ON HUMAN RIGHTS, JUSTICE AND PEACE ISSUES, LABOUR RIGHTS, MIGRANT RIGHTS, FOR THE ABOLITION OF THE DEATH PENALTY, TOWARDS AN END OF TORTURE, POLICE ABUSES, DISCRIMINATION...
Constitution (Amendment) (No. 2) Act 2026 is the law before Parliament now, finally to make the SEPARATION of the Public Prosecutor and the Attorney General.
We want an INDEPENDENT Public Prosecutor - for all matters considering the administration of criminal justice in Malaysia
a) First ISSUE - who chooses the Public Prosecutor, which is a very important position and must be INDEPENDENT, which means that the PM/Executive Branch should not be picking the Public Prosecutor. Some recent decisions not to Charge in Court, and to discontinue criminal proceedings seem to suggest possible interference of the PM and/or Government of the day - the case of Zahid Hamidi(DPM and President of UMNO/BN), the still not charging of the politicians in Sabah, etc...
So, who picks the Public Prosecutor is VERY IMPORTANT - now it says the Judicial and Legal Service Commission, but even after the amendment, the worry is that 4 of the JLSC, are persons who may be 'picked' by the Prime Minister > so we need some changes here to make the JLCS more INDEPENDENT - and 2nd, there is doubts whether KING must follow the 'recommendations'(better to use ADVICE)...
Remember that Saifuddin Nasution was rejected by the people in GE15 - when he lost and failed to become MP. Then PM Anwar Ibrahim, wanting him to be a member of his Cabinet, got him appointed as Senator, so he could be appointed Home Minister(a most powerful Minister). Should we have a LAW that only MPs can become important MINISTERS? (Should we include Parliamentary Approval as a pre-requisite for any candidate that the PM wants to appoint Minister or Deputy Minister?)
Anyway, concerned raised about the Home Minister's recent comments or "DECISIONS"
1) No Royal Commission of Inquiry for the FIFA-FAM Scandal. In this issue, let us be reminded that there were 2 issues that arose (a) The giving of Malaysian Citizenship to these foreign footballers - Malaysian laws are VERY strict requiring per-application residence in Malaysia for at least 12 years (... in the aggregate to not less than ten years in the
twelve years immediately preceding the date of the application..') - this is a mandatory requirement in Art.19 of the Federal Constitution, and also in the 'special circumstances' cases in Article 19(2), and that the applicant intends to reside in Malaysia permanently >> in this case, the person who may be found GUILTY of not following the strict requirements before granting citizenship is the Home Minister, I believe. Hannah
Yeoh(Sports Minister) Saifuddin Nasution(Home Minister) - FAM-FIFA
Global Scandal - Allegation of Forgery/Lies in making foreign
footballers Malaysian Citizens - A BIG EMBARASSMENT?.
and (b) The producing a FALSE or FORGED documents as proof the one of the parent/grandparent of these footballers were BORN in Malaysia (this being a FIFA requirement). Documents of proof was submitted - but who can produce such documents other than the Home Ministry?
The International Federation of Association Football (Fifa) in its
investigations found that the seven “heritage” players - Gabriel Felipe
Arrocha, Facundo Garces, Rodrigo Holgado, Imanol Manchuca, Joao
Figueiredo, Jon Irazabal, and Hector Hevel - had become Malaysian
citizens under false pretences.It found that birth certificates
purporting the players’ grandparents were born in Malaysia were forged,
with one showing clear signs of tampering.
The
investigations also discovered that documents from the players
themselves showed that their grandparents had no connection with
Malaysia.On top of that, Fifa also found that the players had
“passed” the Malay language aspect of their Malaysian citizenship test
despite not speaking the language.
A MAJOR INTERNATIONAL SCANDAL - Malaysia cheated - produced and submitted Forged Documents, just as bad as the 1MDB scandal. Every one, and every nation in the footballing world knows - and this definitely will affect MALAYSIA'S CREDIBILITY - How can we trust a Prime Minister or Government of such a nation?
Don't the Minister know that 'The Independent Police Conduct Commission (IPCC)' now is 'toothless tiger' with only 'sorting power' - on receipt of complaint, it decides who should investigate, and forwards the complaint to the relevant law enforcement agency. Thus, in a police shooting case, it will just send it back to the POLICE to investigate and act upon it > and this is exactly what we did not want - we wanted an INDEPENDENT(independent of police) Commission to investigate complaints about police crimes/misconduct, with the ability to conduct PUBLIC INQUIRY, and best with the power to also take action including Charging and prosecuting them in Court, noting that past recommendations for investigation and prosecution by even SUHAKAM, EAIC(Enforcement Agency Integrity Commission (EAIC)], or even RCIs seems to get ignored - no one gets charged and tried in Court.
After GE14, the PH Government tabled an IPCMC Bill, which was also lacking but was being improved on by Parliament - but then dropped by the subsequent PN Government, who then introduced this 'weak' IPCC Bill.
When Anwar Ibrahim became Prime Minister, the IPCC Act was still NOT IN FORCE - meaning that Anwar and this Madani Government could have RE-INTRODUCED a better Independent Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission (IPCMC) - but disappointingly, on 1 July 2023, the IPCC ACT was put into force.
One thing that questions the 'INDEPENDENCE' of the IPCC is the fact that it is the PM who picks all the members of the IPCC - Section 6(1) 'The Yang
di-Pertuan Agong shall, on the advice of the Prime Minister, appoint not
more than seven members of the Commission, one of whom shall be
appointed as the Chairman and another as the Deputy Chairman.' - there must be an INDEPENDENT selection of any Commission/Committee/Task Force if we want to be truly INDEPENDENT...
Zolkopli Bin Dahalan is the Chairman of IPCC, and the IPCC was fully operational since January 2024 - BUT, have you seen any statement by Zolkopli or the IPCC in the media? Why is this? Azam Baki the chief of MACC is always in the Media, so why has the IPCC been silent - it would be good to hear the views of IPCC when cases involving police wrongs get reported - at least an opinion how police is supposed to act?? So, is the IPCC not just a 'toothless tiger' but also a VOICELESS one - with no expressed views of even what should the PROPER police behavior? Sadly, it is the same with many such committees/commissions appointed to be watchdogs to ensure proper conduct of the police, etc...
The Home Ministry has left it to the Independent Police Conduct
Commission (IPCC) as an independent body, to determine any action on
misconduct in the Durian Tunggal police shooting.
Home Minister Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail said Subsection
32(1) of the Independent Police Conduct Commission Act 2022 [Act 839]
empowers the IPCC to initiate investigations into alleged misconduct on
its own accord in the public interest, regardless of whether a formal
complaint has been lodged.
But, Minister Saifuddin Nasution, don't you know that the IPCC does not even have the power to formed and start a PUBLIC INQUIRY - all it can do now, is determine who to refer the complaint too, and in this case of police shooting that resulted in Death - it will send it back to the police??? And police killing is a CRIME - how can we say it is a mere 'MISCONDUCT"?
Even, when the police came under the jurisdiction of the EAIC(Enforcement Agency Integrity Commission (EAIC)], it was better looking at EAIC's track record - when it did do an INQUIRY and publish a report of report (which could be accessed to the Public) - see EAIC Websites. The majority of the complaints received by the EAIC was about POLICE - indicative of how BIG a problem it is.
The LAW in Malaysia is MOST CLEAR - Police can arrest, but NOT KILL. So, when the police end up killing anyone, the said Police Officers Must Immediately In Court for the 'killing crime' , and in court they will have to prove that they are 'NOT GUILTY', or any Defence they want to RELY on - It is up to the INDEPENDENT Court to decide whether these police officers are GUILTY for MURDER or any of the other 'killing offences' - or NOT GUILTY. If there have some defence, like 'self-defence' , it must be raised in Court.
Note after the police killing incident - we already have the SUSPECTS, those who did the actual killing and/or their accomplices. We have the EVIDENCE - the witnesses that were present and saw the wrongdoings, the report of experts who investigated the crime scene, who conducted the post-mortem, and in the Durian Tunggal case, we also have that audio recording - suggesting intentional killing of suspects already 'arrested'....
It is not for the police, prosecutor, Minister Saifuddin or even the PM to decide NOT to charge and accord a FAIR TRIAL. There should be no suspicions of 'SELECTIVE" non-investigation and/or prosecution because they were police officers...???
So, Minister Saifuddin, ensure that the LAW is enforced...
When police kills instead of arresting - it must be presumed to be an EXTRAJUDICIAL KILLING until it is proven otherwise. Malaysia still does not LAWS criminalizing extrajudicial killings, extrajudicial TORTURE, enforced DISAPPEARANCE - is this because Malaysia still do not consider this a SERIOUS Crime? We need to immediately have these laws enacted ...
Govt rejects RCI to probe 'heritage' footballers citizenship scandal
Published: Feb 24, 2026 10:56 AM
⋅
Updated: 9:56 AM
Home
Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail said there is no need for a royal
commission of inquiry (RCI) to investigate the alleged forgery case
involving “heritage” football players and the Football Association of
Malaysia (FAM).
Saifuddin reminded that the issue regarding the
alleged falsification of naturalised player documents had already been
addressed through ongoing independent investigations and legal
processes, including by the police and the MACC.
“In view of this,
the ministry is of the opinion that there is no requirement at this
time to establish an RCI regarding the issue, as the legal processes and
investigations by the relevant authorities are still ongoing,”
Saifuddin said in a written parliamentary reply, dated Feb 23.
“Nonetheless,
should a reasonable need for an RCI arise in the future, the matter is
subject to the jurisdiction of the federal government through the Prime
Minister’s Department, in accordance with the provisions of the
Commissions of Enquiry Act 1950 (Act 119),” he added.
The
home minister had responded to an inquiry from Takiyuddin Hassan
(PN-Kota Bharu) regarding the establishment of an RCI to investigate
possible elements of corruption and malpractice involving documents
related to the Malaysian citizenship granted to the “heritage” players.
Saifuddin
also said that MACC’s preliminary findings had found that the issues
involved in the scandal were “technical in nature”, and did not
constitute offences under the MACC Act.
Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail
He reminded that an internal investigation committee within FAM, chaired by former chief justice Raus Sharif had also been established to oversee the matter.
However, in December, the committee concluded
its investigations in frustration due to not having the power to
request documents or subpoena witnesses, ultimately recommending that
FAM lodge a police report for further investigation.
Tampered certs
The
International Federation of Association Football (Fifa) in its
investigations found that the seven “heritage” players - Gabriel Felipe
Arrocha, Facundo Garces, Rodrigo Holgado, Imanol Manchuca, Joao
Figueiredo, Jon Irazabal, and Hector Hevel - had become Malaysian
citizens under false pretences.
It found that birth certificates
purporting the players’ grandparents were born in Malaysia were forged,
with one showing clear signs of tampering.
The
investigations also discovered that documents from the players
themselves showed that their grandparents had no connection with
Malaysia.
On top of that, Fifa also found that the players had
“passed” the Malay language aspect of their Malaysian citizenship test
despite not speaking the language.
Saifuddin previously told Parliament in October that the players had a basic grasp of Malay.
He
also revealed he had exercised his discretion to waive a requirement
that they reside in Malaysia for at least 10 years before becoming
citizens.
To date, neither Saifuddin nor the National Registration Department has admitted to any wrongdoing.
IPCC has free hand to investigate Durian Tunggal shooting - Saifuddin
Published: Feb 24, 2026 9:12 AM
⋅
Updated: 9:57 A
The
Independent Police Conduct Commission (IPCC) is free to investigate the
Durian Tunggal shooting, where police officers are suspected of killing
three men in cold blood.
Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail
said the IPCC is an independent body and can decide on its own whether
to launch any investigations, regardless of whether a complaint was
made, including the Durian Tunggal case.
"In this matter, the Home
Ministry leaves it fully to the IPCC as an independent body to take
appropriate action in line with the (IPCC) Act," he said in a written
parliamentary reply yesterday.
Saifuddin (above) was
responding to William Leong (Harapan-Selayang) on whether the IPCC had
been roped in to investigate the police shooting case, and how the
government planned to ensure no conflict of interest in the police's own
investigations into the case.
Malacca police had initially claimed that the shooting was done in self-defence.
However, this was disputed with an alleged audio recording of the incident, which later led Bukit Aman to take over the probe and reclassify it as a murder investigation.
On
Feb 10, Inspector-General of Police Khalid Ismail said police had
completed investigations and were awaiting instructions from the
Attorney-General's Chambers.
The IPCC is a watered-down version of the Independent Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission (IPCMC).
One
key difference is that, unlike the proposed IPCMC, the IPCC can't take
any action against errant police officers. Instead, action must be
referred to the Police Force Commission or other relevant authorities.
The Durian Tunggal shooting had previously led to calls for the government to establish the IPCMC. - Malaysiakini, 24/2/2026
Home Ministry leaves misconduct probe in Durian Tunggal shooting to IPCC
Home Minister Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail -file pic
KUALA
LUMPUR: The Home Ministry has left it to the Independent Police Conduct
Commission (IPCC) as an independent body, to determine any action on
misconduct in the Durian Tunggal police shooting.
Home Minister Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail said Subsection
32(1) of the Independent Police Conduct Commission Act 2022 [Act 839]
empowers the IPCC to initiate investigations into alleged misconduct on
its own accord in the public interest, regardless of whether a formal
complaint has been lodged.
"This includes the shooting incident in Durian Tunggal, Melaka.
"In this matter, the ministry leaves it entirely to the IPCC, as an
independent and impartial body, to take appropriate action in accordance
with the provisions of the law," he said in a written parliamentary
reply today.
He was responding to William Leong Jee Keen (PH–Selayang), who asked
whether the IPCC was involved in the investigation and how the
government could ensure that the internal police probe would be free
from conflict of interest and conducted fairly and objectively.
Saifuddin said a special task force had been set up at the Bukit Aman
Criminal Investigation Department to take full charge of the criminal
investigation into the incident.
He said the police Integrity and Standards Compliance Department is
conducting a disciplinary investigation to determine whether there were
any breaches of the Inspector-General of Police's Standing Orders or
standard operating procedures, particularly in relation to detention,
inspection, arrest and the handling of firearms by the officers
involved.
"The police has given its assurance that a transparent, fair and
professional investigation will be conducted in accordance with existing
laws to ensure that justice is upheld.
"The investigation papers have also been referred to the
Attorney-General's Chambers for further scrutiny in line with Article
145(3) of the Federal Constitution," he said.
On Nov 24, 2025, three men – G. Logeswaran, 29, M. Puspanathan, 21,
and a 24-year-old identified as M. – were shot dead during a police
operation at an oil palm plantation.
Police had earlier said the incident occurred after one of the men
allegedly attacked a policeman with a parang, prompting officers to open
fire.
Lawyers representing the families have since disputed the police account. - NST, 23/2/2026
DAP, Amanah, PKR,..(Pakatan Harapan itself) have suffered a possible loss of support and/or confidence of the people under the premiership of Anwar Ibrahim in this PH-led MADANI Coalition government...for various reasons including the FAILURE to realize the REFORMASI promises - and, in fact, situation may have even deteriorated in the area of JUSTICE and Human Rights. BLAME and/or RESPONSIBILITY will not be placed just on the PRIME MINISTER, but on all the PH and MADANI government coalition parties and that may affect peoples' support in the coming GE.
The credibility and support DAP build over decades thanks to MPs like the late Karpal Singh, Lim Kit Siang, Pattoo, and many more ...resulted in support because of the fact that they had then BRAVELY stood up for Justice and Human Rights.. They fell victim to the ISA, even Guan Eng was send to jail for Sedition Act - ' charged under the Sedition Act with “prompting disaffection with the administration of justice” after he publicly criticized the Malaysian Government’s handling of allegations of statutory rape made against the former Chief Minister of Malacca, Tan Sri Abdul Rahim Tamby Chik, in 1994. He was also charged under the Printing Presses and Publications Act with “maliciously printing” a pamphlet allegedly containing “false information” about the case' - Amnesty International
Likewise Amanah and PKR had the support of the people - primarily for their commitment to justice and human rights - and their promises for REFORM if they were elected into POWER they will bring about changes...repeal bad laws like the Sedition Act, Detention Without Trial laws, SOSMA, make needed amendments to the University and University Colleges Act(AUKU), etc...And finally they got power and became government but the REFORMS were slow to happen...or just did not happen...and the political parties like DAP, Amanah..went silent - not even criticizing or expressing an opinion...Remember, many see SILENCE as CONSENT to what the government does.
There is NOTHING stopping any political party(even parties in government) from speaking their own views if they disagree with the government's position. This is expected also from MPs in Cabinet, and MPs who are back-benchers in Parliament - that silence will affect peoples' support (Was what happened in the recent elections an indication of the peoples' feelings - even DAP(the strongest party in PH and also the MADANI government) were 'kicked out' by the people.
Remember Nazri Aziz expressed personal views on the death
penalty that often appeared more liberal and abolitionist-leaning than
the official, strict Cabinet position held by the Barisan Nasional
government at the time. Remember even Muhyiddin that allegedly raised his views on the 1MDB issue in Najib's Cabinet that led to his sacking... so, we have precedence of people in government speaking up at the RISK of facing retaliation. DAP, Amanah, PKR and/or their MPs could also still do this > when they disagree with government or PM's decisions or actions...Oh yes, one PKR MP has been bravely doing this - MP Hassan Karim?
Then, now, DAP reacted, indicating 'disappointment' in the PM Anwar Ibrahim's PH-led Coalition government, in DAP's Anthony Loke saying that DAP gives 6 months ultimatum without even specifically naming the meaningful REFORMS DAP wanted..
WHEN DAP Secretary-General Anthony Loke warned on Dec 9, 2025 that
the party would reassess its position in the unity government if
“meaningful reforms” were not delivered within six months, it sounded
like a long-overdue attempt to reassert the party’s reformist spine.
But deadlines only matter when the public knows exactly what is being
measured. Without a clear, written and time-bound reform checklist,
DAP’s ultimatum risks being dismissed as political posturing rather than
a serious governing demand.
This is not about semantics. It is about credibility. Reform
cannot remain a flexible slogan that shifts with coalition arithmetic.
If DAP wants Malaysians to take its warning seriously, it must do what
genuine reform movements do: name the reforms, name the laws, name the
institutions, and name the deadlines.
Was there any sincerity - or was it mere 'posturing' because DAP also said that it will not withdraw support from PM Anwar Ibrahim or the MADANI government - What is this? Reasonably, a disappointment with existing government must include removing or changing the Prime Minister. Support for government is OK, because always the MADANI coalition can pick a new and better PM who will bring 'meaningful reforms'...
SIX MONTHS - that would be by 10th June, but now DAP is saying that it will have an Emergency General Meeting on the 7th month...RIGHTLY, the EGM should have been held in June, possibly on 10th June or early June...The fact that 'the special congress' will only happen more than a one month after the 6-month deadline affects Anthony Loke and DAP's reputation, credibility,etc...No mention whether there has been ANY of the 'meaningful reforms' that DAP wanted....
DAP will hold a special congress on July 12 to decide whether the
party’s leaders should resign from their positions in the unity
government while continuing to support it in Parliament.
DAP secretary-general Loke Siew Fook said
the 4,000 delegates attending the congress will vote on whether DAP
leaders should resign as ministers, deputy ministers, state executive
councillors, local councillors and GLC appointees, Sin Chew Daily
reported...
The transport minister stressed that
regardless of the outcome, the party’s MPs would continue backing the
government until the next general election.
He also insisted that DAP would
not withdraw support for the unity government or take part in any
attempts to form a “backdoor government”.
“This is not a threat (to Prime Minister
Anwar Ibrahim), but a review of our role in government,” he said, adding
that some DAP leaders were still adjusting to the pressures of being in
government after years in the opposition.
“We will ensure the government remains stable. Our 40 MPs will ensure the government’s stability.”
Worse, when Anthony Loke says the party will continue to support the PM and the government until next general elections - Should this not be a DECISION of that upcoming DAP Special Congress?Does Anthony Loke and the DAP leadership want to support PM Anwar and the MADANI government despite the fact that there is NO MEANINGFUL REFORMS...? If DAP was in BN during Najib's Premiership, what would you think of a party that will continue to support the PM despite all that 'wrongdoings' until the next elections????
WHY continue to support a PM and a government that fails to do justice, and bring about needed REFORMS? Is that DAP serving the people? Is that DAP acting for the best interest of Malaysia and its people? It all sounds very funny...?
REMEMBER again that SILENCE is often seen as CONSENT - so DAP, by its silence, CONSENTS with everything PM Anwar says and did???
Why does Anthony Loke and the leadership of DAP want to limit the upcoming Special Congress to JUSTwhether DAP
leaders should resign as ministers, deputy ministers, state executive Councillors, local councillors and GLC appointees?
Should NOT the Special Congress be able to DECIDE ALL matters including whether DAP should continue to support Anwar Ibrahim to continue being PRIME MINISTER, should DAP continue support the MADANI coalition forming the government (DAP could support the coalition, and insist on a NEW PM), .... Should NOT DAP also be deciding whether it will remain Pakatan Harapan, and other matters related...
Now, Anthony Loke talks about the possible resigning as ... local councillors and GLC appointees...and this is INTERESTING - How many Local Councillor positions did DAP get? Did it reflect the number of MPs (40) and the number of ADUNs DAP has? In KL, for example,... did it reflect the demography of the particular local council...
Key Political Parties in Parliament (2026)
DAP: 40 seats
PAS (Opposition): 43 seats
PKR (Parti Keadilan Rakyat): 31 seats
UMNO (Barisan Nasional): 26 seats
GPS (Gabungan Parti Sarawak): 23 seats
BERSATU (Opposition): 19 seats
AMANAH: 8 seats
GRS (Gabungan Rakyat Sabah): 5 seats
In Kuala Lumpur
List of Kuala Lumpur MPs (2026), and DAP has 5 out of 11 MPs
Constituency
MP
Party/Coalition
P114 Kepong
Lim Lip Eng
PH (DAP)
P115 Batu
P. Prabakaran
PH (PKR)
P116 Wangsa Maju
Zahir Hassan
PH (PKR)
P117 Segambut
Hannah Yeoh
PH (DAP)
P118 Setiawangsa
Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad
PH (PKR)
P119 Titiwangsa
Johari Abdul Ghani
BN (UMNO)
P120 Bukit Bintang
Fong Kui Lun
PH (DAP)
P121 Lembah Pantai
Fahmi Fadzil
PH (PKR)
P122 Seputeh
Teresa Kok
PH (DAP)
P123 Cheras
Tan Kok Wai
PH (DAP)
P124 Bandar Tun Razak
Wan Azizah Wan Ismail
PH (PKR)
Let us look at the KL Mayor and Local Councillors(here called Board of Advisors) - how many are DAP nominees? OR more importantly, is it reflective of the people of KL in terms of GENDER, Religion, Ethnicity, ...
Sadly, the people chosen MPs are not even in DBKL Local Government, although now some MPs have been appointed to certain Committees. The Mayor now is Datuk Seri Fadlun Mak Ujud (since Nov 15, 2025), who replaced Maimunah Mohd Sharif , whose term in office was 'mysteriously' cut short...ODD - should not the TERM of the Mayor and Local Councillors be a FIXED TERM, just like 5 years for MP/ADUNs or until next General Elections, Senators(3 years)?
And most important, please disclose GLC appointees of DAP, what are these positions, and how much REMUNERATION/Allowance do they get? Are any of them MPs who are not in Cabinet? Are any of those ADUNs not in State EXCOs? IF MPs(not in Cabinet) or ADUNs(not in State Exco) - any such appointments will compromise their role as 'Backbencher MPs', that is to monitor the actions of the government to ensure no abuse of power or wrongdoings?
The impact of PH joining hands with BN to form government
Malaysians CHANGED substantially, when they finally OUSTED the BN from government - and the anger of the people continued on after GE14. In GE14, the BN had 79 MPs, and in GE15, they only had 30 MPs - will the people forget, or are they still angry with BN for what it did wrong to Malaysians, and Malaysia - indication is that they may not.
"Sekali terkena, dua kali beringat"(once burned twice shy) - and the convictions against Najib, and the PRIMA FACIE case against Zahid Hamidi just re-enforces the correctness of their decision to reject BN...
Would the voting trends against BN continue in GE16? Would PH too suffer the anger Malaysians still have against the BN - Noting that PH did not stop at just forming a Coalition Government with BN after elections, but also went further on an electoral pact with BN in recent by-elections and even the Sabah elections > this changes the situation, the forming of Coalition to govern was out of NECESSITY, but the electoral pact is very different...
Come GE16, would PH and BN have an ELECTORAL PACT? Would PH break-up, with some PH parties joining BN? Or will BN be absorbed into PH or vice-versa?
In GE14, PH which included Mahathir wins 113 seats, PH without Mahathir(and this time led by Anwar Ibrahim wins only 81 seats. Was the loss of support due to the absence of Mahathir and BERSATU, or was it because of lesser support of the people because Anwar Ibrahim was leading it? Was the lost of support simply because the post GE14 PH failed to bring about speedy reforms? It is difficult to figure out the minds of people...
But after GE15, with Anwar as PM, the question that many is asking is what reforms has Anwar who had much more time really brought?
# The government abolished the MANDATORY Death Penalty and LIFE IMPRISONMENT - and allowed for the Federal Court Review of those on death row, or facing life imprisonment > but even during the Review, the Federal Court maintained the Death Penalty for some, and still our Courts, even though there is no more MANDATORY Death Penalty is still sentencing people to DEATH - and to date this government has failed to come up with any solution to deal with now again increasing persons on death row.
# Sedition ACT - Not repealed although Anwar assured us that it will ONLY be used for 3R cases - but still it continues to be used for what are NOT 3R cases...???
# Freedom of Expression/Opinion and the right to share has been SERIOUSLY been affected with the government even targeting. POSTs are being removed, worst without the knowledge of the owner of the post and uncertainty as to for what reason exactly, and this is a MAJOR PROBLEM.
...a lot more...
One of the most important REFORM that moved people was the 'RESTORATION OF LOCAL COUNCIL/GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS' - people want democratically elected Local Government - NOT a political appointed Local Government. DAP and PKR led governments could not have Local Government Elections because a FEDERAL LAW had to be amended to RESTORE Local Government Elections - but when PH got Federal Power after GE14 - but at least they were still working towards it...saying it will need about 3 years before it can happen BUT, when Anwar PH-led coalition government, they went 'SILENT' on this fundamental issue.
Note, in Malay kampungs, the Kampung Baru(New Villages), Orang Asli kampungs -the leaders continue to be POLITICAL APPOINTEES - not democratically elected leaders? WHY?
The other REFORM promised - that the PM will not also be the Finance Minister > a needed reform to prevent another 1MDB like scandal???
Given the disappointment of the people, it is WISE for the PH parties like DAP, Amanah and even PKR to WORRY about their future come GE16....The 'promised' or expected REFORMS did not happen...
Worse, what is happening to people's PRIVACY, freedom of expression and the right to share with others - the government admit that they are blocking some online posts > most are OK if it is Pornography, Online Gambling, Post attempting to SCAM people - BUT there is uncertainty as to whether post critical of government, the PM and Ministers are also being BLOCKED. WORST, the victims whose post/accounts get blocked/censored are denied the right to KNOW 'grounds for government action(or government backed actions), the Right To Be HEARD - the right to say why their posts/accounts should not be blocked..
Then, there was the issue of PM/Government manipulating online content/sentiments -
A Malaysiakini investigation finds a network of 263 Facebook
accounts engaged in astroturfing to artificially boost support for Prime
Minister Anwar Ibrahim...The discovery comes two years after Meta removed a separate, 600-account network engaged in pro-government manipulation, which it linked to the police. - Malaysiakini, 30/9/2025
I, for one, thought this was a VERY SERIOUS issue - Can the Government or the Prime Minister 'manipulate' online views? The Minister of Communication should have INVESTIGATED this, and laws should have been enacted CRIMINALIZING this, if needed. But, still NO INVESTIGATIONS. It is OK for the Government, PM and/or Ministers to resort to ONLINE comments/communication BUT they must clearly state that it is the government views, or that the 'commenters' are making comments approved by the Government - to not do so could be a DECEPTION because people believe that this a personal view of fellow Malaysians, not views of persons 'employed' or engaged to give a pro-government or government response. STILL TIME to investigate this...after all the Minister of Communication has the duty to tell the people what is 'FALSE' and to correct misunderstandings - but it has to be done OFFICIALLY, and not by hiding behind some paid/contracted persons...??
SILENCE of DAP, Amanah, PKR and other parties in the MADANI Coalition, their party leaders, their MPs or ADUNs implies that they CONSENT to this act to manipulate public perception?
Many Parties, their MPs and their candidates for the upcoming GE may be 'punished by the people' for this - and that is why political parties must wake up and realize that SILENCE(which implies CONSENT) is not an option - they must speak up and express their Opinions/Views even when the government they are part of is doing it..
Malaysian people are EMPOWERED now - and they will NO LONGER vote you simply because you raised Public Officers Pay, Judges Pay, gave SARA Aid, ... they will look at MORE IMPORTANT matters to decide who is best to be their MP, ADUN or to form the next Government...and now they have options, as even the Opposition parties like PAS, BERSATU,...had proven that they have the CAPABILITY of governing Malaysia and States...as they governed Malaysia and did OK - No Major Consequences at all... ??
PH and BN had been using 'the fear of religious extremism' is parties like PAS came into power will no longer work??? - PKR-led Selangor now has decided to disallow PIG farming(showing little concern for the workers and those who survive with the income from this industry), and all are watching to see if the individuals who went and demolished a Temple(allegedly illegal) will be charged and tried in Court for the crime he committed - noting that the individuals who 'mocked' an Hindu religious practice were never charged for their crime... Malaysia is a multi-religious nation, and its people are respectful of the religion and religious practices of others - and would they want a government that fails to do so? I believe that the use of 'religion' by some politicians and parties do not go down well with the ordinary Malaysians - they live harmoniously with people of different faiths, and such issues that try to divide people on religion or even ethnicity never gets popular support...and in fact, such behavior may lead to loss of support.
DAP and other political parties have LOT TO THINK ABOUT now ... BLIND LOYALTY or 'SILENCE' may impact people's support come next GE.
DAP’s six-month reform ultimatum needs a checklist
Oleh
Ashraf Abdullah
-
DAP
has long argued for MACC reform, including placing the commission under
parliamentary oversight, strengthening security of tenure for the chief
commissioner, and separating investigative authority from political
control over prosecution.
WHEN DAP Secretary-General Anthony Loke warned on Dec 9, 2025
that the party would reassess its position in the unity government if
“meaningful reforms” were not delivered within six months, it sounded
like a long-overdue attempt to reassert the party’s reformist spine.
But deadlines only matter when the public knows exactly what is being
measured. Without a clear, written and time-bound reform checklist,
DAP’s ultimatum risks being dismissed as political posturing rather than
a serious governing demand.
This is not about semantics. It is about credibility. Reform
cannot remain a flexible slogan that shifts with coalition arithmetic.
If DAP wants Malaysians to take its warning seriously, it must do what
genuine reform movements do: name the reforms, name the laws, name the
institutions, and name the deadlines.
The unity government may be fragile. But reform has always been
inconvenient. That was the moral bargain voters accepted when DAP asked
for their trust.
If DAP is serious about “meaningful reforms”, it should publish a
reform list that is specific, testable and non-negotiable. At minimum,
it should include the following six items.
DAP also cannot credibly argue that these reforms are too complex or
politically impossible to deliver within six months. The party has been
in government for seven years, first under Pakatan Harapan and now
within the unity administration.
If institutional reform was truly its core mission, these issues
should have been prioritised from the moment power was secured. Instead,
many were deferred, diluted or quietly side-lined.
Claiming that six months is insufficient today only reinforces the
perception that reform urgency emerges when political leverage is
threatened, not when responsibility is assumed.
Corruption reform: MACC independence, Ismail Sabri, and the Sabah mining exposè
Any reform agenda that does not begin with corruption is already compromised.
The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) remains structurally
vulnerable to executive influence. Regardless of how often the
government declares its commitment to clean governance, enforcement that
lacks institutional independence will always be perceived as selective.
DAP has long argued for MACC reform, including placing the commission
under parliamentary oversight, strengthening security of tenure for the
chief commissioner, and separating investigative authority from
political control over prosecution.
These reforms are not cosmetic. They are structural necessities if
corruption is to be tackled consistently rather than episodically.
The urgency of MACC reform is underscored by the unresolved contradictions in recent high-profile cases.
One of the most damaging is the RM169 million linked to former Prime
Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob. Large sums of cash were seized and
subsequently forfeited. Yet what the public has not seen is prosecution,
charges, or a courtroom examination of evidence.
The uncomfortable question remains: how can someone allegedly linked
to RM169 million return the money and walk away effectively uncharged?
Can others do so too or is it only a privilege for Members of Parliament
whose vote at the Dewan Rakyat is depended upon by the Government?
Returning funds does not equate to accountability. Without
prosecution, forfeiture risks becoming a substitute for justice rather
than a step towards it. DAP’s silence on this case has been conspicuous
and damaging.
Compounding this credibility gap is the Sabah mining scandal exposed
through a series of videos released by businessman Albert Tei.
Despite multiple video revelations allegedly implicating 15
politicians, only two have been charged. Several others named continue
to hold senior positions in the Sabah government, including a deputy
chief minister and key ministerial posts. To top it all, one of the two
was recently appointed to an important GLC position. And DAP said
nothing…yet.
Tei has publicly challenged Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim to
demonstrate that anti-corruption enforcement is not constrained by
political considerations. That challenge remains unanswered.
These three elements, MACC structural weakness, the Ismail Sabri
case, and the Sabah mining expose, are not separate issues. They form a
single corruption credibility test. If DAP’s six-month ultimatum does
not confront them directly, it will be seen as rhetorical rather than
reformist.
Separation of power between the Prime Minister and the Finance Ministry
Closely linked to corruption risk is the concentration of power at the apex of government.
DAP itself once strongly condemned the practice of the Prime Minister
also assuming the role of Finance Minister, warning that it undermines
parliamentary oversight and increases the risk of abuse.
That principle does not lose validity simply because political circumstances have changed.
Any credible reform checklist must therefore include a firm
commitment to separate these two offices, supported by a clear timeline
and institutional safeguards to prevent future reconsolidation of power.
Without structural limits, clean governance becomes dependent on
personal restraint rather than system design, a fragile foundation for
reform.
Recognition of the Unified Examination Certificate (UEC)
Another reform DAP can no longer afford to treat as optional is the recognition of the Unified Examination Certificate (UEC).
For decades, UEC recognition has been framed not as a cultural
concession, but as an education and meritocracy issue. DAP has
repeatedly argued that students should not be disadvantaged by the
education system they are born into.
If the party remains sincere about equal opportunity, UEC
recognition, whether through public university entry, teacher training
pathways, or professional accreditation, must be clearly stated rather
than vaguely implied.
Ambiguity will only reinforce perceptions that politically sensitive reforms are quietly abandoned after power is secured.
A warning from history: the toll abolition promise
DAP should also reflect candidly on its own record of unfulfilled pledges.
For years, the party promised nationwide toll abolition once it
entered government. That pledge featured prominently in campaigns and
manifestos, yet disappeared after power was attained.
That experience continues to shape public scepticism today. It raises
a blunt question DAP must confront: will the reforms promised under
this six-month ultimatum suffer the same fate, remembered only as
casualties of political compromise?
Justice issues that appear forgotten after power was gained
There is a deeper concern DAP must address: the perception that urgency on justice issues diminished after becoming government.
Justice for Teoh Beng Hock was once central to DAP’s moral narrative.
Today, accountability remains elusive and public pressure appears
muted.
The same applies to the disappearances of Pastor Raymond Koh and Amri
Che Mat. A public inquiry found state involvement, yet no senior
official has been held responsible.
Silence in government carries more weight than outrage in opposition.
A reform party cannot afford to appear selective in its pursuit of
justice.
Reform cannot be conditional on political survival
If corruption enforcement is calibrated to political risk rather than
legal principle, DAP’s six-month deadline will achieve nothing of
substance.
Reform will be seen not as a principle, but as a tactical exercise.
If this is the price of remaining in power, DAP must confront a difficult question: has it become what it once opposed?
Put it in writing or lose public trust
DAP supporters are not demanding perfection. They are demanding clarity and consistency.
Anthony Loke’s six-month clock started on Dec 9, 2025, with June 30, 2026 identified as the point of reckoning.
As of Jan 20, 2026, 161 days remain.
If by then MACC reform remains stalled, corruption cases unresolved,
and structural power concentration intact, the ultimatum will expire
without meaning.
The great DAP leader Karpal Singh once said: “There are no permanent friends or foes, only permanent principles.”
Giving up permanent principles for new-found friends will be hypocrisy of the highest degree.
If DAP constantly flip flops, it risks losing something far more serious than votes – its moral authority.
The clock is ticking.
— Datuk Seri Ashraf Abdullah was former Group Managing Editor of Media Prima Berhad’s Television Networks. - Malaysian Gazette, 22/1/2026
The
congress will determine whether DAP leaders, such as ministers, deputy
ministers and state executive councillors, should relinquish their
posts.
DAP
secretary-general Loke Siew Fook insisted the party will not withdraw
support for Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim even if the delegates at its
congress decide party leaders should relinquish their positions in the
unity government.
PETALING JAYA:
DAP will hold a special congress on July 12 to decide whether the
party’s leaders should resign from their positions in the unity
government while continuing to support it in Parliament.
DAP secretary-general Loke Siew Fook said
the 4,000 delegates attending the congress will vote on whether DAP
leaders should resign as ministers, deputy ministers, state executive
councillors, local councillors and GLC appointees, Sin Chew Daily
reported.
Loke said the congress would serve as an
internal “referendum” as this will be the first time the party has
entrusted such a major political decision to a congress, rather than
having the central executive committee (CEC) decide on the matter.
The transport minister stressed that
regardless of the outcome, the party’s MPs would continue backing the
government until the next general election.
He also insisted that DAP would
not withdraw support for the unity government or take part in any
attempts to form a “backdoor government”.
“This is not a threat (to Prime Minister
Anwar Ibrahim), but a review of our role in government,” he said, adding
that some DAP leaders were still adjusting to the pressures of being in
government after years in the opposition.
“We will ensure the government remains stable. Our 40 MPs will ensure the government’s stability.”
Loke noted that the CEC had previously
made decisions on joining or leaving political coalitions, in accordance
with the party’s constitution, without putting the matter to a
delegates’ vote.
“However, given the current
circumstances, especially the impact of the Sabah state election, it is
necessary for delegates to decide our direction collectively,” he said.
“We want the process to be more institutionalised and democratic.”
On Dec 2, Loke said the party would work
closely with Anwar to accelerate reforms over the next six months
following DAP and Pakatan Harapan’s drubbing in the Sabah state
election, where DAP lost all eight seats it contested.
However, political analysts have warned
that the party’s plan to fast-track its reform agenda risks being seen
as mere “political sugar coating” if not accompanied by tangible
measures. FMT, 19/2/2025.
Resign or stay? DAP to decide govt roles on July 12, says Loke
Published: Feb 20, 2026 8:49 AM
⋅
Updated: 9:05 A
DAP
secretary-general Anthony Loke said the party will hold a special
congress on July 12, in which its delegates will determine whether its
officeholders should step down from all government positions.
Sin Chew Daily
reported Loke characterising the gathering as an internal “referendum”,
emphasising that even if members opt to withdraw from executive roles,
the party’s 40 MPs would still support the government led by Prime
Minister Anwar Ibrahim until the next general election.
More than
4,000 central delegates are expected to take part in the vote, making it
the first occasion on which such a consequential political question has
been decided by the party’s top deliberative assembly rather than
solely by its central executive committee (CEC).
"The 40 DAP MPs
will ensure government stability. But our roles in the government,
whether to continue as ministers or deputy ministers, or to resign from
all official positions, including local councillors and positions in
government-linked agencies, are up to the delegates to decide.
"We
cannot want to govern without bearing the burden of governance. Once
the congress decides to remain in the government, the entire DAP must
share the responsibility and act in unison," he added.
He
said the party cannot have it both ways, adding that if the DAP chooses
to remain in the government, it must bear the responsibility and
pressure of governing, and cannot govern while simultaneously opposing
the government.
The party's annual national congress was originally scheduled for September but has been moved up to July.
Loke,
who is also the transport minister, reportedly said the core motion
will determine the party’s direction for the next 12 to 18 months.
He
explained that the CEC previously decided on joining or leaving
political coalitions according to the party constitution, and these
decisions were never put to a vote of delegates.
However, current
circumstances, particularly the impact of the Sabah election, require
delegates to collectively decide the party’s direction.
Sabah polls
In December last year, the CEC vowed
to compile all the feedback it received from Sabah voters during the
recent state election and work towards regaining public confidence.
The
decision was made following the party's dismal performance in the
polls, where it lost all eight of its contests, including six
constituencies it previously won with large majorities in the 2020
election.
Loke
had said at that time the results were a "strong and unmistakable
message from the voters" and reflected a serious crisis of confidence
faced by both DAP and Pakatan Harapan.
He said DAP would also
compile all the feedback it received, and work closely with Anwar to
accelerate a six-month reform agenda.
The Sabah state election saw a wave of rejection for peninsula-based parties.
Parties
such as Harapan’s DAP and PKR, as well as Bersatu and PAS of Perikatan
Nasional, which hold significant political territory in Peninsular
Malaysia, were wiped out or lost in most of their contests.
No to 'backdoor government'
The
Chinese daily further reported Loke as saying that DAP's move was not a
threat to Anwar, as the party would not withdraw its support for the
unity government, much less participate in any "backdoor government"
arrangements.
"I have already made it clear at the Harapan
meeting that this is not a threat, but a review of our role in the
government. We will ensure government stability," he stressed.
Loke
added that once the party’s direction is confirmed at the congress on
July 12, the entire party must act in unison, without personal agendas
or hesitation.
He
also stated that he did not want anyone to suggest that the CEC members
were reluctant to step down merely because of their positions or the
benefits they enjoyed.
"More than half of the delegates have made
the decision, and everyone must obey. Whether it is to step down from
the front line of governance or to continue working hard in the
government, the whole party must be of one mind. If you want to stay,
stay; if you want to leave, leave. There can be no ambiguity.
"Our
role in the government is not just that of a minister, but also a
deputy minister and a position in multiple government agencies; if we
are to be removed, we will be removed together," he added. - Malaysiakini, 20/2/2026
Hamzah was sacked last Friday. Following his dismissal, 16 other Bersatu leaders were expelled the same day.
Of late Opposition leader Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainudin and 16 members of Parliament were sacked from Bersatu raises the question of the rights of political party members who are 'kicked out' from their political parties. Do they not have a right to take the matter to Court so that the Court can consider whether such dismissal was JUST or right? Note that such decisions to expel or suspend members are ultimately decisions of really the incumbent leadership, who may be also in control of the Disciplinary Boards of the party, and also any internal party appeal boards, or processes. Rightly members who verily believe that their expulsion was WRONG ought to have access to court, who will then be able review the party decision to determine whether said dismissals are a wrongful dismissal, or a valid dismissal - where, if the court decides it was a wrongful dismissal, the member will be reinstated as a member of the said political party.
This is the JUST process, and now, it also exist for wrongful dismissal from employment, and also for wrongful dismissal from all other societies and association, except from POLITICAL PARTIES, after Societies Act was amended to introduce new provisions applicable for POLITICAL PARTIES ONLY, and this includes Section 18A, 18B and 18C. 18C reads as follows:-
Section 18C Societies Act 1966 - Decision of political party to be final and conclusive
The decision
of a political party or any person authorized by it or by its
constitution or rules or regulations made under the constitution on the
interpretation of its constitution, rules or regulations or on any
matter relating to the affairs of the party shall be final and
conclusive and such decision shall not be challenged, appealed against,
reviewed, quashed or called in question in any court on any ground, and
no court shall have jurisdiction to entertain or determine any suit,
application, question or proceedings on any ground regarding the
validity of such decision.
The New Part 1A(which includes new Section 18A,18B and 18C) was introduced vide SOCIETIES (AMENDMENT) ACT 1990, which came into force on 12/1/1990, when at that time the number of UMNO MPs was 71 out of 180 seats in the Dewan Rakyat.[And the total number of BN MPs was 127.] In short, BN had more than enough MPs to pass any laws that they needed.
What led to this 'NEW' law that effectively ousted the rights of members in political parties, and totally OUSTED the right of political party members access to Court, as well the jurisdiction of the Courts to hear such cases > making Political Parties all powerful, whereby even their wrongdoings could no more be challenged in Courts?
It all started when the Court declared UMNO illegal - following the contest for Presidency, which Mahathir won, defeating Tengku Razaleigh by a very slim majority of 43. When the issue was taken to court and the Court decided that some of its branches were not properly registered under the Societies Act 1966 - hence decided that UMNO be de-registered. That meant the elections was contentious, as people not qualified, belonging to 'illegal' branches voted.
UMNO had to be re-registered as UMNO Baru, and Semangat 46. This also then led to the Judicial Crisis of 1988, where some Judges were removed.
Thereafter, came the amendment, that placed political parties 'above the law', and the REMOVAL of the rights of political party members to challenge alleged wrong decisions of the party, including the decision to expel members, in Court. It also completely removed the jurisdiction of the Courts - such decision shall not be challenged, appealed against,
reviewed, quashed or called in question in any court on any ground, and
no court shall have jurisdiction to entertain or determine any suit,
application, question or proceedings on any ground regarding the
validity of such decision.
Thus, the power vested in the incumbent leadership of political parties became absolute [ 'decision
of a political party or any person authorized by it or by its
constitution or rules or regulations made under the constitution on the
interpretation of its constitution, rules or regulations or on any
matter relating to the affairs of the party shall be final and
conclusive...'],, and could no longer be challenged in court by members or others[...such decision shall not be challenged, appealed against,
reviewed, quashed or called in question in any court on any ground...], and the Court was prevented from being able to hear such cases [...and
no court shall have jurisdiction to entertain or determine any suit,
application, question or proceedings on any ground regarding the
validity of such decision.].
It is a very BAD law that ought to be ABOLISHED.
PKR benefited from this when it expelled members. UMNO also enjoyed this when it expelled Khairy Jamaluddin and others, suspended some - possibly to kill off the risk of incumbent leaders being challenged in party elections. Other parties also benefited like even BERSATU when Hamzah and others were expelled. The law, as it is, gives no right for members to challenge party decision - even though it was UNJUST and wrong. Many may have wondered why such expelled members did not go to Court to challenge these wrongful dismissals/suspensions... and the reason is this bad law - including section 18C > the members are BARRED by 'bad law' to bring this matters to Court, and in ADDITION, the court's jurisdiction to hear such cases have been removed
What must be done is to REPEAL those draconian provisions that allow the 'dictatorship' of incumbent leaders of political parties, leaving party members NO WAY to challenge such UNJUST decisions in Court. Political parties are no more truly democratic, and member's right of Freedom of Association extinguished - as they no more have any way to challenge UNJUST actions of the party...
This bad law only benefits political parties, but NOT any other associations and societies, where members aggrieved with the decision of their associations/societies can still go to Court to seek JUSTICE even in cases of 'wrongful' termination of membership...
POLITICAL Parties can expel/suspend members for whatever alleged reasons, but what is important is that these 'victimized' members do have the RIGHT and ability to challenge the Party's act of dismissal/expulsion/ etc in COURT - where the Court determines INDEPENDENTLY whether the dismissal/etc is Just and according to law.
Political parties, just like Malaysia, has many members - and every members have a right to their own freedom of expression/opinion - the do not NEED to just just blindly obey existing Leaders and agree with all they say and do - they have the right to have a different VIEW, and even have views that is CONTRARY to existing leaders. They also have the right to lobby and campaign for the removal of existing leaders, and to propose better leaders...That is the nature of human beings in any association - to suppress that freedom turns a 'DEMOCRATIC society' into a DICTATORSHIP of the incumbent leader - where any expression/action of non-support would be EXPULSION from the Party.
I worry about such Political Parties - would they apply the same principles when they are elected to government. Would their solution to those who do not support them - translate into persecution, imprisonment, detention, detention without trial, and worse maybe 'the revocation of one's Citizenship??? That is why we have to see how political parties are - are they tolerant about different views...members 'opposing' incumbent leadership, etc?
In terms of JUSTICE, we shall see which political parties are committed to Democracy, Freedom of Association, etc - in that they will support the move to REPEAL Section 18C, not afraid of members challenging the validity or correctness of party decisions in Court > or are they no different from parties that take the position 'Party decision are FINAL' and cannot be taken to Court. An aggrieved member of the party(maybe now expelled) have no right to courts to challenge any party decision(practically the decisions of the incumbent leadership) - sometimes just to sustain their leadership positions, and remove all possible 'challengers' that may oust them from power????
Why be AFRAID of Court - are they afraid that their decisions are WRONG and/or UNJUST? WHY?WHY?
In Malaysia now, even the decision of the PM, Ministers, Government can be taken to Court - to determine the lawfulness, the correctness and whether it is a Just decision > so, why are political parties alone SO AFRAID?
Hamzah, 16 MPs to join 'new home' next week
By New Straits Times
February 20, 2026 @ 11:19am
Opposition leader Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainudin and 16 members of
Parliament sacked from Bersatu are expected to join a “new home” next
week. — BERNAMA
KUALA
LUMPUR: Opposition leader Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainudin and 16 members of
Parliament sacked from Bersatu are expected to join a "new home" next
week.
Padang Rengas MP Azahari Hassan said the new political platform would
also include Bersatu division chiefs who have already pledged their
support for Hamzah.
"The information I have received is the same (that Hamzah will announce his 'new home') soon, InshaAllah next week.
"I will also join the 'new home' together with the other MPs," he was quoted as saying in Utusan Malaysia.
Former Bersatu supreme council member Yunus Nurdin said the Larut MP
would take over a small party to expand his influence ahead of the next
general election.
He said the "new home" referred to an existing party which Hamzah would assume control of.
"He has given indications about the party, but has yet to reveal its
name. InshaAllah, it will be announced soon as it cannot be delayed," he
said.
Yunus added that Hamzah was not keen on joining a major party, as his
strategy was to lead a party himself to demonstrate his true
capabilities.
He said he supported the move as it would allow Hamzah to become the
main leader of the new party and showcase his genuine leadership.
Former Kepala Batas Bersatu division chief Khaliq Mehtab Mohd Ishaq
said he would remain with Hamzah regardless of where the leader decided
to go.
"Whatever it may be, let him make the announcement because we are his
loyal followers, so he should be the one to announce this matter," he
said.
He expected Bersatu to be affected once Hamzah made the announcement.
"Bersatu will certainly be impacted. When a party has strayed from
its founding principles, Bersatu leaders who are aware of this should
leave the party and join Hamzah," he said.
Last Friday, Hamzah, who is also the Larut MP, was expelled from
Bersatu following a decision by the party's disciplinary board under
Clause 22.5 of the party constitution.
Along with Hamzah, three other Bersatu MPs were expelled: Wan Ahmad
Fayhsal Wan Ahmad Kamal (Machang), Captain Azahari Hasan (Padang
Rengas), and Fathul Huzir Ayob (Gerik).
Hamzah was sacked last Friday. Following his dismissal, 16 other Bersatu leaders were expelled the same day.
Among those dismissed were Bersatu Supreme Leadership Council member
and Machang MP Wan Ahmad Fayhsal Wan Ahmad Kamal, and Datuk Zainol Fadzi
Paharudin, a party council member and Sungai Manik assemblyman. - NST, 20/2/2026
PKR expels 28 members, including three branch leaders, over dual party membership
Party’s Central Leadership Council confirms expulsions following verification of allegiance to other political parties
Updated 9 months ago · Published on 11 May 2025 5:12PM
Expulsions followed a thorough verification process conducted by the party’s Central Leadership Council (MPP) - May 11, 2025
THE People’s Justice Party (PKR) has
expelled 28 members, including three recently elected branch leaders,
after it was confirmed they held membership in other political parties. PKR Secretary-General Dr Fuziah Salleh
said the expulsions followed a thorough verification process conducted
by the party’s Central Leadership Council (MPP).
“In the initial stage, 36 individuals
were identified, and the MPP confirmed their termination following the
close of branch-level nominations. However, they were given two weeks to
appeal,” she told Bernama on Sunday.
Of those, only 11 submitted appeals along
with proof of their commitment to the party’s cause. “These individuals
were subsequently reinstated as members,” Fuziah added.
Further action was taken following the
conclusion of the branch elections, resulting in the removal of three
additional leaders: the branch chiefs of Jempol and Pasir Salak, as well
as the Women’s Wing leader for Besut.
Fuziah stressed that verifying such
allegations is not straightforward. “We often receive complaints about
individuals holding membership in two or three parties. My first step is
always to determine which party they joined most recently,” she said.
“If it is not Keadilan, then there is
reason for disciplinary action. But action is only taken when there is
evidence,” she added, noting that many complaints lack complete
documentation or a clear timeline.
PKR’s upcoming National Congress,
including the Youth (AMK) and Women’s Wing congresses, is scheduled to
take place from 22 to 24 May in Johor Bahru, with voting set for 23 May.
- May 11, 2025 - Vibes, 11/5/2025
UMNO expels former Malaysian health minister Khairy, suspends ex-defence minister Hishammuddin
The moves, announced after a party supreme council meeting, are
part of a "mass cleansing" threatened by UMNO president Ahmad Zahid
Hamidi to get rid of "saboteurs".
File photos of Khairy Jamaluddin (left) and Hishammuddin Hussein. (Photos: Bernama, CNA/Fadza Ishak)
Aqil Haziq Mahmud
28 Jan 2023 12:50AM
(Updated: 28 Jan 2023 01:04AM)
SINGAPORE: The United Malays
National Organisation (UMNO) has expelled former health minister Khairy
Jamaluddin, while former defence minister Hishammuddin Hussein was among
a number of politicians suspended from the party.
According to a statement issued on Friday
night (Jan 27) following a party supreme council meeting, UMNO
secretary-general Ahmad Maslan said former youth chief Mr Khairy and
supreme council member Noh Omar have been sacked for breaching party
disciplinary rules.
“UMNO
members who have been sacked based on disciplinary breaches … due to
wrongdoings during the 15th General Election (GE15) are Tan Sri Noh Omar
and Saudara Khairy Jamaluddin Abu Bakar,” he said.
Mr Hishammuddin, former UMNO information chief Shahril Hamdan as well
as UMNO leaders Fathul Bari Mat Jahya, Maulizan Bujang and Salim Sharif
have been suspended for six years, he said.
Others who have been sacked include five party members from the Pasir
Gudang division, nine from the Putrajaya division, two from the Tanjung
Karang division, and 26 members from UMNO’s Pahang chapter.
“Among their wrongdoings are becoming independent
candidates, candidates for parties other than Barisan Nasional (BN) and
being involved in helping opponent parties during GE15,” Mr Ahmad said.
The Friday supreme council meeting
was keenly watched after UMNO president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said a day
earlier that the party will undergo “mass cleansing" to get rid of
"saboteurs" and those who have "shot themselves in the foot".
He
said this included members who allegedly sabotaged the party and its
candidates during GE15, 10 of whom Ahmad Zahid identified by name during
the party’s recent general assembly from Jan 11 to Jan 14.
The 10 politicians, who included Mr Hishammuddin, had sided with
Perikatan Nasional (PN) chairman Muhyiddin Yassin in forming the new
government, Ahmad Zahid said.
Mr Shahril had resigned as information chief in the immediate
aftermath of GE15, urging Ahmad Zahid to take responsibility for the
party’s defeat by stepping down.
Mr Noh resigned as the chief of UMNO’s
Selangor chapter in November after saying that he no longer had
confidence in Ahmad Zahid.
Mr Khairy had been a vocal opponent of a motion tabled during the
recent party general assembly. The motion was to block UMNO’s top two
posts - party president and deputy president - from being challenged at
the party’s internal elections, which must be held by May.
Rumours of such a motion had swirled as some prominent party members
came out to say they preferred for the posts to remain uncontested,
citing the need to maintain party unity as it rebuilds following its
dismal performance at GE15.
Ahmad
Zahid said during his party policy speech on Jan 13 that he was
confident in the democratic process and would leave it to the delegates
to decide on the issue. He had consistently maintained that he was ready
to defend his position.
When a no-contest motion was first tabled by an UMNO delegate from
Negeri Sembilan later that day, it was met with boos in the convention
hall.
But the motion was passed by the general assembly
the next day in a majority vote, paving the way for Ahmad Zahid and his
deputy Mohamad Hasan to serve at least another term.
Mr Khairy alleged in a TikTok video on the same day that some
delegates’ seat tags at the convention hall were removed, to be replaced
with those of "imported" delegates who would push through the motion.
This prompted a rebuke by UMNO Sungai Besar division chief Jamal
Yunos, who told reporters on Saturday that Mr Khairy was tarnishing the
party by spreading baseless claims.
UMNO’s most recent leadership contest, in 2018, saw Ahmad Zahid fend
off challenges for the presidency from Mr Khairy and former veteran MP
Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah.
Mr
Khairy was a three-term MP for Rembau, Negeri Sembilan before he was
moved to contest in the urban constituency of Sungai Buloh in Selangor
during the GE15 on Nov 19. Urban seats are considered Pakatan Harapan
(PH) strongholds. Mr Khairy eventually lost in a seven-cornered contest.
In a tweet after the party’s announcement on Friday night, Mr Khairy
wrote: “Tonight I was sacked by the party I loved, that I was loyal to.
“Unbowed, unbent, unbroken.”
The BN coalition - led by UMNO - emerged a distant third in the
election by winning only 30 seats, behind PH’s 81 seats and PN’s 74
seats.
But PH, BN and other parties have formed a unity government while PN -
comprising Parti Islam Se-Malaysia (PAS), Parti Pribumi Bersatu
Malaysia (Bersatu) and other parties - is in the opposition.
Rumours
are swirling that Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad has resigned
but this has not been verified or denied by the PMO. - Bernama pic
KUALA
LUMPUR: If the turmoil surrounding the country's political arena was at
boiling point yesterday, the temperature is rising even more today with
rumours that the Prime Minister has resigned.
While the New Straits Times is working to verify this, it is learned
that the Prime Minister's Office has neither confirmed nor denied this,
saying only that a press statement would be issued soon.
News portal The Malaysian Insight carried a report stating that the
prime minister has sent his resignation letter to the Yang di-Pertuan
Agong, adding that a statement would be issued soon.
Meanwhile, it is also learned that Zuraida Kamaruddin and Datuk Seri Mohamed Azmin Ali have been sacked from PKR.
The announcement was made by the party's sec-gen Datuk Seri Saifuddin
Nasution Ismail at a press conference at the PKR headquarters today.
"There has been an open act of betrayal by several players who hold
key roles, against the party's stand in the matter pertaining to the
posisiton of the prime minister," he said.
Mohamed Azmin is PKR deputy president while Zuraida held the post of vice president.
"Due to the open betrayal, it has created an atmosphere which has
undermined the PH government. It has affected our (country's) economy
and politics. We see (the fall) of the ringgit, share market and others.
"The MPP (Central Leadership Council) have taken the position that
Azmin and Zuraida herewith sacked with immediate effect," he added. - NST, 24/2/2020
DAP expels four members for opposing the party's candidates in the state polls
By MUKHRIZ MAT HUSIN
04 Aug 2023 06:05pm
DAP Disciplinary Committee chairman Datuk Ngeh Koo Ham - FILE PIX
SHAH
ALAM - DAP has dismissed four of its members, with immediate effect
following their opposition to the candidates endorsed by the party in
the state elections.
Its Disciplinary Committee chairman Datuk
Ngeh Koo Ham, stated that the four members were also candidates for the
State Legislative Assembly in Penang and Selangor.
Among these candidates are independent candidate for the Bagan Dalam state assembly seat, Satees Muniandy; independent candidate for the Perai state assembly seat, David Marshel Pakianathan; Parti Rakyat Malaysia candidate for the Kuala Kubu Bahru state assembly seat in Selangor, Chng Boon Lai; and Perikatan Nasional candidate for the Pandamaran state assembly seat in Selangor, Gunalan Balakrishnan.
"The Disciplinary Committee has reached a final decision that any member who becomes a candidate opposing the candidates endorsed by DAP in the elections for the State Legislative Assembly or Parliament will be automatically dismissed.
"It has been informed that the following individuals have become candidates opposing the DAP-endorsed candidates in the respective areas," he said in a statement on Friday.
Ngeh stated that members are reminded not to support or assist those who have been dismissed or former members during the election campaign period.
Disciplinary action will be taken if they do so. "Members are also reminded that disciplinary action will be taken against those who act contrary to the party's interests," he said. - Sinar Daily, 4/8/2023
APA PADA NAMA
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Thank you, Malaysians
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Before the lights go out on The Malaysian Insider at midnight, we say
"Thank You" to our readers. TMI started on February 25, 2008. Today, after
eight year...
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