Saturday, May 09, 2026

Historians want to protect their rice bowl, Khairy












Mariam Mokhtar
Published: May 8, 2026 2:02 PM
Updated: 4:02 PM




COMMENT | It is disingenuous of Khairy Jamaluddin to criticise Malaysian historians and experts as “cowardly professors” who refuse to speak out while misinformation about the nation’s past continues to spread.

It is always easier when the narrative becomes uncomfortable to blame those who describe it rather than those who shaped its boundaries.

The former minister’s outburst fits neatly into a familiar political reflex, that confusion in public understanding must be the fault of those who failed to speak loudly enough. This framing is too convenient, and it mistakes the symptom for the system.

So, why is Khairy focusing on the silence of historians, instead of the political environment that shaped what could be safely said in the first place?

The core issue is not academic courage; it is political history.

Malaysia’s post-independence nation-building project, especially during the strong Umno era, was deeply shaped by affirmative action policies and the ideological framing of “Ketuanan Melayu” (Malay supremacy) as a central pillar of state identity and political legitimacy.




Our history was never written in a vacuum of pure academic curiosity because it has always existed inside this larger political architecture. These discriminatory policies were further reinforced through the Biro Tata Negara (BTN or National Civics Bureau).

Khairy was possibly referring to International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM) academic Solehah Yaacob, whose claims about ancient Romans learning about shipbuilding from the Malays made Malaysia a laughing stock, yet again.

She is not the only lecturer to distort early Malayan history. Even once respected historians have been known to “jaga periuk nasi” (guarding one’s rice pot) and toe the official line.


Challenging narratives

I once attended a lecture in Ipoh in 2011, called “Peristiwa Bukit Kepong, Siapa Wira Sebenar?” (Bukit Kepong Incident, who were the real heroes?)

Two of the speakers were former police chief Haniff Omar and historian Khoo Kay Kim, who said Malaya was never colonised by the British. The audience stared dumbfounded, but few dared to counter them. A majority of the audience were police officers and members of the security forces.


Historian Khoo Kay Kim


Khoo’s comments did not go unnoticed because his former student, Rachel Leow, wrote him an open letter, which went viral. She was a PhD student at Cambridge, and she dared to correct him.

Umno policies of the 1980s-1990s shaped institutional behaviour. Public narratives were tightly controlled. Some were encouraged, others were treated cautiously, and those that generated controversy were banned. Self-censorship and silence became the new norm.

So when people ask why historians appear silent or restrained, the answer they give is not just fear. It is also because of structure.

Post 1969, the political atmosphere punished perceived challenges to sensitive identity frameworks. In time, institutions naturally learned to operate carefully within those boundaries. Public history then took shape.


Non-Malay erasure

Take Kuala Lumpur.

Critics claim that Yap Ah Loy, one of the key founders of modern Kuala Lumpur, has been reduced to little more than a passing mention in school narratives.

The parents who complained about this distortion of our early history say this is not about one missing name. They worry about how stories get flattened over time.

The narrative promoted by some Umno leaders five decades ago was that non-Malays were relatively recent arrivals to the country, having come only within the last 200 years.

Critics argue that this framing ignored the much older presence of Chinese and Indian communities in the Malay peninsula as miners, traders, and spice merchants who arrived through the monsoon trade networks centuries earlier.


Yap Ah Loy

Then there is the deeper past.

Sites such as Bujang Valley in Kedah reflect a long archaeological history of trade, industry, settlement, and Hindu-Buddhist cultural influence in early Southeast Asia.

Had this heritage been more fully preserved and allowed to flourish, with its many artefacts and ancient structures protected, Malaysia might today rival historical treasures such as Angkor Wat in Cambodia or Borobudur in Indonesia.

To many observers, the lack of urgency in preserving these sites gave the impression that the authorities preferred not to draw too much attention to the country’s non-Islamic historical roots.

Furthermore, the Orang Asli are the original settlers of Malaya, but they remain as a mere footnote in history books.


Inheriting an environment of caution

What many parents and some teachers describe to me is not a conspiracy. It is a caution. Certain historical topics, especially those touching on identity, origin narratives, or competing interpretations of early civilisation, may not be discussed freely in institutional settings.

Not because it is formally forbidden, but because, over time, a culture develops where stepping too far outside accepted framing feels risky, unnecessary, or professionally unwise.




Khairy may have criticised historians, but academic caution is not the root problem. This pattern of silence among experts is not unique to history.

In mining, industry, and engineering, warnings about hill development, slope stability, radiation, and ecological risks are often raised early, and without drama.

Yet, those warnings frequently gain public attention only after a disaster forces visibility.

Then the same questions return: who knew, who warned, and why was it not acted on sooner?

The issue is not simply “cowardly professors”. That framing is too easy. It shifts attention away from the longer political and institutional history that shaped what could be safely said, and what could not.

Historians did not design that environment. They inherited it.

And when political actors now express frustration at historical confusion, the harder question is not why some academics are quiet, but how the boundaries of acceptable speech were formed in the first place, and by whom.

History is not only written in books.

It is shaped by political frameworks, institutional incentives, and the long shadow of national narratives, including “Ketuanan Melayu” as a defining feature of Malaysia’s post-independence political architecture.



MARIAM MOKHTAR is a defender of the truth, the admiral-general of the Green Bean Army, and the president of the Perak Liberation Organisation (PLO). Blog, X.


MB office denies speculation on Amirudin's shift to Selayang despite strong indications










MB office denies speculation on Amirudin's shift to Selayang despite strong indications


B Nantha Kumar
Published: May 9, 2026 7:00 AM
Updated: 11:11 AM




The Selangor Menteri Besar’s Office has denied speculations that Menteri Besar Amirudin Shari will be shifting from his Gombak constituency to the parliamentary seat of Selayang in the upcoming 16th general election.

A spokesperson from the office told Malaysiakini that the speculation stemmed from an earlier proposal by Selayang PKR, which wanted Amirudin (above) to contest for the seat.

“There is no truth to this matter. It was merely a proposal from the Selayang division.

“The menteri besar remains committed to serving the people in Gombak and intends to defend his seat in the next general election, if and when the party leadership decides to nominate him,” the spokesperson said.

However, at least two internal party sources told Malaysiakini that the party headquarters has dispatched “scouts” who have been in the field since last month to gauge Amirudin’s chances.

“I can confirm that we have been instructed to go on the ground to obtain feedback from the Selayang constituency.

“The instruction given to us were very specific, which is to assess Amirudin’s chances in the Selayang parliamentary seat.

“A leader from Putrajaya has also been mentioned as a possible replacement for him in Gombak,” one source told Malaysiakini, without naming the leader in question.




Amirudin has been the centre of speculation after a motion was tabled at the 2026 Selayang PKR divisional annual general meeting proposing him as the 16th general election candidate for the constituency.

However, the motion failed to pass after the meeting descended into pandemonium.

Instead, the meeting approved a motion nominating Rawang assemblyperson Chua Wei Kiat, who is also Selayang PKR division chief, as PKR’s candidate for the constituency in the upcoming polls.

‘Seeking a shift’

Former Selayang PKR division chief Kamarudin Hussain confirmed that the proposal to name Amirudin came from grassroots members seeking a shift in the constituency’s political dynamics.

“This area requires experienced and credible leadership with a strong administrative track record.

“The current demographic factor in Selayang, which is now a Malay-majority constituency, calls for the presence of a major figure like Amirudin,” he said.

Meanwhile, Chua declined to comment further on the matter.


William Leong


PKR’s William Leong presently holds the Selayang parliamentary seat.

The PKR treasurer-general is a veteran leader who has held the constituency since 2008.

Leong successfully defended the seat in the previous general election with a 23,619-vote majority against the main challengers from Perikatan Nasional and BN.

However, Leong is expected not to defend the seat in the next general election.


Tough seat to win?

Previously, Malaysiakini reported that an internal analysis by PKR classified Amirudin’s Gombak seat in the Tier 3 category - requiring significant intervention from the party to win.


READ MORE: PKR’s GE16 analysis flags ‘marginal’, ‘red zone’ seats for Anwar and top leaders


Selayang, meanwhile, is classified as a Tier 1 stronghold alongside Bayan Baru, Ampang, Pandan, Subang, Petaling Jaya, and Batu.

It is speculated that several seat changes will be made involving prominent PKR leaders, including rumours that deputy president Nurul Izzah Anwar will be moved to Bandar Tun Razak to replace Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail.


Pig farm project ‘on hold first’ because of past excesses, says PM





Pig farm project ‘on hold first’ because of past excesses, says PM


Anwar Ibrahim says it would be difficult for the government to reject an application by companies capable of meeting strict conditions


Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim speaking at a press conference after attending the Asean summit in Cebu, the Philippines. (Bernama pic)


PETALING JAYA: Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim says a proposed pig farming operation in Selangor had to be “put on hold first” in the wake of complaints over the location of pig farms arising from repeated excesses in the past.

Speaking after the Asean summit in the Philippines, Anwar said the Sultan of Selangor, Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah, had voiced his views because “what is happening now involves too many excesses that are affecting public health and are not being properly controlled”.

Anwar reiterated his previous positions that pig farming operations must adopt modern technology, provide assurances that no environmental pollution will occur, and “the farms must be located far away from residential areas”. In principle, he did not agree “with pig farming being allowed just anywhere” without strict regulation.

“If there are companies capable of meeting these strict conditions, then it would be difficult for the government to reject their applications outright,” he said. “That is why, for the time being, let us put this matter on hold first.”

In January, the sultan had criticised the state government’s plan to allow a pig farming operation in Tanjong Sepat, Kuala Langat, beginning this year, prior to relocation in 2030 to a 202-hectare centralised pig farming project in Bukit Tagar, Hulu Selangor, that was intended to manage environmental waste through a closed farming system.


***


It's not easy being the PM when he as a Muslim has to handle "delicate" issues like 'pig farming' in a multiracial society, and especially when the State's Sultan defiantly (and unconstitutionally) voiced his royal 'NO' to any consideration of such a concept.

Should a Malay-Muslim PM go against Malay Royalty on a 'haram' issue, and indirectly allow non-constitutional pronouncement to pass by without any correction? Poor Anwar, but I have to say, with his explanations (above), he has done quite well, tip-toeing through the "royal versus constitutional" tulips rather niftily. PMX has put on hold a delicate matter, assuaging the 'what-is-considered-haram' component of Malaysian society and placating as well as reminding Royalty that constitutional matters require more thoughts. Well done PMX!!! Yes, Anwar at times deserves praises and not just caustic criticisms.

On another issue, I know HRH is a much loved person and wonder whether he has been 'batu-api-rised' into making such a heart-breaking pronouncement.

Aiyah, let the unnecessary dust settled lah, and may we have peace in our nation again.






Opposition using ‘ghost stories’ to scare the people, says Amanah veep





Opposition using ‘ghost stories’ to scare the people, says Amanah veep


3 HOURS AGO
Chia Wan Rou


Mahfuz Omar says Perikatan Nasional frequently accuses the government of failing yet has not proposed solutions to bring relief to the rakyat


Amanah vice-president Mahfuz Omar said the unresolved water supply issue involving a water treatment plant in Kedah was an example of the weakness of PN state governments. (Bernama pic)


PETALING JAYA: Amanah vice-president Mahfuz Omar has accused the opposition of resorting to fear-mongering to cover up its failure to present concrete policy solutions.

Mahfuz, the former Pokok Sena MP, likened Perikatan Nasional’s tactics to the old practice of scaring children with ghost stories to stop them from staying out late at night.

“Every day they accuse the government of failing, yet they themselves have done nothing. Not a single policy solution has been proposed to bring relief to the people.


“Instead, they push fear-based politics, such as claiming the country is tilting towards China,” he said at a ceramah in Penang last night.

He added that the weaknesses of state governments under PN control were shown up by such matters as the unresolved water supply issue involving the Sungai Limau water treatment plant in Kedah, which has required federal government intervention, as well as the political turmoil in Perlis.


Mahfuz defended the achievements of the Madani government led by Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, including two increases in the padi floor price and maintaining the RON95 petrol subsidy at an affordable RM1.99 per litre.

“The government has never promised an easy life, but when people are struggling, we do not leave them to fend for themselves,” he said.

“When they were in power, egg and chicken prices soared sharply. Now that we provide Sumbangan Asas Rahmah (SARA) and Sumbangan Tunai Rahmah (STR) assistance, they complain as well. What kind of politics is this, where nothing is ever good enough?” he said.

Yesterday, economy minister Akmal Nasrullah Nasir said the federal government is expected to allocate an additional RM50 million to rescue the stalled Sungai Limau project in Baling after the original contract for the project was terminated last year.

He said the nearly RM100 million project had only achieved between 15% and 20% progress before construction was stopped, forcing the federal government to step in and take over its management.


Pahang deserves fair treatment on sand export issue, says Tengku Hassanal





Pahang deserves fair treatment on sand export issue, says Tengku Hassanal


The Tengku Mahkota of Pahang says he takes note of Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s response to his call for federal approval of river sand exports



Tengku Mahkota of Pahang, Tengku Hassanal Ibrahim Alam Shah said the federal government’s ban on river sand exports had affected the state’s revenue. (Facebook pic)


PETALING JAYA: The Tengku Mahkota of Pahang, Tengku Hassanal Ibrahim Alam Shah, has taken note of Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s response to his call for Putrajaya to approve river sand exports.

In a brief post on the Kesultanan Pahang Facebook page last night, he stressed that Pahang should be treated fairly on the issue.

“I wish to emphasise that Pahang should be given fair treatment and consideration,” he said.


Earlier, at the opening of the state assembly sitting yesterday, Tengku Hassanal said the federal government’s ban on river sand exports had affected Pahang’s revenue.

He said the state, which is home to the longest river in Peninsular Malaysia, has substantial sand deposits that require dredging to ensure smooth river flow and to prevent flooding.


He added that Pahang previously generated tens of millions of ringgit from sand exports, but the federal government banned the practice despite land and sand resources falling under state jurisdiction.

In response, Anwar had urged Tengku Hassanal to “understand the macroeconomic situation because Pahang’s allocation is substantial, not small”.

Speaking after attending the Asean summit in the Philippines, he said Tengku Hassanal should consider the current economic pressures, as well as any leakages that may be occurring.

Anwar added that he would ask finance minister II Amir Hamzah Azizan to provide a comprehensive explanation of the federal government’s allocation for Pahang.

Friday, May 08, 2026

Trump’s tragedy of errors








Trump’s tragedy of errors


May 9, 2026


Regardless of how long US President Donald Trump’s ill-advised war and today’s stagflationary conditions last, the long-run consequences will be profound. Fancying himself an absolute monarch, Trump has broken something he cannot fix and unleashed forces he cannot control.

It is true, as Alexander Pope once said, that to err is human. But while everyone is fallible, some humans are more prone to error than others. That is a justification for democracy – for subjecting decisions that affect large numbers of people to deliberative processes, which include checks and balances. The history of authoritarian and absolutist political rule is rife with figures whose mistakes proved calamitous not just for themselves but for the societies they ruled

No decision is more important than waging war against another country. Yet the United States has done exactly that without even a nod to its own system of checks and balances and reasoned deliberation. Like the kings of old, America’s mendacious, impulsive president, Donald Trump, remains unchecked by the legislature and surrounded by sycophants who will tell him only what he wants to hear. The disastrous result is now clear: America is once again embroiled in a Middle East war that has already cost thousands of lives – mostly civilians – and in which it has almost certainly committed multiple war crimes.

No one knows how long the war with Iran will last, how many more war crimes will be committed or how many more innocents will be killed. But Americans are apparently so inured to Trump’s violations of human rights and the rule of law and so overwhelmed by the constant flood of breaking news that they have barely mustered any protest. Even at our universities, usually hubs of protest and dissent, fear reigns. As under all repressive regimes, the threat of economic consequences or worse – losing one’s visa, facing expulsion from the country or a criminal investigation – is achieving its intended effect.

As an economist, I am frequently asked what Trump’s war of choice against Iran will mean for the US and global economies. The short answer is that the longer it lasts, the greater the damage will be. But even if the war ends quickly, the effects will linger. After all, critical supply chains have already been disrupted, and oil and gas production facilities destroyed. Most estimates suggest that repairs will take years.

Moreover, it is not just oil and gas supplies that have been endangered. Unlike the oil embargoes of the 1970s, the fertiliser production on which global food systems depend has been jeopardised as well. This crisis also comes fast on the heels of other major global economic disruptions – from the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to Trump’s global tariff war and destruction of the rules-based system of international trade –all of which have contributed to rising inflation and a widening affordability crisis.

Before Trump returned to the White House, inflation was on a downward trend, though still well above central bankers’ beloved 2 per cent target. Tariffs markedly slowed this trend, and inflation has taken off globally once again. With many countries, including America, already facing an affordability crisis that US policies have made worse, the risk now is that central bankers everywhere will either raise interest rates or at least slow the pace at which they were lowering them.

That, in turn, will exacerbate the affordability crisis – because buying a house or paying down a credit card will become more difficult – and slow a US economy already shaken by the trauma of Trump’s erratic trade, immigration and fiscal policies. Were it not for the unbridled spending on AI data centers, which support some one-third of US growth, the US economy would be truly anemic. And with Trump’s regressive tax cuts for billionaires and corporations now in force, the US has less fiscal space to buffer the disruptions he has caused and those that AI may bring, from job dislocations to the collapse of the tech bubble.

Trump’s claim that the US will benefit as a net oil exporter is nonsense. Yes, Exxon will benefit, but US consumers pay prices that are set globally – and that have risen substantially. Under such conditions, the US obviously should impose a windfall-profits tax. But that will not happen under an administration so thoroughly captured by the fossil-fuel industry.

America’s erstwhile allies in Europe are also being battered by the Trump-induced increase in energy prices and supply shortages. If European policymakers tie electricity prices to gas prices (as they did early in the Ukraine war), they could make matters even worse. But if Europe adopts a strategy to restore its sovereignty by reducing its dependencies on US technology and defense, it could strengthen its position now and over the long term.

Regardless of how long the war and the current stagflationary conditions last, the long-run consequences of this episode will be profound. One hopes the world will recognise that the ‘variability’ of sun and wind power is far more manageable than continued dependence on fossil fuels subject to the whims of erratic authoritarian figures like Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. If Trump’s war accelerates the green transition globally, this will be a significant silver lining.

Yet another nail has been added to the coffin of the peaceful, borderless world that our forebears sought to build after the Second World War. Under Trump, the country that laid the foundations of that world is now dismantling it. Between the new cold war with China and the apparent lack of resilience in global supply chains, there is little cause for optimism. And with democracy in the US in such a weakened state, the human errors and their consequences are piling up fast.


PKR MP: Anwar can turn 'marginal' Permatang Pauh back into 'winnable'










PKR MP: Anwar can turn 'marginal' Permatang Pauh back into 'winnable'


Published: May 8, 2026 8:00 PM
Updated: 10:09 PM



A PKR MP believes his party president, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, can reclaim Permatang Pauh if he chooses to return to the parliamentary seat.

Pasir Gudang lawmaker Hassan Abdul Karim argued that Anwar’s candidacy in the constituency on the Penang mainland would also boost party morale in the northern states for the 16th general election.

Speaking on Malaysiakini’s “Explain Sikit” podcast, Hassan also acknowledged that Permatang Pauh is no longer considered a completely safe seat following the rise of the PAS “green wave” and Perikatan Nasional’s strong performance in the north.

Even though Anwar’s daughter Nurul Izzah lost the seat, and all three state constituencies under the parliamentary constituency also fell to PN, Hassan nevertheless described Anwar as a “fighter”, pointing to his victory in Tambun during the 15th general election despite the Perak seat being widely regarded as difficult territory.

“But when he contested there, it means he had done his calculations and felt he could win, and in the end, he did win, although the majority was about 4,000, I think.

“That 4,000 is not small; it is quite significant. So if Anwar wants to defend Permatang Pauh, he is a fighter. If he is willing to be there, it also means the people of Permatang Pauh have a responsibility.


Pasir Gudang MP Hassan Abdul Karim


“Meaning, whether to support Anwar or end his political career there,” Hassan said.

In GE15, Anwar (49,625 votes) won Tambun in a four-cornered battle, with a 3,736-vote majority against the incumbent Ahmad Faizal Azumu (45,889) from PN, Aminuddin Hanafiah (28,140) from BN, and Abdul Rahim Tahir (1,115) from Pejuang.

Hassan added that Anwar has a strong morale-boosting effect depending on which state he chooses to contest in.

“If Anwar contests there (Permatang Pauh), it would boost morale for PKR in the northern region, especially in Kedah and Penang. Just like when he entered Tambun before, it helped Pakatan Harapan in Perak,” he added.

He also labelled Permatang Pauh as a “very sentimental seat”, adding that Nurul Izzah should also consider contesting the seat again, and not let her initial defeat weigh her down.

“From my perspective, Permatang Pauh is a very sentimental seat. I don’t think Anwar would simply leave it like that. Ideally, Nurul Izzah should contest there and take on the challenge. She has won there before and has only lost once.


PKR deputy president Nurul Izzah Anwar


“So the situation in Permatang Pauh could change from a marginal seat to, God willing, a winnable one if Anwar, as prime minister, enters the contest. That place is also where he first contested in 1982 under Umno-BN, so it is not unfamiliar to him,” Hassan added.


Tough road ahead

On Tuesday, Malaysiakini published a report based on an internal PKR seat projection analysis. The document, titled “GE16 Strategic Analysis: Tier-Based Summary”, shows that PKR is on the defensive, with its hold on key seats steadily weakening.

Based on the analysis presented at the Bandar Utama 11 Community Hall in Petaling Jaya, Selangor, on May 2, which was attended by nearly 900 party leaders nationwide, 66 parliamentary seats have been identified as PKR’s main focus in the upcoming election.

These seats were categorised into four tiers to map the party’s strengths and risks ahead of GE16: seven in Tier 1 (strong/safe), 13 in Tier 2A (leaning strong), 17 in Tier 2B (marginal/competitive), and 29 in Tier 3 (difficult/recovery).

This shows that the majority of the studied seats - 46 in total (Tier 2B and Tier 3) - fall into high-risk zones or require significant image recovery.

For context, in GE15 (2022), PKR won 31 out of the 81 parliamentary seats it contested - a drop from GE14 (2018), where it secured 47 seats.


READ MORE: PKR’s GE16 analysis flags ‘marginal’, ‘red zone’ seats for Anwar and top leaders


Among the seats won in GE15, several have now been placed in the Tier 2B (marginal) category, including Tambun, which Anwar holds.

Perhaps the most significant point for reform supporters is the continued classification of Permatang Pauh in Tier 2B.

The seat, long regarded as a stronghold of Anwar’s family, was lost to a PAS candidate in GE15, a political setback that still weighs heavily on PKR.


ALSO READ: Nurul Izzah to contest in Wan Azizah's Bandar Tun Razak seat in next polls?


The party is also targeting the 29 seats it lost in the previous general election.

Among them are Kuantan, which secretary-general Fuziah Salleh contested in, Kulim-Bandar Baharu - contested previously by Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail, and Indera Mahkota - where Anwar’s political secretary Ahmad Farhan Fauzi has been named a prospective candidate.


Tun Mahathir divided the Malays and the nation



Malaysia's #1 Content Aggregator



Tun Mahathir divided the Malays and the nation


8 May 2026 • 9:02 AM MYT


The Vibes
Featuring breaking news & latest stories from every side.







By Datuk Seri Ti Lian Ker


TUN Dr Mahathir Mohamad now says he has “failed to unite the Malays”. But the larger tragedy is not merely the failure to unite Malays, but it is his failure to unite Malaysians.

He had 22 years as Prime Minister during his first tenure, followed by another 22 months after the 2018 election.

Few leaders in modern history were given such a long and dominant opportunity to shape a nation’s identity, institutions and direction.

Yet instead of building a stronger Malaysian identity that transcended race, his politics repeatedly revolved around dividing the country into “Malays” and “non-Malays”, “pendatang” and “Bumiputera”, insiders and outsiders.

For decades, Malaysian politics under Mahathir’s influence normalised the idea that every national issue had to be viewed through a racial lens.

The supposed economic cooperation became a competition - Malay versus Chinese.

Political inputs are seen as criticisms and attacks on Malay rights and powers.

Institutional weaknesses were framed as threats from non-Malays rather than a recognition of failures of governance. Instead of reducing racial anxieties, the political culture became increasingly dependent on them, and the Chinese became the “bogeyman” to unite Malays during his tenure.

Even after returning to power in 2018 under the banner of reform and a “New Malaysia”, the old narrative remained unchanged.

Rather than steering the country away from racial politics, he continued speaking almost exclusively about Malay unity, Malay dominance, Malay threats and Malay survival.

He shortchanged Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim as the incoming Prime Minister for a second time by organising a “Malay Unity” government via his failed Sheraton Move.

The first was when he sacked Anwar as the Deputy Prime Minister and expelled him from Umno, leading to the biggest divide among Malays in our political history.

In fact, the majority of the Malays turned against him in the 1999 general election.

Ironically, many of the divisions among Malays today were also consequences of political fractures that happened under his own leadership.

Umno split under his tenure. Semangat 46 emerged from the crisis of the late 1980s.

Later came Bersatu, Pejuang and various Malay-centric alliances that further fragmented the Malay political landscape. Even his critics now openly argue that he himself contributed significantly to Malay disunity.

A generation of Malaysians grew up under a political environment where racial suspicion became institutionalised.

Non-Malays were often reminded that they were tolerated rather than fully embraced as equal stakeholders in the nation.

At the same time, Malays were constantly told they were under existential threat despite holding political dominance for decades.

That formula may have secured political longevity, but it also left behind deep psychological and societal divisions.

Malaysia today still struggles with the same racial insecurities because the country never truly moved beyond race-based politics during the years when it mattered most.

The opportunity to create a genuinely united national identity existed, and no leader had more power or time to pursue it than Mahathir.

His legacy, therefore, is not merely one of economic modernisation or mega-projects.

It is also the legacy of a nation conditioned to think of itself through racial fault lines first, and as Malaysians second. – May 8, 2026



Datuk Seri Ti Lian Ker is a former Senator, deputy minister and MCA vice-president


KTMB rolls out 186 extra trains from May 22 to June 7 for Hari Raya Aidiladha and school holidays





KTMB rolls out 186 extra trains from May 22 to June 7 for Hari Raya Aidiladha and school holidays



Keretapi Tanah Melayu Berhad (KTMB) has prepared an additional 186 trains for the Electric Train Service (ETS) and EMU Plus for Hari Raya Aidiladha and school holidays from May 22 to June 7. — Picture by Firdaus Latif

Friday, 08 May 2026 7:13 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, May 8 — Keretapi Tanah Melayu Berhad (KTMB) has prepared an additional 186 trains for the Electric Train Service (ETS) and EMU Plus for Hari Raya Aidiladha and school holidays from May 22 to June 7.

KTMB said that the additional trains will create 58,380 seats for the increased passenger demand, with tickets being sold from noon tomorrow (May 9) via the KITS Style app, KTMB official website and KTMB kiosk tickets at selected stations.

The KL Sentral-Padang Besar-KL Sentral route will offer 15,702 tickets for journeys from May 22 to 26, May 29 to 31 and June 4 to7, while there will be 7,584 tickets for the KL Sentral-Butterworth-KL Sentral and KL Sentral-Ipoh-KL Sentral routes respectively for the same period.

Also, 18,960 tickets for the KL Sentral-JB Sentral-KL Sentral route are available for journeys from May 22 to 26, May 29 to 31 and June 1 to 7, while 9,180 tickets are available for the Klang-Ipoh-Klang EMU Plus route for journeys from May 22 to 24, May 29 to 31 and June 5 to 7.

KTMB group chief executive officer Datuk Azlan Shah Al Bakri said response for previous additional train service during Chinese New Year and Hari Raya Aidilfitri was encouraging, especially for high demand routes such as in the Johor Bahru sector.

He said the government initiative, through the Road to Rail campaign also had a positive impact in encouraging the public to use public transport, especially train services that are safer, comfortable and efficient.

“The rise in demand reflects passenger confidence towards the national rail service,” he said in a statement today.

Meanwhile sales for the Ekspres Lambaian Aidiladha (ELA) to the East Coast announced on April 24 was positively received with 447 out of 912 tickets being sold so far.

KTMB is also offering a 30 per cent discount for the ELA 1029 train from Tumpat to KL Sentral Superior Seater, limited to 274 seats from May 11, with tickets priced as low as RM56 compared to the original RM80. — Bernama


‘I take responsibility’: Starmer faces backlash after Labour losses





‘I take responsibility’: Starmer faces backlash after Labour losses



Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria Starmer (back) leave after casting their votes at a polling station in Westminster Chapel, central London on May 7, 2026, as polls open for local elections. Starmer said Friday he took responsibility for ‘very tough’ local election results that saw the insurgent hard-right make big gains, but vowed to carry on as prime minister. — AFP pic

Friday, 08 May 2026 6:22 PM MYT


LONDON, May 8 — UK leader Keir Starmer said Friday he took responsibility for “very tough” local election results that saw the insurgent hard-right make big gains, but vowed to carry on as prime minister.

“I’m not going to walk away and plunge the country into chaos,” Starmer said, after his ruling Labour party lost hundreds of councillors in England.


Labour was also braced for humiliating results in voting for the devolved parliaments in Scotland and Wales due to be announced later in the day.

“The results are tough, they are very tough, and there’s no sugarcoating it,” Starmer said.

“We have lost brilliant Labour representatives across the country, these are people who put so much into their communities, so much into our party.


“And that hurts, and it should hurt, and I take responsibility,” he added.

The ballot is the biggest electoral test for the beleaguered Starmer since Labour ousted the Conservatives following 14 years in power in a landslide election victory less than two years ago.


Grim results for Labour predicted by opinion polls appeared to be being borne out in some areas first to declare.

By 8am (0700 GMT), Nigel Farage’s anti-immigrant Reform UK had gained over 350 seats while Labour had lost over 240 across 40 of the 136 English councils to announce results so far.

The vast majority of results will not come until later Friday.

Big losses for Labour could amplify calls for Starmer, 63, to resign or face a long-rumoured party leadership challenge.

He insisted Friday that “days like this don’t weaken my resolve to deliver the change that I promised”.

Reform UK’s Farage said the local election results had demonstrated a “truly historic shift in British politics” and they were now “the most national of all the parties. We are here to stay”.

Before polls closed on Thursday night, The Times reported that Energy Secretary and former Labour leader Ed Miliband had privately urged Starmer to set out a timetable to step down after the elections.

But Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy insisted early Friday that a change of leadership would be a mistake.

“You don’t change the pilot during the flight, you carry on... Sometimes, particularly incumbent governments, have it hard,” he told BBC radio.

He conceded there was a “lot of frustration” but “sometimes our mistakes have been heard more than our achievements”.

Missteps

The ballot is deciding around 5,000 local council seats, out of 16,000, across England, while in Wales and Scotland voters are electing new devolved parliaments.

Reform and the left-wing Greens, led by self-described eco-populist Zack Polanski, are benefiting as expected from widespread disillusionment with Starmer’s government.

Critics say Starmer has swerved from one policy misstep to another, and he has been embroiled in a scandal over Peter Mandelson, who was sacked as ambassador to Washington over his links to US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

He has also failed to fulfil his main promise of spurring economic growth, with impatient Britons still suffering a cost-of-living crisis, including from high energy prices.

The former lawyer is now one of the most unpopular prime ministers ever.

Surveys suggest Labour will lose control of the devolved Welsh government in Cardiff for the first time since Wales got its own parliament 27 years ago.

Reform or the pro-independence Plaid Cymru are expected finish as the biggest party.

Labour is also fearful of a drubbing in Scotland, where the Scottish National Party (SNP) is expected to extend its 19-year control of the devolved parliament in Edinburgh.

Leadership rumours

Labour also looks set for big losses in London as the Greens pick up disaffected left-wingers in urban areas with a pro-Gaza message.

Pollster John Curtice suggested Labour could lose around 1,500 of the seats it is defending.

Kemi Badenoch’s right-wing Conservatives were also bracing for the loss of traditional strongholds.

Curtice said the results confirmed “the fracturing of British politics”.

Britain’s media is full of rumours that ex-deputy prime minister Angela Rayner or Health Secretary Wes Streeting could try to oust Starmer after the results.

Neither is universally popular within Labour, however, and would need the backing of 20 percent of the party’s MPs to launch a contest. — AFP


PM Anwar reassures nation: Fuel supply steadier after enforcement and import push






PM Anwar reassures nation: Fuel supply steadier after enforcement and import push



The government has assured that the country’s petrol and diesel supply is now more stable following proactive measures taken, particularly under the management of Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas), Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim said. — Bernama pic

Friday, 08 May 2026 7:29 PM MYT


CEBU, May 8 — The government has assured that the country’s petrol and diesel supply is now more stable following proactive measures taken, particularly under the management of Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas), Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim said.

According to Bernama, Anwar, who is also Finance Minister, said measures such as reducing the use of RON95 petrol, stricter enforcement to curb diesel leakage and misappropriation, as well as efforts to import oil supplies, have proven effective in strengthening the nation’s supply security.

“Therefore, in terms of supply, the situation is not as severely affected as it was two months ago,” he told the media after attending the 48th Asean Summit and Related Meetings here today.

His remarks were in relation to the status of the country’s oil supply, which was previously reported to be sufficient at least until June this year.

Is there a hybrid-coup going on in Malaysia?


Murray Hunter
May 08, 2026



Is there a hybrid-coup going on in Malaysia?





With the YDPA on an official trip to Moscow and the prime minister at an ASEAN meeting in Cebu, the Philippines presently, the Selangor Sultan pushed hard down on not allowing any pig farming in Selangor.

Pig farming in Malaysia is much more than an economic issue. It carries nuances concerning Islam, since pork is haram. The issue has been festering in Selangor due to the intervention of the Sultan and Malay sentiments against pork.

Will the Sultan’s advice to the current Pakatan Harapan government composed of PKR, DAP, and Amanah, it became stuck between following the sentiments of the Sultan and needs for the non-Malay groups making up its support base.

Consequently, any pushback by the DAP is being seen as disrespectful to Royalty, a cornerstone of Malay culture, society and the Constitution. PAS in Selangor quickly took up the issue saying a ban on pig farming is respecting the will of Tuanku, which the Mainstream Malay population will support.

With the prime minister’s intervention with the Selangor Palace earlier this weak knocked back by the Sultan, there is both constitutional and political issues at stake. The important issue here is if Anwar pushes back on what the Sultan has said, he will be seen by the majority of the Malay community as being disrespectful to the monarchy. If Anwar doesn’t push back, the non-Malay support base may cease all support for him.

The pig issue has weakened Anwar Ibrahim after his request for a solution to the pig farming issue with the palace was rejected in such a public way. He may now be in an unwinnable position.

Worse still, with 40 seats in parliament, the DAP is in a catch-22 position.

From the constitutional point of view, the issues in Negeri Sembilan, and Johor there are now what could be legitimately called a need for a general election through the halls of power. However, any election in the near future would not be favorable to Pakatan Harapan.

The issues of the pig farming ban will not be able to be rationally discussed in Malaysia’s media due to press self-censorship. The issue will now take on the character of something haram that Malays wont fathom and respect for the monarchy, which is a winner in the Malay heartlands.

The pig issue has taken away all of Pakatan’s electoral cards, leaving it open for UMNO and PAS to be the two dominating political parties in the peninsula.

If an election is called then this will be the result of a hybrid-coup against PH. With Bersatu divided and Pakatan in a catch-22 situation, UMNO will come out very strong in Malay and even mixed seats from Perak to Johor.

Don’t listen to what is being said, just watch what is being done.

The coming resulting election will return power Malay based parties under a more powerful monarchy.

Things are still going on and the above is a likely scenario.


Tengku Hassanal says sand export ban hurting Pahang’s revenue





Tengku Hassanal says sand export ban hurting Pahang’s revenue


The Tengku Mahkota of Pahang says the state previously generated tens of millions of ringgit in revenue through sand exports to other countries


The Tengku Mahkota of Pahang, Tengku Hassanal Ibrahim Alam Shah, said Pahang has substantial sand deposits that need to be dredged to ensure smooth river flow and prevent flooding. (Bernama pic)



PETALING JAYA: The Tengku Mahkota of Pahang, Tengku Hassanal Ibrahim Alam Shah, today expressed disappointment over the federal government’s decision to ban river sand exports, saying it has affected the state’s revenue.

Tengku Hassanal said Pahang, which has the longest river in Peninsular Malaysia, has substantial sand deposits that need dredging to ensure smooth river flow and prevent flooding, reported Harian Metro.

He pointed out that Pahang previously generated tens of millions of ringgit in revenue through sand exports to other countries, but the federal government has since banned the practice, despite land and sand resources falling under state jurisdiction.


“The federal government should not deny Pahang this revenue contribution. Greater priority should be given to Pahang as it is the largest state in Peninsular Malaysia,” he said at the opening of the fifth meeting of the fifth session of the 15th state legislative assembly at Wisma Sri Pahang in Kuantan.

Tengku Hassanal also urged Putrajaya to grant Pahang greater autonomy in project implementation, including prioritising Pahang-based companies and contractors for work within the state.

“I want such opportunities to be given to the people of Pahang,” he said.

“It is true that contractors can be appointed from anywhere in Malaysia, but I want priority to be given to companies from Pahang, which have proven to be qualified and competent.

“Do not let the day come when Pahang is forced to take action against the federal government.”
😨😨😨


Tengku Hassanal also said tourism targets and foreign visitor arrivals should be reviewed to account for external factors that may affect the industry.

He urged the state government to improve tourism infrastructure and facilities across the state to attract more international tourists in conjunction with Visit Malaysia 2026.

“Don’t just rely on Genting Highlands and Cameron Highlands,” he said.

“We have many attractive destinations, and I want the state executive councillor for tourism, Tourism Pahang, and all relevant parties to be proactive.”


***


Selling sand to a foreign country is like selling Malaysian land away


Pastor: U.S. Intel Warned Christian Leaders That Trump's "Alien Files" Release Could Shatter Beliefs









by Tyler Durden
Friday, May 08, 2026 - 01:00 PM


Zero-Point energy? Hologram theory? Consciousness is actually remote controlling our bodies via quantum microtubules in our squishy brains? How about all those dead scientists? Whatever reality is, the steady drumbeat of UFO 'disclosures' now apparently includes religious leaders, who are being 'read in' on some plan for a 2027 disclosure. Maybe project Blue Beam is ready for prime time...




Perry Stone, an influential pastor and author based in Tennessee, claimed that U.S. intelligence officials told Christian leaders to brace their congregations for the federal government’s imminent disclosures regarding extraterrestrial beings, warning that the shocking findings could shake the foundation of their faith.

In a recent video, Stone alleged that the pastors were briefed on unidentified flying objects and so-called “reptilians” in the possession of the government. The claim follows President Trump’s order directing the Pentagon and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth to release all information the government possesses on aliens.

"You're going to have people who are going to say if there are galaxies and there are allegedly other creations in the galaxies, then the whole creation story is a myth, and you're going to have people that's going to apostatize and turn from the Christian faith because they have no answer for what they're about to hear,’ Stone said.


🚨Report: Pastor Perry Stone said a large group of pastors was invited to a secret meeting with individuals from the US government telling them to prepare their churches for UFO disclosure: “There's going to be a release concerning aliens. You need to prepare your people.”
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Stone added that non-believers could be so shaken by the findings that religious leaders will see a flood of people coming to them seeking answers.

"They're going to freak out and they're going to come to pastors, ministers, and teachers and say, 'What is this? Is this really real?”’ he said.

Then there's this guy:


In a Space today, Alan DiDio (@alandidio) says he attended the UFO disclosure pastor meeting, and the year 2027 was discussed in relation to aliens and UFO disclosure. 😳
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Despite Trump’s order to release files on aliens, some of the highest-ranking government officials remain skeptics.

Vice President JD Vance told conservative podcaster Benny Johnson in March that the most likely explanation for aliens is that they are actually “demons.”

"When I hear about extra natural phenomenon, that’s where I go: The Christian understanding that there’s a lot of good out there, but there’s also evil out there," Vance said. "I think that one of the devil’s great is to convince people that he never existed.”


JD Vance Tells Me That UFOs are DEMONS: “I Think They’re DEMONS” 🛸 “I don’t think they’re aliens. There are weird things out there that are very difficult to explain.” The Vice President tells me he’s going to AREA 51 with his Top Secret Security Clearance to FIND OUT. “I Show more
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Still, some in Congress appear to disagree Vance's dismissed stance towards UFOs, including Rep. Tim Burchet (R-TN)

"I've been briefed by just about every alphabet agency there is,” Burchet told Newsmax. And, I'll just say this, if they were to release the things that I've seen, you'd be up at night, worrying about, thinking about this stuff.”




"This country would've come unglued, I think, if they [the public] would've heard all that I heard. They would demand answers,” the lawmaker added.

And just in case all of this is true - here's stoned Alex Jones going off...