
PM Anwar to meet Italian industry leaders in Rome for economic talks
The discussions will take place at the Malaysia-Italy Economic Partnership Roundtable on July 2, as confirmed by Malaysian Ambassador to Italy, Datuk Zahid Rastam.
The roundtable will also feature Malaysian companies accompanying Anwar, alongside Italian firms seeking deeper collaboration with Malaysia.
Leonardo SpA operates in aerospace and defence, STMicroelectronics is a key semiconductor player, and Ferrero is a leading confectionery manufacturer—all with substantial operations in Malaysia.
Zahid Rastam noted that Italian firms are keen to expand investments and partnerships in Malaysia, highlighting the country's strategic position in Southeast Asia.
Italy, the EU's third-largest economy, contributes 12 per cent of the bloc's GDP, making it a crucial partner for Malaysia.
Beyond business discussions, Anwar will hold talks with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on bilateral cooperation in trade, investment, defence, agro-commodity, and digital economy.
The Malaysia-EU Free Trade Agreement (MEUFTA) will also be a key agenda item.
The first round of MEUFTA negotiations is set for June 30 to July 4, 2025, in Brussels, with a target conclusion by 2026.
The EU remains Malaysia's fourth-largest trading partner, accounting for 9.5 per cent of total trade in 2023.
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New Straits Times
31 minutes ago
- New Straits Times
PM Anwar arrives in Rome for a three-day official visit
ROME: Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim arrived here Tuesday for a three-day working visit to the third-largest economy in the European Union (EU). The aircraft carrying the Prime Minister landed at Leonardo da Vinci Rome Fiumicino Airport at 8.18pm (2.18 am Wednesday, Malaysia time). On hand to welcome Anwar at the airport were Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan, Malaysia's Ambassador to Italy Datuk Zahid Rastam, Italian Senior Ambassador for Protocol Affairs Fabrizio Romano and former Italian Ambassador to Malaysia Massimo Rustico. Anwar said he hoped the visit would strengthen Malaysia-Italy ties and deepen strategic cooperation, as well as to elevate ASEAN-EU engagement in a challenging global landscape. "This visit, which comes at the invitation of my counterpart, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, reflects our shared commitment to strengthening the long-standing bilateral relationship between Malaysia and Italy based on the principles and spirit of friendship, trust and mutual respect. "Malaysia sees Italy as an important strategic partner in the European continent and we are committed to expanding cooperation in trade and investment, defence industry and the energy transition sector," said Anwar. Furthermore, as ASEAN Chairman, Anwar said this visit will also enhance the value of the relationship between the Southeast Asian region and Europe in the increasingly challenging geopolitical and geoeconomic landscape. "I am confident that this visit will open a new chapter that is more dynamic, yielding concrete benefits and taking Malaysia-Italy relations to a new and higher level," he added. During the visit, Anwar is accompanied by Mohamad, Transport Minister Anthony Loke, Agriculture and Food Security Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Sabu, Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin, and Investment, Trade and Industry Minister Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Tengku Abdul Aziz. Also part of the delegation is Deputy Minister of Energy Transition and Water Transformation Akmal Nasrullah Mohd Nasir. Immediately upon arrival at the capital, Anwar and delegation attended a gathering with Malaysian diaspora in the country. On July 3, the Prime Minister is scheduled to hold a bilateral meeting with his counterpart at Chigi Palace. According to Zahid, the meeting will provide an opportunity for both leaders to take stock of the current state of Malaysia-Italy relations and explore avenues to further strengthen cooperation, particularly in the fields of economy, defence technology, and energy. The two leaders will also exchange views on regional and international issues of mutual concern, including the ASEAN-Italy Development Partnership, ASEAN-European Union Dialogue Relations, and the situation in the Middle East. As ASEAN Chair for 2025, Anwar is expected to also highlight Malaysia's priorities and ASEAN's efforts in addressing regional and global challenges. The Prime Minister will also officiate the Malaysia-Italy Economic Partnership Roundtable on Wednesday, which will bring together industry leaders from both countries to explore trade and investment collaboration. During the business engagement event, Anwar is set to meet captains of Industry from 36 Italian firms, including multinational companies such as Leonardo SpA, STMicroelectronics and Ferrero. Italy is the third-largest national economy in the EU and the world's eighth-largest by gross domestic product. He is also scheduled to meet leaders of the local Muslim community. Malaysia and Italy enjoy longstanding and multifaceted relations, underpinned by strong economic ties, growing trade and investment, and people-to-people exchanges. – MORE In 2024, total trade between Malaysia and Italy recorded a two per cent increase, reaching RM14.61 billion (USD3.18 billion) compared with 2023. For the period of January to May 2025, total trade grew by 3.3 per cent year-on-year to RM6.5 billion (USD1.48 billion). Italy remains Malaysia's fifth largest trading partner and third largest importer of Malaysian palm oil among European Union member states in 2024. The Prime Minister will undertake an official visit to France on July 3 and 4, 2025 concluding his visit to Italy. – BERNAMA

Malay Mail
42 minutes ago
- Malay Mail
Chief Justice Tengku Maimun on being Malaysia's first female top judge, and more
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In August 2023, Tengku Maimun said gender equality includes not over-emphasising someone's achievement because they are women, including her being made the first female CJ which she believes was 'based purely on my qualifications and not because of my gender.' '[We] do not decide cases based on popular public views...' Tengku Maimun has repeatedly fended off threats to judicial independence by defending judges from intimidation and mudslinging campaigns. In July 2020, she noted that judges' decisions in cases involving politicians would be viewed from a political perspective, no matter how impartial or how detached the judges are from politics. She said judges must be prepared to face scrutiny and to 'swallow the hurtful, unfair and baseless allegations' against them if their decisions do not match public opinion, saying: 'But let it be known that we do not decide cases based on popular public views, rather, we decide cases based on the evidence and the law.' In January 2023, she condemned attempts to intimidate and pressure judges over public interest cases: 'It is very mischievous for anyone to try to tarnish the image of the courts and bring it into disrepute through unfair, biased and often times unenlightened criticism simply because they happen to not like particular decisions. 'The courts cannot turn around and insist to the public prosecutor that a charge remains' Tengku Maimun said when the Attorney General (AG), as the public prosecutor, decides to drop charges, the courts only have two choices under Malaysia's laws — to either grant a DNAA or acquit the accused person. A DNAA means the person can be brought back to court to face the same charges in the future, while an acquittal means they cannot be charged on the same charges again. Tengku Maimun in July 2020 said the courts have no power to force the AG to continue the trial when the AG has decided to drop the charges, reiterating in 2024: 'The courts cannot turn around and insist to the public prosecutor that a charge remains.' 'I have been criticised, vilified, been labelled un-Islamic or an enemy of Islam' 'As Chief Justice, I have been criticised, vilified, been labelled un-Islamic or an enemy of Islam, my husband (unfairly so) has been used against me in some applications to not only have me recused but more generally, to embarrass me and my colleagues,' Tengku Maimun said this year, but said her conscience remains clear. Tengku Maimun cited several Federal Court decisions in recent years which she said were not about the religion of Islam, but were instead about the constitutional issue of whether state legislatures or Parliament had the power to make certain criminal laws. 'That is all it was. Yet, you would invariably have seen that some parties spun those decisions to appear as if the judiciary or some judges within it, including me, are anti-Islam. Some even questioned my faith as a Muslim,' she said. On how the judiciary's loyalty lies with the law Tengku Maimun said the judiciary's top four judges including herself give out administrative directions to other judges, but noted this is only to ensure efficient management of court cases. She said the top four judges do not interfere and cannot give orders to other judges on how to decide cases. 'At this juncture, I would like to share my reminder to the Malaysian judges that the top judges are only the first among the equals and that judges are not expected to display their loyalty to these 'bosses' but only to the law,' she said in March 2023, reiterating the same message she had given in November 2019. On not being partial to any particular prime minister or any political party Early this year, Tengku Maimun said she looked forward to her retirement, as she believes she is leaving the judiciary in a better spot than before, and as she would get to spend more time with her grandchildren. Noting that she had served as CJ under four different prime ministers who all have different political affiliations, she said panels of judges led by her 'have made what we believed to be correct decisions on the law and facts' despite the heated political overtones and undertones in these cases. 'This alone should dispel any baseless notion that I have ever been partial to any particular prime minister or any political party,' she said.


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Motor racing-F1 talks up Silverstone's 'forever' future before Starmer meeting
Formula One F1 - Canadian Grand Prix - Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, Montreal, Quebec, Canada - June 15, 2025 Formula One Group CEO Stefano Domenicali ahead of the race REUTERS/Mathieu Belanger/File Photo LONDON (Reuters) -Silverstone circuit could stay on the Formula One calendar forever with no real rival to host the British Grand Prix, the sport's chief executive Stefano Domenicali said on Tuesday ahead of this weekend's race. The Italian told reporters he could not imagine a championship without Britain, home to seven of the 10 teams, but there was also no chance of the country having more than one race. "I do believe that... Silverstone has the right characteristics to stay forever in the calendar," said Domenicali, who will visit Downing Street on Wednesday with some drivers and team bosses to meet Prime Minister Keir Starmer. "There's no other places where you can develop such a huge event in the UK. I don't see any other places, to be honest." Silverstone hosted the first world championship race in 1950 and has a contract until 2034. Last year it hosted the biggest crowd of any event on the calendar with 480,000 spectators. Miami and Austria's Red Bull Ring have the longest deals, both running to 2041, and Domenicali saw no reason why Silverstone could not join them although the circuit management had yet to seek an extension. The meeting at Downing Street is billed as an informal celebration of the 75th anniversary of the first F1 championship race at Silverstone, but it is also a chance to raise issues the sport wants addressed. Domenicali said he would highlight how much the "F1 ecosystem" contributes to Britain as the beating heart of a global sport, and the risk of losing that primacy due to restrictions on staff and movement. Formula One figures calculate the sport brings 12 billion pounds ($16.48 billion) annually to the UK economy with 6,000 people directly employed and a further 41,000 working in a supply chain of 4,500 companies. The Italian said visa issues post-Brexit had affected the deployment of staff from race to race around Europe, while costly and time-consuming paperwork had complicated logistics and made it harder to draw up the race calendar. "It is impossible to think in the short term that the teams will move out from the UK because of this limitation but the teams will organise themselves maybe in a different way," he warned. "What we are asking is not to change the decision that your country has taken, because it's not our mandate and our role, but to facilitate things that are having a burden on the economical side. "And also in terms of possibility to be, as a country, more attractive for keeping the central part of F1 in this country." ($1 = 0.7281 pounds) (Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Clare Fallon)