Trump says China ‘broke’ trade deal, threatens new tariffs

President Donald Trump has accused China of breaking “the deal” it had reached in trade talks with the United States, and promised to impose more tariffs on Chinese goods if no agreement is reached in fresh talks.

The US president’s latest salvo comes as Chinese Vice Premier Liu He – Beijing’s lead negotiator for the trade dispute – and Trump’s top trade officials meet for talks on Thursday and Friday in Washington.

On Wednesday, the US Trade Representative’s office announced that tariffs on $200bn worth of Chinese goods would increase to 25 percent from 10 percent at 12:01am (04:01GMT) on Friday.

Speaking to supporters at a rally in Florida on Wednesday, Trump said that Beijing would pay if no agreement is reached.

“I just announced that we’ll increase tariffs on China and we won’t back down until China stops cheating our workers and stealing our jobs, and that’s what’s going to happen, otherwise we don’t have to do business with them,” Trump told a cheering crowd.

“They broke the deal,” he added.

“They can’t do that. So they’ll be paying. If we don’t make the deal, nothing wrong with taking in more than $100bn a year.”

Trump’s comments triggered a round of selling in Asian markets.

A tit-for-tat tariff war

Beijing has announced it would retaliate if tariffs rise.

“The Chinese side deeply regrets that if the US tariff measures are implemented, China will have to take necessary countermeasures,” China’s Commerce Ministry said on its website, without elaborating.

The world’s two largest economies have been embroiled in a tit-for-tat tariff war since July 2018 over the US demands that the Asian powerhouse adopt policy changes that would, among other things, better protect American intellectual property and make China’s market more accessible to US companies.

Expectations were recently riding high that a deal could be reached, but a deep rift over the language of the proposed agreement opened up last weekend.

Reuters news agency, citing US government and private-sector sources, reported on Wednesday that China had backtracked on almost all aspects of a draft trade agreement, threatening to blow up the negotiations and prompting Trump to order the tariff increase.

Washington is demanding Beijing make sweeping changes to its trade and regulatory practices, including protecting US intellectual property from theft and forced transfers to Chinese firms, curbs on Chinese government subsidies and increased American access to China’s markets.

Trump also has sought massive hikes in Chinese purchases of US farm, energy and manufactured products to shrink a gaping US trade deficit with China.

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Steve Kerr: Warriors ‘Were F–king Giants’ After Kevin Durant Injury vs. Rockets

HOUSTON, TX - MAY 6:  Head Coach Steve Kerr speaks with the media after Game Four of the Western Conference Semifinals of the 2019 NBA Playoffs against the Houston Rockets on May 6, 2019 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Bill Baptist/NBAE via Getty Images)

Bill Baptist/Getty Images

Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr channeled Liverpool FC manager Jurgen Klopp and called his team “f–king giants” after the Warriors beat the Houston Rockets 104-99 in Game 5 of their NBA second-round playoff series Wednesday despite losing leading scorer Kevin Durant to a right calf strain late in the third quarter.

(Warning: Video below contains profanity.)

95.7 The Game @957thegame

Steve Kerr quoting Liverpool manager yesterday soccer win relating to #Warriors tonight

“Our guys are f—-ing Giants.”

“Sorry mom.” https://t.co/JNYPotqYeS

Klopp used the phrase after his side beat Barcelona FC 4-3 on aggregate after finding itself down 3-0 following the first Champions League semifinal leg.

Durant, who averaged 35.4 points in 10 postseason games before Wednesday, has been the Warriors’ best and most consistent player in this year’s playoffs by far.

Although the Warriors have a few perennial All-Stars in Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Klay Thompson, Golden State’s fourth-quarter performance sans Durant was still impressive considering the team has been inconsistent during this year’s playoffs.

Kerr specifically cited Curry’s performance post-Durant injury after answering a question from Jason Dumas of KRON4 Sports:

Jason Dumas @JDumasReports

Steve Kerr said Steph Curry stepped up when KD went down with the injury. @kron4news

#DubNation | #RunAsOne https://t.co/K2oX3Qk1DV

The two-time NBA MVP scored 12 points and dished a pair of assists in the fourth, which helped shift the momentum back in Golden State’s favor after Houston outscored the Warriors 29-15 in the third to tie the game at 72.

The Rockets will host the Warriors for Game 6 on Friday at 9 p.m. ET. Durant will be getting an MRI Thursday, per Chris Haynes of Yahoo Sports. His Game 6 status has not been determined.

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Stephen Curry Leads Warriors Past Rockets in Game 5 Despite Kevin Durant Injury

OAKLAND, CA - MAY 8: Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors goes to the basket against the Houston Rockets during Game Five of the Western Conference Semifinals of the 2019 NBA Playoffs on May 8, 2019 at ORACLE Arena in Oakland, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images)

Joe Murphy/Getty Images

The Golden State Warriors survived a Kevin Durant calf injury and are one win away from their fifth consecutive Western Conference Finals appearance following Wednesday’s 104-99 victory in Game 5 of their second-round clash with the Houston Rockets.

Golden State has won all three games at Oracle Arena in the series, allowing it to take a 3-2 lead even though it dropped both road contests.

The result took a backseat when Durant limped off the court following a noncontact injury in the third quarter. He didn’t return with what the Warriors announced was a right calf strain, putting Klay Thompson (27 points, four rebounds and three steals), Stephen Curry (25 points, six rebounds and five assists) and Draymond Green (eight points, 12 rebounds and 11 assists) in position to carry the team to victory.

James Harden stuffed the stat sheet for the Rockets with 31 points, eight assists, four steals and four rebounds, but he didn’t make enough plays in crunch time after Durant exited to take advantage of the situation.

What’s Next?

The series returns to Houston for Friday’s Game 6.

This article will be updated to provide more information soon.

Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app and get the game.

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Kanye’s reluctant smile at the Met Gala is a mood

Kanye West's rare smile. Now a meme.
Kanye West’s rare smile. Now a meme.

Image: ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images

By Johnny Lieu

Kanye West, we love to see you smile.

The rapper made an appearance at the Met Gala on Monday, where all eyes were on the pink carpet, thanks to the outfits worn by the likes of Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, and Billy Porter, which understandably, consumed most of the chatter around the event.

Despite the attention mostly being elsewhere, Kanye was spotted by cameras smiling off to the side, although he doesn’t look too impressed while doing it. Of course, it’s since become a meme.

Now, Kanye’s somewhat reluctant smile can be used to mean all sorts of things, like when you’re forced to smile for random relatives, or running into people that you’d rather not.

SEE ALSO: Met Gala 2019: How celebrities did ‘Camp’ on the pink carpet

It’s the smile for all awkward occasions.

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Venezuela detains senior opposition leader Edgar Zambrano

Venezuelan agents have detained a top aide of opposition leader Juan Guaido, using a tow truck to drag his vehicle away with him inside, in the first major detention since a failed attempt last week to spark a military uprising to bring down President Nicolas Maduro’s government.

Edgar Zambrano, vice president of the opposition-controlled National Assembly, said on Twitter at about 6.40pm local time on Wednesday (22:40 GMT) that a unit from the SEBIN intelligence agency had surrounded his vehicle outside the headquarters of his Democratic Action party in the capital, Caracas.

“We were surprised by the SEBIN, and after refusing to let us leave our vehicle, they used a tow truck to forcibly transfer us directly to the (SEBIN headquarters) Helicoide,” he said.

Venezuela’s pro-Maduro Constituent Assembly agreed on Tuesday to strip Zambrano and six other legislators of their parliamentary immunity to allow their future prosecution. The opposition does not recognise the assembly’s decisions.

The Supreme Court had earlier accused those legislators of conspiracy, rebellion and treason, and accused another three opposition politicians of the same crimes on Wednesday. The opposition says Maduro has stacked the court with his own supporters.

People outside the Democratic Action party headquarters in Caracas [Rodrigo Abd/AP Photo]

On April 30, Guaido tried to spark a military uprising to overthrow Maduro, but there were no widespread defections among soldiers and the plan fizzled out. Maduro denounced it as a coup attempt.

“One of the principal conspirators of the coup has just been arrested,” Diosdado Cabello, head of the Constituent Assembly, said in comments broadcast on state television.

“They will have to pay before the courts for the failed coup that they attempted,” he said.

For his part, Guaido said on Twitter: “The regime has kidnapped the first vice president.”

The head of the Organization of American States, Luis Almagro, said: “We demand the SEBIN stop the intimidation, respect the lawmakers’ parliamentary immunities, and immediately release Edgar Zambrano.”

Venezuela’s top court targets opposition leaders

In January, Guaido invoked Venezuela’s constitution to declare himself interim president, saying Maduro’s 2018 re-election was illegitimate. The United States and most other Western nations have recognised Guaido as Venezuela’s legitimate leader.

He has said he does not recognise decisions emanating from the Maduro government, including the Constituent Assembly, which is controlled by the ruling Socialist Party.

The Constituent Assembly removed Guaido’s parliamentary immunity in early April. Authorities have not tried to arrest him since then, but Maduro has said he will “face justice.” US President Donald Trump’s administration has threatened Maduro’s government with a harsh response should it ever detain Guaido.

“What we have seen so far is a government that has been extremely careful in these past three months when dealing with the opposition, especially with Guaido because the US has said that it will take it very seriously any attempts to damage his physical integrity,” Al Jazeera’s Teresa Bo, reporting from Caracas, said.

“But what we know so far is that 15 lawmakers were stripped of their immunity, and three of them have already been detained.”

Earlier on Wednesday, the Supreme Court’s head, Maikel Moreno, rebuffed the US government’s threats to sanction his court’s members if they did not reject Maduro’s government and Guaido.

The U.S. Treasury Department imposed sanctions on Moreno and the seven principal members of the court’s constitutional chamber in 2017 for rulings that “usurped the authority” of the National Assembly.

US Vice President Mike Pence said on Tuesday the Trump administration would soon sanction the 25 remaining members of the court. Pence said the United States was lifting economic sanctions on a former Venezuelan general who turned against Maduro in order to encourage other Maduro allies to follow suit.

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Breaking Down Lakers’ Top Coaching Candidates with Ty Lue out of the Running

Milwaukee, WI - OCTOBER 20:  Jason Kidd of the Milwaukee Bucks and LeBron James #23 of the Cleveland Cavaliers talk before the game on October 20, 2017 at the BMO Harris Bradley Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2017 NBAE (Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images)

Gary Dineen/Getty Images

“Cleveland Cavaliers West” may be on hold, as news broke Wednesday evening that negotiations between former Cavs head coach Tyronn Lue and the Los Angeles Lakers had broken down.

“Negotiations between the Los Angeles Lakers and Ty Lue have reached an impasse without a deal to make him the franchise’s next head coach,” ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski tweeted.

ESPN’s Dave McMenamin explained further:

Dave McMenamin @mcten

Ty Lue and his reps turned down the Lakers’ offer Tuesday, per league sources. LAL regrouped with an offer in the range of 3 years, $18 million today. Lue’s side pulled out of negotiations. Lue’s camp seeking 5 year deal with salary commensurate with championship resume

The dust hadn’t even settled on those reports when names started to emerge as new potential candidates for the Lakers’ head coaching vacancy.

The Athletic’s Shams Charania tweeted Lionel Hollins, Mike Woodson and Frank Vogel are now in the fray. Other names that surfaced in recent weeks include Jason Kidd, Mark Jackson and Juwan Howard.

So, how would each one fit at the helm of a team with LeBron James and the expectations that come from being the mythical Lakers? Let’s break them down.

Mike Woodson

NEW ORLEANS, LA - JANUARY 28:  Mike Woodson assistant coach of the LA Clippers reacts druing the first half against the New Orleans Pelicans at the Smoothie King Center on January 28, 2018 in New Orleans, Louisiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledg

Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images

Legendary goatee aside, Woodson’s career coaching record is among the least inspiring of this crop.

He does have two 50-win seasons on his resume—the 2009-10 Atlanta Hawks and the 2012-13 New York Knicks—but his overall record is 315-365. Among the 83 coaches with at least 500 games under their belts, Woodson’s .463 winning percentage ranks 63rd.

To Woodson’s credit, he was ahead of his time when he led that 2012-13 Knicks squad. Their league-leading 35.4 three-point attempt rate would’ve ranked in the top half of this season’s triple-happy NBA.

Unfortunately, whatever progress he was onto with that approach was stymied by the addition of Phil Jackson and his insistence on the triangle offense following that season.

The Knicks fired him after a 37-45 campaign in 2013-14, and he spent the next four seasons as a defensive-minded assistant for Doc Rivers and the Los Angeles Clippers.

After spending 2018-19 out of coaching, is Woodson ready to jump into the most pressure-packed job in basketball?

While he has his fair share of experience with ball-dominant wing/forwards—Carmelo Anthony in New York and Joe Johnson in Atlanta—few player-coach experiences can prepare someone for LeBron.

Erik Spoelstra might be the lone exception to the following rule: LeBron gets the credit for success, and the coach and teammates get the credit for failures.

Woodson’s (and everyone else’s) candidacy would be about more than how he’d handle the constant scrutiny that comes from coaching LeBron. But it’s certainly a factor for everyone.

Unfortunately, one of the lasting memories of Woodson’s tenure with the Knicks was Anthony caught on camera decrying the length of a timeout.

Lionel Hollins

NEW YORK, NY - JANUARY 08:  Head coach Lionel Hollins of the Brooklyn Nets looks on during the first half against the Orlando Magic on January 8,2016 at the Barclays Center in the Brooklyn borough of  New York City.NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledge

Elsa/Getty Images

Another sub-.500 head coach, Hollins at least has the feather in his cap of being one of the engineers of the Memphis Grizzlies‘ Grit-n-Grind era.

Over his final four-and-a-half seasons as Memphis’ head coach, Hollins went 196-155 (.558). Over his last three seasons there, the Grizzlies played at a 51-win pace. And he capped his run there with a 56-win campaign in 2012-13.

In an April interview with The Undefeated’s Kelley D. Evans, Hollins expressed his interest in getting back into coaching.

I miss the action of teaching. I miss practice. I miss seeing guys get it and run forward with it. To me, that’s the big thing about coaching that I like. I like going to practice. I like teaching. I do miss it and I hope to get back. Maybe somebody will give me an opportunity to coach again.

Hollins’ wish may come sooner than he imagined. 

A coach who’s big on practice and teaching might be a good fit for a team as young as the Lakers. Outside of LeBron, L.A.’s core of Brandon Ingram, Lonzo Ball, Kyle Kuzma and Josh Hart has plenty to learn.

But the shift from Luke Walton’s “player’s coach” style to Hollins’ hard-nosed approach that made him successful with the Grizzlies could be jarring.

Frank Vogel

Once upon a time, former Indiana Pacers head coach Frank Vogel was a rising star in his profession.

He was 38 for his first full season coaching the Pacers. And in his next two, he led the Pacers to 105 wins and back-to-back trips to the Eastern Conference Finals.

You likely remember that team. And this picture, too:

8 Points, 9 Seconds @8pts9secs

5 years ago, The Struggle began. https://t.co/rzYiqgjibm

Things were all downhill from there, but that squad was solid. Anchored by Roy Hibbert, it led the NBA in defensive rating in both 2012-13 and 2013-14.

The Lakers don’t have their own version of Hibbert (yet), but Ball has the potential to be one of the best point-of-attack defenders in the league. Vogel can construct a strong defense with him, LeBron and Ingram as the anchors. 

And even now, Vogel is relatively young by NBA coaching standards. On the right side of 50, there’s a chance for some growth along with the team’s non-LeBron core.

Jason Kidd

Mike Budenholzer and the 2018-19 Milwaukee Bucks have not done Kidd’s future coaching prospects many favors.

After Kidd went 139-152 (.478) with Milwaukee, Budenholzer instantly elevated Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Bucks to contender status in their first year post-Kidd.

They led the league this season in wins, simple rating system (which combines point differential and strength of schedule) and defensive rating.

Still, Kidd has fans within the Lakers’ front office, per Wojnarowski:

Adrian Wojnarowski @wojespn

Discussions have included talks on contract and assistant coaching staff, sources said. Among Lakers hopes on a Lue staff: Jason Kidd. He made a strong impression with management in his head coaching interview and had a productive history w/ Bucks developing young talent. https://t.co/uQxTjqWAm7

If L.A. was intent on having Kidd as part of Lue’s staff, it would make sense for him to be in the mix for the main job now that Lue’s out.

Kidd will be among the serious candidates for the Lakers coaching job if Luke Walton is dismissed,” Wojnarowski tweeted in March.

Stylistically, Kidd didn’t bring a lot to the Bucks that stood out in a positive way. The team’s scrambling defensive scheme was decent when it had the element of surprise, but it ultimately surrendered far too many threes.

And Milwaukee wasn’t imaginative offensively under Kidd, either. There is some value to the “just give LeBron the ball and surround him with shooters” approach, but the Lakers need at least some creativity to work the fit with Ball and James, both of whom need to control the ball to maximize their games.

Mark Jackson

OAKLAND, CA - JANUARY 16: LeBron James #6 of the Miami Heat greets Head Coach Mark Jackson of the Golden State Warriors during their game on January 16, 2013 at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that

Andrew D. Bernstein/Getty Images

Much like Kidd, Jackson’s coaching resume took a bit of a hit from the accomplishments of the guy who followed him.

Jackson deserves credit for leading the Warriors to back-to-back seasons of 47 and 51 wins, but Steve Kerr immediately won 67 games and an NBA title in Golden State’s first year post-Jackson by abandoning the old-school approach and endowing talents like Stephen Curry and Draymond Green with more freedom.

Maybe a grind-it-out style makes more sense with LeBron than it did with Curry, though. Jackson instilled a lot of the defensive identity and culture that set up this Warriors dynasty. And if he can bring that to the Lakers, perhaps LeBron can take care of the other end of the floor.

Juwan Howard

MIAMI, FL - JUNE 24: LeBron James #6 and Juwan Howard of the Miami Heat look on during the NBA championship parade through downtown on June 24, 2013 in Miami, Florida. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using

David Alvarez/Getty Images

This one’s interesting. Far too often, NBA coaching searches are loaded with retreadsguys who’ve had plenty of chances and little success.

And while there are obvious drawbacks to going with a first-time coach, some points may be working in Howard’s favor.

Bleacher Report’s Eric Pincus reported on Howard’s candidacy back in April:

…one new name surfaced with favorable oddsMiami Heat assistant and Pelinka’s former University of Michigan teammate Juwan Howard. 

Howard is one of many assistants around the league deserving of a promotion, but is he ready for everything that comes with coaching James and the Lakers? The Lakers job may eat an inexperienced coach alive, but he might get that chance should James and Pelinka both believe he’s ready for the challenge.

James may not mind a first-year coach if it’s one he knows and trusts. He won two championships with James in Miami and made the move to the bench in James’ final year with the Heat.

Those four seasons with the Heat were the most successful stretch of LeBron’s career. And Howard has been with that organization long enough that its legendary culture may now be ingrained in him.

Perhaps he and LeBron can transform what has become one of the league’s more dysfunctional teams and recapture some of that Miami magic together.

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Malaysia reform momentum wanes a year after historic election

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia – On the night of May 9 last year, Malaysians celebrated the Southeast Asian nation’s first democratic change in government in six decades and the departure of Najib Razak amid allegations billions of dollars had gone missing from state fund 1MDB.

People talked optimistically of a “new Malaysia” under the multi-ethnic Pakatan Harapan, or the Alliance of Hope.

But a year later, for some of its most ardent supporters hope has turned to disappointment. 

“They are not implementing the things we expected,” said Siti Kasim, a lawyer and activist. “That makes us frustrated. It feels like all the important decisions they should be making have been relegated,” added Siti, who voted for Pakatan mostly out of concern about what she sees as the increasing intrusion of religion in Muslim-majority Malaysia’s public life.

A survey released at the end of last month by the Merdeka Center, the country’s most-respected pollster, found only 39 percent of Malaysians were happy with the government and 46 percent thought the country was “headed in the wrong direction”.

Just after the election, with Mahathir Mohamad as prime minister, Pakatan’s approval rating was 79 percent.

It’s not just in its commitments to human rights reforms such as repealing draconian laws and signing up to international conventions where the government has failed to meet expectations. The Merdeka poll also found Malaysians were disappointed with its handling of the economy; their top concern.

“It reflects the frustrations right now,” political analyst Asrul Hadi Abdullah Sani told Al Jazeera. “Times are bad. The cost of living is still high.”

Malaysia: New government sworn in after 61-year party rule

Ethnic tensions

The economy was already slowing when Pakatan won power, but the trade spat between the United States and China and weak commodity prices have further hurt growth. Malaysia’s economy expanded 4.7 percent in 2018, compared with 5.9 percent the year before.

The government delivered on its promise to remove the unpopular Good and Services Tax, but it replaced the levy with another consumption tax a few months later. At the same time, cash handouts were reduced, while promises to abolish road tolls and write off student loans were dropped.

The opposition, made up of the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) and the Parti Islam seMalaysia (PAS), has sought to capitalise on economic frustrations, appealing to the Malay population by focusing on race and religion, which have long been sensitive issues in the multiracial nation and exploded into violence in May 1969. Scores of ethnic Chinese died in those riots, and while there has not been violence on that scale since, tensions occasionally bubble to the surface.

Malays make up about 60 percent of Malaysia’s population, while the Chinese account for about 21 percent and the Indians just over six percent. The remainder are indigenous people.

UMNO and PAS contested separately in last year’s election, but won as many as three quarters of the votes of Malays, who are Muslim. They have now agreed to work together in parliament, although not in a formal alliance, presenting themselves as the defenders of Islam and Malay rights, which are guaranteed under the constitution but also include a host of other benefits including special savings schemes, educational quotas and land rights that are not available to the country’s minority groups. 

“The last election merely installed a multi-ethnic reformist government because the Malay-Muslim votes were split,” said Wong Chin Huat, who studies democratisation and identity politics in Malaysia. “It did not close the decades-old ethnic divides, but has instead exacerbated them.”

Conservative Malays protested in Kuala Lumpur last year against the government’s plan to sign up to a major UN anti-discrimination treaty [Kate Mayberry/Al Jazeera]

Veteran activist Hishamuddin Rais spent 20 years in self-imposed exile and backed the now 93-year-old Mahathir as the best way to oust Najib and the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition that had governed the country since independence.

He says that after losing power conservative forces latched onto a narrative that they knew was easy to sell. “The narrative is very simple; that the Chinese are taking over Malaysia,” he said. “This is the narrative that is confronting Pakatan Harapan.”

Opposition politicians homed in on the appointment of non-Malays to senior government positions – the finance minister is an ethnic Chinese, while the attorney general is an ethnic Indian – and claimed that signing the UN Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination and joining the International Criminal Court would undermine the position of the king and sultans, and threaten the Malays’ special privileges.

Gay and transgender people, liberals and women have also come under attack from conservatives over the past year and found little overt support in the new government.  

Numan Afifi, an LGBT activist who became an aide to the youth and sports minister, quit his job in July after he was attacked over social media. Last month, he was questioned by police over a joint statement on gay rights he read at the United Nations in Geneva.

Maryam Lee, a feminist and activist, found herself investigated over the launch of her first book, Unveiling Choice, an exploration of her decision to stop wearing the headscarf.

In a discussion accompanying last month’s launch, Lee and two other Malaysian Muslim women talked about their experiences of removing the hijab. About 15 people attended the event, but a social media backlash triggered an investigation by the Islamic authorities. There is no legislation in Malaysia that requires women to cover their heads.

“They were never different,” Lee said, referring to the Pakatan Harapan and BN governments.

She herself was so disappointed with the two main coalitions that she led a campaign for people to spoil their votes during the election. “A lot of (Pakatan’s) leaders were UMNO or BN defectors so they came from the same political culture. They are only different in clothing. The essence remains the same.”

Pakatan supporters celebrate the coalition’s historic election victory last year in Petaling Jaya [Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters]

‘Please us’

The questions over Lee’s book followed probes into a march in Kuala Lumpur to mark International Women’s Day, where some of the crowd carried banners in support of LGBT people. The religious affairs minister said the presence of LGBT activists was a “misuse of democratic space” and the organisers said they were being investigated under the colonial-era Sedition Act and the Peaceful Assembly Act.

Pakatan was supposed to be reviewing those acts with a view to repealing more draconian legislation.

“Authorities have used the same old laws to silence critics, stifle unpopular opinions and control public discourse,” Nalini Elumalai, Malaysia programme officer for ARTICLE 19, said in a statement marking Pakatan’s first year in office. “These retrogressive tactics blemish the supposed reformist credentials of Malaysia’s new leaders, and impeded the democratic transition they promised to bring about.”

Nevertheless, there has been progress.

Malaysia’s position on Reporters Without Borders press freedom ranking has improved by 22 places – despite the opposition blocking the repeal of the Fake News Law in the upper house – and Transparency International said in January the country had made “significant strides” in tackling corruption.

Graft investigations have focussed not only on 1MDB but other large government-linked agencies including the giant land co-operative and plantations company FELDA, and Tabung Haji, the fund set up to help Muslims save for the Hajj pilgrimage.

Struggling with debt, both institutions have been bailed out by the government and the two former chairmen, both of whom are UMNO politicians, have been charged with corruption.

Najib himself can currently be found each morning in a Kuala Lumpur court where the prosecution is laying out its case against the former prime minister and finance minister over the disappearance of millions of dollars from 1MDB subsidiary SRC International. A second trial, involving RM2.28b ($549m) at 1MDB itself starts in August. His wife also faces trial for corruption.

All have pleaded not guilty, but the trials are crucial for a government that came to power vowing to beat corruption.

“Of all the promises that Pakatan has to fulfil, the one and only one is to put Najib behind bars,” said Asrul Hadi, the political analyst. “Then they can say, ‘We did our job. We cleaned the country of corruption.’ Finding Najib guilty is a priority.”

Despite the disappointments of the past year, people like Siti are not giving up on Pakatan or the dream of a “new” Malaysia.

“I’m not going to condemn them,” said the lawyer and activist. “It’s a criticism. It’s a reminder to Pakatan that they were voted into office by the minorities and the liberal Malays. We are the ones who voted for them overwhelmingly. What Pakatan must at least do now is please us.”

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Kanye’s reluctant smile at the Met Gala is a mood

Kanye West's rare smile. Now a meme.
Kanye West’s rare smile. Now a meme.

Image: ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images

By Johnny Lieu

Kanye West, we love to see you smile.

The rapper made an appearance at the Met Gala on Monday, where all eyes were on the pink carpet, thanks to the outfits worn by the likes of Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, and Billy Porter, which understandably, consumed most of the chatter around the event.

Despite the attention mostly being elsewhere, Kanye was spotted by cameras smiling off to the side, although he doesn’t look too impressed while doing it. Of course, it’s since become a meme.

Now, Kanye’s somewhat reluctant smile can be used to mean all sorts of things, like when you’re forced to smile for random relatives, or running into people that you’d rather not.

SEE ALSO: Met Gala 2019: How celebrities did ‘Camp’ on the pink carpet

It’s the smile for all awkward occasions.

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Netflix’s ‘Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt’ will get Bandersnatch-style interactive episode

Choose your own KImmy adventure.
Choose your own KImmy adventure.

Image: Eric Liebowitz / Netflix

By Shannon Connellan

If you’ve ever wanted to control an episode of Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, you’re about to get your fudgin’ chance.

Following four glorious Emmy-nominated seasons, the Netflix comedy will return for an interactive special akin to Black Mirror‘s groundbreaking choose-your-own-adventure episode, Bandersnatch.

Series creator and executive producer Tina Fey announced the special episode on Wednesday, marking its release date on Netflix for 2020. 

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt was one of the first original comedy series on Netflix, and now it will be its first interactive comedy event,” she said. 

“Fans will be able to make choices on behalf of our characters, taking different story paths with, of course, different jokes.”

SEE ALSO: Disney+ vs. Netflix: How many subscribers will switch?

While nothing about the multi-channelled plot has yet been revealed, the show’s cast, including Ellie Kemper, Tituss Burgess, Jane Krakowski, and Carol Kane will all star in the episode. 

But Fey also said the special episode will “officially complete” the series, so consider this a grand finale for your pals Kimmy, Titus, Jacqueline, and Lillian.

The exact ending they’ll get? That’s up to you.

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Google is borrowing from Apple’s privacy playbook

Google has a new message, and it's all about privacy.
Google has a new message, and it’s all about privacy.

Image: justin sullivan / Getty Images

By Karissa Bell

Google wants us to know it’s changed. While the company used to use the I/O stage to tout its “AI first” approach to the world, attendees of this developer conference heard a very different theme emerge.

Amid the talk of new products, research, and AI advancements, the company went out of its way to emphasize privacy. And, in an effort to show it’s more than just obligatory lip service, they announced a number of updates meant to make its products more private.

Among the changes:

  • Google is moving much of the machine learning that powers its assistant and other features from the cloud to the actual devices. This applies both to phones and to its new Nest Hub Max, which keeps all its new facial recognition features locally.

  • In two of its most popular apps, search and maps, Google is beefing up privacy with a new incognito mode.

  • In Chrome, users will get more control over which websites can track their activity via cookies.

Look closely, though, and you might discern another theme: All of that is pretty much straight out of Apple’s playbook. On-device machine learning? Check. Better in-app privacy controls? Check. Web browsing that makes it harder to track what you’re doing? Check. 

Google is trying to beat Apple at its own game, and with much, much, cheaper hardware.

The company took further aim at its Cupertino rival with a New York Times op-ed from CEO Sundar Pichai titled “Privacy Should Not Be a Luxury Good.” 

“Privacy cannot be a luxury good offered only to people who can afford to buy premium products and services. Privacy must be equally available to everyone in the world,” he wrote in what’s pretty clearly a massive dig at Apple and its ever pricier iPhones.

Of course, just because Google is changing some of its products doesn’t mean we need to take all its claims at face value. Like Facebook, Google still has an enormous amount of data on the people who use its products, and it uses that data to sell advertising. And, like Facebook, some of its proposed changes will ultimately benefit its own interests, as my colleague Rachel Kraus pointed out

But in a time when tech giants are dealing with a global reckoning on privacy, Google proved that it knows exactly what notes to hit. Apple has long claimed the moral high ground when it comes to privacy. Google’s track record may not be as strong, but by taking the same approach as Apple, they clearly want to at least create the perception that you’re not the product … even if you still are.

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