Thursday, 14 August 2025

Mafia-Yakuza-gangsterism evolves in Malaysia

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No News Is Bad News

 

Mafia-Yakuza-gangsterism evolves in Malaysia

KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 15, 2025: Socio-political commentator Murray Hunter asks: “How safe are you (in Malaysia)?”

In an article titled Dark shades of gangsterism in Malaysia, Hunter also the Madani Unity Government (UG) is also abusing law and enforcement to suppress evidence and truth to support the corrupt and VVIP gangsters.

Indeed, Mafia-Yakuza-gangsterism has evolved and descended upon Malaysia.

And Malaysia's No.1 bully, the racial and religious bigoted Umno youth chief Dr Akmal "Dr Ham/I Am Malay First Saleh" is free to bully non-Malays in Malaysia and the police seem reluctant/unable to take lawful action.

This is what Prof Dr James Chin thinks of the assault on Rafizi's 12-year-old son:
 

James Chin

I’m utterly horrified by this audacious attack, and I know every Malaysian is reeling in disbelief!

This was no random act – it is a calculated, professional hit, executed with precision. I won’t speculate on the masterminds behind this, but the sheer audacity of striking in a public place, under the watchful eyes of CCTV, sends a terrifying message: these criminals have no fear of the police or consequences!

This is eerily reminiscent of the Pamela Ling and Pastor Koh & Amri Che Mat cases – all abducted in broad daylight. How can such brazen crimes unfold in Malaysia? We are not a failed state, yet these incidents pile up!

Anwar Ibrahim and the Home Minister must act NOW! The time for excuses is over. If need be, bring in outside expertise to tackle this crisis. With unsolved cases like Pamela Ling, Pastor Koh, the KK firebombing, and the Nga firebombing stacking up, what will it take for Anwar to show real political will?

I’m actually confident the police can crack RR’s case quickly – but the point is this. If PDRM have the capability to solve this, they can solve the others too. Pamela. Koh. KK Mart. Amri. Nga. These aren’t just cases; they’re making a mockery of our legal system.

It’s time for action, not promises. Malaysians deserve answers, and we demand them NOW!

 No News Is Bad News reproduces below Hunter’s article dated yesterday (Aug 14) that was found shared on WhatsApp and related news reports:

Dark shades of gangsterism in Malaysia

MURRAY HUNTER

AUG 14, 2025

The attack on Rafizi Ramli’s son outside a shopping mall, where he was stabbed by a syringe highlights the dark shades of gangsterism that has descended upon Malaysia.

At the same time, police had to exhume the body of Zara to try and discover who the perpetrator of her violent death really is.

A woman allegedly assaulted in Pahang by a member of the Pahang Royal family is still waiting for action to be taken by the police and Attorney-General’s Chambers.

On top of these current cases there is the mysterious abduction of Pamela Ling by people clad in para-military uniforms directly outside the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC). Over the past two years, lawyer-activist Siti Kassim’s car was armed with a bomb, KK Supermart was firebombed and police don’t have a clue.

Only last June, there were four gangland killings around Kuala Lumpur.

Gangsters are running around the city at will. Crime statistics increased 3.2% in 2023, with assaults up, property crime up, murder up 7.5%, and rape up 11.8% .

What are police doing about this? They are going after the hardened Facebook users, people who hang flags incorrectly, and people who insult the prime minister.

Police resources have been allocated towards political crimes, rather than the business the police should have really been doing – keeping the community safe.

It’s also become very noticeable that the police have been paying close attention to political crimes committed by non-Malays and those who don’t support the government.

There has been a boom in sedition investigations, at the cost of murder investigations.

South Africa during the apartheid times would have been proud of the PDRM. They have become the protectors of the Malay polity.

Corporate gangsterism is rife. While the mainstream media is now meek and mild and the independent media has been suppressed, corporate gangsters have been taking over public assets at a rate never been seen before.

The only news of this is through snippets here and there on X.

Anywhere else, people will be charged by the MCMC and their websites blocked for uncovering corruption through the used and abused Malaysian Communications Act (MCA).

The stripping of public assets and placing them in corporate hands is one of the best kept secrets in Malaysia today.

Cronies with bug money put SLAPP actions on anyone who even attempts to alert the public.

With all these resources being put into suppressing corruption and chasing people for made up crimes such as accidently putting the flag upside down (a crime for non-Malays only), it’s fully understandable why the gangsters are running free in Malaysia today.

Just think if a 12-year-old girl can be murdered, a lawyer have a bomb placed under her car, and a politician’s son can be attacked outside a shopping mall. How safe are you?

Sim calls for cops to act against Akmal for defying order

FMT Reporters

The Penang DAP chairman calls the Umno Youth protest in Kepala Batas this evening provocative and says DAP will file a police report.

Penang DAP chairman Steven Sim said Umno Youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh clearly defied the police order by holding a protest in front of a hardware shop in Kepala Batas today.

PETALING JAYA: Penang DAP chairman Steven Sim has called for police action against Umno Youth chief Dr Akmal Saleh for defying a police directive and allegedly disrupting public order in Kepala Batas, Penang.

Sim, who is also the human resources minister and deputy DAP secretary-general, said police had advised against any gatherings in the area.

He said DAP had complied with the instruction and only sent local representatives to distribute Jalur Gemilang flags in conjunction with National Day celebrations.

“The protest was clearly in defiance of the police order and in breach of the law. It was a provocation that threatened public peace,” he said in a statement.

Sim said Penang DAP would lodge a police report over the incident and urged the authorities to send a clear message that such behaviour would not be tolerated.

Earlier this evening, Malaysiakini reported that Akmal and his wing members had gathered in front of a hardware store in Kepala Batas, Penang, whose owner was seen in a now-viral video hanging the Jalur Gemilang upside down.

He had previously threatened to stage a “class” to teach the man how to correctly fly the Jalur Gemilang if the man was not charged in court for his mistake.

Police had advised against the protest, noting the shop owner had already apologised and explained the matter.

Separately, former Penang deputy chief minister P Ramasamy said Akmal was holding the country “to ransom” over the incident.

The Urimai chairman said in a statement that this was not Akmal’s first act of “intimidation and bullying”, and that it would not be his last as long as law enforcement failed to act.

He also criticised DAP’s flag distribution efforts, calling it a misstep that gave Akmal an excuse to escalate tensions. The police also appeared to lack the will to contain the situation, he added.

Yesterday, former deputy law minister Ramkarpal Singh questioned Akmal’s apparent “immunity” despite several police reports being lodged over his remarks on the upside-down flag and called for a sedition probe.

He said Akmal had issued several “extreme and unacceptable” statements, which were divisive and contained racial undertones that could threaten public order.


Rafizi’s son to undergo 6 months of medical tests after syringe attack

Raphael Lee

PKR’s Rafizi Ramli says doctors have ruled out drugs or poison, but HIV and hepatitis checks will take several months.

 Pandan MP Rafizi Ramli’s son was dragged out of their family car and stabbed with a syringe at a Putrajaya shopping mall yesterday afternoon.

KUALA LUMPUR: Former economy minister Rafizi Ramli today said that his 12-year-old son would have to undergo six months of medical tests to rule out the possibility that he was injected with anything dangerous during an attack at a Putrajaya mall yesterday.

The Pandan MP said doctors and police had yet to determine what the syringe contained, prompting a series of blood and food tests as well as extended hospital observation.

Rafizi said there were three possibilities: drugs or poison, which doctors had ruled out after observation; a virus such as HIV or hepatitis; or plain water.

“So far, there have been no immediate effects (for drugs or poison). I take comfort in that as a father, we can rule out drugs and poison,” he told a press conference in Parliament today.

However, Rafizi said the possibility of a viral infection could only be ruled out after “at least six months” of monitoring.

“We can only know after six months, and we will have to continuously monitor his behaviour,” he said.

Rafizi earlier revealed that his wife had received two threatening text messages from an unknown number this morning, reading: “Be quiet. If you continue, AIDS.”

He said he suspected that yesterday’s attack was linked to a case he was looking into, adding that he had met a group of whistleblowers just last week.

According to Rafizi, his son was dragged out of their family car by two individuals dressed in black and wearing full-face helmets and stabbed with a syringe.

The assailants escaped, while the boy was rushed to the hospital.

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