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Friday, May 01, 2026

Iran threatens escalation as Hormuz Strait remains shut, raising global economic risks





Iran threatens escalation as Hormuz Strait remains shut, raising global economic risks


Tehran warns of “long and painful strikes” against U.S. positions as tensions deepen over control of a key maritime chokepoint, with energy markets rattled and diplomatic efforts stalled

Updated 2 hours ago
Published on 01 May 2026 9:18AM


Briefing scheduled for Trump on Thursday about strike options by US military, US official says as UAE bans citizens from visiting Iran, Lebanon and Iraq (photo from Reuters) - May 1, 2026


IRAN has issued a stark warning of military escalation against the United States, threatening retaliatory strikes if Washington renews attacks, as the Strait of Hormuz remains closed amid a protracted conflict that is shaking global energy markets.

Two months into the war involving the U.S., Israel and Iran, the closure of the vital shipping lane — through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and gas supplies pass — has driven sharp volatility in energy prices and heightened fears of a wider economic slowdown.

A fragile ceasefire has been in place since April 8, but diplomatic efforts to resolve the crisis have stalled, with Tehran continuing to block the strait in response to a U.S. naval blockade targeting its oil exports.

Reuters, on Friday, quoted a US official saying that Donald Trump was scheduled to receive a briefing on Thursday outlining options for fresh military strikes intended to force Iran back to the negotiating table.

Reports of the planned briefing initially pushed Brent crude above US$126 per barrel before easing to around US$114.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei downplayed expectations of swift diplomatic progress.

“Expecting to reach a result in a short time, regardless of who the mediator is, in my opinion, is not very realistic,” he said.

Tensions remained high on the ground, with Iranian media reporting air defence activity in parts of Tehran, where systems were said to be engaging drones and unmanned surveillance aircraft.

Regional spillover risks also intensified, with the United Arab Emirates banning its citizens from travelling to Iran, Lebanon and Iraq, and urging those already there to return home.

Trump reiterated that Iran would not be allowed to develop nuclear weapons and said fuel prices would “drop like a rock” once the war ended, underscoring the domestic political stakes ahead of upcoming U.S. elections.

Iran’s military leadership, however, signalled readiness for further confrontation. A senior official from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned that any renewed U.S. attack would trigger “long and painful strikes” on American positions across the region.

Aerospace Force Commander Majid Mousavi was quoted as saying: “We've seen what happened to your regional bases, we will see the same thing happen to your warships.”

In a strongly worded message, Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei indicated Tehran’s intention to maintain control over the strait.

“Foreigners who come from thousands of kilometres away ... have no place there except at the bottom of its waters,” he said, adding that Iran would eliminate “the enemies' abuses of the waterway”.

The crisis has prompted concern at the highest international level.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned that prolonged disruption to the strait could have severe global consequences.

“The longer this vital artery is choked, the harder it will be to reverse the damage,” he told reporters in New York, cautioning that extended instability could depress global growth, drive up inflation and push tens of millions more into poverty and hunger.

The United States faces a looming deadline to either wind down the conflict or justify its continuation to Congress, with analysts expecting the administration to seek an extension or bypass the requirement altogether.

Despite mounting economic strain exacerbated by the blockade, analysts suggest Iran may be able to sustain a prolonged standoff, complicating Washington’s strategy of economic pressure.

Military options under consideration reportedly include expanding strikes, maintaining the blockade, or deploying ground forces to secure parts of the strait and reopen it to commercial shipping.

At the same time, Washington has floated plans for a multinational maritime coalition to safeguard navigation through the waterway once hostilities subside, though European partners have signalled willingness to participate only after the conflict ends.

Diplomatic channels remain active but fragile, with regional mediators including Pakistan seeking to prevent further escalation as indirect exchanges continue between Tehran and Washington. - May 1, 2026


Military truck loses control, crashes into toll plaza, 15 personnel injured





Military truck loses control, crashes into toll plaza, 15 personnel injured


Ampang Jaya District Police Chief, Assistant Commissioner Khairul Anuar Khalid, said police received information about the incident at about 4.40 pm.

Updated 1 hour ago
Published on 01 May 2026 9:50AM


Further investigations are still being conducted to identify the exact cause of the incident. - May 1, 2026


FIFTEEN army personnel were injured when a military truck is believed to have experienced brake failure before crashing into the Bukit Teratai Toll Plaza area, Sungai Besi-Ulu Kelang Expressway (SUKE), Kuala Lumpur, on Thursday evening.


Ampang Jaya District Police Chief, Assistant Commissioner Khairul Anuar Khalid, said police received information about the incident at about 4.40 pm.

According to him, the accident involved a truck belonging to the Malaysian Armed Forces, which was travelling from Sungai Besi Camp towards Kuala Kubu Bharu.

"Initial investigations found that the truck involved is believed to have lost control before crashing into the toll plaza area.

"The accident is believed to have been caused by a failure of the vehicle's brake system," he said in a statement.

Further investigations are still being conducted to identify the exact cause of the incident.

He said that as a result of the incident, 15 personnel who were in the back of the truck were injured.

"All the victims were taken to Ampang Hospital by the ambulance team for further treatment," he said.

He added that further investigations are still being conducted to identify the exact cause of the incident.

"The case is being investigated under Section 43 of the Road Transport Act 1987," he said. – May 1, 2026

Over 7,000 turn up for Rain Rave day one, KL police chief warns public against misconduct




Over 7,000 turn up for Rain Rave day one, KL police chief warns public against misconduct



KL police chief Datuk Fadil Marsus told local media that the number was expected to swell past the 10,000 mark by midnight. — Picture by Raymond Manuel

Friday, 01 May 2026 9:15 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, May 1 — The opening of the Rain Rave Water Music Festival (RRWMF), held in conjunction with Visit Malaysia Year 2026, saw a massive turnout with over 7,000 attendees gathered in the heart of the city.

KL police chief Datuk Fadil Marsus told local media that the number was expected to swell past the 10,000 mark by midnight.

“The atmosphere is incredibly vibrant, and we anticipate this momentum to continue through tomorrow afternoon, which will conclude on May 2.

“My officers are stationed throughout the venue. We are committed to ensuring this programme runs smoothly and safely,” he said last night when met by reporters.

He added that 500 officers and personnel, including reinforcements from Bukit Aman and all district police headquarters in Kuala Lumpur, were deployed for the opening night alone.

Organised by the Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture (MOTAC), the three-day music festival has transformed the streets of Bukit Bintang into a massive, high-energy wet dance floor.

In light of that, Fadil reminded the public to pay close attention to official traffic updates and to plan their journeys accordingly, as numerous roads in the area are currently closed.

He also issued a firm reminder about social conduct, warning against drug use and any immoral behaviour at the event.

“Numerous roads are currently closed. Please pay close attention to official traffic notices and plan your journeys accordingly to avoid congestion.

“To those visiting, I want to emphasise: please prioritise your safety. Ensure there is no involvement with drugs or any immoral behaviour,” he said.


‘Wanted to win a Nobel Prize’: Convicted ex‑Harvard scientist now leads China’s state‑funded brain‑interface lab





‘Wanted to win a Nobel Prize’: Convicted ex‑Harvard scientist now leads China’s state‑funded brain‑interface lab



Charles Lieber leaves federal court after he and two Chinese nationals were charged with lying about their alleged links to the Chinese government, in Boston, Massachusetts January 30, 2020. — Reuters pic

Friday, 01 May 2026 7:00 AM MYT


  • Charles Lieber leads China’s i-BRAIN lab with advanced resources and state funding
  • Lab is recruiting researchers for studies on monkeys as models for human brain-computer interfaces
  • Case highlights limits of US safeguards on technology with military uses, analysts say


SHENZHEN, May 1 — An American scientist convicted of lying to US authorities about payments from China while he was at Harvard University has rebuilt his research lab in Shenzhen to pursue technology the Chinese government has identified as a national priority: embedding electronics into the human brain.

Charles Lieber, 67, is ‌among the world’s leading researchers in brain-computer interfaces. The technology has shown promise in treating conditions such as ALS and restoring movement in paralysed patients. But it also has potential military applications: Scientists at China’s People’s Liberation Army have investigated brain interfaces as a way to engineer super soldiers by boosting mental agility and situational awareness, according to the US Defence Department.

Lieber was found guilty by a jury and convicted in December 2021 of making false statements to federal investigators about his ties to a Chinese state programme to recruit overseas talent, and tax offenses related to payments he received from a Chinese university. 

He served two days in prison and six months under house arrest, and was fined US$50,000 (RM198,375) and ordered to pay US$33,600 in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service. During the case, his defence said he was suffering from an incurable lymphoma, which was in ‌remission, and he was fighting for his life.

Three years after he was sentenced, Reuters has learned that Lieber is now overseeing China’s state-funded i-BRAIN, or the Institute for Brain Research, Advanced Interfaces and Neurotechnologies, with access to dedicated nanofabrication equipment and primate research infrastructure unavailable to him at Harvard. The lab is an arm of the Shenzhen Medical Academy of Research and Translation, or SMART.

“I arrived on April 28, 2025 with a dream and not much more, maybe a couple bags of clothes,” Lieber said of his move to China at a Shenzhen government conference in December. “Personally, my own goals are to make Shenzhen a world leader.”

Lieber, through an assistant, declined an interview request, citing “current commitments.” He didn’t respond to written questions from Reuters.

SMART last year appointed Lieber as an investigator, according to a post on i-BRAIN’s website dated May 1, 2025. That news was covered by some media outlets. The same day, i-BRAIN said Lieber had also been appointed its founding director — an announcement that went unreported at the time.

This story is the most comprehensive account of Lieber’s activities since he moved to China. Reuters is reporting for the first time that his lab has access to dedicated primate research facilities and chip-making equipment; that it sits within a sprawling ecosystem of state-backed institutions bankrolled by billions of dollars in government funding; and that it is housed within an institution that is luring top scientific talent back from the United States.

In 2011, Lieber was named the world’s top chemist of the preceding decade in a set of scientific rankings published by Thomson Reuters, the parent of Reuters news agency. Thomson Reuters, which in 2016 sold the business that compiled the rankings, declined to comment.

Some analysts say Lieber’s ability to reconstitute his laboratory after a federal criminal conviction for lying about his ties to China shows how US safeguards on technology with potential military uses haven’t kept pace with Chinese government efforts to acquire it. That concern is amplified because of Beijing’s military-civil fusion strategy, whereby civilian scientific resources and research are shared with the military.

“China has weaponised against us our own openness and our own efforts for innovation,” said Glenn Gerstell, a non-resident senior adviser at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies and former general counsel of the US National Security Agency from 2015 to 2020. “They’ve flipped that and turned it around against us, and they’re taking advantage of it.”

The Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology and the defence ministry didn’t respond to questions about China’s development of brain-computer interfaces. SMART and i-BRAIN also didn’t reply to requests for comment about their research and the recruitment of Lieber.


Primate research

Lieber’s new perch appears to give him richer resources ‌than he had in the United States.

In Shenzhen, i-BRAIN in February installed a deep ultraviolet lithography system made by semiconductor-equipment giant ASML, according to the lab’s website. The Dutch company’s machines print the tiny circuits essential to cutting-edge chips. At Harvard, Lieber used shared lithography equipment at the university’s Centre for Nanoscale Systems. The centre serves more than 1,600 users annually, according to its website.

i-BRAIN’s model ⁠is two generations behind restricted machines, but still likely to cost around US$2 million, according to Jeff Koch of semiconductor-research firm SemiAnalysis.

ASML told Reuters it wouldn’t comment publicly about its customers.

On the same ⁠campus, Lieber also has access to Brain Science Infrastructure (BSI) Shenzhen, a research lab with 2,000 primate cages and dedicated space for i-BRAIN’s work, according to the latter’s website. Many researchers in the field consider primate trials a prerequisite for human trials for invasive brain-computer interfaces. The ⁠BSI facility is part of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and is funded by the Shenzhen government. ⁠None of them responded to questions about brain-computer interface technology and the role of primate research ⁠in its development.

Domestic and international researchers are being recruited by i-BRAIN for electrophysiology studies on rhesus monkeys as models for human brain-computer interfaces, according to a September 2025 post on its website, which invites prospective applicants to contact Lieber.

There is no indication that Lieber conducted primate research at Harvard. The elite Massachusetts university closed its New England Primate Research Centre in 2015 under sustained pressure over animal welfare and funding challenges.

Jung Min Lee, a researcher who co-authored nanofabrication papers with Lieber at Harvard, has joined him at i-BRAIN as research associate professor, according to its website. Lee, who couldn’t be reached for comment, is an expert in stitching flexible electronics into brain tissue.

Harvard didn’t respond to Reuters questions about Lieber and Lee.

John Donoghue, a Brown University professor and neuroscientist who pioneered a brain-computer interface system known as ⁠BrainGate, said primate work is “absolutely critical” in translating neural interface technology to humans, but faces regulatory and funding hurdles in the United States.

“With so many hassles with non-human primate research here, to have somebody give you all this support, access to technology, a concentrated centre, a national initiative — those are things that are very attractive,” he told Reuters.

SMART’s 2026 budget, funded entirely by Shenzhen’s government, rose nearly 18 per cent to about US$153 million. The academy’s budget papers don’t indicate the proportion of that funding dedicated to i-BRAIN.

SMART was established in 2023 under founding president Nieng Yan, a structural biologist. Her return to China a year earlier after five years at Princeton University was hailed in domestic media as the homecoming of a “goddess scientist.” Yan and Princeton didn’t reply to Reuters questions about her role at Shenzhen and the recruitment of Lieber.

Alongside SMART sits the legally separate but functionally twinned Shenzhen Bay Laboratory, which launched in 2019 with a five-year budget from Shenzhen’s government of around US$2 billion. Both are based in Guangming Science City, a national science hub of manicured parks and waterways. The two institutions share the same leadership and offices, and will also occupy a dedicated 750,000-square-meter site that is under construction at a planned cost of US$1.25 billion. Shenzhen Bay Laboratory didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Signs guiding visitors to SMART’s premises are emblazoned with the slogan: “Innovate with the Party.” A Reuters reporter was denied access to i-BRAIN’s offices while trying to deliver a letter to Lieber.

Lieber joins at least six others who have moved to SMART from US ⁠institutions, though all of them are Chinese-born researchers returning home.

China named brain-computer interface technology a national growth priority in its new five-year plan in March 2026. Zheng Shanjie, head of China’s National Development and Reform Commission, said in October that the rise of brain-computer interfaces and related technologies “will be equivalent to creating another Chinese high-tech sector in the next 10 years.”

The US Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency is also investing in brain-computer interfaces for drone and cyber defence applications, according to the agency’s programme description. Research projects led by Lieber at Harvard received over US$8 million in funding from the Defence Department since 2009, court documents show. The Pentagon didn’t ⁠respond to questions about the technology’s military uses and Lieber’s role at Shenzhen.


Vying for a Nobel prize

Lieber’s 2021 conviction was one of few wins for the US Justice Department’s China Initiative, launched during the first Trump administration to counter Chinese economic espionage and intellectual-property theft. The initiative was wound down under President Joe Biden after a record of failures and criticism for racial profiling.

While still on supervised ⁠release, Lieber obtained court approval for at least three ⁠trips to China in 2024, including one that US District Judge Denise Casper granted for “employment networking,” court documents show. Judge Casper didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Lieber’s defence team said in a pre-sentencing memorandum in 2023 that the scientist had been suffering from lymphoma and was largely confined to his home, leaving only for medical appointments, brief walks, and occasional visits to a local farm. During a 30-year career at Harvard he spent over 80 hours a week in the lab, and when not working, Lieber spent time “coaching wrestling, and growing giant pumpkins in the back yard,” according to his defence.

Lieber acknowledged being “young and stupid” in getting involved with China’s Thousand Talents Programme, the state-backed initiative to recruit overseas experts, his lawyer told the court in 2021. When he was arrested in 2020, Lieber told FBI agents he “wanted to win a Nobel Prize” and be ‌recognised for his work, according to prosecutors.

The FBI declined to comment and the Justice Department didn’t respond to questions.

The Lieber case illustrates a broader failure of US policy, some analysts say.

“If you think of him as a vector for tech acquisition that runs contrary to US interests, we identified that, punished him, and that did nothing to stop the big-picture trend,” said Emily de La Bruyère, co-founder of China-focused consultancy Horizon Advisory and a senior fellow at the Washington-based Foundation for Defence of Democracies, a nonprofit research institute considered hawkish on foreign policy.

Gerstell, the former US official, described Lieber as “Exhibit A” in how US legal tools are inadequate.

“This is a guy who was convicted of precisely the thing that we want him to be convicted of in this context, and yet the minute he’s released from house arrest, he’s off in China,” he said. — Reuters


Infantino: Iran will compete in World Cup and play matches in United States as scheduled






Infantino: Iran will compete in World Cup and play matches in United States as scheduled



Fifa President Gianni Infantino speaks during the 76th FIFA Congress at the Vancouver Convention Centre on April 30, 2026, in Vancouver, Canada. — AFP pic

Friday, 01 May 2026 9:36 AM MYT


VANCOUVER, May 1 — Fifa President Gianni Infantino reiterated that Iran will play their World Cup games in the United States as scheduled, as football’s power-brokers met in Vancouver yesterday.


Iran’s participation at this year’s World Cup in Canada, Mexico, and the United States has been shrouded in uncertainty since the eruption of war in the Middle East in February following strikes by the United States and Israel.


Infantino, who has repeatedly stated that Iran will be at the World Cup, underscored that stance at the start of his address to delegates as Fifa’s 76th Congress got underway in western Canada.


“Let me start by the outset, confirming straightaway that of course Iran will be participating at the Fifa World Cup 2026,” Infantino said. “And of course, Iran will play (in) the United States of America.”


Infantino’s remarks drew swift support from close ally US President Donald Trump, who told reporters in the Oval Office he was “OK” with Iran’s participation.

“Well, if Gianni said it, I’m OK,” Trump said. “I think let ‘em play.”


Iranian officials had floated the idea of shifting their group games from the United States to Mexico, but that proposal had already been nixed by Infantino.

In a further twist last week, Italy-born US special envoy Paolo Zampolli was reported to have floated the idea of Italy taking Iran’s World Cup place.

The US government later distanced themselves from that proposal, with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying Iran’s footballers would be welcome.

But the tension surrounding Iran’s World Cup participation rumbled into the build-up to Thursday’s summit.

Iran’s delegation was the only absentee from the 211-member congress as Thursday’s meeting got under way after a clash with Canadian border officials earlier this week.

Officials from the Iranian football federation (FFIRI) abruptly left Canada after landing in Toronto, abandoning their onward trip to Vancouver.

Iranian media said FFIRI president Mehdi Taj—a former member of Tehran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) — and two colleagues flew home after being “insulted” by Canadian immigration officers.

Canada, which designated the IRGC a terrorist organization in 2024, said Wednesday that individuals linked to the force were “inadmissible.”

Iran, who are due to be based in Tucson, Arizona, during the World Cup, face New Zealand, Belgium and Egypt in Group G.

The Iranians open their World Cup campaign against New Zealand in Los Angeles on June 15.


Infantino election boost

Fifa supremo Infantino went into yesterday’s summit with his organization under fire over skyrocketing ticket costs for the World Cup, which one supporters group has branded a “monumental betrayal” of fans.

Infantino brushed off those criticisms in his address, insisting that all revenues from the World Cup—estimated between US$11 and US$13 billion—would be pumped back into football development.

“There are expensive tickets, yes, (but) there are also affordable tickets,” Infantino said. “And what is important is that all the revenues that we generate from the world go back to the entire world and finance football in all of your countries.”

Infantino’s close ties to US President Trump have also come under scrutiny.

Advocacy group Fairsquare filed a formal complaint in December arguing that Infantino had breached FIFA rules concerning political neutrality by awarding Trump the inaugural “FIFA Peace Prize” during last year’s World Cup draw.

However Infantino received a huge boost to his hopes of securing re-election as the head of world football yesterday after receiving pledges of support from the African and Asian regional confederations.

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) and Asian Football Confederation (AFC) have both said they will back Infantino if, as expected, he stands for a fourth term in 2027.

The African and Asian confederations account for 101 votes in FIFA’s presidential election out of a total of 211.

Infantino has already secured support for re-election from South American football’s ruling body CONMEBOL, which is worth a further 10 votes. — AFP


Explained: How police remand works and why suspects cannot be publicly identified before facing official charges





Explained: How police remand works and why suspects cannot be publicly identified before facing official charges



A general image of handcuffs taken on August 22, 2024. — Picture by Raymond Manuel

Friday, 01 May 2026 7:00 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, May 1 — In the hours following the apprehension of a suspect, before any formal charges are filed, a court process determines whether the person in custody can be held longer to facilitate ongoing police investigations.

This formal process — a remand proceeding — is an important part of the Malaysian criminal justice system in which magistrates decide if police have sufficient grounds to continue detaining a suspect.

However, because the process largely occurs out of public view except in cases of public interest, it may be unfamiliar to many.

Past instances have arisen where suspects are widely identified or speculated about online through viral footages or posts following an arrest.

However, legal safeguards remain in force at this stage, including media restrictions on public identification such as revealing a suspect’s face or name.

So why the secrecy then?

It is important to understand what leads to a remand in the first place.

Under Section 28 of the Criminal Procedure Code (CPC), the police cannot hold a person in custody for more than 24 hours for investigation without a magistrate’s authorisation.

If investigations cannot be completed within this period and police seek to detain a suspect beyond 24 hours on the basis that the allegations are well-founded, they must apply to the Magistrate’s Court within that timeframe for further detention.

This application — typically made for a remand order — is provided for under Section 117 of the CPC.

A person is therefore “remanded” when the magistrate issues a remand order to extend the suspect’s detention beyond 24 hours.

In short, the purpose of a remand is to give the police more time to complete the investigation and to decide whether there is enough evidence to charge the suspect with the suspected offence.

Most importantly, a suspect is still considered innocent at the remand stage.

TLDR: Individuals on remand have not been formally charged, and restrictions on naming them or publishing identifiable images are meant to protect the integrity of investigations and uphold the presumption of innocence.

Okay, so what happens if I am remanded?


According to the Office of the Chief Registrar of the Federal Court of Malaysia, several steps take place during a remand proceeding.

First, the police must give the magistrate reasons justifying why they need to detain the suspect beyond 24 hours and the court then considers these reasons and later issues the remand duration.

If the offence investigated relates to imprisonment of less than 14 years, detention shall not exceed four days for the first application and three days for any subsequent application.

If the offence relates to imprisonment exceeding 14 years, detention shall not exceed seven days for the first application and seven days for the second application.

During remand, a suspect in custody at a police lockup may make several requests according to their rights enshrined under Article 5 of the Federal Constitution and further codified under Section 28A of the CPC.

This includes being represented by a lawyer of their choice, contacting their family members to inform them of their whereabouts, getting reasonable medical attention and even lodging complaints of ill-treatment.

The magistrate can either allow or refuse a remand order, and if allowed, the police must then charge the suspect or release him/her.

TLDR: Police must justify continued detention by applying for a remand order, with the duration subject to legal limits depending on the offence being investigated, and if no remand is granted, the suspect must be released within 24 hours.