
Indian MPs unite, slam AGC's decision on Muslim preachers
In a rare show of unity, MIC deputy president and Tapah MP M Saravanan, Klang MP V Ganabatirau (DAP), along with PKR MPs P Prabakaran (Batu) and S Kesavan (Sungai Siput), held a joint press conference in Parliament to express their dissatisfaction.
The MPs rejected the AGC's explanation of...

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New Straits Times
7 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Nurul Izzah pays tribute to Bangladesh's July Revolution at Dhaka conference
NEW DELHI: Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) deputy president Nurul Izzah Anwar on Sunday paid tribute to the 2024 student-led uprising in Bangladesh as a quest for sovereignty and dignity. Bangladesh is holding a series of events to mark the first anniversary of the fall of Sheikh Hasina's nearly 16-year rule as a result of what has become known as the July Revolution. She said the events of last year were not just a protest but became an avenue for the rebirth of the nation's spirit. "At the end of the day, any regime, no matter how powerful, cannot stand against the will of an awakened people," Nurul Izzah said. Hasina resigned and fled to India on August 5 as protests mounted against her rule across Bangladesh. Nurul Izzah said the July Revolution is a reminder that "stability without justice is fragile." She also referred to the ongoing genocide by Israel in Gaza in her speech, which covered wide-ranging topics such as democratic and political reforms, her own struggles, youth activism and economic empowerment. Nurul Izzah said the "enabling of the genocidal onslaught in Gaza by the hegemons and their ilk reminds us of the need to reaffirm our solidarity." She spoke alongside international and Bangladeshi speakers at the first International Conference on the July Revolution, organised by the Dhaka-based think tank Research and Integrated Thought (RIT) and Dhaka University's Department of Political Science. Yasin Aktay, a senior member of Turkiye's Justice and Development Party (AK Party), hailed the July Revolution as an event that represented an uprising against local authoritarianism and its foreign backers. The Bangladesh interim government's housing and public works adviser Adilur Rahman Khan said the deposed Hasina regime had made the state machinery a weapon of her Awami League party, and enforced disappearances and killings of dissidents became routine. – Bernama

Barnama
7 hours ago
- Barnama
Nurul Izzah Calls On Bangladesh Interim Government Chief
WORLD By Shakir Husain NEW DELHI, July 27 (Bernama) -- Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) deputy president Nurul Izzah Anwar called on Bangladesh interim leader Muhammad Yunus in Dhaka on Sunday. Yunus, during the meeting, sought Malaysia's support for Bangladesh to join the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). "We want to become a part of ASEAN, and we will need your support," he told Nurul Izzah, according to a Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha report. Bangladesh applied to become an ASEAN sectoral dialogue partner in 2020. Yunus also invited Malaysian companies to invest in Bangladesh's growing economy. "Asia is ageing rapidly, but Bangladesh has a lot of young people. Half of our population is under the age of 27. Set up your industries here and export from Bangladesh. It will help both our economies," he said. The interim government's chief advisor informed the PKR deputy chief about Bangladesh's political reforms following last year's uprising, which ended Sheikh Hasina's nearly 16-year rule. Nurul Izzah spoke at Dhaka University on Sunday at a conference marking the first anniversary of the July Revolution.


New Straits Times
8 hours ago
- New Straits Times
NST Leader: Due diligence the key to uncover scams
SCAMMERS come in various forms. Fake dentists and doctors are common, but a bogus ambassador? Not of one country, but four. That is exactly what Harshvardhan Jain, a Uttar Pradesh native of Ghaziabad, near New Delhi, has been accused of being for the past decade. Arguably, he is the world's first bogus ambassador representing that many countries. There was another fake diplomat, interestingly in Ghaziabad, impersonating the high commissioner of Oman as the police there discovered. His bogus world came crashing when he was arrested on March 13, India's English daily The Hindu reported. Like all scammers, Jain was after money. Yes, money for jobs in the "countries" he was an ambassador of. All four were calling themselves micronations. We do not know if Jain looked and acted like a diplomat, but the posh building he rented, with foreign flags and a few luxury cars with diplomatic number plates parked in front, did the locals in. According to AFP, when the police raided his "embassy", they recovered US$53,500 worth of Indian rupees, doctored passports and forged documents bearing stamps of India's Foreign Ministry. There are several lessons that scammers like Jain are teaching us. Firstly, scams mutate. Early scams that reached our shores were emails from bogus Nigerian royals, willing to share their inheritance if we helped them pay to move the money overseas. When suspicions grew in tandem with the emails, there was no more request for money; just a plea for bank details so that the inheritance can be moved into our account. A clever attempt to get access to money without asking for it. A cleverer move was the African romance scams, with many Asian women, including Malaysians, losing their fortune in the process. Next were calls from fake courier companies claiming that our packages are stuck at Customs, but would be released if some payments are made to clear them. Then came the calls from bogus police officers and taxmen. Today, it is the turn of deepfake videos. Consider, too, this latest duping attempt from an inventive knave: an SMS stating "your WhatsApp is abnormal" and that the app would be shut down in 12 hours unless we click a link for help. The instruction to click is a dead giveaway. Plus, why SMS and not WhatsApp? But Jain takes the cake. He doesn't call. The victims walk into the "embassy" and get taken in by the facade mimicking the real, which brings us to the second lesson: vigilance, the art of being alert to signs of danger. Admittedly, it is not an easy thing to do, but not an impossible one either. Consider Jain's trickery. Granted, the swanky building with flags to boot and luxury cars with diplomatic number plates parked outside added to the believability score. But what "nations" was he a diplomat of? West Arctica, Seborga, Poulvia and Lodonia, clearly are non-existent states claiming to be micronations. Surely, a little due diligence would have uncovered it. Scams are all about money or its equivalent. This we know. The trick is to be aware of how the scammers gain access to either, the final lesson scammers unwittingly have left us with.