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Saturday, January 18, 2025

Bread’s Halal, Cheese’s Halal, Chicken Ham’s Halal – But Becomes Non-Halal When Use Them To Make Sandwich

 After the controversial socks bearing the word “Allah”, KK Mart has courted yet another fiasco. This time, it’s over “ham and cheese sandwich” sold at its convenience store in University Malaya. The sandwiches were sold with the halal logo despite allegedly not been officially certified, forcing the store to be temporarily closed whilst triggering yet another explosive uproar.

 

Sold at one of the 16 KK Concept Stores, the sandwich was quickly exploited by extremist and radical Malay politicians such as UMNO Youth Chief Akmal Saleh, who relentlessly attacks the Chinese-owned business. Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department (Religious Affairs) Mohd Na’im Mokhtar too has capitalized on the issue, calling it a “serious offence”.

 

The scumbag Akmal has also taken to TikTok to express his so-called outrage. In the TikTok video, he falsely said “ham” contains pork and asked how a sandwich containing pork could have a halal label on it. He then reminded KK Mart that the Muslim community is still angry regarding the previous religious sock controversy, warning that this matter will not be taken lightly. 

KK Mart - Ham Cheese Sandwich

KK Mart had suspended all business dealings with the ham and sandwich supplier – Shake and Bake Cafe – and halted the supply of its sandwiches to all its outlets. The store chain had also issued a letter of demand to its supplier through its legal team, as well as filing a police report. Shake and Bake Cafe, meanwhile, was raided by Jakim (Islamic Development Department Malaysia).

 

However, a few days later (January 15), the supplier of the pre-packed chicken ham and cheese sandwiches sold by Shake and Bake Cafe confirmed that the meat used in the product is halal-certified. As it turned out, the sandwich ingredients – bread, cheese and chicken slices – were halal-certified by none other than the notorious Jakim itself.

But it was Jakim that had previously declared that the sandwiches, along with the company producing them, did not possess valid halal certification. It’s both hilarious and dumb for Jakim to say that the bread is halal, the cheese is halal, and even the chicken ham is halal, but when use all of them to make a sandwich, it suddenly becomes non-halal or forbidden.

JAKIM Building

Unless the plastic wrap used to package the ham sandwich is non-halal, it’s laughable to say the food is haram (forbidden) when all the ingredients were already halal-certified. In fact, Malaysia has become a laughing stock even in Indonesia for trying to be too obsessed with “halal-ness” till some extremist Malays foam – even develop ulcer – at the mouth trying to make a hill out of a mole.

 

Basically, there are three different issues on this so-called ham sandwich. For a Russian graduate doctor like Mr Akmal to hoodwink gullible Malays that ham means pork speaks volumes about his stupidity and ignorance. While ham was originally made from pork (hence the birth of hamburger), the processed meat nowadays could be made from chicken or something called “Turkey” ham.

 

Therefore, ham isn’t necessarily made from pork as a simple Google could clear the doubts. For Malay students of the University Malaya to be equally dumb like the moron Akmal and can’t use common sense and intelligence to tell the difference is even more disturbing and flabbergasting. What a waste going through years of education only to end up with Taliban mindset.

Akmal Salleh – UMNO Youth Chief

The second issue is the halal logo itself. Even if the company had misused the logo, it’s wrong to say the sandwich is forbidden. The halal-ness of the sandwich and the halal logo are two separate issues altogether. For Akmal to create a perception – even instigating – that Malay Muslims have been tricked into eating pork sandwich is both irresponsible and disgusting.

 

Still, it does not explain why Jakim insists the final product – ham sandwich – is not halal despite using halal ingredients to make the delicious food. If the issue is about the logo, and has nothing to do with the food, then it’s merely about the technicalities. Halal food and halal-certified food are two different things here. You eat the sandwich, not the logo. It was like insisting a Honda / BMW cannot be driven on the road unless it gets a logo to certify that it’s a car.

 

How difficult it is to wrap a piece of cheese and sliced chicken ham between two pieces of bread? If such simple food preparation still needs an approval from the useless Jakim to be halal-certified, then 99% of the food on the market are technically non-halal, including nasi lemak, fried chicken, sizzling yee mee, yong tau foo, pizzas, meatballs, sushi, and whatnot sold at food court in shopping centres.

Yong Tau Foo

Yes, how do the Malays know that ingredients like bee hoon, yellow mee, fish paste, meatballs, chicken, sausage or tau foo, let alone the final products, are halal? Was there any halal logo on that plate of sizzling yee mee, yong tau foo or dim sum sold at food courts, for example? Just because the food is sold and cooked by Malays does not mean they are 100% halal, mind you.

 

Heck, how do you even know that the poultry feed for chickens, or the boba in bubble tea, or the smoked sausage is not tainted with pig DNA? After all, previously the brilliant Jakim and some genius Malays were screaming till their face turned blue about Cadbury tainted with pig DNA, forcing the chocolate maker to recall its products from the shelves.

 

To be absolutely halal-compliant, Malays who are constantly losing sleep over halal-ness of food must buy their raw materials and products from Muslim producers and manufacturers only. Essentially, they should stop importing from non-Muslim countries including China, India, U.S., Europe, Australia, New Zealand, South America and the list goes on.Food Inflation - Chicken Price Skyrockets

In fact, they should boycott ethnic Chinese local-made products like eggs, tau foo, mee, bee hoon, kuey teow, soya sauce, biscuits, white coffee, snacks, diapers, beverages and even those juicy chicken from Pasar Selayang wholesale market. They should also produce their own baby formula, and avoid Tealive, Chicken Rice Shop, 99 Speedmart, NSK, 7-Eleven, Johnny’s Steamboat because they are owned by Chinese.

 

To be sure, they should stop buying anything from Shopee or Lazada as products sold on the e-commerce platform could be non-halal. How sure are they that the clothing being sold did not contain material from prohibited animals like pig and dog because they do not have Jakim’s halal logo? Hilariously, the same holier-than-thou Malays have no issue accepting banknotes tainted with pork and lard.

 

The third issue is the burning question why the same Malay extremists still buy a sandwich despite having called for a boycott on KK Mart previously. Why did they care about the halal-ness of the food sold at the kafir convenience stores if they are already boycotting KK Mart? The answer is obvious – they just wanted to create unnecessary troubles and destroy Chinese businesses.

UMNO - A Man Walked Passed Logo

And we know why UMNO Akmal has been falsely and deliberately stirring up racial and religion sentiments among the Malays that the Muslims are being insulted by non-Malays. He wanted to become a Malay hero at the expense of racial harmony, hoping that the continuous and excessive hatred for ethnic Chinese could swing back Malay voters who had abandoned UMNO.

 

He dares to constantly provoke, bully and attack the Chinese largely because spineless Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has no balls to reprimand the UMNO youth chief. The premier still hasn’t the clue that the Chinese voters are waiting – silently – for the next 16th General Election to teach his PKR (People’s Justive Party) a lesson he won’t forget.

 

Halal certification is merely a marketing gimmick to justify the existence of Jakim, which PM Anwar Ibrahim burnt RM2 billion in annual budget allocation. Are you saying that before the invention of the halal sticker and the formation of Jakim in 1997, Malay Muslims – including Akmal’s ancestors – could not go to heaven for consuming non-halal food? If ham is pork, then all the Malay Muslims have theoretically been eating pork for having eaten “hamburger” (pork burger) for decades.

Halal Restaurant
 

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

- financetwitter

FRIDAY NOTES (17/1/2025) FROM THE QURAN - CAREFUL READING

NON MUSLIMS CAN SKIP THIS. BUT THIS IS REALLY SUPER SHORT

I have been writing this Friday Notes from the Quran for sometime now. Muslim readers would have or should have noticed that I do not explain too much of the verses which I reproduce from the Quran.

  • Because in truth, that is all that is needed to understand the Quran. 
  • You just have to read it. 
  • That is Step 1 and the only step needed. 
  • You just have to read it. 

As Dr Maurice Bucaille said it is best if we read it in Arabic and understand it in Arabic. This is not a very difficult thing to do. A long time ago I took Arabic classes at the university here - certificate level. It does help a lot but of course if you dont practise speaking the arabic then your spoken arabic will be very rusty. N'theless reading the Quran in Arabic and reading it repeatedly does give you a grasp of the Quran in the original Arabic.

And there are translations in almost all languages which are very useful too. My all time favorite is a literal Indonesian translation. So it can sound like this: 'kemudian mereka tidak bertaubat dan mereka tidak,  mereka mengambil pelajaran/ingat'

We should read the Quran carefully. Pay attention to details.

For example the Surah Baqarah verse no. 2 says :

 ذٰ لِكَ الۡڪِتٰبُ لَا رَيۡبَ ۛۚ ۖ فِيۡهِ ۛۚ هُدًى لِّلۡمُتَّقِيۡنَۙ

which means "That is the Book. There is no doubt in it.  A guidance for the muttaqeen" (the reverent, who stay straight).

The yellow highlight :  لَا رَيۡبَ ۛۚ ۖ فِيۡهِ ۛۚ  means  'There is no doubt in it'.

So the Quran says that "there is no doubt in it".  

Plus other verses which say the Quran is majeed (glorious), muneer (enlightening), mubeen (clear), hakeem (wise).

So if someone comes along and says there are doubts in the Quran such a statement is basically challenging or rejecting Surah Baqarah verse no 2 above. 

Or other similar statements like the Quran is unclear, its message its incomplete, etc. Such statements basically imply that Baqarah verse 2 is quite incorrect. 

  • Non-Muslims have no obligations to accept or believe in the Quran. 
  • They may have their doubts. 
  • But if Muslims have doubts then how would they deal with verses like Surah Baqarah 2 above?  

If readers confine themselves to staying within the pages of the Book, they should stand a better chance of coming to a common understanding about what the Book says.

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

Disabled man assaulted after riding into market stall

 

Free Malaysia Today
Police said a video clip of the incident has been circulating on social media.

CHUKAI
Police are looking for several people believed to be involved in the assault of a mentally disabled man at the farmers’ market in Padang Astaka Chukai this morning.

Acting Kemaman police chief Wan Muhammad Wan Ja’afar said a complaint was received at 9.30am.

Investigations revealed that a 47-year-old man on a motorcycle accidentally collided into a market stall. “The collision caused items from one of the stalls to topple. Several people at the scene then assaulted the victim,” he said.

The man sustained minor injuries and was taken to hospital for treatment.

Wan Muhammad urged members of the public with information about the incident to contact Kemaman police. “We found a video recording of the incident that has been circulating on social media since this morning,” he added. - FMT

GRS man says Hamzah has no solution, only rhetoric

 

Joniston Bangkuai Hamzah Zainudin
GRS information chief Joniston Bangkuai hits back at opposition leader Hamzah Zainudin’s call for a change of state government.

PETALING JAYA
Opposition leader Hamzah Zainudin has no solutions to Sabah’s infrastructure problems, only political rhetoric to blacken the state government, says a leader of the ruling Gabungan Rakyat Sabah.

GRS information chief Joniston Bangkuai said Sabah’s infrastructure problems would not have persisted if the federal government had fulfilled its commitments to the state.

He dismissed Hamzah’s call to Sabahans yesterday to vote out the current state government in the coming state elections for its failure to end problems of electricity and water supply and poor road conditions.

He said that Hamzah, a former federal minister, should understand that the solution to these long-standing issues lies in Putrajaya fulfilling Sabah’s right to receive its share of federal revenue collected from the state.

Joniston said the remarks by Hamzah, a deputy chairman of Perikatan Nasional, were politically-motivated. “He’s not trying to offer solutions with his remarks but to create negative perceptions for political mileage,” Joniston told FMT.

Joniston said the GRS government had allocated RM2.6 billion in the 2025 state budget for basic infrastructure and utilities, RM424.53 million for road development and upgrades, and RM729.79 million to improve clean water supply.

One of PN’s component parties, PAS, has a nominated member (Aliakbar Gulasan) in the Sabah legislative assembly.

Revenue-sharing has been a bone of contention with Sabah political leaders over the years based on a constitutional provision for annual federal grants amounting to 40% of the net revenue collected since 1963.

However, the constitution also provides that the revenue share is subject to review while the federal government had previously stated lump sum payments had been agreed on later, rendering the 40% formula inapplicable. - FMT

Say no to graft and bigotry, Anwar urges young Malaysians

 

Free Malaysia Today
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim speaking at the London School of Economics today, with a lecture on Malaysia’s global strategy. (Facebook pic)

LONDON
The new generation of young Malaysians must have the courage to reject corruption, racism and religious extremism, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said today.

In making the call, Anwar said that while Malaysia is a multiracial and peaceful country, there are those who are attempting to divide the nation through racial and religious extremism.

Anwering questions after delivering a lecture at the London School of Economics, the prime minister said that his government’s Madani concept did not allow compromise on issues such as corruption and “leaders squandering wealth” regardless of whether they are from the coalition or not.

Anwar pointed out that while the constitution guarantees the rights of Muslims, Malays and Bumiputeras, certain groups sought to exploit race-based policies to insult and incite hatred towards those of other communities.

“I will be tough on this. They can criticise me for my policies, but they cannot use (the) race and religious cards,” he asserted.

Anwar, who is on a five-day working visit to Britain, said Malaysia had significant growth potential in the past but poor governance and greed had hindered progress.

“I need young people to understand this. Have the courage to say no to corruption and religious bigotry,” he said, adding that tolerance is essential in a multiracial country like Malaysia.

The lecture was attended by about 500 students and lecturers, including Malaysians studying at LSE.

Responding to a question on why Malaysia has not yet ratified the 1951 refugee convention and a 1967 refugee protocol, Anwar said the Malaysian government treats refugees well despite not being a signatory.

“We have several million illegal workers and refugees in Malaysia, including about 200,000 from Myanmar. Whether refugees or illegal workers, our stance is that they must be treated humanely,” he added. - FMT

Fire razes adhesive tape factory in Perai

 

kilang loytape perai pulau pinang
Black smoke was visible up to five kilometres away from the adhesive tape factory in Perai. (JBPM pic)

BUTTERWORTH
Fire destroyed a factory producing adhesive tape in Perai this afternoon. No casualties were reported.

Black smoke was visible up to five kilometres away, said Penang fire and rescue department operations chief Endi Sherimi Adam.

“The fire involved a single-storey factory covering approximately 6,000 sq ft, affecting the storage, office, and operational sections. As of 8pm, about 60% of the building had been destroyed,” he said in a statement today.

He said the fire had been brought under control in the operational and storage areas, while firefighting efforts were still continuing in the office and laboratory sections.

About 100 firefighters were involved, from fire stations in Perai, Bandar Perda, Butterworth, Bakap River, Bukit Mertajam, Kepala Batas, and Paya Terubong, along with 13 people from the voluntary fire brigade. - FMT

Friday, January 17, 2025

Anwar: Malaysia joined BRICS to navigate global shifts, not choose sides

 

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia's decision to join BRICS was not about aligning with a particular bloc but rather a response to the need for strategic adaptation in an increasingly dynamic global environment.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim said, as an international trading nation, Malaysia must navigate the uncertainties of the global landscape with renewed determination.

He said this includes staying adaptive and ambitious while prioritising sustainable, inclusive, and equitable growth.

Anwar said Malaysia was also focused on positioning

"It is through this forward-looking and holistic paradigm that Malaysia made the strategic decision to join BRICS. It is not, as some of the pundits would like to claim, about Malaysia choosing a side.

"It is about a clear-sighted recognition of the geopolitical and geoeconomic changes that are happening around us and expanding our options," he said.

Anwar made these remarks during his lecture, "The Adaptive Edge: Malaysia's Global Strategy in an Uncertain Era", at the London School of Economics and Political Science today.

He also said Malaysia was not alone in this endeavour, as neighbouring countries such as Thailand, Vietnam, and Indonesia have made similar strategic calculations.

"As alluded to earlier, these developments are coterminous with the narrowing of the dichotomy between the Global South and Global North, notwithstanding the differential in absolute GDP numbers," he said.

Anwar added that, with Malaysia assuming the Asean chairmanship this year, he will bring this adaptive mindset, focusing on strengthening the bloc's connections with other regional organisations, such as the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), in addition to the European Union.

On July 28, Anwar announced that Malaysia had applied to join BRICS during Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov's two-day visit to Malaysia.

On Oct 24, Malaysia joined 12 other nations as a BRICS partner country.

BRICS, originally comprising Brazil, Russia, India, and China, was established in 2009 as a cooperation platform for emerging economies. South Africa joined the bloc in 2010.

The bloc has since expanded to include Iran, Egypt, Ethiopia, and the United Arab Emirates.

BRICS represents about 40 per cent of the global population and accounts for a cumulative gross domestic product of US$26.6 trillion, or 26.2 per cent of the world's GDP, nearly matching the economic strength of the Group of Seven. NST