Thursday, 2 July 2026

Pig farming - Selangor’s total loss, Sarawak and Indonesia’s exports’ gain!

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 Crunchy roast pork birthday cake

Pig farming - Selangor’s total loss, Sarawak and Indonesia’s exports’ gain!

KUALA LUMPUR, July 2, 2026: Singapore gets the bulk of its pork and pig supply from Sarawak.

It also imported pork and pigs from Selangor but a ban in pig farming in Selangor is forcing Singapore to look to Indonesia for supply alternative.

And Sarawak is aiming to more than double its annual production from 350,000 pigs in 2025 to 860,000 by 2030, targeting RM1 billion (S$324 million) worth of exports.

It is Selangor’s total revenue loss but Sarawak and Indonesia’s gain.

Mixing religion with business is a sure mix for economic disaster.

No News Is Bad News reproduces below Singapore’s The Straits Times report on their pork and pig imports from Sarawak:

 

How one Sarawak farm became Singapore’s sole live pig supplier after 18-year trade ban

 

 

(From left) Dr Ng Yi Xian with her brother Dr Ng Yong Han and her mother and founder of Kuching-based Green Breeder, Ms Veronica Chew.

 ST PHOTO: LU WEI HOONG

Published Feb 15, 2026, 05:00 AM

Updated Feb 16, 2026, 03:22 PM

 

KUCHING, Sarawak – The delicious braised pork served at many Singapore reunion dinners this Chinese New Year may have travelled two days by sea from Malaysian Borneo.

Sarawak-based Green Breeder, located about 700km away from Singapore, is currently the only farm in Malaysia licensed to export live pigs to the Republic – and the East Malaysian state wants to send many more.

On a recent sunny day, a drove of pigs was being loaded on the docks at Kuching port. White-clad workers guided the squealing animals into cages for a Singapore-bound vessel.

Green Breeder ships up to 3,000 live pigs weekly to Singapore. In 2024, the farm sent 121,685 pigs, or 13,385 tonnes of pork, to Singapore, accounting for 8.2 per cent of the Republic’s pork imports.

“Fortune tellers read pig livers to tell the future. A pig must be slaughtered before a VIP can enter the longhouse. We treasure pigs the most. So it’s easy for us to encourage people to make a living from them,” Sarawak’s Minister for Food Industry, Commodity and Regional Development Stephen Rundi Utom told The Straits Times on Jan 20.

Datuk Seri Rundi, who is of Iban heritage, said the porcine creatures have been a familiar presence in his longhouse “since the day I opened my eyes to the world”. A longhouse is a traditional communal home for some indigenous groups in East Malaysia.

The Iban ethnic group constitutes 30 per cent of Sarawak’s population.

Sarawak aims to more than double the state’s annual pig production, from 350,000 animals in 2025 to 860,000 by 2030, targeting RM1 billion (S$324 million) worth of exports for that year. The push would cement the East Malaysian state as the country’s pork-producing hub at a time when disease outbreaks and land-use pressures are reshaping the industry elsewhere.

The state’s demographics have contributed to the growth of the pig-rearing industry, which is located away from residential areas and operates using modern methods with strict hygiene standards.

Pork consumption is deeply embedded in Sarawak’s cultural landscape. About three-quarters of the state’s population – including indigenous Iban and Bidayuh communities, and ethnic Chinese – consume pork. Muslims make up around 20 per cent of the population.

“We have adopted better technology after visits to Denmark, China and Japan to learn best practices, particularly in pig farming,” said Dr Rundi. The state successfully contained an African swine fever (ASF) outbreak in 2022 and has since eradicated foot-and-mouth disease, he added, bolstering confidence in its systems and processes.

Trade in live pigs between Malaysia and Singapore was halted in 1999. In 1998, the Nipah virus outbreak devastated pig farms in the peninsula, killing 105 people and forcing the culling of more than one million pigs. In March the following year, an outbreak that occurred among abattoir workers in Singapore who handled live pigs imported from Malaysia led to 11 reported cases of human transmission, and the death of an abattoir worker in the Republic.

Singapore resumed live pig imports from Malaysia only in November 2017 – and exclusively from Sarawak. Since then, the East Malaysian state has shipped more than 675,000 animals, valued at RM742.5 million in total, to the Republic.

Meanwhile, the Singapore authorities are looking to resume live pig imports from Pulau Bulan, Indonesia, after these were paused in April 2023 following the detection of ASF in a consignment of pigs from the island.

Singapore imported 133,600 tonnes of pork products – live pigs, chilled and frozen meat – in 2024. Its top three sources of chilled and frozen pork were Australia, Brazil and Germany.

Viruses like Nipah and ASF remain the pig farming industry’s biggest threats. Though harmless to humans, ASF can wipe out entire herds and force farms to cull infected stock.

 

 

A poster warning about the risk of ASF displayed on the wall of a Green Breeder pig farmhouse.

 ST PHOTO: LU WEI HOONG

 

Raising a stink

 

While Sarawak eyes expansion, local residents, civic and Muslim advocacy groups in West Malaysia continue to raise a stink over the persistent odour and hygiene issues of traditional, open-air pig farms.

Apart from Sarawak, there are fewer than 300 pig farms operating in the states of Perak, Penang and Selangor.

In Peninsular Malaysia, pig farming has been reshaped by land competition and disease outbreaks. Selangor – once one of the country’s major pork producers – recently saw relocation plans for pig farms stalled amid environmental concerns.

To be sure, pig farms are a contentious issue in the Muslim-majority peninsula. The animals are considered unclean, according to the tenets of Islam, and consumption of their meat is haram, or unlawful, for Muslims.

Moves to accelerate the closure of pig farms in Selangor have intensified in 2026, driven by a directive from the Selangor ruler to address environmental pollution, particularly in the Tanjung Sepat and Sepang areas. 

On Feb 10, Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah stated that he would “not consent to pig-rearing activities in any Selangor district” due to pollution concerns and limited land resources, following an audience with Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim.

Two days later, the state government announced it would stop issuing pig-farming licences and aims to close all existing breeding farms in the state as soon as possible.

No compensation will be given to the farmers, except in cases of ASF-related culling, Selangor agriculture executive council member Izham Hisham told the local media on Feb 14. He indicated that the shuttering process would take six months.

Elsewhere, there have been protests against pig farms in 2025 in Malay-majority areas in Penang and Perak, with residents and opposition Parti Islam SeMalaysia citing odour and water pollution issues.

Federal Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Food Security Chan Foong Hin noted that the growing opposition to pig farming in the state is partly due to competition for land use on the developed West Coast of Peninsular Malaysia.

“Some say Tanjung Sepat is better suited for tourism. How can that mix with pig farming? It’s a competition between industry and agriculture on limited land,” he told ST. Tanjung Sepat is a coastal town in Selangor, a popular weekend getaway known for its fresh seafood and agricultural attractions, particularly dragon fruit farms and coffee.

To stabilise prices ahead of Chinese New Year, in anticipation of surging demand before the major festive season, the Malaysian government has given the go-ahead for chilled and frozen pork imports from 70 abattoirs in 10 countries. Discounts of up to 20 per cent are available at 50 retail outlets across Malaysia as the government urges sellers to keep pork prices affordable.

Nationwide ASF outbreaks in the past few years have also driven pork imports higher. Malaysia imported 74,513 tonnes of pork in 2025, up fivefold from 2021. About one-third of the country’s pork supply is now imported.

 

 

Recently born piglets feeding from a sow.

 ST PHOTO: LU WEI HOONG

 

Quarantine, disinfection measures


Green Breeder, the anchor farm of Sarawak’s 804ha pig farming area, introduced strict biosecurity measures following an ASF outbreak in neighbouring Sabah in 2021. The farm is located 105km from state capital Kuching, and is a 1½-hour drive from there.

I visited the facility in January for a first-hand look at how the pig farm is run.

Visitors must undergo a 48-hour quarantine after arriving in Kuching and avoid other pig farms before entry. Vehicles pass through disinfectant pools and spray bays. Workers and guests shower and change into scrub suits before stepping into production areas that can house around 143,000 pigs at any one time.

Bars of soap and disinfectant footbaths for shoes are placed at the entrance and exit of each enclosure, requiring everyone to scrub in and out.

“We have an exclusive wash centre just for our lorries. No other hog lorries are allowed (there) to prevent cross-contamination,” the farm’s co-founder Veronica Chew, 62, told ST.

 

 

A staff member walking over a disinfectant footbath to minimise the presence of the African swine fever virus in Kuching.

 ST PHOTO: LU WEI HOONG

 

Fruit trees are not allowed around the farm to prevent attracting bats, which can carry the Nipah virus, she added.

For me, the main surprise was the smell – or rather, the lack of it. Instead of the choking stench I had imagined in a pig farm, here there was only a lingering muskiness in the air that brought to mind wet animal fur.

Unlike traditional open-air farms that produce strong odours, Green Breeder uses modern farming methods to minimise unpleasant smells. The closed-house system is equipped with water curtains and ventilation fans to maintain a temperature of 28 deg C, which is comfortable for growing weaners (piglets that have been separated from their mothers and transitioned from milk to a solid diet, between four and eight weeks of age) and butcher hogs raised specifically for meat production and usually slaughtered between six months and one year old. The hogs’ manure is collected for biogas production.

 

 

Pink-skinned weaners feeding from a trough inside a closed farm.

 ST PHOTO: LU WEI HOONG

 

Floating pig pen, Danish piglets


Green Breeder was founded in 1994 by Ms Chew and her late husband Gregory Ng.

“He (Dr Ng) said chilled pork has a short shelf life of seven days. Transportation alone would take two days. Why not send live pigs instead?” recalled Ms Chew.

The couple purchased their first ship, Bintang Liberty 1, converting it into a temperature-controlled floating pig pen for the first shipment to Singapore in 2017.

To boost productivity, Green Breeder imported 759 breeder pigs from Denmark in 2023.

“The Nordic breed has some of the best genetics available,” said Dr Ng Yong Han, Ms Chew’s younger son, who is a veterinary doctor and director of the farm. Piglet production has already improved from 23 to 25 piglets per sow per year (PSY), and is expected to rise further over three generations.

Denmark remains free of ASF, supported by strict livestock transport controls and a 70km wild boar fence along its border with Germany – measures Sarawak officials say offer lessons in disease prevention.

Danish sows now average 35 piglets PSY, up from 24 in 2003, said Mr Jens Munk Ebbesen, director of food and veterinary issues at the Danish Agriculture & Food Council. He was visiting Kuala Lumpur in early February on a trade mission.

“Top herds reach 40 to 42 PSY, but the national average is 35. This allows farmers to maintain production with fewer sows, reducing housing space and feed use,” Mr Ebbesen told ST.

Denmark was the world’s sixth-largest pork exporter in 2024, with pork exports valued at US$2.73 billion (S$3.4 billion). The country, with a population of around six million, is well known for having twice as many pigs as humans.

While pig farming requires adherence to a strict biosecurity regime and hard work aplenty, Ms Chew does not regret leaving her civil engineering job in 1994 to rear swine.

She believes Sarawak’s future lies firmly in modern agriculture and farming methods – and in pigs raised to high, export-grade standards.

“I don’t think it’s (a) dirty (business). In the early days, I even helped a sow give birth. Piglets are cute and never complain – unlike my stressful days in construction, stuck between clients and contractors,” she said with a laugh.

Correction note: An earlier version of the online story mislabelled the name of the family members of Green Breeder Farm. This has been corrected. We are sorry for the error. This story has also been edited for clarity.

Lu Wei Hoong is Malaysia correspondent at The Straits Times, specialising in transport and politics.

Malaya piracy and politics

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Malaya piracy and politics

KUALA LUMPUR, July 2, 2026: According to Wikipedia and history, piracy in the Strait of Malacca was not only a lucrative way of life but also an important political tool.

Piracy in the region was mentioned in Chinese texts; for example, the 14th century traveller Wang Dayuan described pirates from Long Ya Men (in present-day Singapore) and Lambri (in Northern Sumatra) in his work Daoyi Zhilüe. The pirates of Long Ya Men were said to leave Chinese junks going west through the strait undisturbed, but waited until the Chinese junks were on their way back to China laden with goods before they attacked with two to three hundred boats.

Between the 15th and 19th centuries, Malaysian waters played a key role in political power struggles throughout Southeast Asia. Aside from local powers, antagonists also included such colonial powers as the Portuguese, Dutch and British.

A record of foreign presence, particularly in the South China Sea and the Strait of Malacca, is found today in the watery graves of sailing vessels lost to storms, piracy, battles, and poor ship handling.

In the 1830s, the controlling colonial powers in the region, the British East India Company and the Dutch Empire, agreed to curb the rampant piracy.

This decision, embodied in the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824 led to the creation of the British Straits Settlements of Malacca, Dinding, Penang, and Singapore, seats of British administration aimed at controlling piracy and enabling maritime trade.

The British and Dutch empires effectively drew a demarcation line along the strait, agreeing to fight against piracy on their own side of the line. This line of demarcation would eventually become the modern-day border between Malaysia and Indonesia. Increased patrolling and superior seafaring technology on the part of the European powers, as well as improved political stability and economic conditions in the region, eventually allowed the European powers to greatly curb piracy in the region by the 1870s.

Piracy and politics are thus deeply rooted in Malaysia.

For more details, go to: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piracy_in_the_Strait_of_Malacca

Why the expired racist and corrupt politicians and their parties must be ‘politically exterminated’ via the ballots

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Bapa Malaysia Tunku Abdul Rahman, Malaysia’s first premier, read this “political evil” well and accurately.


Why the expired racist and corrupt politicians and their parties must be ‘politically exterminated’ via the ballots

KUALA LUMPUR, July 2, 2026: The 100-year-old plus Dr Mahathir Mohamad today deserves no credit from multi-racial-multi-religious Malaysians who treasure national unity and harmony.

It is only his own doing that he has destroyed whatever integrity and positive legacy in his political life.

Today at his advanced age, he still continues to use and apply divisive racial and religious politics to divide the rakyat dan negara (people and country).

No News Is Bad News had refrained from giving any space for this moronic political and evil creature but, since he has started trying to divide the rakyat dan negara during the polling season, we decided to remind Malaysians of this sick and racist creature.

This was found posted on Facebook:

An Open Letter to the Malaysian People: On Mahathir's Final Betrayal

Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad recently urged Malays to vote only for their own race. He warned that failure to do so would mean losing "Tanah Melayu" and leaving Malays "a people without a country."
This is not a letter to him. He has spent seventy years in politics and has never once been persuaded by a critique he did not author himself. He is 100 years old, and he will not change.

This is a letter to you — the Malaysian voter, the citizen, the constitutional rights-holder because his words demand a response, and that response must be rooted not in emotion, but in the law, in history, and in the uncomfortable truth of his own record.

What He Said Breaks Faith with the Constitution

Let us be absolutely clear about what Mahathir has asked you to do. He has asked you to vote based solely on ethnicity, ignoring every other consideration: integrity, policy, competence, and the future of your children.

The Federal Constitution does not recognise this. Article 8 guarantees equality before the law and prohibits discrimination based on race in specified contexts. Article 119 defines voting qualifications by citizenship and residency not by the colour of your skin.

There is no constitutional provision that allows for an electorate segregated by race. There is no legal basis for a campaign that tells citizens they are less worthy of representation because of their ethnic background. Mahathir knows this. He was Prime Minister for twenty two years. He swore an oath to uphold this Constitution.

When he asks you to "vote for only Malays," he is asking you to tear up that social contract, not to defend it. He is weaponising the very document he once swore to protect.

A Law That Has Never Been Applied Consistently

We have watched for years as the Sedition Act 1948 has been used to silence students, journalists, and opposition politicians. It has been a blunt instrument of state control, often unfairly wielded against those who speak inconvenient truths.

Yet here is Mahathir, openly urging racial segregation in the political process, and we are expected to treat it as a statesman's warning?

Section 3 of the Sedition Act defines a "seditious tendency" as anything that promotes feelings of ill will and hostility between different races. Many lawyers would argue his statement sits squarely within that threshold — that it tells one community to close ranks against another, and frames the political process as a zero sum ethnic war.

If the law is to have any consistency at all, this speech deserves the same scrutiny as any other. The problem, of course, is that Malaysia's legal system has never been consistent when it comes to the powerful. Mahathir built that system. He dismantled judicial independence. He sacked Lord President Salleh Abas in 1988. He ensured that the law would bend to those in power. And now, in his final years, he is testing whether that system will bend to him one last time.

The Man Who Betrayed His Own Legacy

This is the most painful part of this moment. Mahathir is not some fringe extremist. He is the father of modern Malaysia's developmental state. He gave us the Proton car, the Kuala Lumpur International Airport, the Petronas Twin Towers — symbols of a nation that dared to dream beyond its colonial past.

But those achievements came at a cost. His 1970 book, The Malay Dilemma, attributed Malay economic struggles in part to hereditary and cultural factors including the practice of inbreeding and made grotesque racial generalisations about other communities. He ruled through the Internal Security Act, detaining political opponents without trial. He neutered the judiciary. He centralised power to an extent that left Malaysia's institutions hollowed out, dependent on the will of a single man.

When he returned to power in 2018 at age 92, he sold himself as a reformer. He stood with former enemies, promising institutional change, promising justice for the victims of 1MDB, promising a new Malaysia. And what did we get?

Within two years, his coalition collapsed. He resigned, triggering a political crisis. He allied with the very forces he had once opposed. He proved that his only consistent principle was his own ambition.

Now, stripped of power and relevance, he has reverted to the one language he knows best: fear. He tells Malays they are losing their country, even though they hold the Prime Ministership, the monarchy, the civil service, the armed forces, and the vast majority of political power. He tells them they are under threat, when the actual threat to Malay wellbeing is poverty, poor education, and a system of patronage that has enriched elites while leaving the poor behind.

What He Will Not Tell You

Mahathir will not tell you that Malaysia's real challenges have nothing to do with race.

He will not tell you about the brain drain — our brightest young people leaving for Singapore, Australia, and the UK because they cannot find meaningful work here.

He will not tell you about the crumbling public healthcare system, the stagnant wages, the rising cost of living, or the climate crisis that threatens our coasts and our food supply.

He will not tell you about the billions lost to corruption — many of which was facilitated by the very political structures he built.

He will not tell you that voting along racial lines does not put food on the table, does not educate a single child, does not build a single hospital, and does not create a single job.

He will not tell you this because he does not want you to think about solutions. He wants you to think about enemies. That is how he has always operated. Divide, distract, and dominate.

A Call to Malaysian Citizens

So here is what I ask of you, fellow Malaysians.

When you go to the voting booth, do not ask yourself what Mahathir would want. He is irrelevant. Ask yourself what your grandchildren would want. Ask yourself whether you want a Malaysia defined by fear or by possibility. Ask yourself whether you are voting for the past or for the future.

The Constitution belongs to all of us — not to one race, not to one religion, and not to one hundred year old man who cannot let go of power.

Vote for competence. Vote for integrity. Vote for leaders who will fix our schools, our hospitals, and our economy. Vote for leaders who see all Malaysians as equal partners in this nation's future.

And if that means rejecting the politics of race — rejecting Mahathir's politics — then so be it. Because the Malaysia he is offering you is not worth defending. It is a Malaysia of suspicion, division, and stagnation.

We deserve better.

We always have.

Yours in the spirit of Bangsa Malaysia,
Betty Teh
Bersama Malaysia