Senin, 05 Juli 2021

Malaysia's Parliament to sit for 5 days starting July 26 following calls from King for it to reconvene - The Straits Times

KUALA LUMPUR (REUTERS) - The Malaysian government has agreed to advise the country's King that Parliament will resume for five days from July 26 to Aug 2, the office of Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said on Monday (July 5).

The sitting will be held to present a national recovery plan to lawmakers and to amend necessary laws to conduct hybrid Parliament meetings, the office said in a statement.

Malaysia's King, Sultan Abdullah Ahmad Shah, had previously conveyed his wish that Parliament sit before Aug 1 during a meeting with the Speakers of both the Lower and Upper Houses of Parliament. It was the second time he had urged Parliament to sit soon.

Tan Sri Muhyiddin had previously said that Parliament would sit by September at the earliest, when the Covid-19 outbreak eases. But he has come under increasing pressure to call for a sitting following the King's comments.

Although Parliament is supposed to sit within six months of its last sitting in December, this constitutional provision is suspended during the current state of emergency, announced by the King on Jan 11. He had granted Mr Muhyiddin's request for a state of emergency to help Malaysia contain a worsening Covid-19 outbreak. But the crisis has become worse during the emergency period.

Malaysia has been under a total lockdown since June 1, with June the deadliest month since the pandemic started in the country.

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2021-07-05 07:49:20Z
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Over 17000 in S'pore received Sinovac Covid-19 vaccine; 2 non-serious adverse events reported - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - As at last Saturday (July 3), 17,296 people here have received one dose of Sinovac's Covid-19 vaccine, Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said on Monday.

In a written response to several parliamentary questions on the vaccine by Mr Yip Hon Weng (Yio Chu Kang), Mr Ong added that as of June 29, two non-serious adverse events relating to the Sinovac vaccine had been reported.

He did not elaborate on what the events were, but said that the Ministry of Health (MOH) and the Health Sciences Authority (HSA) would continue to monitor the situation and provide updates if any significant safety concerns are detected.

The first batch of Sinovac vaccines arrived in Singapore on Feb 23, but the vaccine has yet to be approved for use in the national vaccination programme.

This is because the drugmaker has still not submitted certain data which the HSA needs to complete its evaluation of the vaccine's safety and efficacy.

Mr Ong confirmed this was still the case on Monday, in response to opposition MP Gerald Giam (Aljunied) who asked whether the vaccine could be made part of the national vaccination programme for those who have contraindications to the vaccines by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna.

Contraindications are reasons that an individual should not continue with a particular medicine or treatment, as it may be harmful to them.

In the case of Singapore's Covid-19 vaccines, this includes those who had allergic reactions to the first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines, or those who allergic to other vaccines and have been assessed by an expert to be unsuitable for the two vaccines.

Making Sinovac's vaccine part of the national vaccination programme would allow such individuals to get their jabs at vaccination centres and polyclinics, and to be eligible for the Vaccine Injury Financial Assistance Programme (Vifap) should they develop any adverse reactions, noted Mr Giam.

Currently, those who wish to take Sinovac's vaccine may do so only at certain private healthcare providers across the island, and are not eligible for Vifap.

Mr Giam also asked if people who have contraindications to Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna's vaccines but not Sinovac's could be given priority to receive Sinovac's vaccine, ahead of those who simply choose Sinovac's vaccine out of personal preference.

In his written response, Mr Ong said that as Sinovac's vaccine is still not authorised by HSA under the Pandemic Special Access Route and has not been recommended as part of the national vaccination programme by the expert committee on Covid-19 vaccination, those who wish to take the jab will not be eligible for Vifap.

Noting that "only a small group" here are contraindicated to Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna's vaccines, Mr Ong added that sufficient stock of Sinovac's vaccine had been set aside for their priority use.

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2021-07-05 15:22:36Z
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Indonesia seeks more oxygen for COVID-19 sick amid shortage - CNA

JAKARTA: Parts of Indonesia lack oxygen supplies as the number of critically ill COVID-19 patients who need it increases, the nation's pandemic response leader said on Monday (Jul 5), after dozens of sick people died at a public hospital that ran out of its central supply.

“Due to an increase of three to four times the amount (of oxygen) needed, the distribution has been hampered,” said Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, the coordinating maritime affairs and investment minister.

The government is asking oxygen producers to dedicate their full supply to medical needs and will import it if needed, Pandjaitan said at the virtual news conference.

This statement comes after Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikit said the government guaranteed oxygen supply for COVID-19 patients on Jun 26.

READ: COVID-19: Indonesia ramps up oxygen output after dozens die amid scarcity

At least 63 COVID-19 patients have died during treatment at Dr Sardjito General Hospital in Yogyakarta city since Saturday — 33 of them during the outage of its central liquid oxygen supply even though the hospital switched to using oxygen cylinders during that period, hospital spokesman Banu Hermawan said.

“Their deteriorating condition contributed the most to their deaths,” Hermawan said.

The hospital’s central oxygen supply was operational again at 4.45am on Sunday, after 15 tonnes of liquid oxygen were delivered. Medical oxygen comes in liquid and compressed forms.

Yogyakarta Governor Sri Sultan Hamengkubuwono X said the hospitals needed more oxygen than before because of the increasing number of COVID-19 patients in the province.

“We need more oxygen supply. But it does not mean there is no supply at all,” he said.

READ: Indonesia rolls out tougher curbs as COVID-19 cases skyrocket

Indonesia, the world’s fourth-most populous country, has seen a rapid surge in COVID-19 cases in the last two weeks. The Health Ministry recorded 27,233 new cases with 555 deaths from the virus on Sunday. The country has recorded more than 2,284,000 cases, including 60,582 deaths.

Pandjaitan said the incubation period means the number of people infected will continuously increase through mid-July.

“It can increase again in the future if we cannot be disciplined,” he said.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and its developments

Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram

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2021-07-05 06:21:53Z
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Minggu, 04 Juli 2021

Canada's Hong Kong diaspora helps new arrivals with jobs, housing, psychotherapy - CNA

OTTAWA: Hong Kongers in Canada are banding together to help the latest wave of immigrants fleeing Beijing's tightening grip on their city.

Networks across the country, some descended from groups set up after the Tiananmen Square incident in China in 1989, are offering new arrivals everything from jobs and accommodation to legal and mental health services and even car rides to the grocery store.

"We are in a battle. These are my comrades, people who share the same values," one 38-year-old who asked to be identified only as Ho told Reuters. "Who is going to provide that helping hand if I'm not going to?"

Ho runs a cooking school near Toronto, and said he hired a former aide to a Hong Kong democratic politician to promote his business online, and recently took on a new kitchen assistant who took part in the city's 2019 protests.

Ho, who came to Canada as a teenager before Britain handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997, is just one person helping the network of support groups that have been formed in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary and Edmonton in the past two years.

Immigrants looking after each other is not unique. But people in Canada, which has one of the world's biggest overseas concentrations of people from Hong Kong, told Reuters the situation is urgent because many of the people they are seeking to help fear they will be arrested for taking part in past protests and may not be able to afford professional help to resettle overseas. 

"It's my natural duty," said Ho, who asked not to be identified by his full name, and did not name his new employees, for fear of problems with Hong Kong authorities. "If I was in Hong Kong, I would be in a desperate position. If there was a helping hand, I would hold onto it." 

Eric Li, a co-founder of the Toronto Hong Kong Parent Group, accompanies a newcomer to an interview
Eric Li, a co-founder of the Toronto Hong Kong Parent Group, which has been connecting new immigrants to employers who support the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong, accompanies a newcomer to a government interview in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on Jun 15, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Carlos Osorio)

Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law on Hong Kong a year ago, outlawing a wide range of political activities and effectively putting an end to public protests. Many pro-democracy activists and politicians, including prominent Beijing critics Joshua Wong and Jimmy Lai, have been arrested under the new law or for protest-related offences. Many people have already left the territory.

READ: Hong Kong court denies bail to democracy activist

The Hong Kong government and China say the law was necessary to restore stability after the sometimes violent protests of 2019, and that it preserves freedoms guaranteed by Beijing after Britain handed Hong Kong back to China. 

"The Hong Kong national security law upholds the rights and freedoms of Hong Kong people," said a spokesperson for Hong Kong's Security Bureau. "Any law enforcement actions taken by Hong Kong law enforcement agencies are based on evidence, strictly according to the law, for the acts of the persons or entities concerned."

CANADIAN 'PARENTS'

Britain and Canada are two of the most popular destinations for people leaving Hong Kong after the imposition of the national security law.

About 34,000 people applied to live in Britain in the first two months after the country introduced a new fast-track to residency for Hong Kongers earlier this year, according to the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford, citing government data.

About a fifth of that number applied for temporary and permanent residency in Canada in the first four months of this year, according to the government. The total number of Hong Kongers going to Canada is likely larger but hard to track as many already hold Canadian passports from earlier waves of emigration.

Hundreds of thousands of Hong Kongers moved there in the 1980s and 1990s for fear they would lose wealth and property, or much of their freedom, after China took back control of the city. 

But the city prospered and retained freedoms unavailable in mainland China, so many Hong Kongers returned home, with some keeping a foot in Canada. The latest wave of emigration looks more likely to be permanent, as China stamps its authority on Hong Kong.

Eric Li, a co-founder of the Toronto Hong Kong Parent Group, accompanies a newcomer to an interview
Eric Li, a co-founder of the Toronto Hong Kong Parent Group, which has been connecting new immigrants to employers who support the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong, brings a newcomer to a government interview in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on Jun 15, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Carlos Osorio)

Canada loosened its restrictions on admitting Hong Kongers after the imposition of the national security law last year. It set up a new work visa programme aimed chiefly at young Hong Kongers with a degree or diploma from a post-secondary institution in the last five years, along with two pathways to permanent residency for Hong Kongers in Canada who have recently worked or completed post-secondary studies in the country.

The new coronavirus has complicated matters for new arrivals. Under Canada's latest travel restrictions, even those who have obtained permission to live and work in Canada through the new programme are only allowed to enter the country if they have a job offer.

READ: Hong Kong silenced as China celebrates Chinese Communist Party centenary

That is where the support network comes in. The Toronto Hong Kong Parent Group has so far assisted 40 people, half of whom have already received three-year permits, according to Eric Li, co-founder of the group and former president of the Canada-Hong Kong Link, a rights advocacy organisation established in 1997. 

Li said the group has encouraged 20 employers to offer jobs to people arriving from Hong Kong, including Ho's cooking school, restaurants, a construction company, a travel agency, and a family who hired a Cantonese tutor for their children.

The Toronto group also has interpreters, lawyers and psychotherapists on hand to help new arrivals and has 10 rooms it can provide as free, temporary accommodation. The rooms are in the members' or their friends' homes.

Volunteers in Calgary said they have helped at least 29 asylum seekers, picking many up from the airport and driving them to doctors' offices, grocery stores and banks. 

STEPPING STONE

Canada has long had one of the largest populations of overseas Hong Kongers, some of whom came together in 2019 to hold rallies in solidarity with the protests back home.

Many of the new groups can trace their roots to activist organisations that formed in response to Beijing's crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in and around Tiananmen Square in 1989, or the 1997 handover. The groups already have contacts with social agencies, such as Community Family Services of Ontario or the York Support Services Network, or with churches and professionals willing to help.

READ: Hong Kong security law 'a human rights emergency': Amnesty

The Vancouver Parent Group, supported by the Vancouver Society in Support of Democratic Movement that formed in 1989, has raised more than C$80,000 (US$65,963) to help Hong Kong protesters settling in Canada with living costs and legal fees.

Vancouver "parents" show new arrivals how to navigate public transport or get a library card, and organise donations of winter clothing or kitchenware, according to Ken Tung, one of the volunteers.

Tung said their aim is to "give them a stepping stone to move on."

Eric Li, a co-founder of the Toronto Hong Kong Parent Group, accompanies a newcomer to an interview
Eric Li, a co-founder of the Toronto Hong Kong Parent Group, which has been connecting new immigrants to employers who support the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong, brings a newcomer to a government interview in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on Jun 15, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Carlos Osorio)

Alison, a protester who left Hong Kong last year after many of her friends there were arrested for taking part in protests, was one of those helped by the Calgary group. 

Along with a few other new arrivals, she launched the Soteria Institute, named after the Greek goddess of safety and salvation, to offer free, weekly, online English lessons, resume-writing workshops and emotional support.

"We understand what they're experiencing," said Alison, who asked to be identified by only one name. "We try to use our experience to help out more Hong Kong exiles."

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2021-07-04 23:02:08Z
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Death toll climbs to 47 in Philippine military plane crash, 49 others injured - CNA

MANILA: All 96 passengers of the Philippine Air Force plane that crashed on Sunday (Jul 4) have all been accounted for, military chief Cirilito Sobejana said on Monday.

The death toll from the crash was 47, while 49 military personnel were injured, Sobejana told Reuters in a phone message.

The Department of National Defence said on Sunday three civilians on the ground were also killed, and four civilians were injured.

Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said he had ordered an investigation of the incident, which would begin after rescue and recovery operations had been completed.

Deadly Philippines troop plane crash
Army personnel work at the site after a Philippines Air Force Lockheed C-130 plane carrying troops crashed on landing in Patikul, Sulu province, Philippines on Jul 4, 2021. (Photo: Armed Forces of the Philippines - Joint Task Force Sulu via Reuters)

READ: At least 45 dead after Philippine military plane crashes

Most of the 96 people on board the Lockheed C-130 Hercules transport aircraft were recent army graduates. 

The military command said the soldiers aboard had the rank of private and were being deployed to their battalions.

The plane had attempted to land at Jolo airport, but overshot the runway without touching down. It failed to regain enough power and height and crashed at nearby Patikul.

"A number of soldiers were seen jumping out of the aircraft before it hit the ground, sparing them from the explosion caused by the crash," the Joint Task Force Sulu said in a statement.

It was not immediately clear how many jumped or whether they had survived.

Photos of the crash site released by the Joint Task Force-Sulu showed the damaged tail and the smoking wreckage of the fuselage's back section laying near coconut trees.

Images published by local media outlet Pondohan TV on its Facebook page showed the wreckage engulfed in flames and a plume of thick black smoke rising above houses located near the site.

Jolo airport has a 1,200m runway that usually takes civilian turboprop flights though occasionally some military flights, according to a Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines spokesperson.

Jolo island, part of the Sulu archipelago, is about 950km south of the capital, Manila.

The army in the sprawling Philippine archipelago has been fighting a long war against Islamist militants from Abu Sayyaf and other factions.

"They were supposed to join us in our fight against terrorism," said Commander William N Gonzales of Joint Task Force Sulu.

philippines military plan crash jolo sulu
A Philippine military plane carrying troops crashed in a southern province Sunday after missing the runway on July 4, 2021. (Photo: Facebook/Rotary Clubs of the Philippines)

The Lockheed C-130H Hercules aircraft, with registration 5125, had only recently arrived in the Philippines.

It was one of two aircraft provided by the US government through the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, a government website said in January. It quoted an air force spokesman as saying the aircraft would boost capability for heavy airlift missions.

Senator Richard Gordon said it was the fourth military aircraft accident this year with "mass casualties".

"Are we buying defective crafts... (with) the people's money?" he tweeted.

Lorenzana said the previous mishaps were being probed and dismissed speculation about the causes as "disrespectful" to victims and their families.

Presidential spokesman Harry Roque described the accident as "very unfortunate".

The US offered "deep condolences," national security adviser Jake Sullivan said in a statement released by the White House.

"We stand shoulder to shoulder with our Philippine allies at this difficult time and are ready to provide all appropriate support to the Philippines' response effort," he said.

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2021-07-05 00:00:52Z
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'Fair wear and tear' disputes over rental property: What can tenants and landlords do? - CNA

SINGAPORE: After seven years in Singapore, Ms Ngo was excited to take on new opportunities in Canada, along with her husband and baby. 

But issues with their landlord arose when they ended their two-year lease for a rental flat in Singapore.

Out of their S$3,600 two-month deposit, their landlord withheld about S$2,000 for damage to the flat, as well as the cost of deep cleaning and a prorated agent’s fee.

Some of the damage cited included sink crack lines, tile discolouration and kitchen top stain. 

According to Ms Ngo, who did not want to reveal her full name, the landlord also pointed out the need to replace the toilet bowl seat, cooker hood bulb and repair a toilet light. 

“I was very shocked that when we hand(ed) over, (the landlord) was very demanding,” she told CNA over the phone from Canada.

She and her husband are disputing several of the issues as “fair wear and tear”. 

According to property agents and lawyers, fair wear and tear refer to damage to the property through ordinary use of the premises.

This could include furniture being worn out at the edges, scratches and marks on parquet flooring, fading of curtain colours under sunlight, as well as oil and fume stains in a kitchen hood.

READ: 8 useful tips to make the renting process stress-free for tenants

“A landlord cannot deduct the cost of these things from the deposit as it would be unreasonable to expect the property to be in exactly the same condition at the end of a tenancy as it was at the beginning,” said Ms Victoria Lee Soo Pin, a counsel at IRB Law.

However, issues like a burned or badly stained carpet, a lost key or a stain on the ceiling caused by an overflowing bath or sink can be claimed from the deposit, she added.

If a dining chair that is part of a set is “irreparably broken”, the landlord could claim for the cost of replacing a single chair, said Ms Lee. But the landlord may not claim the cost of the whole set.

RESPONSIBILITIES OF TENANTS AND LANDLORDS

​​​​​​​IRB Law sees about 50 to 60 cases a month involving landlords and tenants, Ms Lee said.

She added that common issues are about “real damage” caused to the rental property, as well as landlords refusing to return tenancy deposits for issues such as broken items and odours in the house. 

“In fact, we see more cases of actual damage where the equipment breaks down, such as the air-conditioner, washing machine, TV, big-ticket items during the course of the tenancy,” she said.

Another common area of dispute is cleaning, as it can be a “subjective issue”, she added. “Some instances of fair wear and tear can be improved with a good clean.”

Ms Lee noted that tenancy agreements would usually state that a property must be cleaned to a professional standard when a tenant checks out. While this standard may vary according to the property's original condition, this generally means cleaning to a “very high standard”, she said.

When returning a property, tenants should present a detailed invoice from the cleaner to prove that they have cleaned the house, Ms Lee said.

READ: Renting in Singapore: The most common reasons a landlord might reject you

Sometimes, tenants misunderstand their responsibilities, said Ms Lee. For instance, tenants are generally responsible for replacing light bulbs when they leave.

As for landlords, some of them think they can use the tenant’s deposit to make general repairs.

“The deposit belongs to the tenant and should be returned to the tenant at the end of the tenancy. Any deductions to tenancy deposits should be discussed and agreed on by both parties,” she said.

HOW TENANTS AND LANDLORDS CAN PROTECT THEMSELVES

According to Ms Ngo, she had inspected the house before moving in, but “not so much” as it came without any furniture. 

“In the past, I usually had problems with the landlord’s furniture. I never had any problem with the wall, toilet sink or anything like that … so I wasn’t paying a lot of attention since the unit came without any furniture,” she told CNA.

She did not take many photographs either, as it “wasn’t anything obvious” or were not things she usually paid attention to. As such, she does not have photos of the items or issues she is disputing with her landlord.

Disputes over fair wear and tear is a “common problem”, said Propnex key executive officer Lim Yong Hock. “It can be a common issue, especially if they were not very specific at the point of handover.”

There are two reports at the point of handover, said KnightFrank property agent Alvin Yeo. The condition report should be as descriptive as possible and backed up with pictures.

When tenants move in, it is best for them to take many pictures and send them to the landlord to make sure they acknowledge the condition.

For any incidents that happen midway through the tenancy, tenants should flag it immediately, he added.

It is also important for tenants, landlords and agents to set expectations for any potential damage, said Mr Yeo.

He noted, for instance, a common dispute concerning walls that have scuffs near electrical switches. Some landlords might expect tenants to repaint the whole wall or even the whole house.

READ: Renting in Singapore? Here are 5 budgeting steps that are often overlooked

“So it’s best to clarify this at the beginning of the tenancy agreement - the walls, do you expect me to repaint the whole place, or can I return it to you with some scuffs?,” said Mr Yeo. 

He gave another example of parquet flooring. While it is normal for some blemishes to appear after a while, some landlords might expect the floor to be in “showroom condition”, he said.

Chemical cleaning of air-conditioning units could be another source of dispute.

“So maybe it’s good that everyone comes up with a checklist and say that these are all the potential pitfalls, we better clarify,” he said.

The tenancy agreement should outline key issues so that tenants are fully informed, said Ms Lee. “The tenants should be clear as to what they can and cannot do.”

A good property agent should also warn tenants in advance on what constitutes misuse, she added.

AGENT’S ROLE

When Ms Ngo and her husband received the charges for the damage, they tried to explain the situation to the agent, saying some of the materials were more susceptible to stains.

She said that although they tried to negotiate to split some of the cost, especially for wear and tear, the landlord was unwilling to change his position.

Ms Ngo then told the agent that she engage a third party to mediate, and that they would file a claim at the Small Claims Tribunal. 

“From that point on, he just stopped all communication with us. He didn’t read any of our WhatsApp messages, which was our only means of communication. When we tried to call through WhatsApp, he didn’t answer,” she said.

READ: How much should you spend on rent in Singapore?

According to Propnex’s Mr Lim, agents are under no obligation to resolve disputes between tenants and landlords.

“The duty of the agent, according to CEA (Council for Estate Agents), ends after we hand over the premises to the parties,” he said, adding that such disputes are usually resolved without the agent.

However, agents might get involved when tenants or landlords write to the authorities to complain about the agent, he noted.

In Mr Yeo’s experience, the agents “usually (end up as) the punching bag”, and they will have to manage the expectations on both sides.

WHAT TO DO DURING A DISPUTE?

When tenants and landlords get into a dispute, they can go to the Small Claims Tribunal or try mediation, said Mr Yeo. 

There is no way for agents to help with resolving disputes, said Mr Lim, adding that agents usually refer parties to an independent mediator.

There are several factors tenants should consider if they disagree with their landlords’ assessment of damages to the property, said Ms Lee.

This includes the age and condition of the property at the start of the tenancy, the length of a tenancy or lease and the number of people living in the property.

For example, wear and tear during a five-year tenancy will be greater than a six month period, and a family of five with young children will inflict more wear and tear than a young professional couple out working most of the day, she said.

If there is damage to the property, the landlord should see if it is possible to repair or clean the item first, rather than disposing of the item to make the tenant pay for a new one.

In cases where an item needs to be replaced, the landlord should not replace the item with a better one, as they are not supposed to make a profit from it, said Ms Lee.

“It is down to the landlord to prove that the tenant has damaged the item through misuse. This might involve getting contractors to ascertain whether there is misuse and giving a quote to repair the damage,” she added.

“If parties are still in conflict, see if it is possible to have a third party such as the property agent who rented the unit act as the go-between."

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2021-07-04 22:04:34Z
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Muhyiddin government on shaky ground as Umno faction threatens to pull support - The Straits Times

KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysian politics is in for a bumpy week, with turmoil sweeping through Umno, a major component member of Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin's beleaguered Perikatan Nasional (PN) coalition, and mounting concern over the Premier's health.

The simmering tensions in Umno have broken out into the open in recent days over plans by the faction headed by party president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi to withdraw its support for the Muhyiddin administration as early as this week, according to senior Umno officials close to ongoing discussions.

The Umno officials said more than two-thirds of the party's 48-member policymaking Supreme Council have individually pledged their support to break away from the PN coalition that is coming under growing public opprobrium over its handling of the Covid-19 crisis and the deepening economic hardship faced by ordinary Malaysians due to a nationwide lockdown.

Separately, Umno politicians opposed to Zahid have come out to attack the party president, arguing that the planned move by the Supreme Council was contrary to the resolution at a party general congress in March to break away from the governing coalition only at the next general election, which must be held before mid-2023.

Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz, a veteran Umno MP and the self-appointed spokesman of the faction aligned to Tan Sri Muhyiddin, said that at least 25 out of the total 38 parliamentarians from the party will abide by the congress session's resolution in March.

Umno officials aligned to Zahid said that the situation in the coming days remains precarious for the PN coalition and Mr Muhyiddin, who has been in hospital since last Wednesday (June 30) after being stricken with diarrhoea.

"Zahid is holding all the cards now and the mood is that the longer Umno stays, the more the party will be tainted (by its association with Muhyiddin)," said a senior Umno official aligned to the party president.

This official and others in the Zahid faction noted that once the Umno Supreme Council declares its decision to leave PN, Umno ministers and elected MPs from the party who have been appointed to positions in government-linked entities will be directed to resign or risk disciplinary action, which includes being sacked from the party.

Even if the Umno MPs aligned to Mr Muhyiddin remain in government as independent elected representatives in Parliament, the PN government will lose its already razor-thin majority in the 222-member Parliament, raising more questions over the Premier's ability to cling on to power.

The 74-year-old Mr Muhyiddin was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2018 and was last given a clean bill of health from the disease last year. He has yet to comment on the turmoil in Umno or how his government will deal with any loss of political support from a crucial member of his coalition.

In a statement issued on Sunday, the Prime Minister's Office said that Mr Muhyiddin was being treated for a digestive system infection with intravenous antibiotics and was expected to be discharged from hospital in the coming days.

The political instability is expected to shift public focus in the coming days to the country's royal households.

Malaysia's nine sultans have in recent weeks broken away from their traditional symbolic roles in the country's constitutional monarchy to take a more interventionist position in national politics.

In mid-June, the sultans, who rotate under five-year terms to serve as king, declared that the country must reconvene Parliament as soon as possible. Sittings have been suspended since a state of emergency was declared in January.

In a separate meeting with the Speakers of the Lower and Upper Houses last week, Sultan Abdullah Ahmad Shah, the current King, reiterated his view that Parliament should sit before the state of emergency expires on Aug 1, to debate the government's handling of the pandemic and its economic fallout.

Umno politicians said that they expect that the withdrawal of the party from the PN coalition will very likely prompt Sultan Abdullah to pressure Mr Muhyiddin to show that he still has majority support to remain as premier, through an urgent parliamentary sitting.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMidGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnN0cmFpdHN0aW1lcy5jb20vYXNpYS9zZS1hc2lhL211aHlpZGRpbi1nb3Zlcm5tZW50LXVuZGVyLXNpZWdlLWFzLXVtbm8tZmFjdGlvbi10aHJlYXRlbnMtdG8tcHVsbC1zdXBwb3J00gEA?oc=5

2021-07-04 09:35:15Z
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