SHAH ALAM SPORTS COMPLEX: SELANGOR IDENTIFIES 10 SITES FOR LAND SWAP PROCESS

The Selangor government has identified 10 sites in the state for the land swap process to finance the cost of building the Shah Alam Sports Complex (KSSA) which is expected to begin construction this year.

Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Amirudin Shari said the sites are in Hulu Selangor and Port Klang, adding the land swap process will be based on the progress of the project.

“InsyaAllah, we will not swap all at once but we will see by progress. If progress reaches certain numbers, we will surrender the land. We have already offered it (to the developer) and are finalising it,” he said after officiating at the opening ceremony of the Rural Smart Centre in Kampung Air Tawar here, today.

Asked about the project, Amirudin said it was slightly behind the original schedule but the construction was expected to begin this year.

“Hopefully before the state polls but then people will say it is a project for the election. I am not using the state election as a parameter but it is all based on the process. We don’t want the process to be breached or done in haste,” he said.

On July 15 last year, the Selangor government appointed Malaysian Resources Corporation Bhd (MRCB), to redevelop the Shah Alam Stadium and surrounding sports facilities, with a cost set at around RM787 million.

Earlier, he said the Rural Smart Centre which was established in Kampung Sungai Air Tawar and Kampung Endah, Kuala Langat was a pilot project for the development of rural residents, particularly school-going children.

He said extra classes could also be held at the internet centre, adding each project cost RM200,000 funded by the federal government but managed by the state government.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

Vietnamese activist sentenced to 8 years in jail for Facebook posts

A court in Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City on Friday sentenced war veteran and democracy activist Tran Van Bang to eight years in prison and three years probation for Facebook posts that were deemed to be anti-state propaganda in a trial that lasted less than three hours.

Tran Van Bang, better known as Tran Bang, is a 62-year-old war veteran who fought during the 1979 Sino-Vietnamese War. He had regularly participated in demonstrations against China for its controversial claims over territories in the South China Sea.

He was arrested in March 2022 for what was initially determined to be 31 Facebook posts between March 2016 and August 2021.

After a subsequent investigation, authorities found that he wrote 39 problematic posts between three Facebook accounts that that were seen as “distorting, defaming and speaking badly of the people’s government; providing false information, causing confusion among the people; and expressing hate and discontent towards the authorities, Party, State, and country’s leaders,” the Tuoi Tre newspaper reported, citing the indictment.

The posts were in violation of article 117 of the penal code, a vague law that the government has often used to silence dissent.

It was the latest conviction in Hanoi’s ongoing campaign to silence bloggers and activists. Vietnam has convicted at least 60 such people under the same article and sentenced them between four and 15 years in prison, and 13 others to between four and 12 years under the older article 88, because it was the law when the alleged crime occurred, New York-based Human Rights Watch reported.

During Friday’s trial, Bang claimed that his Facebook accounts had been hacked and he hadn’t used them in a very long time.

But the Procuracy rejected the explanation, and used the posts on the accounts to convict him.

Tran Dinh Dung, Bang’s defense lawyer, told RFA’s Vietnamese Service following the trial that freedom of speech is guaranteed in Article 25 of Vietnam’s constitution, and Article 117 does not explain anti-state propaganda.

“The current law fails to clarify what freedom of speech is and what anti-state propaganda is,” said Dung. “In addition, there are some electronic documents and evidence missing, so I requested that the file of the case should be returned to the procuracy and a verdict should only be made when everything was clarified.”

Closed trial

Two diplomats, from the U.S. and France, were barred from attending the proceedings. They were made to wait in the courtyard until the trial’s conclusion.

Family members, meanwhile, were allowed only to watch the proceedings on a television screen from another room in the courthouse.

Bang’s brother, who declined to be named, told RFA that the audio of the broadcast was cut several times when the defense lawyer was speaking and was turned very low when Bang spoke in his own defense.

“The lawyer requested an additional investigation as some assessments of the investigator about the Facebook stories, which were the ground for accusations, were wrong,” Bang’s brother said.

“The lawyer also said that the accusation grounds were just the investigator’s viewpoint, and with another viewpoint, other people may find my brother innocent.”

According to Dung, his client will appeal the verdict. He told the judging panel that Bang was suffering from a serious health issue as he had a tumor in the groin area, which had not been determined benign or malignant. The verdict noted this information but also said that it needed to wait for the opinion of Bang’s detention center clinics, Dung said.

“On May 10, I had a working session with the detention center, and they told me that their clinic had recommended removing the tumor,” said Dung, adding that red tape is preventing the operation. “If the tumor is malignant, i.e. cancer, it would be a very serious health issue.”

Human Rights Watch on Thursday issued a media release calling on the Vietnamese government to drop all charges against Bang and immediately release him.

Copyright © 1998-2016, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036

CABINET COMMITTEE SET UP TO TACKLE SHORTAGE OF SUGAR SUPPLY

Domestic Trade and Cost of Living Minister Datuk Seri Salahuddin Ayub has announced the formation of a Cabinet committee to address the issue of sugar supply shortage and keep the commodity prices stable.

He said the establishment of the committee was agreed to at the Cabinet meeting on Wednesday.

According to him, the committee involved three other ministries, namely the Ministry of Finance; the Ministry Investment, Trade and Industry; and the Ministry of Economy.

“Although the shortage of sugar supply only affects Kelantan and Terengganu, I believe that a Cabinet committee should be formed to develop long-term solutions to this issue.

“Meetings at the officer level have already started and the committee will have one month to submit a proposal to the Cabinet,” he told a press conference here today.

Salahuddin said the committee would also hold engagement sessions with various stakeholders including local sugar manufacturers, namely MSM Malaysia and Central Sugars Refinery Sdn Bhd (CSR) to get input and views on the matter.

He said that this was important to ensure that the plan drawn up was comprehensive while also assisting the government in dealing with the issue of supply disruptions and sugar price volatility more effectively.

“With a comprehensive plan and the steps that will be taken later, I am confident that the issue of supply disruption and sugar price stability will be dealt with well,” he said.

Previously, the media reported that the shortage in sugar supply in Kelantan and Terengganu, which was caused by the temporary closure of the MSM Malaysia Holdings Bhd sugar mills in Johor and Perai, Penang, had been restored.

Salahuddin was reported as saying that the factories which were closed for Hari Raya Aidilfitri resumed operations on April 25.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

UNITY GOV’T HAS NEVER SIDELINED MALAY, ISLAMIC AGENDA – AHMAD ZAHID

The Unity Government supported by various political parties has never ignored the Malay agenda and Islamic interests, said Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi.

The deputy prime minister said at the same time, the Unity Government led by Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim will not sideline the agenda of other religions and races in this country.

Ahmad Zahid, who is UMNO president, said the struggles championed by the Unity Government were in line with the objectives of the formation and struggles of UMNO, which is for the Malay and Islamic agenda.

“This is enshrined in the UMNO constitution itself, that we make Islam the objective of our party’s establishment and struggle without excluding other religions,” he told reporters after attending a Hari Raya Aidilfitri event organised by Perlis UMNO here today.

He was commenting on the statement by the Parti Pejuang Tanah Air (Pejuang) president Datuk Seri Mukhriz Mahathir who reportedly said that the party would not cooperate with any coalition that UMNO joined in facing the upcoming state elections.

Also present were Ahmad Zahid’s wife Datin Seri Hamidah Khamis, UMNO secretary-general Datuk Dr Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki, Perlis UMNO chairman Datuk Rozabil Abd Rahman and Kedah UMNO chairman Datuk Seri Mahdzir Khalid.

“We should also be kind to our friends and the people from Sarawak and Sabah, and they understand that fact,” he said.

On UMNO’s chances in Kelantan and Terengganu in the state polls, Ahmad Zahid said he was confident that there was now a trend of the people shifting their support to the Unity Government.

“I believe the trend has changed direction from ‘Anti-Establishment’ to ‘Pro-Establishment’ with high confidence in the Unity Government under the leadership of Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim,” he said.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency