasised that diesel is an “economic fuel” essential for agriculture, logistics and manufacturing rather than a lifestyle choice. He warned that high diesel costs trigger a ripple effect, driving up production and transport costs, which ultimately burdens consumers.


“Once prices go up, they rarely and hardly come down even if diesel prices drop,” he said, adding that stable costs are vital for national competitiveness.

He urged the government to review the diesel usage structure and act swiftly to protect the future of the national economy.


The East Coast Rail Link (ECRL) land bridge has potential competitive advantage over Thailand’s KRA project



Murray Hunter
Apr 15, 2026



The East Coast Rail Link (ECRL) land bridge has potential competitive advantage over Thailand’s KRA project





The ECRL between Kota Baru in Kelantan to Port Klang, via the ports of Kemaman and Kuantan will enable a land bridge to Port Klang. This will allow a direct connection between the South China Sea and the Strait of Malacca.

This link will be highly competitive with the proposed Kra Land bridge between Chumphon in the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea. The distance by sea for both projects are very similar, as ships using the proposed Kra project will have to cruise into the Gulf of Thailand first. This offsets some of the Thai competitive advantage against the ECRL land bridge. In addition, if the Malaysian land bridge can be first into the market, it will have an advantage over the Kra project.





Thus, a competitive Kemaman/Gebeng to Port Klang land bridge in operation before Kra is a game-changer in China-Japan-Korea and Mena-European trade. This could potentially build Port Klang into one of the most strategically important ports in the region.

Plans should be underway to make the Malaysian land bridge a success.

Fortunately for Malaysia, Thailand is still seeking investors for the project. However, much of the highway between Chumphon and Ranong has already been built, while the rest is still in construction.


Enter the ECRL land-bridge

The ECRL between Kota Baru in Kelantan to Port Klang, via the ports of Kemaman and Kuantan will enable a land bridge to Port Klang. This will allow a direct connection between the South China Sea and the Strait of Malacca.

This link should be highly competitive with the proposed Kra Land bridge between Chumphon in the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea. The distance by sea for both projects are very similar, as ships using the proposed Kra project will have to cruise into the Gulf of Thailand first. Thus, a competitive Kemaman/Gebeng to Port Klang land bridge in operation is a potential game-changer in Korea-Japan-Korea and Mena-European trade. This could potentially build Port Klang into one of the most strategically important ports in the region.

The key to a successful ECRL land bridge is trimming down de-load and re-load times at the ports at both ends. This normally takes 1-3 days. The land bridge authority will need to develop very efficient logistics to make the land bridge effective. Secondly, charges must be very competitive with the costs for shipping companies using the existing shipping route around Singapore.

Another improvement upon the land bridge would be to enable trains to travel up to the Penang Port, which would completely by-pass the Melaka Straits and save another 1.5 days shipping time. Most of the infrastructure already exists, and this route could in theory be in operation before the link to Port Klang is completed.

The ECRL land bridge would greatly reduce sea traffic in the Straits of Melaka. It would become an important route, should there be any mishap within the Melaka Strait. China would become very interested in using the route, should the civil war in Myanmar render the Kyaukphyu too dangerous to use. Strategically, the Melaka Strait is a dilemma for China.


Positive externalities from an existing project

Since the ECRL is an ongoing project, the land bridge will provide massive positive externalities that will benefit both the East and West coasts. The land bridge will boost shipping, transport, and provide Malaysia another lever to be competitive over the Port of Singapore.

In effect, the ECRL land bridge will require minimal investment, above what has already been committed. What is needed most is Malaysian politicians, bureaucrats, and businesspeople to jump in and support Malaysia’s upcoming land bridge, rather than look at the failed Thai proposal in awe.





Malaysia’s land bridge could become one of the region’s most strategic assets, and project Malaysia’s economy forward. In 2024, 23.7-25 percent of the world’s maritime trade, worth USD 5.3 trillion passed through the South China Sea into the Melaka Straits.

This is one project where Malaysia boleh.


Thursday, April 16, 2026

Police officer among six charged over RM4.4m gang robberies in Kepong homes, pleads not guilty





Police officer among six charged over RM4.4m gang robberies in Kepong homes, pleads not guilty



DSP Ahmad Ruzaini Ahmad Dahalan, 41, together with Abd Samat Shaari, 44, Faridzuan Yahya, 31, Lim Cheal Kei, 51, Yeoh Choon Siang, 47, and L. Jijayendran, 31, pleaded not guilty to the charges read before Judges Suhaila Haron, Noridah Adam, Mazuliana Abdul Rashid and Siti Shakirah Mohtarudin at four separate Sessions Courts. — Bernama pic

Thursday, 16 Apr 2026 7:16 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, April 16 — Six men, including a police officer holding the rank of Deputy Superintendent, were charged in the Sessions Court here today with exhibiting a firearm and committing gang robbery at residential areas around Kepong earlier this month.

DSP Ahmad Ruzaini Ahmad Dahalan, 41, together with Abd Samat Shaari, 44, Faridzuan Yahya, 31, Lim Cheal Kei, 51, Yeoh Choon Siang, 47, and L. Jijayendran, 31, pleaded not guilty to the charges read before Judges Suhaila Haron, Noridah Adam, Mazuliana Abdul Rashid and Siti Shakirah Mohtarudin at four separate Sessions Courts.

According to two of the charges, Ahmad Ruzaini, who previously served in the Commercial Crime Investigation Department (CCID) at Bukit Aman, is jointly accused with the five others of committing robbery while exhibiting a pistol against two individuals, thereby causing fear of death.

For the offence, the officer, who has been suspended since January, was charged under Section 4 of the Firearms (Increased Penalties) Act 1971, read together with Section 34 of the Penal Code, which carries a jail term of 30 to 40 years and no less than six strokes of the cane upon conviction.


He also faces another charge of committing gang robbery against a house occupant under Section 395 of the Penal Code, which carries a jail term of up to 20 years and caning.

All the offences were allegedly committed at a residential area in Desa ParkCity, here, between 4am and 8.10am on April 5.

Meanwhile, the five other individuals were also charged with three similar offences at the same place and time.


All six accused were represented, but no bail was offered as the offences are non-bailable, with Kuala Lumpur Prosecution Director Datuk Mohd Nordin Ismail conducting the prosecution.

The court fixed May 25 for mention.

On April 10, Kuala Lumpur police chief Datuk Fadil Marsus confirmed that a police officer had been arrested for allegedly masterminding a series of armed robberies in Kepong involving losses amounting to RM4.4 million.

The syndicate is believed to have made off with three luxury vehicles, namely a Rolls-Royce, a Bentley and a Toyota Alphard, as well as a safe, RM24,200 in cash, US$1,200 in foreign currency, jewellery and two gold bars. — Bernama


Israeli army says soldiers accused of abusing Palestinian to return to duty



Israeli army says soldiers accused of abusing Palestinian to return to duty

Some of the reservists accused of sexually assaulting a detainee have already started combat roles, reports Israeli Army Radio.

Israeli military chief Eyal Zamir has authorised five soldiers accused of sexually assaulting a Palestinian inmate in the notorious Sde Teiman detention camp to return to reserve service after charges against them were dropped, according to Israeli media reports.

The soldiers, all from the Force 100 unit assigned to guard military prisons, are being reinstated despite an ongoing, internal military inquiry into their conduct.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Israeli Army Radio reported that some of the reservists have already returned to active duty, including deployment to combat roles.

An Israeli army statement, cited by Israel’s Haaretz newspaper, said: “The investigation does not prevent them from continuing to serve … the command-level investigation will be completed as soon as possible.”

The reinstatement comes after Israel’s top military lawyer dropped all charges against the soldiers last month, closing a case that had been among the most divisive in Israel’s recent history.

The soldiers had been charged with aggravated assault and causing severe injury, after footage broadcast by Israeli television showed them abusing a Palestinian man in Sde Teiman. The military’s own indictment described soldiers stabbing the detainee with a sharp object near his rectum, causing cracked ribs, a punctured lung and an internal tear.

A doctor at the facility, Yoel Donchin, told Haaretz he was so shocked by the Palestinian inmate’s condition that he initially assumed it was the work of a rival armed group.

“If you can’t do good, don’t deter others from doing so”, Muslim stray dogs rescuer chastises detractors




“If you can’t do good, don’t deter others from doing so”, Muslim stray dogs rescuer chastises detractors




“IF YOU are unable to do good deeds, don’t stop others from doing so.”


Such was the pertinent advice from animal lover Airis Yasmin whose efforts in feeding stray dogs have gone viral.


The kind-hearted Samaritan shared that caring for animals had been inculcated in her since young by her parents and she is now doing the same with her own daughter.


In a video on Oh My Media’s Facebook Reel which has attracted 584K views, 22.4K likes, 2.2K comments and 2,2K shares, both Airis and her child could be seen mingling comfortably with strays which they feed several times a week.

The affection displayed appears genuine with numerous canines seen reciprocating this love. Airis hopes she can pass on this practice of loving and caring for animals in distress to her daughter.

Editor’s Note: This affection came on the back of a touching tale of animal rescuer Shikin of Shikin’s Team Animal Rescue (STAR) who went viral after being pictured cuddling a canine who survived a crash en route the team’s road trip to participate in the Oh My Pets Expo at Mid Valley, Kuala Lumpur recently.




As most people are afraid of stray dogs, the mother was asked how did she get her own child to overcome that fear.

“I did not force her but merely brought her along. She merely observed and followed my lead and soon she was the one showing me what to do,” quipped the obviously proud matriarch.

The busy working mum also shared that she fed the dogs out of her own pocket but since her video went viral, some good Samaritans have also chipped to help with supplies.

She also shared that she always wear gloves when handling the strays and also performed sertu (purification ritual) after touching the animals. However, despite these precautions, she admitted to having been subject to heavy criticism which she tended to ignore.

Hence, the pertinent advice to not prevent others from being kind to God’s creatures if one is uncomfortable doing so themselves.

However, not everybody was enamoured but instead seemed aloof to the advice to let sleeping dogs lie. One commenter sparked a fiery debate when his opening salvo was to invite the animal lover to also care for swine.


This brought plenty of pushback from other commenters who responded in kind.


However, such backlash did not seem to deter others with a similar dogmatic and conservative viewpoint. One aggressive commenter urged the authorities to find the canine feeding location and “destroy this public menace”.

It was also remarked that such dog lovers would trot out the usual excuses “of the animals will only bite if perturbed” when there is incident involving attacks by strays. The commenter left everyone in no doubt what he thought of the lady’s efforts in caring for stray dogs.


One observer remarked in a less than positive manner that such Muslim dog lovers seem to be increasing in number.


Judging from the comments, it would appear that many more are in favour of this kind-hearted lady’s efforts. She is, after all, wearing gloves and observing the necessary purification rituals after dealing with her canine “friends”.


It is most certainly hoped that values such as kindness, compassion and generosity of spirit are celebrated and promoted. This is certainly preferable to a culture of spiteful putdowns and cyber-bullying in the name of religion. – April 16, 2026



Jamaliah laments govt censoring grandma's memoir, Home Ministry plays 'communism' card











Jamaliah laments govt censoring grandma's memoir, Home Ministry plays 'communism' card


Published: Apr 16, 2026 4:17 PM
Updated: 6:43 PM


A granddaughter of Shamsiah Fakeh has urged the Home Ministry to lift a ban on the Malayan Communist Party figure’s memoir and another book that narrates stories about the organisation’s struggle.

Bandar Utama assemblyperson Jamaliah Jamaluddin, in a statement on Facebook, expressed disappointment with the Home Ministry’s move to ban the two books - “Memoir Shamsiah Fakeh: Dari Awas ke Rejimen ke-10” and “Komrad Asi (Rejimen 10): Dalam Denyut Nihilisme Sejarah”.

“The memoir has been published since 2004, more than two decades ago, and has been reprinted several times.

“Its content mainly recounts the life journey and experiences of Shamsiah,” she said.

“There has been no extremist movement reported to have arisen from the writing or publication of this book,” said the Selangor state exco, who described the move as “unfounded”.

Shamsiah’s memoir was first published by Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia in 2004 and is in its third reprint, while Gerakbudaya published the second title in 2022.




Gerakbudaya yesterday confirmed it was served with a notice from the Home Ministry on the book bans, despite both titles not being included in the prohibition order list. The company said it will challenge the ban.

In calling for the bans to be lifted, Jamaliah said the measure risks narrowing the space for discourse and intellectual culture, and may indirectly create room for more extreme sentiments to develop.

“Therefore, I urge the Home Ministry to review this decision and lift the ban.

“We should not restrict the space for knowledge out of unfounded fear,” she stressed.


Red scare

Meanwhile, the Home Ministry, in a statement, defended the move and stressed that all enforcement actions are based on current assessments and considerations of public security, a
nd not solely on the date of publication of any material.


The Home Ministry


“All actions are taken lawfully, carefully, and based on legal provisions as well as relevant expertise,” said the ministry, citing provisions under the Printing Presses and Publications Act 1984 (PPPA).

Among others, the ministry explained that content assessments are conducted in accordance with Section 7 of the PPPA, particularly concerning elements that may be detrimental to public security.

“Based on continuous monitoring and intelligence received, the ministry found that certain publications containing elements and ideology of communism have begun to circulate more openly in the market.

“While previously such materials were distributed in a limited and discreet manner, recent developments indicate a tendency to normalise and glorify such ideology, which clearly runs counter to national security interests,” it said.

“In this context, the ministry rejects allegations that the enforcement action is intended to restrict intellectual freedom or academic discourse.

“Rather, the action is a necessary preventive measure to protect society from the spread of ideologies that could undermine harmony and public order,” said the ministry amid criticisms from various groups defending freedom of expression.




Further, the ministry revealed an ongoing probe into both banned publications and their publishers to ensure compliance with legal requirements, including registration status with the Companies Commission of Malaysia and the Registrar of Societies.

Earlier today, Petaling Jaya MP Lee Chean Chung urged the government to be better than its predecessors from Perikatan Nasional and BN, who had not moved to ban the books.


Forest reserve land sold cheap, Subang MP demands answers










Forest reserve land sold cheap, Subang MP demands answers


Haspaizi Zain
Published: Apr 16, 2026 2:51 PM
Updated: 5:21 PM




Subang MP Wong Chen has urged the Selangor government to explain allegations that 68.4ha of the Ayer Hitam Forest Reserve land had been sold at a low price.

Wong (above) said checks through the National Property Information Centre (Napic), under the Finance Ministry, showed that the land was acquired by Jakel Group at only RM13.80 per square foot.

“I want the Selangor government to confirm this matter. Is it true that the land was sold at RM13.80 per square foot?

“If it is true, we proposed in a press conference on Jan 20 that the state government buy back the land from the developer with interest, simply because RM13.80 per square foot is extremely cheap.

“If the state government cannot afford to repurchase the entire land, which we estimate would cost around RM193 million, then it should consider buying back part of it, especially areas with very steep slopes,” he said in a press conference at his office in Puchong today.


Ayer Hitam Forest Reserve


This is not the first time Wong has made similar demands.

In January this year, he and Petaling Jaya MP Lee Chean Chung urged the Selangor government to buy back the land in Kinrara.

In a joint statement, the PKR lawmakers reiterated their demand for Selangor Menteri Besar Amirudin Shari to disclose the detailed history and chronology of transactions relating to the land, which is believed to be slated for development.


Govt’s silence

Today, Wong lamented that the state government’s silence on the issue would only increase public anger, particularly among voters in his constituency.

The press conference was also attended by Rawang assemblyperson Chua Wei Kiat, former permanent forest reserve protest chairperson Awies Ung, and Bandar Puteri residents’ representative Kathryn Wong.


Rawang assemblyperson Chua Wei Kiat


According to Wong, Chua will also raise the matter during the Selangor state assembly sitting that will begin on April 20.

Additionally, Wong said his team had received 7,541 complaints from voters opposing the development in the area.

“We are disappointed that the Selangor state government has yet to provide any official response to our letters.

“There are 7,541 of my voters who are angry and demanding accountability and a solution,” he added.


Letters to MB

On Dec 15 last year, Wong had, via a letter, urged the Selangor government to disclose the historical chronology of a 68.4ha parcel of land near the said forest.

A large portion of the land falls under the purview of Wong’s parliamentary seat, and he had demanded that the transaction price of the land be revealed, citing concerns over “possible acquisition costs that may ultimately be borne by taxpayers”.

He had urged Amirudin to respond within 14 days.


Selangor Menteri Besar Amirudin Shari


On Jan 6, Wong issued a second letter to Amirudin, again, demanding the disclosure of the historical chronology and details involved in the said parcel of land’s ownership transfer.

On Dec 17 last year, Selangor executive councillor for public health, environment, climate change and green technology Jamaliah Jamaluddin said checks with the Selangor State Forestry Department found that the area had not been a permanent forest reserve for 99 years.

She said the area was originally part of the Ayer Hitam Forest Reserve gazetted in 1906, before being degazetted 20 years later, in 1926.


Breaking up is hard to do — Malaysia still seeking ‘middle ground’ in AG-Prosecutor split





Breaking up is hard to do — Malaysia still seeking ‘middle ground’ in AG-Prosecutor split



Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Azalina Othman Said speaks at a press conference after officiating the Justice On Wheels tour at Dewan Sri Putatan in Kota Kinabalu on August 26, 2025. — Bernama pic

Thursday, 16 Apr 2026 2:32 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, April 16 — The parliamentary select committee reviewing the proposed separation of the Attorney-General (AG) and Public Prosecutor roles is working to find a “middle ground,” with the goal of tabling a constitutional amendment by June.

According to Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Law and Institutional Reform) Datuk Seri Azalina Othman Said, the committee is currently distilling feedback from civil society organisations (CSOs), non-governmental organisations (NGOs), and lawmakers.

“All NGOs have presented their views, opinions, criticisms, and feedback. Their input has been very consistent with their long-held positions on this matter,” Azalina told reporters following the committee’s third meeting at Parliament today.

“Generally speaking, everyone involved wants what is best for the country.”


The next meeting, scheduled for April 27, is expected to be a turning point. The committee will evaluate legal perspectives from the Attorney General’s Chambers (AGC) alongside formal written positions from various political parties.

Azalina said that while there is a broad consensus on the need to separate the two roles, the primary point of contention remains the appointment process for the Public Prosecutor.

“There can be no finality at this point, as we are still discussing a draft,” she said, adding that the committee is seeking a compromise that can secure the two-thirds majority required for a constitutional amendment in the Dewan Rakyat.


‘Political’ paradox

A significant portion of the discussion centres on ensuring the Public Prosecutor’s independence.

Many CSOs have advocated for Parliament to play a decisive role in the appointment process to ensure transparency.

However, Azalina pointed out that involving the legislature brings its own set of complexities.

“Whether we like it or not, Parliament is made up of political parties. If Parliament is involved, there will inevitably be political influence,” she said.

“The question is whether we want politicians involved or not. These are complex, technical issues.”

To address this, the committee is studying models from other jurisdictions where appointment processes involve a balance between the executive and legislative branches.

Azalina added that any reform must remain compatible with Malaysia’s unique constitutional framework, including the roles of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong and the Conference of Rulers.

Despite the gravity of the constitutional reforms being discussed, Azalina described the atmosphere of the meetings as constructive rather than confrontational.

When asked if the sessions with vocal NGOs were intense, she quipped, “There was nasi lemak, it wasn’t intense.”

The meeting saw participation from key stakeholders, including the Malaysian Bar, Bersih, Projek Sama, Rasuah Busters, and Suhakam.

Anwar: Malaysia to prioritise domestic fuel, supply surplus to Australia






Anwar: Malaysia to prioritise domestic fuel, supply surplus to Australia



Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim (second from right) accompanied Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during the official welcome ceremony at the Perdana Putra Complex today, in conjunction with his three-day official visit to Malaysia from April 15 to 17. — Bernama pic

Thursday, 16 Apr 2026 2:57 PM MYT


PUTRAJAYA, April 16 — Malaysia will prioritise meeting its domestic fuel requirements before supplying any excess to Australia, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim said.

Anwar, who is also the Finance Minister, said the government had obtained assurances from Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas) of sufficient supply for local consumption, with any surplus channelled to trusted partners such as Australia.


“The priority is, of course, on domestic requirements and economic resilience in the country,” he said at a joint press conference with visiting Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, here today.

The Prime Minister noted that such arrangements reflect the importance of negotiations and mutual understanding between friendly nations, particularly as both countries rely on each other for strategic resources.


Malaysia, he said, imports gas, including liquefied natural gas (LNG), from Australia, which has reaffirmed its commitment to honour existing supply agreements, while Malaysia, in turn, will ensure that Australia’s requirements are fulfilled once domestic needs are secured.


“That’s what friendship is all about,” he said, describing the cooperation as a balanced partnership built on trust and reciprocal commitments.

Anwar stressed Malaysia will continue to strengthen engagement with a wide range of international partners while ensuring that national interests and the welfare of its people remain the government’s foremost priority.


He said the country maintains diverse economic relationships with major global players, noting that the United States remains Malaysia’s largest source of trade and investment, even as Kuala Lumpur sustains constructive bilateral ties with other countries, including Russia.

“We, as a country, have been engaging with more countries. The largest trade (and) investments are still from the US, notwithstanding that we have good bilateral relations with Russia and we trade with them,” he said.

Anwar emphasised that in an increasingly complex global environment, Malaysia must carefully manage its international relationships to ensure economic stability and protect national interests.

“My priority, the mandate that I have, is to protect the interests of the people in this country,” he reiterated.

Australia is a significant economic partner for Malaysia, ranking as Malaysia’s 12th largest trading partner in 2025, with total bilateral trade valued at RM78.63 billion (USD18.38 billion).

Malaysia and Australia elevated their relations to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (CSP) in 2021, providing a framework to further expand cooperation across three key pillars: economic prosperity, society and technology, and defence and regional security. — Bernama


Muslims the target? Fury as millions lose voting rights in India’s Bengal




Muslims the target? Fury as millions lose voting rights in India’s Bengal


The key eastern state heads to polls this month under the shadow of a controversial revision of electoral rolls, which many say excludes Muslims disproportionately


People walk past the Nakhoda Mosque in Kolkata, capital of West Bengal state, India [File: Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters]



By Ritwika Mitra
Published On 16 Apr 2026


West Bengal, India – Nabijan Mondal, 73, has voted in every Indian election – national, state or local – for the past 50 years.

Suddenly, she finds her name missing from the list of voters published by the Election Commission of India (ECI) in her home state of West Bengal as it heads for a two-phase assembly election on April 23 and April 29, with votes to be counted on May 4.


Recommended Stories







In the run-up to the election, the ECI this month revised its electoral rolls through special intensive revision (SIR), a controversial exercise India’s election authorities have conducted in more than a dozen states and federally-governed territories so far.

Nabijan’s husband, three sons and a daughter, as well as their spouses, all made it to the final list. But she did not.

The reason: all these years, Nabijan and her family had not paid much attention to the fact that she went by “Nabijan”, her nickname, on the voter card, and “Nabirul” on other government documents, including her biometric ID (Aadhaar) and ration cards.


Nabijan Mondal at her home in Gobindapur village, North 24 Parganas, West Bengal [Ritwika Mitra/Al Jazeera]


Nabijan is among more than nine million people to lose voting rights in West Bengal – nearly 12 percent of the state’s 76 million voters, after the SIR process was concluded earlier this month. Almost six million of these nine million voters have been declared absentee or deceased, while the remaining three million will be unable to vote until special tribunals hear their cases.

But that seems unlikely, given that the tribunals will not be able to hear such a large volume of cases before the polling days. Approaching the tribunals would also be tedious for people as they scramble for the required documents needed to prove their voting rights. Earlier this week, the Supreme Court of India said it could not allow those whose cases were pending before the tribunals to vote in the April election. However, the court said it could allow the ECI to publish supplementary voter lists before the election.

“This time, my whole family will vote, but I won’t be able to. I do not understand things much, and did not know the names being different would bar me from voting,” Nabijan, a resident of Gobindapur village in West Bengal’s North 24 Parganas district, told Al Jazeera.


‘I am in deep pain’

West Bengal is home to nearly 25 million Muslims, accounting for roughly 27 percent of the state’s 106 million population, according to the last census conducted in 2011 – the community’s second-largest population among Indian states after Uttar Pradesh.

It is also a state the BJP has never won. The Trinamool Congress (TMC), one of India’s key opposition parties led by Mamata Banerjee, a fiery 71-year-old Modi critic, has governed the state since 2011, ending a record 34 years of communist rule.

The analysis of voter deletions across West Bengal shows that Muslims have been disproportionately affected by the SIR exercise, mainly in districts where they constitute a high percentage of the population and could sway the election, including Murshidabad with 460,000 deletions, followed by 330,000 in North 24 Parganas and 240,000 in Malda.

Al Jazeera met nearly a dozen such Muslim families in Gobindapur, Gobra and Balki villages of North 24 Parganas. They said some names were struck off the voter list despite their documents being in place, whereas many others were struggling to find proof of their residential status, change of surnames after their marriage or remarriage of their parents, discrepancies in the spellings of their names, proof of their migrations to other states, or just their names figuring in the last SIR list published in 2002.

Like Nabijan, Sohidul Islam, 49, from Murshidabad’s Sagarpara village, had also been voting in previous elections. Now, he is not a voter any more.

“I am in deep pain. Who will I approach? I never thought my name would be deleted from the list. But now I want to focus on getting my name included. Even if I lose money and time, I have to think ahead,” Islam told Al Jazeera over the telephone.



India’s voter revision triggers anxiety in communities at risk of exclusion



Israel's military kills four Lebanese paramedics in consecutive strikes



Is France making pro-Palestinian speech a crime?



Trump plans 250-foot ‘Triumphal Arch’ to mark 250 years of US independence


The ECI claims the SIR process is aimed at removing duplicate or deceased voters and adding genuine people left out of voter lists.

But the process has faced extensive controversies and legal challenges, with opposition parties and Muslim groups accusing the ECI of a systematic exercise to remove people unlikely to vote for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) from the voter lists, especially Muslims – the prime targets of the BJP’s Hindu supremacist campaign and policies since Modi came to power in 2014.

West Bengal BJP leader Bimal Sankar Nanda told Al Jazeera that while no eligible Indian should be left out of voter lists, there should be no ineligible voters on the list either, accusing the TMC of keeping names of “dead and shifted voters” in the rolls.

“It is also true that the demographic character of the border areas [with Bangladesh] has been changing in a calculated manner. It is in public domain and TV channels have showed people who were not Indian citizens leaving the state [in border areas] after the SIR exercise started,” he said.


‘Some motive’ behind hurried SIR

Since 2014, India’s Muslims have overwhelmingly voted for a political party or coalition most likely to defeat the right-wing BJP. In West Bengal, it is the TMC, which is why Banerjee, as the state chief minister, herself moved the Supreme Court in February, accusing the ECI of being partisan towards the BJP after the SIR was launched in October last year.

“The SIR process was selectively applied in West Bengal to benefit the BJP,” she said at a campaign rally this week. “The BJP is plotting to forcefully capture votes through fraudulent means as they don’t have the guts to fight and win the elections democratically.”

The BJP says the exercise was intended to weed out millions of “illegal infiltrators” – often using “Bangladeshis” and “Rohingya” interchangeably – from West Bengal, which shares a porous 2,200km (1,367-mile) border with neighbouring Bangladesh, home to the world’s largest camp of nearly a million Rohingya refugees, most of whom fled a genocidal campaign by the Myanmar army in 2017.

The BJP has been using the bogey of Bangladeshi “infiltrators” or “illegal migrants” to appeal to its mainly Hindu support base, most recently in the northeastern state of Assam, where assembly elections were held earlier this month. The election results of Assam are expected along with those of West Bengal and some other states on May 4.



AI video of Indian minister shooting at image of Muslims sparks outrage


However, Sabir Ahamed of the Kolkata-based SABAR Institute, an independent research organisation, told Al Jazeera that while the revision of electoral rolls is a routine activity, usually conducted over one or two years, the process was hurried in high-stakes West Bengal.

“There seems to be some motive behind such a hurried activity,” he said. “Micro observers with no local knowledge were brought in from other states … The ECI process also lacked transparency, and lists were published in the middle of the night.”

The SABAR Institute analysed voter deletions in two key constituencies – Nandigram and Bhabanipur, both being contested this year by Suvendu Adhikari, the BJP’s leader of the opposition in the West Bengal Legislative Assembly, the latter against Banerjee, who had lost Nandigram to Adhikari in the 2021 vote. India allows a candidate to contest from two constituencies in regional or national polls.

The SABAR analysis found that while Muslims make up about 25 percent of Nandigram’s population, more than 95 percent of the names deleted from the list were Muslims. Similarly, Bhabanipur has 20 percent Muslims, but 40 percent of voters deleted in the constituency are Muslim.

“The preliminary findings showed that Muslims were the most mapped population. First, over five million people were put in the ASDD [absent, shifted, dead or duplicate] list. After that, they started using AI tools and found huge ‘logical discrepancy’ cases due to Urdu or Arabic words being translated into Bengali or English when it came to Muslim names,” he said.

“Our studies find that Muslims from the mapped population have been disproportionately deleted.”

Mohammad Bakibillah Molla, head of the West Bengal chapter of All India Imam Association, said his organisation has established helplines across West Bengal to help people whose names have been deleted in approaching the tribunals.

“There should be no conspiracy against any eligible Indian voter, be it Muslim or Hindu or any other community. Who will account for people who will be unable to vote?” he said.

Al Jazeera reached out to two senior ECI officials in West Bengal, but they did not respond.


‘Excessive burden’ on female voters

Swati Narayan, who teaches law, poverty and development at the National Law School of India University in the southern city of Bengaluru, told Al Jazeera that women and the poor were at a disproportionate risk of being disenfranchised, as they often lack the required documents to prove their citizenship rights.

“In case of women, they shift houses especially after marriage in a patrilocal society,” she said.

“In West Bengal, there is also the common use of nicknames, which often gets into official documents. Most women, especially Muslim women, are given different surnames before and after marriage. There can also be errors in translating names into English. What we now see is an exercise which has led to the rise of large-scale panic among residents.”

Jesmina Khatun, 31, lives in Gobindapur. She told Al Jazeera all her documents were in place with the correct spellings of her name, while her parents and grandfather figured in the 2002 list. Except for a tiny detail: her father’s name appeared as “Goffer Mondal” on her school certificate and as “Gaffar Mondal” on other documents. While her father still made it to the SIR list, Jesmina’s name was scrapped.

“I do not know what the way ahead is now. All my documents are in place. I feel so anxious these days. None of my other relatives has had to face this problem,” said Jesmina, adding that she had voted in three previous elections.


Jesmina Khatun at her home in Gobindapur village, North 24 Parganas, West Bengal [Ritwika Mitra/Al Jazeera]


Psephologist and political commentator Yogendra Yadav told Al Jazeera the SIR places an “excessive burden” on female voters.

“Men have to account for papers in the family in the location where they live, and women have to produce papers from the location they don’t live, which is their ‘maika’ [father’s home]. This differential burden of papers has led to a large number of deletions of women’s names,” he said.

“Also, in many parts of India, probably not so much in West Bengal, it is a standard practice for women to change their first names after marriage. Now, in the eyes of law, it looks like a crime or fraud. Because of this lack of sensitivity over this issue, it has led to the largest ever disenfranchisement of women voters.”

Yadav, who last year challenged the SIR exercise conducted in the neighbouring state of Bihar before the Supreme Court, said the problem lies with the Indian government, which uses its power to translate its own failures as crimes of the population.

“The problem lies with the state. It demands of people documents that it has never provided. Suddenly, you want documents of some kind; the expectation that your name must be recorded the same from a person who is probably not educated. Or say, if they are educated, the names are not recorded by themselves. The problem is the state itself writes them in different formats in different registers,” Yadav said.

Back in Murshidabad, Islam says his name was deleted despite attending two SIR hearings and submitting all the relevant documents.

“You know what is sad? If you dig this land, you can find our umbilical cords here,” he said. “I am a Muslim man … We will vote here, and we will die here.”


***


Aiseh Sahib Modi, how can Motherland do such a wicked thing lah? Don't be like the Fatherland you so admire - they are murdering Palestinians left, right and centre daily, yesterday and tomorrow.


‘Better than doing nothing’: Hannah Yeoh defends Bangun KL, says it uses no public funds





‘Better than doing nothing’: Hannah Yeoh defends Bangun KL, says it uses no public funds



Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Federal Territories) Hannah Yeoh reportedly defended the 'Bangun KL' campaign, saying it is a private sector initiative by Zus Coffee Group that does not use public funds. — Bernama pic

Thursday, 16 Apr 2026 2:45 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, April 16 — Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Federal Territories) Hannah Yeoh today reportedly defended the “Bangun KL” campaign following criticism, saying it is a private sector initiative and does not involve government spending.

According to a report in The Star, Yeoh said the campaign and tagline were created by Zus Coffee Group, adding that Putrajaya would work with any party whose efforts benefit the public.

“It is better than doing nothing; if you want to criticise any programme, I’m sure anyone can find something wrong with every single one,” she reportedly said at an event in Bandar Tun Razak.

The initiative, launched on April 9, aims to encourage commuters to enter Kuala Lumpur earlier to ease peak-hour congestion through behavioural incentives and cross-sector collaboration.


As part of the campaign, 250 Zus Coffee outlets in Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya are offering discounted drinks to customers who place orders through the company’s mobile application between 7am and 8am.


At the launch, Yeoh said around 1.2 million vehicles enter Kuala Lumpur each morning, and shifting even 10 per cent of that traffic to earlier hours could improve traffic flow.

The campaign has drawn criticism online, with some questioning whether discounted coffee can make a meaningful impact on congestion in the capital.

Yeoh said traffic jams were not unique to Kuala Lumpur, noting that many cities worldwide face similar problems.

She added that other measures were also being pursued, including work-from-home arrangements, efforts to improve public transport, and broader cooperation from the public to ease congestion.

‘I don’t remember’ — Inspector who ran over traffic cops claims bewitched by ‘black magic’

 




‘I don’t remember’ — Inspector who ran over traffic cops claims bewitched by ‘black magic’



Police inspector Kamal Raj Abdullah arrives at the Kuala Lumpur Court Complex on April 16, 2026. — Picture by Sayuti Zainudin

Thursday, 16 Apr 2026 1:26 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, April 16 — A 40-year-old police inspector claimed memory loss due to “black magic” when he was charged today with the attempted murder of a traffic policeman and seven counts of reckless driving.

Muhammad Kamal Raj Shanmugam Abdullah, who reportedly suffers from schizophrenia, saw no plea recorded at the Sessions and Magistrate’s Courts after allegedly ramming an officer with his car on April 10, Berita Harian reported.

“I am sick from black magic, I don’t remember,” he said in court, appearing visibly distressed.

Due to his mental health history, the court has ordered a formal psychiatric evaluation to determine his fitness to stand trial.

According to the charge sheet, Kamal Raj is alleged to have attempted to kill a traffic policeman by ramming him with a Perodua Axia, an act the prosecution argues he knew was capable of causing death.

The attempted murder charge was framed under Section 307 of the Penal Code. If convicted, the offence carries a prison sentence of up to 10 years and a fine. However, if the act resulted in physical injury to the officer, the sentence could be extended to a maximum of 20 years.

The court has fixed the next mention date pending the results of the psychiatric report.


***


Black magic is quite a common phenomenon that people in SE Asia believes in. Aeons back, post a soccer match between Selangor and Penang, which Selangor won, the Penang side claimed they were bewitched by black magic and thus felt lethargic during the match. As a Penang supporter I agreed though there was no proof, wakakaka.

Malaysian politicians also consulted bomohs as far as Indonesia for election victories - presumably the dark art would be used to ensure their opponents were hexed during election day, wakakaka.

And some unfortunate souls had literally lost their heads in such black art encounters - eg. t'was said one American woman (gf of a local Indian man) was decapitated during a bomoh session for 'chun-chun-see-ay-jee'; an Indian lad was similarly 'pancung' in such a similar session, and then there was the infamous Mona Fandey case - in the last case, there was no black magic involved but t'was a scam game with cold-blooded intent - Wikipedia says:

In 1993, the couple [Mona Fandey and hubby Nur Affandi] were approached by Mazlan Idris, a politician who was eyeing the position of the Menteri Besar of Pahang. The couple agreed by promising to give Mazlan a talisman comprising a tongkat and a songkok supposedly owned by Sukarno, the first President of Indonesia, with an offer of RM 2.5 million. In exchange, Mazlan agreed to pay RM500,000 and giving them 10 land titles as guarantee for the remainder.

To cut the gruesome story short, Mona's assistant Juraimi Hassan chopped Mazlan head off with an axe while the conned politician was asleep under the bomoh's direction.






Its time for real rice reform



Murray Hunter
Apr 15, 2026



Its time for real rice reform


Need policies that enhance communities





With a drought prevailing across south-east Asia, leading to irrigation water shortages and declining production, it has long been evident there would be a rice crisis in Malaysia.

With the price of imported rice significantly increasing due to shortages, there is now greater demand for cheaper local rice, which is also in shortage. Long standing price controls have eroded profit margins and are now acting as a dis-incentive mechanism for growers to produce. Increasing the long-standing retail price cap of RM 2.60 per kilogram for locally produced rice will lead to a consumer backlash in the current economic climate.





Government looking for solutions

The government introduction of a Madani branded white rice, priced at RM 30 per 10 kilograms (RM 15.50 per 5kg, and RM 3.50 per single Kg). This represents a departure from the old ceiling price of RM 2.60 per kg.





With ‘unity government’ politicians distancing themselves from the Madani rice concept, and the Kedah Menteri Besar Muhammad Sanusi Md Nor announcing the state is also looking how it can provide a cheaper rice to consumers. Government policy on rice has become politicized and looks to be in disarray.


The basic problems

1. Rice price ceilings have not risen for 18 years. This has stressed out farmers ability to make a profit and push most into debt. Basically, the industry is unsustainable due to price ceilings.

2. The market has been manipulated with cheaper local rice mixed with more expensive imported rice and passed off as imported rice, thus cheating the consumer. This has destroyed the integrity of local rice quality standards.

3. The monopoly on importing rice has brought inefficiencies into the market, where consumers have paid higher prices for imported rice than they should have.

4. The local paddy industry requires a deep study, with the view to making it more efficient, and providing new opportunities to add-value.


Solutions


Changing price controls, subsidies, and adding new packaging are not going to solve the deep structural problems in the rice industry today. This needs to be approached through the introduction of new techniques, new business models, and new products.


Rice cultivation techniques

The current rice cultivation techniques in the north, where over 50 percent of Malaysia’s rice is produced, heavily relies on contractors, where farmers undertake only the spraying of insecticide over the crop in an ad hoc manner. A major issue is that paddy farmers are aging, with the youth having little interest in continuing family paddy cultivation. This is not sustainable.





Most work on paddy fields is undertaken by contractors. Aging paddy farmers today just schedule these contractors to come and do the work.

The key in creating profitable and sustainable paddy production needs a multi-fold approach. Instead of obtaining 4-5 tonne yields per Hectare (depends upon the availability of irrigation), 9-11 tonnes could be achieved through emulating many of the practices used in Sekinchan, Selangor. Sekinchan farmers are reported to be able to obtain 5 harvests in a two-year cycle, compared with 4 crops in the north. The farmers of Sekinchan are meticulous in the preparation of their fields, cultivation practices, and weed control.

There needs to be a return to basic research to obtain the best practices, and a return to the days of extension advice provided by local agricultural authorities to farmers.


Business models

The current business model consists primarily of smallholders cultivating relatively small plots of land between one and 10 ha. Contractors do the harvesting and milling, and also receive the bulk of government subsidies. Most of these farmers are in debt and there is nobody to takeover their land plots to continue cultivating rice when they are unable to continue.

Farmers need to be re-organized into forming community and regional cooperatives which undertake the bulk cultivation activities, harvesting, milling, sales and distribution of the rice produced. This will require government grants and subsidies, but will assist in turning smallholders into sustainable farming communities. Through cooperatives, farmers can achieve economies of scale and improve profits, which can be shared.

These cooperatives must be considered start-ups.


New products

With the community bound together in cooperatives, other rice varieties can be cultivated to add value to crops. There are many local aromatic and brown rice varieties which can be commercialized. These new products can be marketed as ‘healthy foods’, using geographical regions as branding.





Other market reforms

The sooner price controls and monopolies are eliminated from the marketplace, the better off both farmers and consumers will be. To date, the rice industry has only benefitted contractors and monopoly corporations. This doesn’t mean that subsidies and grants should be eliminated. Grants and subsidies should be used as fiscal tools to reform the ailing rice industry. These reforms should benefit communities, where the cooperative will be the vehicle to do so.

This needs a brave government to make these reforms.


What Russia Can Learn from the Iranian War


Murray Hunter
Apr 14, 2026



What Russia Can Learn from the Iranian War


Strategic lessons from a six-week conflict





The intense conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran is unfolding against a backdrop of a broader erosion in Western strategic hegemony. The United States is losing its alliances around the world, and thus becoming diplomatically weaker.

Strains in traditional partnerships over the last year have been driven by tariff disputes, skepticism over the effectiveness of NATO, and a more transactional diplomatic approaches under the second Trump administration. This has prompted allies in Europe, the Indo-Pacific, and the Middle East to hedge their bets or pursue greater autonomy in their foreign policy thinking.

Major institutions like NATO have only endured because of shared concerns over Russia and China, but prolonged friction with the United States is risking the erosion of trust and coordinated action between the US and its allies.

The European Community (EU) itself is becoming divided and weaker as a single unit. Internal fractures over migration, energy, defense spending, fiscal policy, and relations with Russia and China have intensified, with populist shifts in several member states complicating unified responses. The recent loss of Victor Orban to Peter Magyar in Hungary will certainly exacerbate this.

Transatlantic tensions are accelerating calls for “strategic autonomy,” yet uneven capabilities and national priorities continue to limit the bloc’s geopolitical cohesion.

Militarily, U.S. military hardware which cover naval ships, aircraft carriers, and attack aircraft now appear much less effective in modern warfare. Advances in anti-access/area-denial systems, hypersonic weapons, drone swarms, and precision munitions make large surface assets and manned platforms vulnerable to saturation attacks and long-range strikes in contested environments.

Lessons from recent operations underscore the high costs and finite nature of these systems against determined adversaries with effective weaponry that have been indigenously developed and manufactured at just a small percentage of the costs relative to the United States.

In contrast, Russia demonstrates superiority in land warfare through troop numbers, logistics, and tactics. Russia also now has military technologies the US does not have. In Ukraine, Russian forces have leveraged massed artillery, glide bombs, cheap FPV and Lancet drones, electronic warfare, and adaptive “thousand cuts” tactics to sustain attritional advances despite high losses. This ground-domain edge contrasts sharply with Western emphasis on expensive precision systems.

Compounding the shifts above are the personal differences between the Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump. Putin, shaped by a KGB culture and discipline and decades of centralized state control, embodies calculated, long-term strategic patience and methodical risk management. Trump on the other hand, is a deal-making businessman and media-savvy populist, who favors intuitive, transactional diplomacy, public branding of “wins,” with an aversion to prolonged U.S. troop commitments.

These contrasting styles and methodical application of Putin versus the spontaneous assertiveness of Trump create both potential for direct negotiations and risks of mismatched expectations in great-power relations. We have seen this paradox as a major reason the Russo-Ukrainian war has not been ended yet.

Within this environment, the six-week US-Iranian conflict has provided Moscow with several glimpses of US and European vulnerability.

In the space of just six weeks, the brief but intense conflict between Iran, the United States, and Israel has rewritten several long-standing assumptions about how great-power confrontations can unfold in the 21st century.

On 28 February 2026, U.S. and Israeli forces struck Iranian targets in what is best described as an unprovoked escalation. What followed was a calibrated cycle of attack and retaliation of missile barrages, drone swarms, and strikes on proxy assets, until Washington quietly opened channels for ceasefire talks.

Russia’s own “special military operation” in Ukraine, now in its fourth year, has been defined by strategic patience: a grinding war of attrition designed to exhaust Ukrainian manpower, strain Western treasuries, and keep energy markets uncomfortable. Yet inside Russia, a vocal segment of the security establishment and nationalist commentariat has grown restless with what it sees as excessive restraint.

The events offer Moscow a timely view of the US directly in a theatre of war.

The Iranian precedent suggests that limited, demonstrative escalation against the external enablers of an adversary shows up a number of potential strategies that Russia could incorporate into its Ukraine campaign.


Hitting Forward Bases Without Crossing the Nuclear Threshold

Iran repeatedly struck U.S. bases located in third countries. These facilities in third countries were actively supporting operations against it. These Iranian attacks managed to avoid the kind of spiraling retaliation that many Western analysts had predicted. The strikes were precise enough to degrade US base capabilities and send a message, but carefully scoped to remain below the level that would compel Washington to treat them as acts of war against the American homeland.

For Russia, the analogy is uncomfortably direct. NATO countries have hosted training missions, provided deep-strike weapons, and allowed their territory to serve as logistics hubs for Ukrainian operations. Deep missile and UAV strikes originating from Ukrainian soil and launched with Western-supplied systems have already reached deep inside Russia.

The Iranian model implies that Moscow could respond in kind, targeting command nodes, airfields, or logistics depots on NATO soil that are unambiguously part of the war effort.

These actions may be taken by Russia without necessarily inviting a full Article 5 response. Trump calling on NATO allies to assist in the Strait of Hormuz signals the impotence of Article 5 in the contemporary today. The key, as Iran has demonstrated, is calibration, striking the enabler, but not the sovereign heartland. This for Iran demonstrated resolve, without escalation.


Exposing the Limits of Western Military Superiority

Iran’s performance in the six-week exchange revealed something that satellite imagery and leaked assessments have since confirmed. Even a mid-tier power armed with relatively low-cost drones, ballistic missiles, and layered air defenses can impose painful costs on the world’s most advanced military.

U.S. and Israeli systems were not rendered impotent, but they were shown to be expensive, finite, and vulnerable to saturation attacks. Tehran’s ability to keep launching after absorbing the first waves of strikes turned the conflict into a costly war of expenditure rather than a quick demonstration of dominance.

Russia has already made similar calculations in Ukraine relying on massed artillery, glide bombs, and cheap Lancet drones to offset Western precision munitions. The Iranian case reinforces the logic. A continued restraint may prolong the conflict by allowing NATO to replenish stocks on its own timeline.

Consequently, a more assertive posture that forces the West to expend high-end interceptors and expose forward bases could accelerate the very economic and political fatigue Putin has sought to create, especially given the vulnerabilities already evident in U.S. naval and air assets. Iran has undertaken this strategy very well.


Punishing Allies to Discipline the Adversary

Perhaps the most politically astute element of Iran’s campaign was its willingness to strike U.S. allies in the Gulf, the facilities and assets linked to the anti-Iran coalition while calibrating the blows so that Washington felt pressure to restrain its partners rather than escalate directly. Retribution was limited, but the message was received.

Applied to the Russian context, this suggests that selective strikes against the most forward-leaning NATO states such as Poland’s airfields and logistics centers have been cited most frequently in Russian discourse. This based upon the Iran experience not automatically trigger a collective NATO response.

Instead, they could have the opposite effect. Nervous European capitals, already divided internally, might begin pressing Washington and Kyiv for de-escalation rather than further escalation.

The goal would not be conquest or permanent occupation but to make the cost of proxy war visible on allied territory, thereby fracturing the coalition’s political will.


The Domestic Calculus in Moscow

Putin’s restraint has so far been Russia’s strength. This has preserved Russia’s economy, kept nuclear risks contained, and allowed time for sanctions evasion and military-industrial expansion.

Yet the Iranian precedent arrives at a moment when patience is being questioned inside the Kremlin’s corridors and on Russian state television. Hardliners argue that the West has interpreted restraint as weakness. The six-week Iran conflict offers them an empirical example. Limited escalation produced talks, not Armageddon.

Of course, the risks are real. NATO’s nuclear umbrella, the presence of supporting U.S. personnel inside Ukraine, and the integrated intelligence-sharing networks mean that any Russian strike on allied soil would be a step into uncharted territory.

Iran operated with the tacit understanding that neither side wanted a wider regional war. Russia enjoys no such luxury. Any miscalculation could still cascade, particularly when interacting with a U.S. leader who’s intuitive, deal-oriented style differs markedly from Putin’s methodical long-termism.

It must be remembered there are ‘jokers’ on both sides Israeli prime minister Netanyahu in Israel and President Zelensky in Ukraine, who would be willing to sabotage any move which attempts to bring an end to either war.

Nevertheless, the Iranian war has supplied Moscow with a new mental model. It is no longer necessary to choose between total restraint and all-out confrontation. There exists a middle path which is demonstrative, limited, and politically potent. Iran as a regional power can bleed its adversaries’ willingness to fight without inviting the end of the world.

Whether Putin chooses to walk that path will likely define the next phase of the Ukraine conflict. The six weeks in February–March 2026 have shown that patience has limits, and that calibrated audacity can sometimes shorten them.