Sunday, May 03, 2026

Ridhuan Tee Went To Rain Rave Water Music Festival, And Then Reported Back




Ridhuan Tee Went To Rain Rave Water Music Festival, And Then Reported Back


Malaysia’s government-backed Rain Rave Water Music Festival drew over 50,000 people on its opening night but ignited a culture war that outlasted the music itself



by Fernando Fong
May 3, 2026





Mohd Ridhuan Tee Abdullah, a prominent Muslim commentator, attended the Rain Rave Water Music Festival in Kuala Lumpur before publicly condemning it as a “pesta maksiat” — a festival of vice — on social media.

In a Facebook post on Friday (1 May), Tee, whose Chinese name is Tee Chuan Seng before he converted to Islam, said he visited the event at Bukit Bintang to see it for himself rather than “talk empty.”

Tee said the area should be renamed from Bukit Bintang — meaning Hill of Stars — to “Bukit Binatang,” meaning Hill of Animals.

He described the festival as an embarrassment that had damaged Malaysia’s identity as a “madani” nation, and said it offered nothing but sin.

The controversial preacher described scenes of frenzied music, a drunk-acting DJ, and crowds jumping in hedonistic revelry — all in English, with not a word of Bahasa Melayu spoken — saying water meant for ablution was being misused in a festival more Western than the West itself.

Tee also took aim at the broader governance question, saying that despite Muslims being the majority, the country had failed to exercise oversight — likening the situation to “living in a kafir illuminati state.”

He closed with a warning: “Don’t invite the wrath of Allah.”





Festival Rules Come Under Scrutiny

Questions were also raised about whether the event’s own rules were followed on the ground.

Muslim convert activist Firdaus Wong Wai Hung pointed out a discrepancy between the festival’s official guidelines and what was seen in live video footage.

He claimed that the organisers’ rulebook explicitly stated “No Water Guns or Splashing,” with a note that “our rain = bubbles and gentle mist only — don’t soak people.”

Footage circulating online, however, appeared to show large water jets drenching the crowd.

Wong questioned whether the organisers had practised what they preached.
Students Rally Against Festival at Bukit Bintang

Meanwhile, a group of student activists from Gabungan Mahasiswa Islam Se-Malaysia (GAMIS) staged a demonstration at Bukit Bintang during the festival on Friday (1 May).

More than 80 members of GAMIS gathered near the festival venue, standing their ground in the rain as the event continued around them.

The group said the festival promoted immoral behaviour, encouraged free mixing between men and women, and went against Islamic values.

Holding cardboard placards that read “Tolak Budaya Luar,” “No Pesta”, and “Jangan Normalisasi”, the group submitted three demands to the Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.

They want greater autonomy for Islamic institutions, a review of ministerial appointments on sensitive issues, and the dismissal of Tourism, Arts and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing.


The Music Played On


The event, which had attracted criticism from Jabatan Mufti Wilayah Persekutuan (JAWI) ahead of its opening, also drew attention from Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi.

The UMNO president called for future events of this nature to be reviewed against religious and cultural values — though he stopped short of demanding a cancellation.

PAS, in the latest opposition response, went further: secretary-general Datuk Seri Takiyuddin Hassan called the festival “a large-scale disco” that should have been privately organised and held behind closed doors, saying the government lacked imagination in promoting Malaysia’s tourism and that Tiong’s dismissal of critics was “reckless” and unbecoming of a minister.

The Bintulu MP stood firm, citing voluntary participation and tourism goals, with former minister Yeo Bee Yin adding that the backlash was excessive and damaging to the industry.

Police reported no major incidents across all three nights.

The three-day water music festival, held from Thursday (30 April) to Saturday (2 May), drew large crowds to the heart of Kuala Lumpur and featured international acts including the collaborative duo WUJACKERS, which consists of Singaporean DJ Wukong and Dutch duo Bassjackers, alongside Malaysian acts Joe Flizzow, Dolla, De Fam and Mimifly, as well as performers from the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand and South Korea.

More than 50,000 people turned up on the opening day alone of the Tourism Malaysia event.



Beijing strikes back: China invokes first-ever "blocking order" against US sanctions



Malaysia's #1 Content Aggregator



Beijing strikes back: China invokes first-ever "blocking order" against US sanctions


3 May 2026 • 2:27 AM MYT





Beijing [China], May 2 (ANI): In a sharp escalation of trade hostilities, China's Ministry of Commerce (MOC) on Saturday issued a formal blocking measure prohibiting domestic entities from complying with US sanctions, Xinhua reported.

The move specifically protects five major Chinese petrochemical firms recently targeted by Washington for their alleged involvement in the Iranian oil trade.

This marks the first time Beijing has officially invoked its "blocking statute," a legal mechanism designed to neutralise the extraterritorial reach of foreign laws, signalling a shift from diplomatic protests to active legal countermeasures.

According to Xinhua, the companies named include Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) Refining Co., Ltd., Shandong Shouguang Luqing Petrochemical Co., Ltd., Shandong Jincheng Petrochemical Group Co., Ltd., Hebei Xinhai Chemical Group Co., Ltd., and Shandong Shengxing Chemical Co., Ltd.

As per the Chinese MOC, the US measures involve placing the firms on the Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list, freezing their assets, and restricting transactions with them.

Responding to the sanctions, an MOC spokesperson said the United States has, since 2025, imposed restrictions on the Chinese companies under its executive orders targeting other countries, citing their alleged role in petroleum dealings with Iran, Xinhua reported.

The spokesperson criticised the US actions, stating that such measures improperly restrict normal economic and trade exchanges between Chinese companies and third countries, as well as their citizens and organisations, in violation of international law and basic norms governing international relations.

Last month, the US Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) cautioned global financial institutions about the sanctions risks associated with dealings involving independent Chinese oil refineries, commonly known as "teapot" refineries, particularly those based in Shandong province.

According to an alert by the OFAC, these refineries continue to play a significant role in importing and processing Iranian crude oil, including throughout 2026.

The OFAC designated the above-mentioned five refineries as part of its enforcement actions.

Before this alert, the OFAC imposed sanctions on "teapot" refinery Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) Refinery Co., Ltd., citing its role in purchasing large volumes of Iranian crude oil and petroleum products.

According to the Treasury Department, the refinery is among the major buyers supporting Iran's oil economy, having reportedly purchased billions of dollars' worth of Iranian petroleum.

The Chinese Commerce Ministry further stated that the blocking order was issued in accordance with Beijing's rules on countering the extraterritorial application of foreign laws, to safeguard national sovereignty, security and development interests, and protect the legitimate rights of Chinese entities, as reported by Xinhua.

Reiterating its position, the spokesperson said the Chinese government firmly opposes unilateral sanctions that are not authorised by the United Nations or grounded in international law. (ANI)


Teresa Kok urges PAS, Akmal to propose tourism alternatives instead of opposing events





Teresa Kok stressed that criticism without solutions would do little to support the nation’s tourism ambitions. - Scoop file pic, May 3, 2026


Teresa Kok urges PAS, Akmal to propose tourism alternatives instead of opposing events


Seputeh MP says constructive ideas and not criticism are needed to boost Malaysia’s tourism drive ahead of Visit Malaysia 2026


Keran Raj
Updated 35 seconds ago
3 May, 2026
2:37 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR – Seputeh MP Teresa Kok has called on PAS and Umno Youth chief Datuk Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh to move beyond opposing tourism-related events and instead offer constructive proposals to help strengthen the country’s tourism sector ahead of Visit Malaysia 2026.

In a statement shared on her Facebook page today, Kok criticised both parties for their strong objections to the Rain Rave Water Music Festival 2026, which is scheduled to take place in Bukit Bintang.

“I urge PAS and Dr Akmal to stop merely objecting and instead present constructive proposals to attract foreign tourists and stimulate the local economy,” she said.


Umno Youth chief Datuk Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh. – Scoop file pic, May 3, 2026


She noted that while PAS and Dr Akmal have been vocal in their opposition, they have yet to put forward viable alternatives.

Kok stressed that Malaysia needs fresh and engaging events to draw international visitors, especially as the country prepares for Visit Malaysia 2026. She added that criticism without solutions would do little to support the nation’s tourism ambitions.

She also took aim at PAS’s track record in managing tourism, pointing to a decline in visitor numbers in Langkawi.

“Look at the situation in Langkawi; poor governance by the state government has led to a significant decline in both foreign and domestic tourist arrivals,” she said.

According to Kok, foreign tourists come to Malaysia for leisure, entertainment, and to experience the country’s vibrant culture.

She warned that excessive restrictions and moral policing could damage Malaysia’s reputation as a tourist-friendly destination.

“The majority of foreign tourists visit Malaysia to relax, seek entertainment, and experience the vibrancy of urban culture,” she added.

Kok said that if PAS and Dr Akmal oppose street concerts and music festivals, they should propose alternative programmes capable of attracting millions of tourists.

“Our focus now should be on economic growth and the success of Visit Malaysia 2026, not on the politics of opposition,” she said.

Earlier, the Federal Territories Islamic Religious Department (Jawi) issued a statement formally objecting to the Rain Rave Water Music Festival 2026.

Jawi said the event had the potential to lead to “moral degradation and the erosion of societal values.” The department urged organisers to reconsider the programme, taking into account Malaysia’s multiracial, multireligious, and multicultural sensitivities.

It stressed that while Islam does not reject entertainment entirely, such activities must remain within boundaries prescribed by Islamic teachings.

Jawi also announced that special prayers and Yasin recitations would be held at mosques across Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya, and Labuan.

The department further called on all parties to ensure that entertainment programmes do not include elements that could offend religious sensitivities or undermine public morality.

This stance was echoed by Akmal, who said, “previously, ministry programmes served alcohol. Now, a ministry-organised water festival looks more like a disco in the heart of Kuala Lumpur.”

Meanwhile, Umno has also urged the government to reassess events such as the Rain Rave Water Music Festival to ensure they align with Malaysia’s cultural values, religious sensitivities, and societal norms.

Umno president and Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said all public programmes must respect local traditions, uphold community values, and remain sensitive to the country’s religious and cultural diversity.

He added that Umno takes seriously the concerns raised by Jawi and the Federal Territories Mufti Department, noting that their views reflect the sentiments of a significant portion of Malaysians. – May 3, 2026


***


PAS and UMNO (particularly Dr Akmal) will propose an alternative for the Rain Rave Water Music Festival, to wit,

the "Rant Rave Rage Thunder at Musuh Festival"


Missing Bandar Mahkota Cheras girl found dead in Sungai Langat after three-day search





Missing Bandar Mahkota Cheras girl found dead in Sungai Langat after three-day search



A Water Rescue Team recover the body of Nur Qaseh Deandra Mohd Qayyum, nine, from Sungai Langat, 11km from where she was reported to have fallen into a drain in Bandar Mahkota Cheras, Selangor on May 3, 2026. — Picture from Facebook/Bernama
il
Sunday, 03 May 2026 2:23 PM MYT


KAJANG, May 3 — The body of nine-year-old girl Nur Qaseh Deandra Mohd Qayyum, who was reported missing after falling into a drain in Bandar Mahkota Cheras, has been found in Sungai Langat, ending a three-day search.

Selangor Fire and Rescue Department Operations Assistant Director Ahmad Mukhlis Mukhtar confirmed the discovery, Harian Metro reported this afternoon.

He said the discovery was made at 12.17pm, about 11 kilometres from the location where the child was believed to have fallen, by the Water Rescue Team.

Harian Metro also reported that Nur Qaseh had identified her body at the scene.

Anwar: No elitism in Madani’s Bumiputera empowerment approach






Anwar: No elitism in Madani’s Bumiputera empowerment approach



Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim greets congregants after performing Friday prayers at Masjid Nurul Iman in Rawang on May 1, 2026. — Bernama pic

Sunday, 03 May 2026 12:04 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, May 3 — The Bumiputera empowerment agenda has been pursued more assertively, firmly and boldly under the Madani Government over the past three years, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim said.

Anwar, who is also finance minister, said the approach demonstrates that the government does not subscribe to elitism at the expense of Bumiputera interests, as alleged by certain quarters.

He pointed to the government’s decision to grant automatic matriculation placement to students who obtain 10As regardless of race, while at the same time maintaining the existing quota for Bumiputera students.

“At the same time, 90 per cent of Bumiputera students continue to be given opportunities through the matriculation programme, reflecting the government’s inclusive approach.

“Therefore, in any debate, do not focus on one aspect alone without considering the policy in its entirety, and avoid creating the perception of a zero-sum game,” Anwar said when officiating Majlis Amanah Rakyat’s (Mara) 60th anniversary celebration at the World Trade Centre Kuala Lumpur here today. — Bernama


Solat Hajat untuk pesta air ‘tidak bermoral’, diam seribu bahasa bab seleweng suku bilion duit zakat – A. Azim Idris





Tiga individu termasuk seorang timbalan pengerusi sebuah pertubuhan bukan kerajaan (NGO) ditahan pada Selasa kerana disyaki menyeleweng kira-kira RM230 juta dana zakat. – Gambar SPRM, 2 Mei 2026


Solat Hajat untuk pesta air ‘tidak bermoral’, diam seribu bahasa bab seleweng suku bilion duit zakat – A. Azim Idris


Penyelewengan membabitkan RM230 juta menerusi inisiatif swasta dedah keperluan mendesak pengawasan lebih ketat



A. Azim Idris
Updated 15 hours ago
2 May, 2026
8:08 PM MYT


SEPATUTNYA ada tempat khas di neraka bagi mereka yang menyeleweng wang zakat. Ini bukan hiperbola — ia adalah suatu kebiadaban moral. Zakat ditujukan untuk golongan miskin, yang terpinggir, ibu tunggal yang bergelut, anak yatim, dan warga emas yang tidak mampu berdikari.

Sebaliknya, timbul dakwaan bahawa RM230 juta telah diseleweng untuk membiayai gaya hidup yang membuatkan ketua kartel dadah pun malu: banglo bak istana, deretan kereta mewah umpama ruang pameran, dan jam tangan berjenama bertimbun seperti trofi. Menunggu hukuman di akhirat terlalu lama. Individu-individu ini perlu dihadapkan ke muka pengadilan sekarang.

Skala skandal ini amat mengejutkan. RM230 juta bukan sekadar jumlah yang besar — ia hampir suku bilion ringgit. Untuk perspektif yang lebih jelas, jumlah itu boleh membina puluhan sekolah, melengkapkan hospital dengan peralatan penting, serta menyediakan makanan dan tempat tinggal untuk puluhan ribu keluarga susah selama bertahun-tahun.

Namun, antara 2018 hingga 2024, wang ini didakwa digunakan untuk membiayai kemewahan peribadi. Tiga individu termasuk pemimpin NGO dan pengarah syarikat telah ditahan. Pihak berkuasa merampas 18 kenderaan mewah, hartanah bernilai RM11 juta, wang tunai, jam tangan berjenama, serta 33 akaun bank dibekukan dengan jumlah RM120 juta. Siasatan dijalankan di bawah Akta SPRM 2009.

Penting untuk ditegaskan bahawa RM230 juta ini dikaitkan dengan inisiatif swasta, bukan saluran sistem zakat awam rasmi. Rangka kerja zakat Malaysia dikendalikan oleh Majlis Agama Islam Negeri, manakala Wilayah Persekutuan diuruskan oleh MAIWP melalui PPZ-MAIWP.

Majlis-majlis ini mengurus kutipan dan agihan zakat kepada lapan asnaf — fakir, miskin, amil, muallaf, orang berhutang, fi sabilillah, musafir, dan hamba yang ingin dimerdekakan. Namun, inisiatif swasta dan NGO juga memainkan peranan, sering menyalurkan zakat dan wakaf untuk projek kebajikan tertentu. Ada majlis yang membenarkan penderma melantik ejen bagi mengagihkan zakat, mewujudkan saluran separa swasta di bawah pengawasan negeri.

Amalan zakat mencerminkan keindahan agama, tetapi kadangkala sistem ini dicemari oleh manusia paling keji.

Skandal ini menekankan keperluan mendesak untuk ketelusan dan pengawasan. Rakyat biasa hampir tidak tahu ke mana dana inisiatif swasta disalurkan, membuka ruang kepada penyalahgunaan. Kontroversi lalu melibatkan Zakat Pulau Pinang (ZPP) dan YaPEIM sudah pun menghakis kepercayaan awam, dan pendedahan terbaru ini menambah parah.

Ironinya jelas: minggu lalu JAWI, Mufti Wilayah Persekutuan dan MAIWP menganjurkan Solat Hajat, bacaan Yasin serta mengeluarkan bantahan mengutuk “Rain Rave Water Music Festival 2026” di Bukit Bintang. Mereka menyifatkannya sebagai tidak bermoral, membazir, dan merosakkan masyarakat — risau tentang percampuran bebas, pakaian menjolok mata, muzik bising, orang meninggalkan solat, malah pembaziran air. Tetapi di mana keprihatinan sama apabila suku bilion ringgit wang zakat didakwa lesap terang-terangan? Seolah-olah pihak berkuasa lebih sibuk mengawal moral daripada membanteras rasuah sebenar.

Jurang tadbir urus jelas: komisen tinggi untuk ejen boleh mendorong salah laku, manakala proses perolehan tidak telus membuka ruang kepada rasuah dan penyelewengan.

Reformasi mesti dilaksanakan segera. LHDN dan Bank Negara perlu memantau kutipan zakat swasta dan korporat dengan lebih ketat. Amaran awal perlu dibangkitkan, had dikenakan ke atas pengendalian dana oleh ejen, dan ketelusan wajib untuk memastikan wang sampai kepada penerima sebenar — bukan kereta mewah atau percutian luar negara.

Laporan mandatori, pendedahan tahunan, kerangka tadbir urus standard selaras dengan Kod Tadbir Urus Korporat Malaysia, pengurusan risiko kukuh, serta pengawasan Syariah khusus adalah penting untuk mengelak ketirisan di masa depan.

Mereka yang bersalah perlu berdepan hukuman berat: diharamkan seumur hidup daripada mengurus dana zakat, diisytihar muflis, dan akaun keluarga terdekat dipantau. Tanpa akauntabiliti, jutaan — malah berbilion — boleh hilang setiap tahun, menafikan hak umat Islam yang layak dan mencemarkan reputasi agama.

Skandal ini setanding dengan penipuan Haji dan Umrah paling terkenal. Ia hipokrasi agama pada tahap paling buruk. Jika tidak dibendung, ia akan terus memalukan umat Islam dan memberi alasan kepada pengkritik untuk menghina sistem. Kerajaan perlu bertindak tegas. Zakat adalah amanah yang suci, dan mengkhianatinya adalah pengkhianatan jelas terhadap iman itu sendiri. – 2 Mei 2026

***A. Azim Idris adalah Pengarang Berita di Scoop

Israeli air strikes on Lebanon kill 41 people in 24-hours





Israeli air strikes on Lebanon kill 41 people in 24-hours


Strikes on Saturday killed at least 10 people, raising the death toll from Israeli strikes on Lebanon since March 2 to 2,659, with 8,183 others injured


Smoke rises in Habboush following Israeli strikes, as seen from Nabatieh, Lebanon [Stringer/Reuters]



By Al Jazeera Staff and AP
Published On 2 May 2026


Israel has launched multiple strikes across southern Lebanon, killing at least 10 people in further violations of the “ceasefire” declared two weeks ago.

Lebanon’s Ministry of Health said the latest wave of attacks on Saturday increased the total recorded over the previous 24 hours to 41. The overall death toll since March 2 is 2,659, with 8,183 injured.

Quoting the health ministry, Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA) said three people were killed in an Israeli attack on the town of Shoukine in Nabatieh district.

An earlier attack on a car in the village of Kfar Dajjal killed two people. Three others were killed when a home was hit in the village of Lwaizeh. A strike on the village of Shoukin killed two people, NNA reported.

Israeli forces carried out an air strike near al-Quds roundabout in the city of Nabatieh, and warplanes attacked the town of Siddiqine in Tyre district.



Israel replicating its Gaza tactics in Lebanon



'We're addicted to war': Israeli protesters demand end to conflicts



Israel continues to violate the ceasefire that began on April 17 and was later extended until mid-May.

Israel claims its attacks target the pro-Iran Lebanese group Hezbollah, but many of the dead were civilians.

More than one million people in Lebanon have been registered as displaced since the outbreak of the war.
Hezbollah says attacks will continue

Despite the rising death toll, Hezbollah on Friday pledged to continue attacks on Israeli forces inside Lebanese territory.

The group said it targeted multiple gatherings of Israeli soldiers and vehicles in several front-line towns in southern Lebanon. The attacks included artillery strikes on troops near Moussa Abbas complex in Bint Jbeil and the village of Hula. Drones were used to attack soldiers in Biyyada.

Hezbollah has recently been using small drones controlled by fibre-optic cables to hit Israeli tanks. Three Israeli soldiers have been killed.

Attack drones also targeted military hardware, including a Humvee truck in the town of Taybeh and a Merkava tank in Rishaf.



Lebanon Crisis Deepens: 1 Million Displaced as Israeli Offensive Continues



The latest war between Israel and Hezbollah began on March 2, when Hezbollah fired rockets into northern Israel two days after the United States and Israel attacked its main backer, Iran.

Israel has since carried out hundreds of air strikes and launched a ground invasion of southern Lebanon, capturing dozens of towns and villages along the border.

A 10-day ceasefire declared in Washington started on April 17 and was extended by three weeks.

Reporting from Beirut, Al Jazeera’s Rory Challands said the ceasefire exists in name only.

“Essentially, it’s a diplomatic construct. The reality is that, certainly down in the south, the war continues, and, in fact, it is expanding,” he said.



Southern Lebanon demolitions: Israeli forces wipe out entire villages and towns



On Friday, China’s envoy to the United Nations told reporters at the UN headquarters in New York that there is no real ceasefire in place, only a “lesser fire”.

“It is incumbent on Israel to stop this bombardment of Lebanon,” Fu Cong said, as China assumed the rotating presidency of the UN Security Council for May.

Reporting from Amman in Jordan, Al Jazeera’s Jack Barton said Israel’s Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, is coming under intense pressure from all quarters to abandon the ceasefire.

“The majority of the Israeli public is against it. The opposition is against the ceasefire. And all week, the army has been saying they are ready to re-engage, to broaden the conflict if they get the green light,” he said.

“On Friday, senior officers were telling multiple Israeli media outlets that they were frustrated, that they believe the ceasefire was causing harm for Israeli soldiers, who are seeing daily injuries now from these first-person view fibre-optic cable drones increasingly used by Hezbollah.”

E-hailing drivers: The end is near





E-hailing drivers: The end is near


2 DAYS AGO
K. Kathirgugan


Robotaxis are coming. For the thousands of Malaysians working in the gig economy, the clock is already ticking.





Imagine this. You wake up tomorrow and open the Grab app. But instead of a driver’s name and a photo, you see a car with no one in it pulling up to your doorstep.

No driver cancelling on you three times in a row. No wrong turns. No surge pricing. Just a clean, quiet ride to work for half of what you pay today.

Now imagine you are the driver who just lost that fare. And the next one. And every one after that.

This is not a thought experiment. On April 1, 2026, Grab and Chinese autonomous vehicle company WeRide launched a driverless shuttle service in Singapore’s Punggol neighbourhood.

Eleven autonomous vehicles. Two fixed routes. No human behind the wheel. The service, branded Ai.R, is still free and limited in scope, but the signal it sends is unmistakable: the driverless taxi is coming soon to our shores.

It is also a warning to the thousands of people who depend on driving taxis or ride hailing vehicles for a living to be prepared for yet another disruption.

Globally, the autonomous ride-hailing revolution is accelerating at a breathtaking pace. Waymo operates robotaxis in ten American cities. Baidu’s Apollo Go has completed 20 million fully driverless rides across China.

Tesla launched its robotaxi service in Austin last June and is rolling out across Phoenix, Dallas, Las Vegas and Miami, with its purpose-built Cybercab entering mass production this month at under RM120,000 per vehicle. For context, each Waymo robotaxi costs roughly RM400,000.

Tesla’s vertical integration—designing its own chips, software, batteries and vehicles end-to-end—gives it a cost structure that no competitor can match. The Cybercab has 50% fewer parts than a Model 3, courtesy of gigacasting technology that replaces hundreds of stamped steel components with single massive aluminium castings. Elon Musk has claimed that the Cybercab could eventually operate at roughly RM0.50 per kilometre.

To put that in terms Malaysians can relate to, a Grab ride from KLCC to Bangsar currently costs around RM10 to RM14. At Tesla’s projected operating costs, that same trip in a robotaxi could cost as little as RM4 to RM6. Half price, no driver to pay, available around the clock.

The economics are devastating for human drivers. And they will only get worse.

But the question that should haunt every e-hailing driver in this country is not when robotaxis will arrive. It is what they plan to do when they do.

Consider the scale of what is at stake. Malaysia’s gig economy encompasses approximately 1.64 million workers, spanning e-hailing, food delivery, courier services and freelance digital work.

Over 160,000 of these are registered e-hailing drivers, the overwhelming majority with Grab. For many, this is not a side hustle. It is their primary source of income, averaging around RM4,100 a month, modestly above the national median salary of RM2,864.

These are not wealthy people. Many are former taxi drivers who already survived one wave of disruption.

When ride-hailing decimated the taxi industry, Malaysia went from 120,000 operational taxis to just 40,000, with 30,000 abandoned outright. Tens of thousands adapted by switching to Grab, learning new apps, buying new cars, taking on new loans.

Now they face the prospect of doing it all over again. Except this time, there may not be a new platform to absorb them.

How long do they have? Full autonomy on Malaysian roads is still some years away. Our regulatory framework has barely begun to contemplate it. The chaotic nature of Southeast Asian traffic presents challenges that even the best AI has not fully cracked.

Baidu’s recent system failure in Wuhan, where over 100 robotaxis were stranded mid-traffic, underscores how far the technology still has to go.

My best estimate is three to five years before the first commercial robotaxi corridors appear in Kuala Lumpur or Putrajaya; a decade before autonomous rides take a meaningful share of the market.

That timeline sounds comfortable. It is not. A decade passes quickly, and the taxi drivers who dismissed ride-hailing as a distant threat in 2012 were out of work by 2020.

Will these jobs fully disappear? Not overnight.

There will be a transitional period where human drivers and autonomous vehicles coexist, much as traditional taxis still limp along alongside Grab today. New roles will emerge: remote vehicle operators who monitor robotaxis from command centres; fleet technicians who maintain, calibrate and repair autonomous vehicles.

But these require technical skills that most current drivers do not have.

The Gig Workers Act 2025, which came into force on March 31, 2026, mandates social security contributions and written contracts for gig workers. It is progressive legislation, but it is designed for the gig economy as it exists today, not the one that is coming.

The i-Saraan Plus scheme, which matches retirement contributions up to RM600 a year, is welcome but laughably inadequate in the face of wholesale job displacement.

The hard truth is this: drivers cannot wait for the government to save them. They need to start preparing now. That means treating the next few years not as business as usual, but as a runway to retrain and reskill. The drivers who survive this transition will be the ones who saw it coming and refused to stand still.

The gig economy gave millions of Malaysians a lifeline when formal employment fell short. That lifeline has an expiry date. The app will stop ringing eventually.

The only question is whether you will have prepared for the silence.


Chinese think tank: “KL’s inaugural Rain Rave 2026 attracts crowd of 80k, rakes in over RM200m”



Chinese think tank: “KL’s inaugural Rain Rave 2026 attracts crowd of 80k, rakes in over RM200m”




SUCH are the conservative figures claimed by self-proclaimed Chinese leadership site Top Leader 领袖 upon the conclusion of the inaugural three-day Rain Rave Water Music Festival 2026 in Bukit Bintang yesterday evening (May 2).


Bulls eye or way off the mark, the figures represent the first attempt to gauge economic impact of the Madani initiative in conjunction with Visit Malaysia Year 2026 (VMY 2026) that has come under heavy fire from the PAS-led rightist fraternity in addition to an eleventh hour objection by the Federal Territories (FT) Islamic Religious Department (JAWI) and the FT Mufti.




“Conservative estimates show that international visitors comprised around 25% to 30% of the estimated 80,000 total attendance, hence around 20,000 to 24,000 people,” Top Leader 领袖 pointed out in a Facebook post.

80,000 peserta dalam 3 hari—berapa banyak Malaysia jana? Mencecah lebih RM200 juta!

Analisis impak ekonomi terkini Rain Rave Water Music Festival!

Angka sudah keluar....

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Singapore, China and Indonesia were the main sources of international visitors. Malaysia Airlines and Scoot also recorded record bookings throughout the event.

With an average daily spend of RM150 for local participants and RM400 for international visitors (including accommodation), the total direct spend over the three days is estimated to reach RM55 mil to RM70 mil.

This is an around 40% increase from the initial projection based on 50,000 attendees.


Tourism, Arts and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing launched the inaugural Rain Rave Water Music Festival on April 30 with the symbolic ‘shooting of the water cannon’ at the crowd of revellers (Image credit: Guang Ming Daily)

🇲🇾 | Water Festival in Malaysia

Introducing the new festival "The Rain Rave Water Music Festival" in Bukit Bintang, Kuala Lumpur, from April 30 to May 2, 2026. This festival is created to boost tourism in Malaysia.

CR. Guang Ming Daily

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May be an image of one or more people, saxophone, crowd and Times Square
May be an image of one or more people, Times Square, crowd and text
May be an image of saxophone, crowd and text
May be an image of one or more people, saxophone, accordion, violin, crowd and text
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Spill-over effect

Based on an estimated 5,000 hotel rooms in the Bukit Bintang area with full occupancy for three days, Top Leader 领袖 expected the event to propel revenue of RM40 mil to RM45 mil to the hotel industry.

This is on the backdrop of luxury hotels around Bukit Bintang such as the St Regis and Pavilion Hotel having introduced special festival packages, including VIP access and exclusive experiences.

“Occupancy rates were nearing 100% while budget travellers turned to Airbnb, resulting in bookings to skyrocket on the platform,” observed the Chinese think tank.

“Tourism Malaysia is also partnering with 79 hotels nationwide to offer discounts of up to 70% to encourage visitors to extend their stays.”

Top Leader 领袖 further tributed Tourism, Arts and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing for having stressed that one of the main objectives of the water/music festival is to ensure that local traders especially those in the B40 group derived direct benefit.




“The festival features a food bazaar themed The Rhythm of Flavours which provided an opportunity for small traders and artisans to interact directly with tens of thousands of visitors,” noted the Chinese think tank.

An ordinary trader in Bukit Bintang who usually earns RM500 to RM800 on weekends reported sales rising to RM2,500 to RM4,000 per day during the festival. This means that three days of earnings is equivalent to a month’s income.

With dozens of stalls involved, the overall, additional income for traders is estimated at RM8 mil to RM12 mil.

‘More than just money’

Below are more intriguing findings from Leader 领袖:

 Multiplier impact to surrounding economy:

Restaurants, convenience stores, shopping malls, parking and transportation in the Bukit Bintang area also received a flood of benefits.

 Additional income estimated at RM10 mil to RM15 mil.

 Seven states involved: Economic distribution

The event was also held simultaneously in seven states, namely Negeri Sembilan, Johor, Melaka, Kedah, Labuan, Pahang and Terengganu. Such move prevented economic concentration only in Kuala Lumpur by ensuring that economic benefits were distributed nationally.

 Additional value estimated at RM10 mil to RM15 mil.

Sebelum ini dalam program kementerian ada sajikan arak

Kali ini program kementerian anjurkan pesta air dah mcm disko di tengah bandar Kuala Lumpur

Jabatan agama islam keluarkan kenyataan bantah pon tidak dihiraukan oleh menteri 

...See more

 Aviation industry: Unexpected winner


Malaysia Airlines added flights from Singapore, Hong Kong and Bangkok. Scoot, on the other hand, offered tickets as low as US$50 for a round trip. Both recorded exceptional booking rates. With estimated ticket prices of RM150 to RM300 one-way:




 Additional income for the aviation sector could exceed RM30 mil.

So what’s the final verdict?


Tourism Malaysia has confirmed that Rain Rave Water Music Festival will be a major annual event in Malaysia’s tourism calendar.

The brand value and social media impact generated is hard to match by any typical marketing campaign.

It took Thailand 20 years to build Songkran into a RM2.6 bil a year industry. Malaysia managed to attract 80,000 participants in the first edition alone – this is a very encouraging start.

If developed consistently:

 Within five years, the Rain Rave Water Music Festival has the potential to become the most iconic urban water festival in Southeast Asia. – May 3, 2026



Editor’s Note: MCA has hit out at the call by UMNO Youth chief Datuk Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh to cancel the Rain Rave Water Music Festival 2026 as unconvincing and counter-productive, “especially at a time when Malaysia urgently needs tourism to generate growth and revenue”.

“Taking an emotional and confrontational position against such initiatives only risks harming our economy and tarnishing our global image,” the party’s Economic & SMEs Affairs Committee chairman Datuk Lawrence Low jibed in a statement.

Hosting the festival in Bukit Bintang is no coincidence. It’s one of Malaysia’s most prominent tourism and commercial hubs, making it an ideal location to maximise visibility and impact.




Large-scale events like this uplift countless small and medium businesses – from hawkers and drivers to shop owners and hoteliers – who depend on such opportunities to sustain their livelihoods.

With this year designated as VMY 2026, the government has set an ambitious target of attracting 47 million visitors and generating RM300 bil in revenue.

Achieving this requires fresh, creative approaches to tourism and the water music festival is precisely the kind of initiative we should be supporting, not opposing without sound basis.



Main image credit: A cheeky AI pic of Tourism, Arts and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing shooting the ‘water gun’ at UMNO Youth chief Datuk Dr Muhamad Akmal Saleh who emerged a vocal critic of the inaugural Rain Rave Water Music Festival 2026.


Bystanders subdue armed woman at Rain Rave Music Festival in KL






Bystanders subdue armed woman at Rain Rave Music Festival in KL 



Kuala Lumpur police chief Datuk Fadil Marsus speaks to the media at the Kuala Lumpur police headquarters drug case items disposal ceremony on August 20, 2025. — Bernama pic

Sunday, 03 May 2026 8:50 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, May 3 — A 28-year-old woman armed with a knife was arrested on the final night of the Rain Rave Water Music Festival in Bukit Bintang yesterday, with a viral video showing members of the public bravely intervening to subdue her before police arrived.

Kuala Lumpur police chief Datuk Fadil Marsus confirmed the arrest, which occurred amidst a crowd of approximately 30,000 attendees.

“Tonight, we have arrested a 28-year-old woman for possession of a weapon,” Fadil told the media after the event.

“She was found in possession of a knife and has been detained; she will undergo the remand process later in the morning.”

The video, which has been widely shared on social media, shows several bystanders holding the woman back, with one man gripping her arm to control the weapon until police officers take her into custody.

Aside from the incident, Fadil said the three-day festival, which drew a total of 180,000 people, was a success and ran smoothly with no other major issues reported.

“Despite a crowd of 30,000, the situation remained orderly and under control,” he said, praising the public for their cooperation with the authorities.

He disclosed that 500 police personnel, including reinforcements from Bukit Aman, were deployed each day to manage the event.

Tourism, Arts and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing was also present on the final night.


Privately staged Rain Rave festival held indoors would have defeated purpose, says Karyawan





Privately staged Rain Rave festival held indoors would have defeated purpose, says Karyawan


The Malaysian Artistes' Association says the event is an addition to the nation's diversity, not a detraction from it


Karyawan said relocating the Rain Rave Water Music Festival to an indoor venue would have reduced its visibility, reach, and impact on the international visitors it was designed to attract.


PETALING JAYA: The Malaysian Artistes’ Association (Karyawan) has defended the staging of the Rain Rave Water Music Festival at Bukit Bintang in Kuala Lumpur, saying it was designed to attract visitors, particularly those from overseas.

It also said that without an admission charge, there was insufficient commercial return to attract a private organiser at the scale that such an event required.

It was responding to comments by PAS secretary-general Takiyuddin Hassan that it would have been more appropriate for the private sector to have organised the event and held it behind closed doors as the festival had sparked controversy.

Takiyuddin also said the event was not inclusive.

Karyawan president Freddie Fernandez said relocating the event to an indoor venue would have reduced its visibility, reach, and impact on the international visitors it was designed to attract.

He said Bukit Bintang is an internationally recognised tourist corridor.

“Outdoor festivals of this nature are a proven tourism draw across the region. Thailand’s Songkran celebrations and Taiwan’s water festivals have demonstrated increased tourist arrivals specifically tied to such events.

“An indoor event would have lacked impact and defeated this purpose,” he said in a statement.

Fernandez also said Malaysia’s identity as a nation has never been singular.

“It is precisely Malaysia’s multicultural, multiracial and multilingual character that forms the foundation of the ‘Malaysia Truly Asia’ positioning, a branding that has served this country’s tourism industry for decades,” he said.

“The Rain Rave Water Music Festival drew strong attendance from international visitors and from younger demographics. To characterise the event as inconsistent with Malaysian identity is to advance a narrow and contested definition of what that identity means.”

He said it is worth noting that Saudi Arabia has in recent years hosted large-scale outdoor entertainment events as part of its national tourism strategy under Vision 2030, without abandoning its values or identity.

“If the benchmark for responsible governance is to be drawn from Islamic-majority nations, Malaysia’s approach to tourism-driven public events is neither unprecedented nor inconsistent with that standard,” he said.

Fernandez said the tourism, arts and culture ministry, which organised the Rain Rave festival as part of Visit Malaysia 2026, has over many years supported festivals celebrating Malay heritage, Chinese culture, Indian traditions, and the indigenous cultures of Sabah and Sarawak.

“The Rain Rave Water Music Festival is an addition to that diversity, not a detraction from it.

“Karyawan stands firmly in support of a creative economy that is open, ambitious, and reflective of Malaysia’s diversity. We commend the ministry for its commitment to positioning Malaysia competitively within the regional and global tourism landscape,” he said.

The three-day festival ended last night.


***


PAS is a kill-joy entity - ban this organisation from Malaysian lives, wakakaka


Saturday, May 02, 2026

Umno wants to force GE by October, says Rafizi










Umno wants to force GE by October, says Rafizi


B Nantha Kumar
Published: May 2, 2026 8:00 PM
Updated: 10:00 PM




Force a general election by October - that is the ultimate aim of the crisis triggered by Negeri Sembilan Umno, according to PKR ex-deputy president Rafizi Ramli, as his colleagues in Pakatan Harapan continue to reel from the episode last week.

“The controversy in Negeri Sembilan is Umno’s grand strategy to build a wave of support similar to what happened in the previous Malacca and Johor state elections,” he said, referring to the victories BN chalked up in those polls that took place in 2021 and 2022.

“The aim is to force Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim to dissolve Parliament and hold a general election,” he speculated in the latest episode of his podcast “Yang Berhenti Menteri”.

“Using the same strategy now, (they want to) build a big wave. That will force Anwar to hold an early general election, and Umno will mop up seats all over Malaysia.

“The plan involves holding the election in October together with polls in Negeri Sembilan, Malacca, and Johor,” Rafizi said.

Umno’s top leadership has made it clear that it has not supported a postponement of the Johor and Malacca state polls, which have to be called by early next year. The federal government’s term, however, only ends in December 2027.


Umno’s 80th anniversay convention today


Last week, Bloomberg reported that Anwar is allegedly in the early stages of considering holding a general election in the third quarter of this year.

Experts and some politicians, however, have suggested that the two state polls be postponed so that the federal government can focus on tackling economic pressures triggered by the US-Israel-Iran war.


Shows Umno’s true colours

Earlier this week, all 14 Negeri Sembilan Umno state lawmakers withdrew support from Menteri Besar Aminuddin Harun, who is from Harapan, after losing confidence in his leadership.

Led by Negeri Sembilan Umno chief Jalaluddin Alias, the party, which is a partner with Harapan in the federal government, said it was willing to form a state government with opposition bloc Perikatan Nasional.

The move sparked anger among Harapan leaders and supporters who called on the coalition to review its ties with Umno.


Negeri Sembilan Umno


Since then, Umno president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi announced that the party respects the stand taken by its Negeri Sembilan lawmakers, but that the party would still support the Madani administration led by Anwar, who is the Harapan chairperson.

Speaking on his podcast, Rafizi said the Negeri Sembilan gambit did not pay off and would tarnish Umno’s image, labelling it a “backdoor party”.

“The crisis reminds people of Umno’s true colours and the party’s internal issues. The move is premature and fails to take into consideration its long-term negative impacts”.

A backdoor party will be viewed negatively by progressive Malay voters and non-Malay voters, Rafizi said.

“Umno’s victories in Negeri Sembilan actually depended on non-Malay and Malay voters,” he added.