Zaidatul Syreen Abdul Rashid

The Latest

4y

‘PDRM promotions normal, not politically motivated’

Experts say IGP has discretion to reshuffle force as he sees fit

4y

Teen, civil servant among 15 arrested in ‘wild party’ raid

Of total, 11 at luxury service suite gathering in KL test positive for drugs

4y

Pantai Dalam PPR residents fret over relaxed lockdown as Covid-19 cases rise

Locals willing to stay in to reduce infections, question wisdom of reopening Lembah Pantai

4y

Part 6: Did the Sheraton Move send the wrong signal to the rakyat?

Some believe a betrayal of the trust of the people is cause enough for popular political rebellion

4y

Part 5: Breaking away from race-based parties

Understanding their presence in country more accepted today than in the past, but question now is, should they remain forever?

4y

Part 4: How men and movements pushed for reform from the streets

Malaysia is no stranger to rallies and uprisings, as the Reformasi and Bersih campaigns show

4y

Part 3: Rakyat have come a long way in navigating political turbulence

At present, irrespective of race, the majority do not mind staying together provided they do not challenge each other’s sensitivities

4y

Part 2: Why the things politicians say matter

How do we determine limits of free speech as we increasingly encounter forms of hate revolving around race and religion?

4y

Part 1: Are politicians’ vindictive, race-based tactics weakening nation’s foundation?

The Vibes answers this question and more in a new 6-part series that seeks to unveil the truth about our most prominent leaders

5y

Are politicians the catalyst for extreme violence in Malaysia?

Do politicians instrumentalise aspects of race, religion, and culture, creating a potential for discord and disharmony in our multifaceted society?

5y

IGP in bid to get EAIC to look into predecessor’s claims

This as 200 more roadblocks to be mounted, personnel on duty increased, top cop says ahead of lockdown

5y

Graffiti gaining mainstream acceptance

Graffiti artists recount the days when they were outsiders, call on powers-that-be for more support