Jumat, 29 Maret 2024

Moscow attack survivor: four minutes are 'a whole lifetime' - Financial Times

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  1. Moscow attack survivor: four minutes are 'a whole lifetime'  Financial Times
  2. Commentary: What will Putin do after deadly Moscow concert hall attack?  CNA
  3. Islamic State spokesperson praises group's attack on concert hall in Russia  The Straits Times
  4. Caught up in concert shooting, a Russian woman said goodbye to the world  Reuters
  5. US repeatedly warned Russia ahead of Moscow attack, White House says  The Guardian US

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2024-03-29 05:00:18Z
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Thai PM says legalising casinos good for revenue and jobs, eyes entertainment project - CNA

BANGKOK: Thailand's government is considering drafting a casino bill and if passed by parliament, it would generate more jobs and state revenue and allow for the creation of a mega entertainment project, Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin said on Friday (Mar 29).

Casinos are illegal in Thailand and the only gambling allowed is on state-controlled horse races and the lottery, though illicit gambling is commonplace, with underground casinos and soccer betting rife.

Southeast Asia's second-largest economy is considering allowing casinos as another means of drawing in investment and tourism, according to a study in parliament that was passed late on Thursday.

Many in the industry believe a legal casino market in Thailand would be a huge success in drawing overseas visitors, providing strong competition for the world's biggest gambling hub Macau, the only place in China where citizens can legally gamble in casinos.

"We can regulate the grey economy and collect taxes ... We do not want to promote gambling, but would rather supervise it and use the investment to create jobs," Srettha said in a post on X.

Legalisation of gambling has been discussed in the past but no government has gone ahead due to public opposition.

Underground casinos do exist in Thailand but large numbers of its people travel to neighbouring Cambodia and beyond to visit huge casino complexes, revenue that gambling advocates say could be kept in-country.

The proposed entertainment complex, the location of which Srettha did no disclose, would have a concert hall and sports venue, among other things, plus a gambling floor, although that would account for only 3 per cent to 10 per cent of the total area, he said on X.

Cabinet would have to submit a draft law to parliament for consideration, he added.

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2024-03-29 04:07:00Z
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Political Islam: Why the religious conservatism wave is rising in Malaysia but ebbing in Indonesia - CNA

In neighbouring Indonesia, concerns over the rise of political Islam and religious conservatism, especially in the lead-up to its latest election last month, appear to have cooled.

All three pairs of presidential and vice-presidential candidates did not succumb to the use of identity politics to garner votes, observers noted. 

The three pairs are: Former Jakarta governor Anies Baswedan who teamed up with chairman of the Islamic National Awakening Party (PKB) Muhaimin Iskandar; current Defence Minister Prabowo Subianto and Solo mayor Gibran Rakabuming Raka; as well as former Central Java governor Ganjar Pranowo who ran with former member of PKB Mahfud MD.

The winning duo of Mr Prabowo and Mr Gibran have never been members of Islamic parties, unlike the other two pairs of candidates.

There was worry that the election would be marred by religious conservatism especially since identity politics dominated the 2019 presidential and legislative elections and Jakarta’s 2017 gubernatorial elections. 

Mr Ujang Komarudin, a political Islam expert from Jakarta’s Al Azhar University, believes some political groups want to enforce Islamic ideologies but struggle to win in elections because Indonesian society is heterogeneous.

"Objectively speaking, there are indeed people or groups that fight for an Islamic ideology or political Islam.

"But if we look at the Islamic community, Islam itself here is heterogeneous. It is not homogeneous,” said Mr Ujang. 

And although about 87 per cent of Indonesia’s over 270 million people are Muslims, many are not pious, Mr Ujang added. 

Many Indonesians practise a moderate form of Islam or are Muslims according to their identity cards but do not really practise the religion.

“This impacts the behaviour of the voters and their choice (during elections),” said Mr Ujang.

Beyond that, analysts told CNA that the differing ideologies of various Islamic political groups and their inability to garner mainstream support as well as the country’s foundational philosophical theory of Pancasila appear to counter the threat of rising conservatism in Indonesia. 

DIFFERING IDEOLOGIES GOVERNING ISLAMIST POLITICAL PARTIES 

Mr Ujang believes that the Islamist political parties in Indonesia are not united and have differing ideologies. This is unlike in Malaysia, with its dominant Islamist party, the Parti Islam Se-Malaysia (PAS). 

“For example, PKB and the National Mandate Party (PAN), do they function based on their ideologies? I think not,” said Mr Ujang.

“They function based on interests, whether when forming a coalition or campaigning. They don’t highlight Islamic values but general or universal values if they talk about Islam.”

There are currently nine political parties in the Indonesian parliament. 

Five of them are nationalist parties, and four of them have Islamic ideologies, namely PKB, PAN, the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) and the United Development Party (PPP).

Only PKB showed a significant increase in votes in last month's legislative elections, making it the fourth-largest party in the upcoming 2024-2029 parliament, whose members will be inaugurated in October. 

It was the fifth-largest party in parliament based on the results of the 2019 elections - behind the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), Golkar, Gerindra and National Democratic Party (Nasdem). 

“Regarding the legislative election results, thank God. We at PKB are grateful.

“Because we are led by Mr Muhaimin, who is Mr Anies's vice-presidential candidate, we received a significant coattail effect,” said Mr Zainul Munasichin, secretary of PKB’s election-winning unit.

Coattail effect is the tendency for a political party figure to attract votes for other candidates from the same party.

In the recent election, Mr Anies and Mr Muhaimin were backed by the coalition of PKB, PKS and nationalist party Nasdem. 

Before the coalition was formed, some analysts opined that PKB and PKS would not be able to work together because they believed in a different form of Islam. But PKB’s Mr Zainul told CNA that his party’s alliance with PKS was “purely tactical”.

Meanwhile, PAN - which backed Mr Prabowo and Mr Gibran - was founded by people who were members of Indonesia’s second-biggest Islamic organisation, Muhammadiyah.

PAN’s secretary general Eddy Soeparno said it performed slightly better in February’s election compared to five years ago because of the perception then that it was right-wing due to its founder’s participation in events attended by hardline Islamic groups. 

The remaining Islamist party in parliament - the PPP - is the oldest and has existed for 51 years.

It was one of the only three political parties during the regime of Suharto, along with nationalist party Golkar and PDI, now named PDI-P. 

But in recent years, it has lost ground.

Mr Muhammad Romahurmuziy, chairman of PPP’s advisory council, attributed this to many factors.

One was because it does not have a strong leading figure and political machinery.

“We would have to undertake a major reorientation in the next party congress,” Mr Romahurmuziy told CNA, adding that it is due in December next year but could be brought forward due to the latest election results. 

According to the official results released by the Indonesia's General Elections Commission, PPP did not meet the minimum threshold of 4 per cent to enter the House of Representatives. This is the first time since its establishment in 1973 that the party will not be represented in parliament, although PPP will challenge the election results at the Constitutional Court.

Mr Adi Prayitno, a political Islam expert from Universitas Islam Negeri Syarif Hidayatullah, surmised that parties operate based on interests rather than ideologies because Indonesia has a multi-party presidential system. 

“There is a tendency that everyone is just chasing electoral votes,” said Mr Adi. 

“In Indonesia, everything is being measured by political interests and not ideology.”   

PANCASILA A WAY TO REIN IN IDENTITY POLITICS 

In line with this, Mr Ujang from Al Azhar University noted that Islamic conservatism is not a selling point to most Indonesians. 

“I don’t think conservatism is a threat in Indonesia because the democracy in Indonesia is built on Pancasila,” said Mr Ujang.

Pancasila is Indonesia’s ideology, which consists of five principles: Belief in one and only God, justice and civilised humanity, unity of the country, democracy guided by the inner wisdom among representatives, and social justice for all Indonesians.

“And Pancasila is the home of all religions in Indonesia, creating harmony,” Mr Ujang said.  

Mr Ahmad Khoirul Umam, a political lecturer from Islamic university Paramadina in Jakarta, concurred. 

“This is what makes the character of Islam in Indonesia very different from others in the region,” he said. 

Mr Umam said Pancasila has become an identity of Indonesia, with its history dating back to the country’s first president, Sukarno. 

Dean of Islam Nusantara faculty at Nahdlatul Ulama Indonesia University Ahmad Suaedy told CNA that Pancasila is the reference point for every political group because it encompasses various ideologies.   

“So, in Indonesia, there are many religious elements which are used by the state. But they are not part of the political symbol because of Pancasila,” said Mr Ahmad. 

In a country with about 1,300 different ethnic groups, the analysts believe that Pancasila has been a crucial element in keeping the country united. 

“We are grateful Indonesia has Pancasila, which unites different religious communities. So there is no reason for Islam to be dominant and a threat,” said Mr Ujang.

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2024-03-28 22:00:00Z
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Kamis, 28 Maret 2024

Probe instigators in 'socks' issue, says LFL - New Straits Times

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  1. Probe instigators in 'socks' issue, says LFL  New Straits Times
  2. Designer says Allah artwork was used on socks without permission  Malaysiakini
  3. Malaysia's Sock Scandal: The Sound of Silence | FULCRUM  fulcrum.sg
  4. 5 to be charged on March 26 over 'disharmony' caused by KK Mart socks issue in Malaysia  The Straits Times
  5. Umno's Akmal has lost the argument against academic, says Zaid  Free Malaysia Today

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2024-03-28 02:32:56Z
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2 men die of suspected food poisoning in Taipei after eating char kway teow - The Straits Times

All outlets of restaurant chain Polam Kopitiam in Taipei have been ordered to close. PHOTO: POLAM KOPITIAM

Two men died of suspected food poisoning after reportedly dining at a Malaysian vegetarian restaurant in Taipei, the capital of Taiwan.

All outlets of restaurant chain Polam Kopitiam were ordered to close during investigations into the deaths and hospitalisation of customers who had eaten at one of the outlets in the city, local media reported Taipei Mayor Chiang Wan-an as saying on March 27.

According to the Taipei Department of Health, eight people who dined at the restaurant in the Far Eastern Department Store in Xinyi District on March 19, 21 and 22 later fell sick with symptoms such as vomiting and diarrhoea, and sought medical help.

Among them, a 39-year-old man who ate at the restaurant on March 22 died two days later, while a 66-year-old man who ate there on March 19 died on March 27.

At least one of the eight is reported to be in the intensive care unit.

They are believed to have eaten char kway teow – a stir-fried noodle dish – among other dishes at the restaurant.

Local media reported that Taipei health officials were alerted on March 24 that it could be a case of food poisoning after one of the diners who fell ill was treated at a hospital.

Food samples were then collected from the restaurant for testing, and it was ordered to improve operations.

On March 26, the Taipei City government ordered the closure of the restaurant’s Xinyi District branch, and has since extended the order to the chain’s other outlets – which are all in the city.

According to Polam Kopitiam’s website, the Xinyi outlet’s lease is to expire on March 31, while preparations are under way for the opening of a new branch in Taipei’s East District. The restaurant chain also has outlets in the city’s Raohe Night Market and at Taipei Main Station.

Mr Chiang said that the Taipei health authorities carried out food sample testing at the restaurant, but have not found any bacteria commonly associated with food poisoning.

Meanwhile, Taiwan Food and Drug Administration (TFDA) director-general Wu Shou-mei said that Taipei city and TFDA officials had taken samples of food products – including cabbage, rice noodles and soya sauce – that usually have high risk of contamination on March 26, with the results expected in two weeks.

Although the restaurant passed a food safety inspection in 2022, Taipei health inspectors who visited the eatery after the suspected poisonings found several problems such as cockroach droppings on the premises, knives stored on the counter next to the sink, and a failure to provide employee health records, local media reported Ms Wu as saying.

The Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office also said it seized surveillance footage and collected evidence at the restaurant’s premises on March 27 together with the police and the health authorities, and has assigned a special prosecutor to oversee the investigation, according to local media.

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2024-03-27 11:20:00Z
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As its 'last samurai' chief battles poor health, frontmen from factions in Malaysia's Islamist party PAS are touted as successor - CNA

KUALA TERENGGANU: Reports of Parti Islam Se-Malaysia (PAS) president Abdul Hadi Awang’s continuing ill health have triggered speculation over a potential successor for the top position of Malaysia’s Islamist party. 

Two political rising stars from different factions of the party have emerged as main contenders to succeed the 76-year-old: one a religious legacy candidate, the other a progressive professional. 

The differences between Mr Abdul Hadi's son Dr Muhammad Khalil, and Dr Ahmad Samsuri, as well as their contrasting ideologies representative of the respective camps, have caught the attention of observers and raised questions over the future direction of the party, and whether any potential infighting could disrupt a smooth transition. 

Political analysts CNA spoke to believe that it could soon be time for PAS to consider succession. And as the party enjoys its strongest position yet, following a stellar performance in 2023 state elections and looks to attract new voter demographics, the stakes are high for whoever might step up to take the helm.

Associate Professor Yusri Ibrahim, chief researcher at think-tank Ilham Centre told CNA: “In the context of PAS with the concerns over health of the party president, it is perhaps time for the party to commence a leadership transition. 

“The snag is that in PAS currently it is unclear who has the most calibre to take over the leadership mantle,” he added. 

A CRITICAL POINT FOR SUCCESSION PLANNING

PAS is at a crucial juncture in its history. 

The party is arguably at the strongest point since it was founded in the 1950s. It currently holds the most seats in the federal legislature after a strong showing in the 2022 general election, more than Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) as well as the country's historically dominant party the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO). 

However, PAS and its ally party Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (Bersatu) in the Perikatan Nasional (PN) coalition did not garner enough seats and support to form the government and are now in the opposition.

Researchers have predicted that PAS’ influence is expected to grow with the party strengthening its base in areas where Malay Muslims are the majority, while making inroads in urban areas, as seen during the 2023 state elections when it won 105 out of 127 seats it contested. 

Speculation over who might lead the party through this era of potential growth has been further fuelled by recent reports of the current chief’s continuing ill health. 

Two years ago, Mr Abdul Hadi was hospitalised at the National Heart Institute in Kuala Lumpur for shortness of breath. 

More recently in July 2023, he was again warded in his home state Terengganu for an unspecified illness. At the time, his condition was of sufficient concern that Dr Muhammad Khalil released a statement asking for well-wishers to make prayers for his father's health.

Mr Hadi Awang was again hospitalised on New Year's Day for an unspecified illness at the National Heart Institute. He was reportedly discharged in February.  

When the newly installed Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar delivered his maiden speech in the lower house at the end of February, the PAS president’s seat at the front of the opposition bench was conspicuously empty. 

During the PN's elected lawmakers convention in Kuala Lumpur in early March, the current PAS chief was spotted in a wheelchair. Local media reported that the Marang Member of Parliament (MP) needed help to stand for certain segments of the programme, including a photo shoot.

POSSIBLE SUCCESSOR FROM PROFESSIONAL OR ULAMA FACTION? 

Mr Abdul Hadi's eldest son, Dr Muhammad Khalil, is a member of the party’s central committee, a former youth chief, and a potential successor to his father's position. 

Analysts noted that there is interest surrounding the 47-year-old given that he has been put forth by the party recently for important roles. 

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2024-03-27 22:00:00Z
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Rabu, 27 Maret 2024

Malaysia Edition: Anwar pays the price for poaching rivals | Religion and red tape stymie entertainment tourism - The Straits Times

Asian Insider: Malaysia Edition helps you connect the dots on the biggest stories playing out in Malaysia every week. Sign up here to get the newsletter in your inbox.


In a bid to shore up support, Malaysia’s government this week watered down a controversial constitutional amendment that critics - including ruling lawmakers - had earlier warned would render thousands of abandoned children stateless. 

Just as it works to resolve this delicate issue, the temperature over socks printed with the word “Allah” has only risen.

Despite a slew of enforcement actions taken by authorities, including bringing legal charges against directors of both the convenience store chain and the socks supplier, as well as raids on several related shops (which found no offending socks), tensions have continued to simmer.

How these issues play out politically could be tested soon enough with the opposition Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia’s attempt to amend its constitution in hopes of triggering a by-election for the seats of defectors who pledged support for Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. 

But whether these votes happen or not, analysts believe that the move to welcome these turncoats will now backfire on the premier and his government.

Follow ST’s coverage as we continue to bring you the latest developments.


Govt backs down after MPs and civil society condemn planned citizenship law changes

Critics said the original Bill would make stateless thousands of children born in Malaysia without clear citizenship.

READ MORE HERE


Boycott calls and apologies amid uproar over socks with the word ‘Allah’

Apologies have been issued by KK Mart and the local vendor who supplied the socks.

READ MORE HERE


PM Anwar wooed turncoats from rival party Bersatu – now he’s paying the price

The Malaysian PM’s government faces three possible outcomes, none likely to leave it politically unscathed.

READ MORE HERE


Why Johor can be the Shenzhen of South-east Asia

The planned Johor-S’pore Special Economic Zone is promising, as long as policy changes are made, says the writer.

READ MORE HERE


Malaysia school canteens usually shut for Ramadan, but Anwar’s govt pushes back against conservatives

Mr Anwar says Malaysians can do better than bickering over shutting canteens and bak kut teh as national dish.

READ MORE HERE


Red tape and religion: Malaysia missing out on hundreds of millions from entertainment tourism

Over $285 million in potential revenue was lost from scrapped concerts in 2023, experts estimated.

READ MORE HERE


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2024-03-27 04:37:46Z
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