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Monday, December 29, 2025

‘Pergilah kawan, jangan kembali’, kata Pemuda PAS selepas persahabatan tak dihargai

Kenyataan Afnan Hamimi Taib Azamudden itu tidak lama selepas Adun Bersatu dilantik menteri besar Perlis menggantikan Adun PAS.

Afnan Hamimi holds a Press Conference "Youth Reject URA"
Ketua Pemuda PAS Afnan Hamimi Taib Azamudden berkata parti itu buat apa sahaja nak jaga persahabatan tetapi ia tidak dihargai oleh ‘kawan’.
PETALING JAYA:
 Ketua Pemuda PAS Afnan Hamimi Taib Azamudden menyuarakan kekecewaannya selepas segala pengorbanan parti itu dan semangat setiakawan yang dipertahankan selama ini tidak dihargai ‘kawan’.

Kenyataan itu dibuat tidak lama selepas Adun Kuala Perlis dari Bersatu, Abu Bakar Hamzah dilantik sebagai menteri besar Perlis menggantikan Adun Sanglang Shukri Ramli daripada PAS yang meletak jawatan atas faktor kesihatan, Khamis lalu.

Dalam hantaran di Facebook itu, Afnan mengimbas kembali beberapa pengorbanan PAS selepas PRU15 untuk menjaga persahabatan termasuk menamakan calon dalam kalangan ‘kawan’ sebagai calon perdana menteri.

“Selepas PRU15, kerusi PAS lah yang paling banyak di Parlimen tetapi semua Ahli Parlimen PAS tandatangan SD yang ada nama ‘kawan’.

“Walaupun dalam hati kecil mahu nama calon perdana menteri itu dari kalangan PAS, kerana kerusinya lebih banyak. Namun hasrat itu dipendam, kepentingan muafakat persahabatan lebih diutamakan,” katanya.

Kata Afnan, selepas ditakdirkan jadi pembangkang, PAS namakan pula ketua pembangkang dalam kalangan nama ‘kawan’.

Tambahnya, PAS juga sanggup kerah jentera, keluar duit, kutip derma untuk membantu kempen ‘kawan’ dalam pilihan raya.

“Begitulah PAS dalam berkawan. Semua menjadi saksi kesetiakawanan PAS dalam berkawan. Hari ini, ‘kawan’ itu sudah pergi berjalan sendiri. Merasakan diri sudah gagah hebat kuat.

“‘Kawan’ yang setia ini sudah ditinggalkan begitu sahaja. Tak mengapa ‘kawan’. Nak pergi, pergilah. Tak usah kembali lagi,” katanya.

Terdahulu, beberapa pemimpin PAS turut memberi pelbagai reaksi di media sosial susulan pelantikan menteri besar Perlis itu termasuk ada menganggapnya sebagai satu bentuk ‘pengkhianatan’ dan ‘kawan makan kawan’.

Isu itu bermula, selepas lapan Adun Perikatan Nasional (PN) iaitu lima Bersatu dan tiga PAS mengemukakan akuan berkanun (SD) yang memberitahu menarik balik sokongan terhadap Shukri. - FMT

Sunday, December 28, 2025

The climate finance gap: Is academia fighting the last war?

 

Letter to Editor

THE race to decarbonize the global economy is on. But a new study suggests the climate crisis is, at its core, a financial crisis.  The staggering sums needed to transition to clean energy dwarf what governments alone can provide.

The transition to a clean energy future is no longer a technological fantasy. Solar and wind are now often cheaper than fossil fuels. Electric vehicles are mainstream.

So why does the transition feel so slow? The single biggest obstacle is finance. Bridging that multi-trillion-dollar gap is about rewiring the entire global industrial base—energy, transportation, agriculture, and manufacturing—all at once.

This requires capital on a scale that dwarfs the Apollo program. Governments simply do not have these sums. The only source is private capital. Yet, the global financial system has not yet been harnessed into these critical projects.

There is a mismatch between the risks of green investments and what traditional finance rewards. Building a grid-scale battery storage facility requires enormous capital today for returns that may materialize over 20-30 years.

Most private investors demand quicker, more predictable returns. Investors also fear betting on the wrong solution. A fossil fuel power plant, by contrast, has a known business model.

For many solutions, like sustainable aviation fuel or green steel, the cost is still higher than the dirty alternative. Who pays that premium? The market hasn’t yet figured it out, creating uncertainty for investors. 

Perhaps the most perverse bottleneck is that the price of capital often fails to reflect the true cost of climate change, seen as a massive market failure.

Fossil fuel investments have long enjoyed an implicit subsidy because their price does not include the colossal social and environmental costs—the healthcare bills from pollution, the disaster recovery from extreme weather, the existential threat of a destabilized climate.

Because these “externalities” aren’t on the balance sheet, dirty investments can appear artificially profitable. Simultaneously, the massive systemic risk that climate change poses to the entire financial portfolio—from flooded coastal assets to collapsed agricultural supply chains—is still not accurately priced in.

Investors are, in effect, making decisions with a blindfold on, unable to see the true risk of inaction. The Result? Capital continues to flow towards the old economy, effectively subsidizing our own destruction, while the new economy struggles to attract funding despite being the only viable long-term path.

Solving this is requires making projects palatable for private investors. And creating new ways to bundle, securitize, and trade green assets to improve liquidity and attract different types of capital. Not to mention mandating clear, consistent climate risk disclosure so the market can finally price risk accurately.

We have the technology. But without a financial system redesigned to fund it, the energy transition will remain a dream. Unleashing private capital is the only option.

This has given rise to the critical field of “climate finance,” the study of how to price, allocate, and manage capital to address climate change.

But is academic research keeping pace with the breakneck speed of the real-world problem? A new working paper from Matteo Gasparini of Oxford and Peter Tufano of Harvard Business School, “The Evolving Academic Field of Climate Finance,” delivers a startling answer: not even close.

The focus of academic literature is overwhelmingly on the role of public finance. Papers on topics like carbon pricing, green bonds, and the cost of capital for green investments are dwarfed by a preoccupation with government policy and public funding.

Yes, smart public policy is an essential catalyst. But governments don’t have the balance sheets to build a global network of renewable energy plants.

That capital resides in the vaults of institutional investors, asset managers, banks, and corporations. So, why the disconnect? Research on public finance often relies on established economic models and readily available data.

Studying the intricate, often proprietary, mechanisms of private markets is far messier and more difficult.

A deliberate rebalancing of research effort toward the mechanisms that can attract and deploy private capital at scale is needed. Climate finance requires insights from engineering, data science, law, and sociology to understand the real-world viability and impact of investments.

It requires moving beyond diagnosing the problem to designing and testing financial instruments, business models, and measurement frameworks that work.

The climate crisis is the defining challenge of our time. We have mobilized scientists, and activists. But if we fail to mobilize the minds of our finest financial thinkers to tackle the problem of funding, we will lose.

Academia must step out of the ivory tower and into the deal room. The future of the planet may depend not just on the technology we invent, but on the financial ingenuity we apply to deploying it. 

Professor Dato Dr Ahmad Ibrahim is an Adjunct Professor at the Ungku Aziz Centre for Development Studies, Universiti Malaya. 

The views expressed are solely of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of  MMKtT.

- Focus Malaysia.

Stern warning: RM2,000 fine and community service for littering starting Jan 1

 

THE Ministry of Housing and Local Government has issued a final warning as tougher enforcement against public littering takes effect from January 1, 2026, including mandatory community service for offenders.

Minister Nga Kor Ming announced that enforcement officers have been directed to implement the new measures, which include a RM2,000 fine and 12 hours of public cleaning work for anyone caught littering, regardless of nationality.

In a Facebook statement, Nga emphasised shared civic responsibility, stating that urban cleanliness is a collective duty ahead of Visit Malaysia Year 2026.

He expressed disappointment over persistent littering in city centres and public areas, warning that irresponsible behaviour damages Malaysia’s image among tourists and undermines efforts to become a developed nation.

The reminder follows viral footage of streets in Bukit Bintang, Kuala Lumpur, left strewn with rubbish after Christmas celebrations. On X, Nga called the scenes embarrassing, urging the public to “grow up” and stop blaming authorities when laws are enforced.

Kuala Lumpur City Hall echoed the concern, noting that litter at popular tourist spots harms the capital’s reputation despite ongoing cleaning efforts.

Through Solid Waste and Public Cleansing Management Corporation and local authorities, the ministry remains committed to sustained enforcement and cleanliness drives, but stressed success depends on public cooperation.

Nga called on Malaysians to dispose of waste properly, especially during festive events, to build cleaner, sustainable cities for future generations. — Focus Malaysia

The money trail and weak ‘documents’ from Najib’s defence team busted the Saudi donation claims

 

LAWYER and podcaster Liyana Marzuki has highlighted why the Malaysian court dismissed former Prime Minister Najib Razak’s defence that billions of ringgit in his personal account were donations from an Arab king.

She stressed that solid money trail evidence overwhelmingly favoured the prosecution in the 1MDB scandal.

In a recent podcast episode, Marzuki explained that in anti-money laundering cases, the money trail, meticulously traced by professional analysts showing funds’ origin, global movements, and final destination, is the most powerful and credible form of proof.

Malaysian prosecutors built their case on exactly this. Expert testimonies from Bank Negara Malaysia, bank compliance officers, authenticated international bank statements, and SWIFT transaction records demonstrated 1MDB funds were laundered before landing in Najib’s personal account.

Similar money trail evidence secured convictions abroad in Switzerland, Singapore, and the United States, including those of bankers Tim Leissner and Roger Ng.

In contrast, Najib’s defence, led by lawyer Shafee Abdullah, relied solely on photocopied letters purporting to confirm the Saudi royal donation.

These lacked original documents, certified true copies, supporting witnesses, or any Saudi government representation. The alleged author of the letters was never called to testify.

High Court Judge Collin Lawrence Sequerah ruled the letters fake and inadmissible under the Evidence Act, finding them unreliable due to the complete absence of corroboration.

Marzuki emphasised that to counter strong prosecution money trail evidence, the defence needed equivalent proof, such as verified bank records or official Saudi endorsements.

But none was provided, leaving the court with little choice but to accept the prosecution’s version. — Focus Malaysia

Perlis Mufti now wants evidence on allegations linking the political crisis to irregular projects

 

PERLIS Mufti Mohd Asri Zainul Abidin has stressed that any claims connecting the state’s recent political crisis to major projects allegedly bypassing regulations require solid proof to avoid fostering negative perceptions toward institutions.

In an audio program, Asri shared that he personally inquired with the Raja of Perlis, Tuanku Syed Sirajuddin Putra Jamalullail, about such allegations, and the ruler requested that the individuals making such accusations come forward to present information about the projects involved.

Asri warned that unsubstantiated accusations could imply the former Menteri Besar resigned under pressure to approve non-compliant matters, potentially damaging views on leadership and the constitutional monarchy in Malaysia.

“He did not refer to anyone specifically, but allegations like this can create perceptions, for example, that the Menteri Besar resigned due to pressure to approve certain matters without following regulations,” he said.

“Who can pressure the Menteri Besar? This can give a very negative perception. I am not trying to defend anyone, but if you want to point fingers, there must be evidence. This is very frightening, and we do not want it to be used in the name of religion,” Asri added.

His comments respond indirectly to PAS President Abdul Hadi Awang’s assertions that issues with several large projects not adhering to rules contributed to the crisis.

Perlis Menteri Besar Mohd Shukri Ramli stepped down after losing the support of eight PN state assemblymen.

They are the three PAS members whose party memberships were subsequently revoked, and five elected representatives from Bersatu. He attributed his resignation to health concerns. — Focu Malaysia