You no come, please

There’s bad news for citizens of India, Indonesia and the Philippines. They won’t be allowed to enter Malaysia because of the prevalence of Covid-19 in their respective countries. And yes, that includes the non-citizen spouses of Malaysians.

In other news, PM Muhyiddin Yassin must be having a splitting headache cos Kedah, the state his party holds, will likely not be dissolving its legislative assembly if Parliament is dissolved in the near future.

We’ve also had a third Covid-19 death in four days; PAS is continuing to behave like a donkey with a brain injury; and, M. Indira Gandhi will finally get to meet our nation’s top cop over the daughter who has been missing for 11 years.

Can Malaysia afford the RMCO extension?

With no end in sight to the Covid-19 pandemic, the Recovery Movement Control Order (RMCO) always looked likely to be extended. The big question though is whether Malaysia can see itself through to Dec 31.

In other news, Barisan Nasional wins big in Slim, durian farmers are raising a stink in Raub, and after a month with no Covid-19 fatalities, we suddenly have two! Oh, and by the way, even though celebrations this year were muted, we’d still like to wish you Selamat Hari Kebangsaan!

Guan Eng fires back

Pakatan Harapan and Lim Guan Eng have fired back at the Perikatan Nasional government over the 101 direct negotiation contracts the former signed during its 22-month tenure in Putrajaya. And what a broadside it was, as only a small percentage of the contracts appear to have actually been “new”.

Meanwhile, the Electoral Reform Committee has submitted its final report to PM Muhyiddin Yassin with 49 recommendations that will hopefully see the light of day soon, Perikatan is set to be officially launched on Monday, and the number of active Covid-19 cases has dropped.

Finance minister spills the beans

It was a big day in Parliament, or at least for Parliament related stuff, as a number of important things cropped up, the biggest of which was regarding the 101 direct negotiation contracts awarded by the Pakatan Harapan government during its short tenure. The full list of projects was finally released and folks, they contained some real doozies.

We also saw two significant bills being withdrawn, one of which drew criticism from an NGO and the Malaysian Bar, while there was some tension when a PAS MP made a rather odd claim about non-Muslim religions.

Rehab, not jail, for drug addicts

The government is looking at amending a law so that drug addicts are sent to rehabilitation centres and not prison. If it goes through, it could help mitigate the problem of overcrowding in prisons, save our tax money and put us on the path to taking a more humane approach to the handling the issue of drug addiction.

In other news, the bankruptcy threshold has been doubled, a fantastic move considering the problems we’re having with money thanks to the current pandemic; investigations have been launched into a former minister and the 101 direct negotiation deals the Pakatan gomen signed; foreigners will soon be allowed to attend mosques; and, our beloved supreme leader is said to be about to launch the country’s “newest” coalition in Sabah.

The 2019 Auditor-General’s Report is shocking!

While Auditor-General’s Reports are usually notable for their shocking tales of government mismanagement, the latest edition is particularly alarming on account of a revelation that soldiers’ lives were put at risk!

Also in the news, two former and current finance ministers face off over some 101 dubious deals, PM Muhyiddin Yassin is happy to let one of his ministers be investigated for breaching quarantine rules, and Parliament approves the government’s Covid-19 financing bill.

Bersatu moots multiracial move

Buoyed by the membership of Azmin Ali and his ex-PKR buddies, Bersatu is considering affording its associate non-Bumiputera members larger slices of the political pie. The big question though is whether the party’s potential metamorphosis from Umno 2.0 to PKR 2.0 will hurt or help it.

Elsewhere in today’s newsletter, Malaysians are up in arms over a Cabinet Covidiot’s paltry fine for breaching quarantine rules, a deputy minister finds himself in hot water for trying to get his son a cushy boardroom job, and the Health Ministry wants the Recovery Movement Control Order (RMCO) extended beyond Aug 31.

Covidiot in the Cabinet?

There’s much ado about a minister who allegedly broke Covid-19 quarantine regulations and attended several functions and meetings when he was supposed to have been isolated at home. He is now being investigated.

In other news, the man who alleged in a statutory declaration that he had been sodomised several times by a prominent opposition politician is claiming he was “manipulated” into signing the document; we could know today whether the Sabah elections will go on as planned; and yesterday, for the first time in a month, there were no local transmissions of Covid-19.

Sick, sick, sick of sodomy claims

A prominent opposition politician is facing more allegations of a sexual nature (read: sodomy) and our top cop has said what we’re all thinking – that he is just sick of it all and it’s a waste of police resources.

In other news, there’s political trouble brewing in Sabah thanks to the decision to let a certain politician with a corruption case hanging over his head run the show for BN there; there’s hope yet that we may see an anti-party frogging law in the land; and, the gomen has done it again by allowing sports and co-curriculum activities in schools without first telling us what the damned SOPs will be.

Btw, tomorrow is Awal Muharram and we’d just like to wish all our Muslim friends a happy new year. And as always, a public holiday means we give ourselves a day off. See you on Friday!

2017 tahfiz arsonist jailed for murder

Three years on from that tahfiz fire in Keramat, a person’s finally been found guilty of murder. But is it justice enough for the 23 people who lost their lives in the pre-dawn blaze?


In other news, Sabahans head to the polls on Sept 26, an MP thinks the gomen should absorb workers’ EPF contributions, Kedah imposes stricter Covid-19 measures, and a glovemaker becomes Malaysia’s fifth billionaire!