Southern Thailand Muslim Community Donates 1 Million Baht To Help Flood Victims In Malaysia

HATYAI (Songkhla, A Muslim community in southern Thailand donated 1 million baht (US$29,838) to help alleviate the burden of flood victims in Malaysia.

The online donation drive campaign is an initiative of young preacher Asari Lateh, along with several independent religious orators in southern Thailand.

Asari and the orators, through “Babazu Channel,” held an online talk to collect the donations.

“The collection for two days, last Saturday and Sunday, managed to collect 1 million baht to be donated to the NSTP-Media Prima Disaster Fund.

“We hope this contribution can help ease the burden of flood victims,” ​​he told Bernama.

Meanwhile, the Malaysian Consul General in Songkhla, Muhammad Ridzuan Abu Yazid, thanked the Muslim community in southern Thailand for their assistance.

“The sincere contribution from the Muslim community in southern Thailand shows the good relations between Malaysia and Thailand that can help each other when the country is hit by disaster,” he said.

Earlier, Asari handed a replica of the check to TV3 representative Tuwaedaniya Meringing, witnessed by Muhammad Ridzuan, at the Malaysian Consulate General in Songkhla.

Last Friday, the Muslim community in Pattani also held a prayer – for the safety of Malaysians – following the floods.

 

Source: Nam News Network

Malaysian Ambassador To Bahrain Presents Letter Of Credence To King HamadMalaysian Ambassador to Bahrain Shazryll Zahiran presented his letter of credence to King Hamad Isa Al Khalifa on Tuesday.

The Malaysian Embassy in Bahrain in a statement on Wednesday said during the audience, Shazryll affirmed his commitment to continue strengthen the existing bilateral relations, further intensify cooperation and explore new economic, trade and investment opportunities between both countries.

He also conveyed to King Hamad the greetings from the Malaysian King Al-Sultan Abdullah Ri’ayatuddin Al-Mustafa Billah Shah, the government and the people of Bahrain.

“King Hamad welcomed the commitment and also expressed his hope that the cooperation between the two countries could be further enhanced in the future for the common good,” the statement read.

According to the embassy, Shazryll began his diplomatic career at the Foreign Ministry in 2001. He served in various capacities, among them were as the Deputy Director General at the Southeast Asia Regional Centre for Counter-Terrorism (SEARCCT) and Director at the Multilateral Security Division.

He also held the position of Malaysia’s Consul General to Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam from 2011 to 2015 and First Secretary at the Malaysian Embassy in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina from 2002 to 2007.

Diplomatic relations between Malaysia and Bahrain began in 1974 and further strengthened with the opening of the Malaysia Embassy in Bahrain in 2003 and the opening of the Bahrain Embassy in Malaysia in 2017.

 

Soutrce: Nam News network

How China Snuffed Out Threats Across Asia in 2021

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA — China spent much of 2021 addressing threats across Asia with a growing sophistication — the result of economic clout and superpower status — that tolerated few compromises, Asia experts say.

In the diplomacy department, Chinese President Xi Jinping said in November his country would always be a “good friend and good partner” to Southeast Asia, where some governments resent Beijing’s maritime expansion.

Turning to another would-be border flashpoint, China offered in September to build new infrastructure in Taliban-run Afghanistan.

But between those overtures, the Chinese government passed its border law, which authorizes use of weapons along its 22,117-kilometer land boundary.

Last year, China got locked into a deadly standoff with India — still a source of tension despite talks in 2021. It also flew military planes into Taiwan’s air defense identification zone almost daily in 2021.


Multilayered diplomacy

Sino-foreign flaps came up throughout the year.

The 200-plus Chinese fishing boats that suddenly moored in a disputed tract of the South China Sea soured Beijing’s relations with rival claimant Manila early in 2021, for example, while the spread of civil unrest in Myanmar after the country’s military coup in February challenged China to stop rebels from spilling over its border. Taiwan stood its ground all year rather than negotiating over China’s goal of unification.


At an Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit in late November, Xi pledged to always be a “good friend” to ASEAN to assuage the Philippines and three other claimants to the contested sea, analysts told VOA. A month earlier, Xi had advocated peaceful unification with Taiwan, a self-ruled island where polls show most citizens prefer autonomy.


“China’s behavior is not really historically new,” said Eduardo Araral, associate professor at the National University of Singapore’s public policy school. “That has been always the behavior of rising great powers. ASEAN countries have a basis for their concern, for their worry, about the rise of China. That’s why President Xi’s assurances would probably be very much welcome.”

Xi’s government added deeds to words by offering COVID-19 vaccines and personal protective gear to multiple countries, scholars say.

Filipinos noticed, said Aaron Rabena, research fellow at the Asia-Pacific Pathways to Progress Foundation in metro Manila. “The public, they’re quite skeptical. They’re not as receptive as the (Philippine) government when it comes to Chinese vaccines, but a lot in the public has received Chinese vaccines because they didn’t have much of a choice,” he said.

A return to authoritarian rule in Myanmar has helped China’s interests in the Southeast Asian nation’s gas pipes and natural resources, Kingston said. Myanmar was expected to grow closer to China as Western countries oppose junta rule.


Wolf warrior’ remarks, rising resentment in US, EU

China garnered less welcome attention around Asia and beyond largely for what became known as its “wolf warrior” diplomacy, a widely used term that the think tank National Bureau of Asian Research defines as open expression of “controversial thoughts” that may hurt bilateral relations.

“The wolf warrior diplomacy has been a total failure in terms of projecting a positive image of China around the world,” Kingston said. “All it’s done is generated anxiety in Asia, which basically has backfired on Beijing’s intentions.”

Beijing’s comments and military movement in Asia catalyzed a banding together by Western allies in favor of ASEAN’s South China Sea claimants, Rabena said, pointing particularly to a renewal of the U.S-Philippines Visiting Forces Agreement on military cooperation, which ensures the continuation of bilateral engagements with the armed forces of the Philippines that “range from expert exchanges” to joint “training exercises,” according to the U.S. Department of Defense.

Many European Union members hope China will follow United Nations maritime rules in the South China Sea to ensure consistency with other world waterways and to protect booming seaborne trade in goods with Asia.


Western countries have come together this year as well to support Taiwan, a fellow democracy, over China.


Fatigued by a 3-year-old trade dispute with the United States, hopeful of a zero COVID-19 caseload and intent on charting their own economic future, Chinese officials have turned on expatriates from much of the world over the past year by curbing immigration, analysts have told VOA.


That shift dovetails with the land boundary law, which took effect in October partly to stop infections coming from abroad.


“Clearly, the border closures and tensions with the U.S. and tensions with Europe are on their mind,” said Ker Gibbs, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, who plans to spend much of his time in California from December onward partly because of the pandemic-linked border controls.

“China wants a cooperative relationship with both major economies … and they’re having a struggle right now, frankly,” he told VOA.

Going into 2022, the Winter Olympics in Beijing are expected to test China’s ties with the world following months of calls overseas for boycotts and U.S. President Joe Biden’s announcement that his country would not send diplomats. China’s response to the pileup of boycotts and how it would make Xi look overseas will be analyzed by China scholars in the weeks to come.

 

Source: Voice of America

Indonesia Allows Boat With 120 Rohingya Refugees to Land

BANDA ACEH, INDONESIA — Indonesian authorities decided Wednesday to allow a boat carrying 120 Rohingya Muslims to land after drifting for days off the country’s northernmost province of Aceh.

The decision was made because of the severe conditions experienced by the passengers, who are overwhelmingly women and children, said Armed Wijaya, who heads a refugee task force at the Coordinating Ministry for Political, Law and Security.

“The Indonesian government has decided, in the name of humanity, to accommodate the Rohingya refugees currently adrift at sea near Bireuen district,” Wijaya said in a statement.

Local authorities had earlier said they would push the boat back to international waters despite calls from the United Nations refugee agency and human rights groups that it be allowed to land.

The vessel is reportedly leaking and has a damaged engine, and is floating in the open sea in harsh weather and may be at risk of capsizing, the UNHCR said Tuesday.

The boat was first sighted by local fishermen on Sunday about 60 miles (96 kilometers) off the coast of Bireuen, said Badruddin Yunus, the leader of the local tribal fishing community. He said fishermen were unable to tow the broken-down wooden boat but provided food, water and clothes to the passengers, including 60 women, 51 children and nine men.

“Their condition looks weak but fine,” said Yunus, adding that the Rohingya said they wanted to go to Malaysia and had been at sea for 28 days before their boat’s engine broke down.

Local officials, supported by police and the navy, provided food, medicine, a new engine and a technician to help repair the boat, and earlier said they would push it back to international waters once it is fixed, said Bireuen district chief Muzakkar Gani, who also cited concerns that some of the people might have COVID-19.

The plan to push the boat back out to sea drew an outcry from human rights groups.

“The Rohingya ethnic group is a vulnerable, stateless group of people that should be given protection,” the Civil Society Coalition, a coalition of nine Indonesian rights groups, said in a statement. “As a country that upholds human rights and a member of the U.N. Human Rights Council, Indonesia should set an example for other countries.”

The UNHCR said it is ready to assist the government and local community in preparing for the Rohingya, including a quarantine process in line with international public health protocols.

More than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled from Buddhist-majority Myanmar to refugee camps in Bangladesh since August 2017, when the Myanmar military launched a clearance operation in response to attacks by a rebel group. Myanmar security forces have been accused of mass rapes, killings and the burning of thousands of homes.

Groups of Rohingya have attempted to leave the crowded camps in Bangladesh and travel by sea in hazardous voyages to other Muslim-majority countries in the region.

Muslim-dominated Malaysia has been a common destination for the boats, and traffickers have promised the refugees a better life there. But many Rohingya refugees who land in Malaysia face detention.

Although Indonesia is not a signatory to the United Nations’ 1951 Refugee Convention, the UNHCR said that a 2016 presidential regulation provides a national legal framework governing the treatment of refugees on boats in distress near Indonesia and to help them disembark.

These provisions have been implemented for years, most recently in June when 81 Rohingya refugees were rescued off the coast of East Aceh.

 

Source: Voice of Amrica

MAN ARRESTED FOR HOTEL ROOM BOOKING SCAM

The Police have arrested a 45-year-old man for his suspected involvement in a series of hotel room booking scam cases.

On 28 December 2021, the Police received a report from a victim who was purportedly cheated by the man for a hotel room booking. The victim did not receive the hotel booking after making payments to the man.

Through investigations, officers from Ang Mo Kio Division established the identity of the man and arrested him within six hours upon receiving the police report. Preliminary investigations revealed that the man is believed to be involved in other similar scam cases.

The man will be charged in court on 30 December 2021 with cheating under Section 420 of the Penal Code. The offence carries an imprisonment term of up to ten years and a fine.

The Police would like to advise members of the public to take the following precautions when making online purchases:

  1. If the price is too good to be true, it probably is. Purchase only from authorised sellers or reputable sources, especially for high-value items.
  2. Opt for buyer protection by using in-built payment options that release payment to the seller only upon delivery. Whenever possible, avoid making advance payments or direct bank transfers to the seller as this method does not offer any protection.
  3. Scammers may entice buyers to contact them directly through messaging platforms such as WhatsApp or WeChat by offering a better or faster deal if bank transfer payments are made directly to them. They may also use a local bank account or provide a copy of a NRIC/driver’s license to make you believe that they are genuine sellers. Do not fall for it!

For more information on scams, members of the public can visit scamalert.sg or call the Anti-Scam Hotline at 1800-722-6688. Anyone with information on such scams may call the Police Hotline at 1800-255-0000 or submit information online at www.police.gov.sg/iwitness.

 

Source: Singapore Police Force

MAN TO BE CHARGED FOR OFFENCES UNDER THE PENAL CODE AND CRIMINAL PROCEDURE CODE IN RELATION TO ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION OF OBSCENE MATERIALS

The Police arrested a 22-year-old man on 29 December 2021 for offences under the Penal Code and Criminal Procedure Code in relation to the electronic transmission of obscene materials on an online platform – ‘OnlyFans’.

On 4 September 2021, the Police received a report informing that the man had allegedly transmitted, by electronic means, obscene materials in the form of images and videos of his private parts via his ‘OnlyFans’ account. On 11 October 2021, the Police seized the account and served the man an order under Section 39(1)(d)(i) of the Criminal Procedure Code not to access the account. The man was warned at the time when the order was served, that a breach of the order would amount to a criminal offence. Despite that, the man allegedly wrote in to the ‘OnlyFans’ administrators, claiming that his account was not secured, and a password reset was done. The man subsequently regained access to the account and allegedly continued to electronically transmit more obscene materials using the account and another secondary account.

For allegedly failing to comply with an order under Section 39(1)(d)(i) of the Criminal Procedure Code not to access his ‘OnlyFans’ account, the man will be charged with an offence under Section 39(3)(b) of the Criminal Procedure Code, which carries a fine not exceeding $5,000, an imprisonment term not exceeding six months, or both.

For allegedly transmitting obscene material electronically via the two ‘OnlyFans’ accounts, the man will be charged with two offences under Section 292(1)(a) of the Penal Code, which carries an imprisonment term of up to three months, a fine, or both.

The man will be charged in court on 30 December 2021.

On 1 November 2021, the man was served a fresh order under Section 39(1)(d)(i) of the Criminal Procedure Code not to access both ‘OnlyFans’ accounts. The Police are presently conducting further investigations into possible fresh offences, including a further breach of the order which was served on 1 November 2021.

The Police would like to remind the public that it is illegal under the Penal Code to transmit any obscene materials by electronic means. It is also against the law to take part in or receive profits from any business where obscene materials are transmitted by electronic means or advertise the sale of obscene materials. Members of the public may wish to lodge a police report if they are aware of persons engaging in such activities.

 

Source: Singapore Police Force