BFM 89.9

HIGHLIGHTS 
Podcast  >  Evening Edition  >  Top 5 At 5  >  Top 5 at 5: Did Sabah's Youth Go Too Far?

Top 5 at 5: Did Sabah's Youth Go Too Far?

Ariff Adi Putera Anwar, Research Associate, Institute for Development Studies (Sabah)

23-Jun-25 17:00

Top 5 at 5: Did Sabah's Youth Go Too Far?

The Gempur Rasuah Sabah 2.0 anti-corruption rally held this past weekend, with the slogan Madani Pelindung Rasuah Sabah, ended with the burning of PM Anwar’s caricature to rebuke his administration. With the event and its organizers being investigated, we talk to Ariff Adi Putera Anwar, Research Associate from the Institute for Development Studies (Sabah) about the situation and for insight into Sabah's political culture.

Other stories we covered:

• Strait of Hormuz potentially shut: With the US’ decision to join Israel in its attacks on Iran, the Iranian Parliament has approved the decision to shut the Hormuz Strait. With Washington warning that this would be “economic suicide,” we talk to Julia Roknifard, Senior Lecturer at the School of Law and Governance at Taylor’s University about the geopolitical implications of the potential closure.

• Should refugees be allowed to work?: President of the Malaysian Employers Federation (MEF) has stated that integrating refugees into the formal workforce can benefit the country on multiple fronts. However, refugees in Malaysia cannot legally seek employment. We spoke to economist Dr Melati Nungsari who is also Deputy CEO of the Asia School of Business and Datuk Shamsuddin Bardan, Executive Director of the Malaysian Employers Federation.

• Foreign workers frustrated with living conditions: In light of the Bukit Mertajam riots last week in which foreign workers were frustrated with their hostel warden collecting fines, Minister of Human Resources Steven Sim said the ministry will level repercussions against operators that fail to comply with acceptable housing conditions. We talk to Glorene Das, executive director of Tenaganita for better insights into the situation and about the conditions foreign workers live in.

• Malaysia shortlisted for World's Best School Prize: SK Putrajaya Presint 11 (1) were shortlisted for developing an app called “Helpie” that engages the students in fun games and that help their mental health. We talk about their innovative creation, the team behind it, and schools having open conversations about mental health.

Image Credit: Suara Mahasiswa UMS Facebook

Produced by: Sudais Ferhard, Juliet Jacobs, Dashran Yohan, Sneha Harikannan, Alia Zefri

Presented by: Sharaad Kuttan, Dashran Yohan


This and more than 60,000 other podcasts in your hand. Download the all new BFM mobile app.

Categories:  marketsthe workplaceeconomytechnologymanagingeducationcontroversiescorruptionLaw/Activismpoliticsgovernmentinternational

Tags:  world's best school prizehelpiebukit mertajamminister of human resourcesGempur Rasuah Sabah 2.0appstudentsforeign workersliving conditionsrefugeesMalaysian Employers Federation (MEF)employmentstrait of hormuziranisraelunited states of americamadani governmentdatuk seri anwar ibrahim





Play / Pause

Listen now : BFM 89.9 -- The Business Station

Today’s Shows



6:00 AM

The 6AM Stretch

Thought-provoking discussions on ideas, people and events shaping our lives.

7:00 AM

World Market Watch

Brian Arcese, Portfolio Manager & Equity Analyst, Foord Asset Management, tells us where international markets are heading.

7:15 AM

Morning Brief

We recap global and local headlines from today's papers and portals.

7:30 AM

Morning Brief

George Chen, partner and co-chair of the Digital Practice at The Asia on the future of the tech industry.

7:45 AM

Morning Brief

Hafiza Abdul Samath of Women Aid Organization (WAO) discusses teenage pregnancy and what more can be done to support at-risk teens.

8:00 AM

The Breakfast Grille

Jason Fong of Invest Hong Kong discusses the department’s strategy for attracting family offices to the territory.

8:30 AM

Morning Brief

Dr. Amit Ranjan, National University of Singapore gives us an update on Bangladeshi politics.

8:45 AM

Morning Brief

(REPEAT) We dive into the local and international news that matters to you.

9:00 AM

Opening Bell

(REPEAT) Brian Arcese, Portfolio Manager & Equity Analyst, Foord Asset Management, tells us where international markets are heading.

9:15 AM

Opening Bell

(REPEAT) We take a look at the FBM KLCI as well as regional capital markets.

9:35 AM

What's The Focus

We wrap up the week’s biggest conversations to keep you in the know.

10:05 AM

Open For Business

Yoann Gueguen and Onno Pfeiffer, Co-founders, Diolko

11:00 AM

Mattsplained

Matt Armitage, Founder, Kulturpop

12:00 PM

Enterprise Explores

1:00 PM

The Breakfast Grille Repeat

Jason Fong of Invest Hong Kong discusses the department’s strategy for attracting family offices to the territory.

2:05 PM

Discovery Hour

3:05 PM

Front Row

Award-winning playwright Adriana Nordin Manan's "Wacky Double Bill: Borong & Encyclopedia" explores the wit, warmth, and weirdness of two scenarios: colleagues vying for their boss's approval and a cross-cultural encounter gone wrong. We speak with Adriana and producer/designer Sidhart Joe Dev.

3:20 PM

Front Row

"Fragments of Tuah," a new documentary theatre work, deconstructs the historical figure of Hang Tuah through music, performance, and archival research, exposing gaps and contradictions in the familiar tale. Co-creators Mark Teh and Faiq Syazwan Kuhiri discuss their collaborative process.

4:05 PM

Health & Living

Are MRI machines safe? We explore the unusual death of a man sucked into an MRI machine and how to improve safety.

5:00 PM

Top 5 at 5

6:00 PM

Popcorn Culture

7:00 PM

Just For Kicks

8:00 PM

Bar None

Lauren Hoh Ruyi joins us to share her football journey so far and her observations of the women's game here.

9:00 PM

The Selector

Covering all styles of music from indie, dubstep, folk, soul, electro and everything in between.