Auckland relief teacher Ankui Gui named after kissing 3-year-old, loses registration


















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KUALA LUMPUR, May 7 — Most Malaysians earn below RM3,500 a month — a gap the government aims to close by 2030.
To understand what that means, it helps to first look at a key but often misunderstood figure: the median wage.
What is the median wage?
The median wage is the middle point of all salaries.
If every worker’s pay is arranged from lowest to highest, the median is the figure right in the middle — meaning:
In Malaysia, the median monthly wage was around RM3,000 in 2025, making it a closer reflection of what a typical worker actually earns.
Why not use the average wage?
The average wage or mean is calculated by adding up all salaries and dividing by the number of workers.
But it can be distorted by a small number of high earners.
For instance, executives earning tens of thousands of ringgit a month can pull the average up, even if most workers earn far less. It tends to overstate what ordinary workers take home.
In contrast, the median cuts through that distortion, offering a more grounded benchmark.
Median vs minimum wage
The median wage serves a different role from the minimum wage:
Raising the minimum wage helps the lowest-paid workers.
Raising the median wage, however, means lifting incomes across a much broader segment of the workforce.
Where Malaysia stands now
Official data shows wages are gradually rising.
According to the Department of Statistics Malaysia’s (DOSM) formal* sector wages dataset, which draws on administrative data from EPF, Socso and DOSM, and covers over six million employees, median wages have been trending upward:
* Formal workers refer to those who work under a contract of service or apprenticeship with an employer and receive remuneration for the work completed.
What the government is targeting
The push to raise wages is anchored in the Thirteenth Malaysia Plan (13MP), which sets a median salary and wage target of RM3,500 per month by 2030.
It was recently mentioned by Human Resources Minister Datuk Seri R. Ramanan during the recent national Labour Day celebration.
“By 2030, our targets are clear: the median monthly wage is to rise to RM3,500, and Compensation of Employees is projected to reach 40 per cent of GDP,” he said.
Ramanan said that the government will strengthen the National Wages Consultative Council, including setting starting salaries for graduates and TVET leavers to achieve the target.
The plan frames wage growth as part of a broader push to improve living standards, address the cost of living and ensure workers benefit more from economic growth.
“This is not an aspiration, it is a plan already being implemented,” Ramanan added in his speech.
In achieving the target, the government has also continued to raise the wage floor, with the Minimum Wage Order 2024 gazetted to increase the minimum wage to RM1,700 per month from RM1,500, effective February 1, 2025.
How Malaysia plans to reach a RM3,500 median wage
Unlike minimum wages, the median cannot be set by law.
Instead, the 13MP outlines a series of labour market reforms and structural changes aimed at pushing wages up across the board.
The plan frames labour market reform as key to this effort, aiming to create a more dynamic and competitive employment ecosystem that can generate more high-paying skilled jobs, improve productivity and support overall wage growth.
At the core is a strategy described as “holistic wage adjustment”, which focuses on raising pay across the wage distribution, and not only the minimum.
This includes:
Supporting reforms
The plan also highlights broader changes to support wage growth:
Together, these measures aim to improve job quality, which is a key driver of higher wages.
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WASHINGTON, May 7 — It was the perfect split-screen for the race to succeed Donald Trump — so long as your name is Marco Rubio and not JD Vance.
In a packed White House briefing room, journalists shouted over each other in a bid to get a question from the US secretary of state.
At the same time Vice President Vance — Rubio’s most likely rival for the 2028 Republican presidential nomination — was hundreds of miles away from the action at a political fundraiser in Oklahoma.
“Guys, this is chaos,” said Rubio as reporters desperately waved their hands at him.
The 54-year-old appeared to be enjoying his time standing in for Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, who is on maternity leave.
He fielded a series of questions on Iran, Cuba and China with a relaxed style and dashes of humour — and little of the invective that Trump often unleashes in his briefing room appearances.
The self-confessed rap fan even threw in some hip-hop lyrics, declaring Iran’s leaders to be, in the words of Cypress Hill, “insane in the brain.”
“Rubio just wrapped up his FIRST White House Press Briefing, and he absolutely knocked it out of the park,” conservative influencer Nick Sortor said on X.
“This man is a SERIOUS contender for 2028.”
Could it mark the moment when Rubio’s star definitively rose in the race to lead a post-Trump Republican party in two and a half years?
‘Easter Bunny over the Tooth Fairy’
Polling has suggested that Vance, 41, has a large lead among Republican voters.
Neither man has officially declared his intention to run — and Rubio himself has publicly said that the “veep” is a friend and insisted that he would not run in 2028 if Vance is a candidate.
Nor has Trump yet anointed an heir to the throne of his Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement.
But in Washington there has been growing speculation that Trump increasingly favours Rubio. Vance’s odds on prediction markets have collapsed in recent weeks.
While Vance’s life story — growing up in poverty in an Appalachian community beset by opioid addiction — is tailor-made to appeal to Trump’s base, he has sometimes struggled to connect with voters.
Yet Vance was not as far from the action as he may have seemed on Tuesday.
Notably, his travels took him to Iowa, the crucial mid-western state where Republicans will cast their first votes for the 2028 Republican nominee — and which first propelled Trump towards the White House in 2016.
The Oklahoma fundraiser meanwhile reflects Vance’s overlooked role as Republican National Committee finance chief — which could help build his grip on a party that has never quite seemed to warm to him.
And he stopped in Ohio to vote in a primary in the state where he was formerly a senator — and his son Vivek was able to cast a kids’ vote in a contest between two mythical figures.
“He voted for the Easter bunny over the tooth fairy,” Vance said of his son.
‘You’re not ready for my DJ name’
Vance is still regarded with suspicion by some Trumpists.
Back in 2016 he compared his future boss to Hitler. And the former marine and anti-interventionist has kept a low profile over Trump’s Iran war.
By contrast, Rubio is a long-term foreign policy hawk who has won Trump’s praise over the Venezuela and Iran military operations.
It was Rubio, and not devout Catholic convert Vance, that Trump dispatched to meet Pope Leo XIV this week amid tensions over Iran.
The White House’s X feed on Tuesday even seemed to lean towards Rubio, announcing his press briefing with the caption “Another job?” and posting a picture of him on dozens of channels.
If it was a try-out for the top job itself, Rubio wasn’t saying.
Rubio will know that two years is an eternity in politics — and that the last former secretary of state to run for the presidency, Hillary Clinton, suffered a stunning loss to Trump.
Instead, he was content to bask in the attention at the podium, while keeping his ambitions to himself.
That includes whether he has an alternative identity as a DJ after a video clip at the weekend showed a besuited Rubio behind the decks at a wedding even as Iran negotiations continued.
“My DJ name? You’re not ready for my DJ name,” he said. — AFP
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BACHOK, May 7 — While many choose to slow down after retirement, a group of retirees in Kuala Rekang, Melawi, have taken a different path by reviving idle land with Harumanis mangoes, which are now gaining recognition and putting Bachok on the map.
The premium mango, previously synonymous with Perlis, is gradually establishing a new foothold in Kelantan.
What began as a casual conversation among friends has grown into a shared source of income, strengthening community ties and giving new meaning to life after retirement.
Head of the Harumanis farm project, Mohd Rudzuan Jusoh, 53, said the initiative was sparked in late 2019 following discussions with fellow villagers after Isyak prayers, before evolving into a group farming project involving more than 40 participants.
“The idea was well received as the participants wanted to make use of idle former tobacco land while generating new income through high-value agriculture.
“We sourced the seedlings from Perlis at our own cost and cultivated them in stages,” he told Bernama recently.
He said more than 3,000 Harumanis trees are now being cultivated, with most of the participants comprising retired civil servants, including teachers, who have the time, interest and capital to venture into agriculture after leaving service.
He added that Bachok’s geographical advantages, its coastal location, prolonged hot weather and sufficient water supply make it suitable for the crop, along with the fertile land previously used for tobacco farming.
“According to feedback from customers, including those from Kuala Lumpur, the taste and aroma of Harumanis Bachok are comparable to those from Perlis. We offer both fully ripe (yellow) and semi-ripe (green) fruit based on demand,” he said.
Mohd Rudzuan said Harumanis trees typically begin to bear fruit within three to five years, and for this May season, the harvest is estimated at three tonnes, among the best yields so far.
He said sales will begin on May 16, with premium-grade fruit priced at RM100 for three kilogrammes and Grade A at RM100 for four kilogrammes.
Farm purchases are also available at RM100 for five kilogrammes without grading, including the option for customers to pick the fruit themselves.
Meanwhile, retired teacher Rasidi Teh, 63, said the project’s success proves that retirees can remain active and generate income while strengthening community bonds.
“From idle land, it has become a shared source of livelihood. We hope Kuala Rekang can emerge as a new Harumanis hub in Kelantan,” he said, expressing appreciation for the state government’s support through courses and grants to expand the cultivation. — Bernama
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LONDON, May 7 — David Attenborough, a leading voice on climate change and biodiversity loss whose landmark documentaries transformed popular understanding of the natural world for a global audience, marks his 100th birthday on Friday.
Attenborough’s natural history series, such as Life on Earth, in which he had a famous encounter with mountain gorillas in Rwanda, have brought the most remote corners of the planet into living rooms worldwide.
“He’s taken us all to places that we would never otherwise go. That’s a huge gift,” botanist Sandra Knapp, director of research at London’s Natural History Museum, told AFP.
The BBC is leading the celebration of the Briton’s centenary with a full week of programming dedicated to his life.
Classic episodes of series including Planet Earth II and Blue Planet II are being reshown along with others such as Life in the Freezer and Paradise Birds available on the BBC’s iPlayer service.
The centrepiece will be a 90-minute live show on his birthday from London’s Royal Albert Hall.
Knapp said Attenborough’s programmes had “expanded people’s horizons” and been an inspiration to many.
Jean-Baptiste Gouyon, professor of science communication at University College London (UCL), said Attenborough had made natural history as popular as football.
Attenborough’s programmes succeeded in instilling in the public an unparallelled passion and wonder for the natural world, said Gouyon.
Attenborough’s lifelong passion for the natural world began as child, and he went on to study geology and zoology at university.
Prince William, heir to the UK throne, has described him as a “national treasure”. Attenborough was also a firm favourite of the late Queen Elizabeth II, who knighted him in 1985.
Showing Attenborough’s cross-generational appeal, US singer-songwriter Billie Eilish has praised his “deep love and knowledge of our planet”, adding: “The animal kingdom brings out the childlike curiosity within us all.”
Mountain gorillas
Attenborough has often reflected on his “luck” in being able to “find and film rare creatures that few outsiders have seen in the wild”.
And he has said he has been able “to gaze on some of the most marvellous spectacles that the wild places of the world have to offer”.
In 2006, he added his voice to those raising the alarm on climate change and biodiversity loss.
He declared himself “no longer sceptical” about the issue, having waited for conclusive proof that humanity was changing the climate.
Attenborough’s broadcasting career spanning nearly eight decades has been closely associated with the BBC, which he joined in the early 1950s.
Life on Earth, released in 1979, has alone been watched by 500 million people worldwide, while dozens of documentaries and associated books have made him a household name.
Recalling the series’ highlight, when he unexpectedly found himself up close with a group of mountain gorillas, Attenborough described the experience as “bliss” and “extraordinary”.
“I was simply transported,” he said ahead of his centenary, reliving how the adult female twisted his head and looked straight into his eyes and her two youngsters sat on him as the cameras rolled.
‘Modern colonialism’
Still making documentaries well into his nineties, he used his 2025 film Ocean to condemn the industrial fishing methods of wealthy nations, which he called “modern colonialism at sea”.
Despite his fame, the broadcaster — whose brother was the late actor and film director Richard Attenborough — has always refused to be seen as a celebrity.
Gouyon said Attenborough always made sure to direct the viewer’s gaze back to the subject matter.
On the threat to the natural world, Attenborough has said he hopes humanity will be able to change course.
“Perhaps the fact that the people most affected by climate change are no longer some imagined future generation, but young people alive today... will give us the impetus we need to rewrite our story, to turn this tragedy into a triumph,” he said at the UN Climate Summit in Glasgow in 2021.
“We are, after all, the greatest problem-solvers to have ever existed on Earth,” he said.
At 100, Attenborough no longer wanders the world’s jungles and deserts.
But he has continued to tell the story of the planet closer to home.
In Wild London, broadcast in early 2026, he marvels at the wildlife of the British capital, his birthplace, from foxes and beavers to hedgehogs and harvest mice.
After all his travels, he has confided that his favourite place remains Richmond, an affluent and leafy suburb in south-west London.
He has lived in the riverside town for many years, and still resides in the family home he shared with his late wife Jane and their two children. — AFP
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FOSHAN (China), May 7 — Vacuum cleaners and vapes could get more expensive if the Iran war drags on for much longer, Chinese factory owners and traders warn, as the world’s manufacturing hub reels from “crazy” costs.
Weeks of US-Israeli strikes on Iran and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz have choked Asia’s oil supply, stymieing the production of plastic — derived from oil — across the region.
Manufacturing giant China has been comparatively sheltered from fuel shortages thanks to oil reserves and renewable energy, but local factories are picking up a ballooning raw materials bill.
“Basically, we’ve been losing money on all our orders,” said Bryant Chen, a manager at vacuum cleaner factory RIMOO in southern Guangdong province’s Foshan.
The price of plastic has risen roughly 50 per cent since before the Iran war, Chen told AFP as workers behind him fastened suction tubes to metal tanks.
“The costs of the products that we are making are being very greatly affected,” the 42-year-old said, listing plastic, copper for the vacuum’s motor and raw materials in its power cords.
“Typically at this time we’d be entering peak season, but compared to the same period previously, shipment and production data aren’t very optimistic.”
Two hours away, plastic traders in storage hub Zhangmutou said price fluctuations were the worst they’ve seen in decades.
“It has never been this crazy,” said Li Dong, 46, who entered the industry two decades ago.
The plastic, rice-sized pellets he buys for local phone case and EV battery factories jumped wildly in March, triggering days of panic that jammed the small town’s roads as factories rushed to stock up.
‘Mutual state of decline’
Exporters in Zhangmutou showed AFP a vast range of products their pellets would become, including drones and badminton birdies.
One trader sifted through pink, green and purple beads that she said would be moulded into e-cigarette casings sold in the Middle East.
The Iran war has hit plastic production even harder than bottlenecks caused by the Covid pandemic, when ships could not come and go from China, Li said.
Some sellers cashed in on the plastic panic, he added, fighting to take advantage of surging costs.
Li said the price of plastic had dropped around 10 to 20 per cent from its height, but he cautioned against further oil hold-ups.
“The factories we supply to will suffer the most because their direct costs will rise,” he said.
For exporters, the Middle East crisis has added to the hangover still lingering from Donald Trump’s sweeping global tariffs last year.
The US Supreme Court struck down those levies as illegal, but tolls on Chinese goods entering the US still sit at around 20 per cent.
On the outskirts of Guangzhou, one garment factory owner lamented the chaos triggered by the US President’s trade war.
Overseas clients are afraid to place orders, while Chinese manufacturers cannot pin down changing costs.
“As a result, everyone is in a mutual state of decline,” garment boss Zhou, 55, said.
While 80 per cent of his clients have returned, the fabrics scattered on his factory floor made into sweatpants headed for Europe and North America have risen 10 to 20 per cent in cost due to the Middle East war.
As overseas orders dropped, seamsters went months without a job.
‘Tensions rise, orders disappear’
Migrant worker Jingjing returned to her hometown in Hubei province for two months, where she made half the 400 yuan (RM240) she now earns in Guangzhou’s garment factories.
“When tensions rise... orders suddenly disappear,” the 42-year-old said.
But this year she said she always has something to do.
In a damp back alley, Jingjing joined job-seekers milling about leisurely, haggling for higher wages while garment bosses perched on scooters brandished hiring signs, desperate for day labourers.
Chen, the vacuum factory manager, said he was “still worried” about surging shipping costs should the Iran war drag on.
“If shipping costs rise, it will cause the final costs for our customers to increase sharply,” he said.
They “will have no way to sell normally, because the costs are just too high”.
Chen said RIMOO plans to expand to other markets beyond the Middle East where around 60 percent of its customers are based.
“We are still optimistic,” he said. “The market demand still exists.”
But analysts warn the war’s impact on costs will be felt for months.
“The problem is all of these costs will filter through the supply chains for the rest of the year,” said supply chain consultant Cameron Johnson.
“The longer it goes on, that kind of cascades into much bigger problems, particularly if there’s not enough oil in general to run stuff.” — AFP



