Saturday, June 13, 2026

Three Fingers Pointing Back

Before blaming Ali Chandran or Ali Bangla, ask a harder question: Who wrote the rules, issued the licences, set the enforcement priorities and measured success? Sometimes the biggest obstacle to local economic participation is not who walked through the door — but who left it open in the first place.


KopiTalk with MHO

June 2026

Part 3 of the KopiTalk series on local economic participation in Brunei (Read here for Part 1 and Part 2)

Before we ask why Ali Chandran and Ali Bangla thrive, we should ask who wrote the rules they are operating within.

By Malai Hassan Othman

There is a point in every honest conversation when exhaustion sets in.

Not the exhaustion of having nothing left to say. The exhaustion of watching the same argument circle back on itself — louder each time, angrier each cycle, and no closer to the truth that was sitting there from the beginning.

We have reached that point with the Ali Chandran and Ali Bangla debate.

Because here is what the viral rants, WhatsApp forwards and TikTok complaints have consistently failed to ask:


Who wrote the policy?

Who runs the system?

Who issues the licences?

Who sets the enforcement priorities?

Who designs the market spaces?

Who decides what gets monitored and what gets quietly ignored?


The answer is not Ali Chandran.

It is not Ali Bangla.

And yet those are the names being blamed.


Let us be precise about what Ali Chandran and Ali Bangla have actually done.

They entered a market that was open to them. They operated within a licensing system that permitted their participation. They rented licences from locals who offered those licences willingly — for a monthly payment, for a lump sum, for an arrangement that suited both parties at the time.

They read our institutional culture accurately. They understood that some licence holders preferred passive income over active enterprise. They understood that enforcement was inconsistent. They understood that certain corridors of the system were navigable through relationships and familiarity.

They also understood that Bruneian consumers — given a choice — would often queue at the foreign-run food stall, browse the foreign-run retail shop, and hire the foreign contractor, not out of disloyalty, but because the service was consistent, the price was competitive and the experience met expectations.


They did not impose themselves on Brunei.

Brunei invited them in — one licence rental, one customer choice, one hiring decision at a time.



This is the truth that the complaints are designed to avoid.

Because if we acknowledge it fully, the conversation changes entirely.

It stops being about them and starts being about us.

It asks why a local licence holder finds passive rental income more attractive than building his own enterprise. It asks why local cooperatives, designed specifically to build collective economic strength, have too often collapsed into internal disputes and governance failures. It asks why enforcement agencies, staffed and funded by the public, have not developed the institutional intelligence to detect ecosystem-level economic activity rather than individual licence violations.

It asks why the same community that writes economic policy, runs the licensing system and controls the regulatory environment is now expressing surprise — on social media — at the outcome of that policy, that system and that environment.


You cannot write the rules, run the system, leave the door open, and then complain about who walked through it.


There is something else worth saying plainly.

The preference for foreign-run businesses is not something Ali Chandran or Ali Bangla manufactured. They did not create the Bruneian consumer’s inclination toward foreign retail, foreign food and beverage, foreign construction finishes, or foreign professional services.

That inclination existed before they arrived.

They simply positioned themselves to meet it.

Walk through any commercial area in Brunei. Notice where the queues form. Notice which shopfronts are maintained with more consistency. Notice which food stalls run out of stock by midday.


The market is telling us something.

It has been telling us for years.


What it is saying is not that foreign operators are superior. What it is saying is that they took the market seriously — its demands, its expectations, its habits — in a way that local enterprise has not always matched.


That is not a racial observation.

It is a market observation.

And markets do not respond to sentiment.

They respond to behaviour.



None of this means enforcement does not matter.

Licence fronting arrangements must be scrutinised. Labour and immigration rules must be applied consistently. Businesses operating outside the boundaries of the law must be held accountable.

But enforcement alone will not solve this.

Part of the problem is what the system chooses to measure. As long as authorities count the number of licences registered as the measure of entrepreneurship progress, the KPI will always look healthy — even as the reality behind those numbers tells a different story.


A licence registered is not a business built.

A number recorded is not an enterprise functioning.


When we measure inputs instead of outcomes, we will always find reasons to be satisfied with a situation that deserves scrutiny.

The system is counting paperwork and calling it progress.

Because the moment one arrangement is closed, another will open — as long as the underlying conditions remain unchanged. As long as locals find it easier to rent than to build. As long as cooperatives cannot govern themselves with the discipline the market demands. As long as policy continues to reward passivity over enterprise. As long as the system measures licences issued rather than genuine local economic participation.


The door will stay open.

And rational actors will continue to walk through it.



This is not a uniquely Bruneian challenge.

More than a decade ago, Singapore-based advisers warned that many Malay-Muslim businesses faced similar problems: small scale, weak bankability and limited growth potential. Their recommendation was not more slogans or more encouragement, but consolidation, stronger governance, shared manpower, shared infrastructure and institutions capable of scale.

That lesson should feel familiar to Brunei today.


What genuine reform looks like is not complicated to describe, even if it is difficult to execute.

It requires licence holders to be held to the standard of active participation, not nominal ownership.

It requires cooperatives to be governed with the same rigour demanded of any serious commercial entity.

It requires enforcement to develop economic intelligence — the ability to map supply chains, financing networks and labour systems — not just inspect individual shopfronts.

It requires the KPI to change.


Not how many licences were issued — but how many represent genuinely active, locally run enterprises.

Not how many entrepreneurship programmes were conducted — but how many participants built businesses that survived, scaled and employed others.



Measure outcomes.

Not paperwork.



Most of all, genuine reform requires us to stop outsourcing our economic frustration to the people who responded to conditions we created.


Ali Chandran did not write the policy.

Ali Bangla did not run the system.

We did.


And if the outcome is not what we wanted, the reckoning begins there — not on TikTok, not in a WhatsApp group, and not with three fingers pointing outward while we ignore the ones pointing back.



The next piece in this series asks a different question: if ecosystems can be built, why have we struggled to build our own?



KopiTalk with MHO  •  Malai Hassan Othman

Substack: kopitalkwithmho.substack.com  •  LinkedIn: Distribution

Part 3 of a continuing series on local economic participation in Brunei.


Journey of the Heart: The Trade That Loses the Soul


Pak Maun walked out with a tasbih and a secret.

We laughed because P. Ramlee made it funny.

But Surah Al-Baqarah ayat 10–16 asks a quieter question: how often does the heart borrow respectable language to hide desire?

Not every trade looks like a loss.

But the soul keeps record.


Reflections from Surah Al-Baqarah, Ayat 10–16


Pak Maun was getting ready to go out.

Not with the nervousness of a man planning mischief.

No.

He carried himself with the calm dignity of a man going somewhere respectable.

At home, the face was serious.

The voice was careful.

The reason was ready.

He was going to a syarahan, he told his wife.

A religious talk.

What could be more proper than that?

Then came the little finishing touch.

The tasbih.

He needed his tasbih.

While waiting for the syarahan to begin, he said, he could fill the time with wirid.

There it was.

The perfect cover.

A night out, wrapped neatly in religious language.

A wife could hardly object.

A husband with tasbih in hand, going for syarahan, planning to do wirid while waiting — what suspicion could possibly survive that?

But we, watching from the other side of the screen, knew better.

The syarahan was not the real attraction.

The tasbih was not the real preparation.

Behind that respectable excuse was another Pak Maun.

Not the solemn man leaving the house.

But the playful old man still restless for music, movement, laughter and the little thrill of being young again for one night.

That was P. Ramlee’s genius.

He did not scold.

He did not preach.

He let Pak Maun walk out of the house with a tasbih and a secret.

And because it was funny, we laughed.

But the laughter carried something with it.

A small discomfort.

Because Pak Maun was not only deceiving his wife.

He was borrowing the language of piety to hide the direction of his desire.

People may be fooled.

A wife may be fooled.

A village may be fooled.

Even the man himself may begin to enjoy the respectability of his own excuse.

But Allah cannot be deceived.

And that is where an old comedy scene becomes more than nostalgia.

It becomes a mirror.

That thought stayed with me during a recent taddabur class on Surah Al-Baqarah, ayat 10 to 16.

—  —  —

The ayat speak of the munafiqun.

A heavy word.

A frightening word.

And perhaps a word we should be very careful with.

Because the moment we hear it, the easy thing is to look outward.

To think of someone else.

To remember people who speak one way and live another.

But the Qur’an has a way of refusing to remain safely outside us.

It comes closer.

It asks quieter questions.

Not only: who are they?

But: what of this could begin in me?


The ayat speak of a disease in the heart.

Fi qulubihim maradun.

I kept thinking about that word.

Disease.

Not something visible on the face.

Not something that immediately alarms other people.

A person may look composed, speak well, laugh easily and carry himself with confidence — yet still have something unsettled inside.

A doubt left unattended.

A resentment quietly fed.

An envy dressed as principle.

A gap between what the tongue says and what the heart knows.

Maybe that is how some inner sickness begins.

Not dramatically.

Not with one loud collapse.

But with small permissions.

One excuse.

One hidden motive.

One truth avoided because it costs too much.

One promise that quietly dissolves.

At first, the heart may still feel uneasy.

It may still hear the whisper of shame.

But if that unease is ignored often enough, it grows tired.

And that, to me, is the frightening part.

Not that the heart falls.

All hearts fall.

But that the heart may stop wanting to rise.

—  —  —

What makes these verses sharp is not only the sickness.

It is how the sick heart survives.

It learns to rename things.


We say we are protecting someone.

But perhaps we are hiding the truth.

We say we are keeping peace.

But perhaps we are avoiding responsibility.

We say we are being realistic.

But perhaps we have simply become afraid of doing what is right.


The diseased heart does not always admit it is causing damage.

Sometimes it calls the damage repair.

Sometimes it calls pride principle.

Sometimes it calls cowardice wisdom.

Sometimes it calls self-interest sacrifice.

And once the heart has learned to rename things, it becomes harder to return.

Because the problem no longer looks like a problem.

It has been given a respectable name.

—  —  —

Then there is the mask.

Life requires adab.

We do not speak the same way in every setting.

But there is a difference between manners and masks.

Manners respect the situation.

Masks protect the false self.

A person can live behind masks for so long that the real face becomes unfamiliar.

He may still know what to say.

Still know how to appear.

Still know which words sound sincere, loyal or devout.

But inside, something is no longer aligned.

And life may still continue.

He may not be stopped immediately.

He may still succeed.

Still gain comfort.

Still be praised.

Still feel that nothing serious has happened.

But not every ease is reassurance.

Not every open road is guidance.

Sometimes the scariest thing is not when Allah stops us.

Sometimes it is when He lets us continue — quietly, comfortably — with what is slowly destroying us.

—  —  —

Then comes the image that gives these ayat their sharpest edge.

A trade.

They bought misguidance with guidance.

Their business did not profit.

And they were not guided.


Notice the word Allah chose.

Not sin.

Not disobedience.

Not wrongdoing.

Perniagaan.

A business transaction.

That choice is precise.

A transaction implies calculation.

Something offered.

Something received in return.

Not merely a moment of weakness.

Not just a slip.

A deal, made deliberately, even if made in small amounts over time.


And in business, every transaction is recorded.

The ledger does not forget what the trader prefers not to remember.

That is why the closing of these ayat carries such weight.

Their business did not profit.

And they were not guided.

Not simply that they sinned.

But that the deal was bad.

They thought they were being clever — gaining comfort, image, position and respectability.

But the transaction left them poorer than before.


Pak Maun thought the tasbih was a small, clever price to pay.

P. Ramlee showed us the comedy of it.

Allah is showing us the ledger.


The Qur’an speaks in the language of commerce because we understand exchange.

We know profit.

We know loss.

We know a bad deal.

But this is not a trade of money.

It is the trade of the soul.

And perhaps the heart is always trading.

Truth for comfort.

Honesty for image.

Sincerity for recognition.

Humility for pride.

Guidance for ego.


Rarely does it feel like a major transaction at the time.

It feels small.

A sentence adjusted.

A promise delayed.

A truth softened until it disappears.

A wrong defended because admitting it would hurt.

One trade does not seem to change much.

But repeated trades become a character.

Quietly.

Privately.

Until one day, we may become the sum of what we kept choosing.

—  —  —

That is why these verses leave me uneasy.

Not because they make me want to identify the munafiqun around me.

But because they make me afraid of the traces of nifaq within me.


Where have my words failed to meet my actions?

Where have I renamed something wrong so I did not have to change it?

Where have I worn a mask because truth would cost me something I was not prepared to pay?


These are not comfortable questions.

But discomfort may still be a mercy.

A heart that still feels uneasy is not yet numb.

A heart that still worries about its condition is still being invited back.

These verses do not show us the failed trade to make us despair.

They show it to us while there is still time to change.

While the heart can still feel the weight of what it is giving away.

While the loss has not yet become permanent.


P. Ramlee made us laugh at Pak Maun.

But perhaps the deeper discomfort was never only about him.

It was about that quiet moment after the laughter.

The moment when an old comedy stops being entertainment and becomes a mirror.


Not every trade announces itself as a loss at the time it is made.

But the soul keeps every record.

— KopiTalk Jiwa


Friday, June 12, 2026

Why Do Others Build Ecosystems While We Build Shops?

The real story was never the shop.

It was the ecosystem behind the shop.

While we debate licences and ownership, others may be building supply chains, financing networks and business ecosystems that are far harder to compete against.

Why do others build ecosystems while we build shops?

The latest KopiTalk explores a question that goes beyond Ali Chandran, Ali Bangla and licence renting — and goes to the heart of Brunei's economic future.


KopiTalk with MHO

June 2026


Part 2 of the KopiTalk series on local economic participation in Brunei
(read Part 1 here)

The real competitive advantage may not be nationality, licence or capital. It may be an organisation.

By Malai Hassan Othman

A customer walks into a small neighbourhood shop.

The shelves are full. The prices are competitive. The workers are present. New stock appears regularly.

From the outside, it looks like a simple shop.

But behind the counter may sit a network of suppliers, importers, wholesalers, transporters, financiers and community relationships stretching far beyond the shopfront itself.

That may be where Brunei has misread the Ali Chandran and Ali Bangla debate.

The real story was never only the shop. The real story is the ecosystem behind it.


In Part 1, the argument was that Ali Bangla is not the disease — it is the latest symptom. The deeper issue is not merely who runs the shop, but how certain business communities have built networks of supply, support and survival while many local businesses remain scattered.

Part 2 asks the harder question: why do others build ecosystems while we build shops?

One mistake often made in Brunei is assuming that every business stands alone. Many do not.

One person imports. Another wholesales. Another handles transport. Another runs a shop. Another supplies labour. Another provides informal financing. Individually, they may look like small operators. Collectively, they form a system — sharing information, capital, workers and customers, absorbing shocks and allowing newcomers to enter faster because they are not starting from zero.

A local entrepreneur may open a shop and then begin searching for suppliers, workers, credit and transport. A networked entrepreneur may already have access to all of these before the signboard is installed.


That is not just business. That is structure.

And structure beats improvisation.


Official retail data show why this matters. In the first quarter of 2024 alone, Brunei’s retail sector generated almost BND448 million in sales. Competition for access to that market is therefore not simply about shopkeeping. It is a contest for control over supply chains, distribution networks and customer relationships.

Consider what is visible at ground level. Local vendors at tamu and pasar operate on thin daily margins, paying stall rentals, ingredient costs and wages that together can exceed what the day’s sales bring in. When enforcement actions close a market or remove a stall, that vendor has nowhere to absorb the shock. No network catches them. No supply arrangement gives them flexibility. They restart from zero each time.

A networked operator in the same market rarely faces that vulnerability. The supply chain adjusts. The labour moves. The financing holds. One shop closes; the system survives.


That asymmetry is not accidental. It is structural.


The same logic runs through construction. What appears to be a small contractor may be linked to manpower supply, transport, hardware, materials and subcontracting arrangements. A worker today may become a subcontractor tomorrow. A subcontractor controls a team. A team connects to hardware and transport. Transport connects to the next project.

The visible company is only part of the story. The ecosystem is the real business.


This is where Brunei must be honest with itself.

Local businesses are not without talent. There are hardworking Bruneian entrepreneurs, serious operators, capable vendors and skilled contractors. But too many remain isolated. They buy alone. They borrow alone. They negotiate alone. They fail alone.

Foreign business communities often move through networks. They may compete with one another, but they know when to cooperate — who supplies what, who can lend, who has workers, who can step in when one business struggles.


This is not magic. It is organisation.


For years, Brunei has spoken about entrepreneurship. We encourage people to start businesses, offer training, create market spaces and urge people to buy local. All of that matters.

But starting businesses is not the same as building ecosystems.


A stall is not a supply chain.

A licence is not an enterprise.

A cooperative is not automatically cooperation.

A business association is not automatically business power.


Cooperatives, in theory, should be among the strongest tools for local economic participation — pooling capital, sharing risk, negotiating better prices, managing distribution. But too many have struggled with governance, internal disputes and weak commercial discipline. If local cooperatives cannot build trust among their own members, they cannot build market power against organised business ecosystems. If leadership is weak and accountability poor, the cooperative becomes another committee.

Meanwhile, others continue to build quietly. Not with slogans. With systems.


This is also where policy must catch up with economic reality. Brunei has the tools on paper — registration oversight, labour controls, immigration enforcement, entrepreneurship support. But if the same complaints keep resurfacing, the question is whether these tools are designed to detect ecosystems or only individual violations.

Brunei may be regulating businesses one licence at a time while the real competition operates as networks. A single shop can be inspected. A single licence can be checked. But how does the system detect control over a supply chain? How does it recognise coordinated capital or map informal financing?

These are not enforcement questions alone. They are economic intelligence questions.

Enforcement can limit abuse. It cannot by itself create strong local businesses.


For that, Brunei needs local supply chains, purchasing alliances, financing pools, professionally managed cooperatives and business mentoring that goes beyond motivation. Entrepreneurs who understand cashflow, margins, inventory, credit and scale. And a shift in thinking.

We cannot keep asking locals merely to open shops. We must ask how locals can control more of the chain — who imports, who wholesales, who distributes, who finances, who owns the customer relationship.

That is where economic power sits.


The uncomfortable truth is that some foreign business communities understood this before we did. They did not simply enter the market. They connected themselves inside it — from labour to retail, retail to wholesale, construction work to subcontracting, subcontracting to hardware and transport. From individual survival to community ecosystem.

While that was happening, many local businesses remained dependent on individual effort, government support, temporary markets and public sympathy.


Sympathy does not build supply chains.

Sentiment does not lower costs.

Slogans do not create margins.


The Ali Chandran and Ali Bangla debate should not end with anger at the shopfront. It should push us to examine the structure behind it — and ask honestly why our own structures are not stronger.

The real competitive advantage may not be foreign labour, foreign ownership or foreign capital.

It may be something much simpler: the ability to organise.

Until Brunei learns to build its own local economic strength with the same seriousness, the pattern will continue.


Others will build networks.

We will build shops.

And shops, no matter how sincere, will struggle to compete against ecosystems.



KopiTalk with MHO  •  Malai Hassan Othman

Substack: kopitalkwithmho.substack.com  •  LinkedIn: Distribution

Part 2 of a continuing series on local economic participation in Brunei.


Tuesday, June 9, 2026

The Same Question, Asked Again

From Ali Baba to Ali Bangla — the name changes every few years. The system does not. While Brunei debates who runs the shop, others have quietly built the supply chain behind it. The real question was never about the shopfront. It was always about the ecosystem.

#KopiTalkMHO


KopiTalk with MHO

9 June 2026

From Ali Baba to Ali Bangla, the real story is not who runs the shop, but who built the ecosystem behind it.

By Malai Hassan Othman

The debate now begins, as many Brunei debates now do — not in Parliament, not in a policy paper, but in WhatsApp groups, TikTok clips and Instagram shares.

A familiar complaint has resurfaced: foreign vendors are mushrooming across retail, food services, backstreet shops, kampung businesses and even construction-related activities. Locals ask why the system appears easier for outsiders than for Bruneians themselves.

But the viral rant is only the trigger.

The real story is older, deeper and more uncomfortable.

Brunei has been here before. First, it was called Ali Baba — the familiar arrangement where a local licence holder allowed another party to run the business. Then, in 2019, Li Li Pang of Universiti Brunei Darussalam argued that the Brunei version had evolved. The expatriate partner was no longer typically Chinese, but increasingly from the Asian subcontinent. The paper called it Ali Chandran.

Today, with Bangladeshi operators increasingly visible in small retail, food services, supply activities and construction-linked businesses, some locals have begun calling the latest version Ali Bangla.

The names change.

The system survives.

And that is the real question.

Why?

Li Li Pang’s study already pointed to the uncomfortable mechanics: locals renting out licences, expatriates operating the businesses, weak monitoring, and a policy environment flexible enough for the arrangement to continue. The paper noted that locals were willing to sell or rent licences for lump sums or monthly payments, while enforcement was made difficult because the law did not directly address the practice.

Yet years later, the conversation has returned — louder, faster and more public.

This time, however, the issue should not be reduced to foreign vendors opening small shops.

That would be too simple.

What we are seeing is not merely the rise of shopfronts.

It is the quiet growth of business ecosystems.

Behind the grocery counter may be an importer. Behind the small shop may be a wholesaler. Behind the construction worker may be a subcontractor, a hardware supplier, a transport provider, a labour network and a community financing channel.

The shop is only the visible end of the chain.

The real strength is the chain itself.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

What the World Sees, and What Brunei Must Show

The world may be watching because of Prince Mateen.

But the real question is not why the world is watching.

The real question is what Brunei will show.

His appointment as Minister of Foreign Affairs is more than a headline about youth, visibility or royal appeal. It is a rare diplomatic opening for Brunei — a chance to turn attention into trust, trust into relationships, and relationships into national advantage.

For a small state, diplomacy is not decoration.

It is survival with manners.


KopiTalk with MHO

Public Affairs Column  |  Substack  |  LinkedIn


What the World Sees, and What Brunei Must Show

Prince Mateen's appointment as Minister of Foreign Affairs is not merely a story about visibility. It is a rare diplomatic opening for Brunei — one built on responsibility, preparation and national purpose.

By Malai Hassan Othman

The Cabinet reshuffle was news. Prince Abdul Mateen's appointment as Minister of Foreign Affairs became a story — and it is still travelling.

That distinction matters.

A news item is reported and filed. A story has legs. It keeps moving, finding new audiences and generating reactions in places the original announcement may never have expected to reach.

Within hours, the appointment was circulating in regional newsrooms. Within a day, it had reached audiences that rarely follow Brunei closely — not only because of the portfolio, but because of the person now carrying it.

The world already knew him.

It knew a military man — disciplined, trained and familiar with the meaning of duty. It knew an athlete and sportsman of genuine accomplishment. It knew a prince whose warmth and outgoing nature had made him genuinely familiar across cultures and distances. And it knew the romantic — a royal love story, played out with quiet grace, that the world watched and found, in its own way, irresistible.

What followed him into public life was not merely manufactured attention. It was public familiarity and goodwill built over time — earned, not inherited.

Locally, the news landed with pride, warmth and curiosity. But beneath that, there was also a pause — people trying to place a familiar public figure into a role carrying real national weight.

That pause is what called me to write this.

As a journalist, I felt obliged — terpanggil — to put the appointment in its proper perspective. Not to diminish what is being celebrated, but to make sure that what is being celebrated is understood correctly.

International coverage, however warm and enthusiastic, has mostly told only part of the story.

The part it missed is the more important one.

A Cabinet reshuffle is a serious act of governance. Ministers are repositioned. Portfolios are reassigned. The machinery of state is recalibrated.

Yet in this case, the reshuffle was quickly overtaken by a single name.

That tells us something — not about the reshuffle, which stands on its own significance, but about the unusual public presence Prince Mateen brings into office.

He did not seek this surge of international attention. He carried it into the appointment from a life partly lived in public view, with enough authenticity for people to respond to the person, not merely the title.

In most circumstances, that kind of public recognition would be unusual for a Foreign Minister.

At this point in Brunei's diplomatic journey, it can be an asset — if understood and used well.

His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah was precise in the language used when announcing the new Cabinet line-up. The appointments took into account their interests, inclinations and early exposure in the government's administrative system.

That sentence deserves careful attention.

It is not merely ceremonial language. It gives the appointment its proper Bruneian frame: preparation, exposure, responsibility and continuity.

What may look to the outside world like a sudden, attention-commanding elevation sits, within Brunei's own system, inside a longer process of observation, exposure and gradual responsibility.

The military background is not incidental. A person shaped by military discipline understands hierarchy, duty and responsibility. An athlete understands preparation, setback and the long work that precedes any moment of recognition.

A sportsman understands teamwork — that individual performance matters only when it serves the broader effort.

These are not soft qualities.

They are qualities that diplomacy also demands.

Foreign headlines may not have paused long enough to see this. Brunei should make sure they do.

Foreign affairs is not a portfolio of handshakes, airport arrivals and ceremonial courtesy. For a small state, it is the discipline of keeping doors open when larger powers want smaller countries to choose sides.

Brunei does not have size. It does not have a large military presence on the regional stage. It does not have the economic weight to dominate any room it enters.

What it has carefully protected across decades is reputation — reliability, calm, principled engagement and the discipline of knowing when to speak and when silence carries more weight than words.

That reputation was built through Brunei's steady conduct in ASEAN, its role in Islamic finance and halal standards, its careful neutrality when larger powers press for alignment, and the accumulated trust of neighbours who know that Brunei says what it means and does not say more than it means.

None of that was loud.

All of it mattered.

This is where some outside readings of the appointment become useful, even when they do not fully capture Brunei's own perspective.

Foreign observers may read the reshuffle through the lens of great-power competition, the South China Sea, China's economic rise and the search for Western strategic reassurance.

Those concerns are not irrelevant.

Brunei sits in a difficult neighbourhood, at a time when energy security, maritime claims, food supply, investment flows and regional trust are becoming harder to separate.

But Brunei has rarely seen its future as a simple choice between one power and another.

Its strength has always been balance.

Brunei's diplomatic posture is built on discretion, not noise; pragmatism, not alignment for its own sake; and a steady effort to remain a friend to all while preserving independence of action.

Its anchors are not found in one capital alone. They are found in ASEAN, in long-standing ties with Singapore, in defence and institutional links with the United Kingdom, in neighbourhood relations with Malaysia and Indonesia, and in wider multilateral platforms where small states multiply their voice by acting carefully and consistently.

Seen this way, Prince Mateen's appointment should not be reduced to a geopolitical pivot.

It is better understood as generational renewal at a serious diplomatic moment — the preparation of a younger figure to carry forward Brunei's tradition of balance in a world where balance is becoming harder, but more necessary.

That is the point foreign commentary may miss.

The bigger story is not whether Brunei is turning one way or another. The bigger story is how Brunei prepares a new generation to carry old relationships, trusted habits and national interests into a more demanding world.

This appointment offers a chance to carry Brunei's quiet diplomatic tradition forward with a presence the world already recognises.

Not to replace substance with image.

But to let a credible human presence carry Brunei's substance further than quiet diplomacy alone may reach.

Visibility, in today's diplomatic environment, is not vanity. It is infrastructure.

A Foreign Minister who commands genuine international attention walks into every meeting already known. That familiarity, if handled well, can become the beginning of deeper trust.

That is what Prince Mateen brings.

The question now is what Brunei chooses to build around it.


For Bruneians, it would be easy to receive this appointment as a moment of domestic pride and then step back and watch.

That would be a mistake.

Foreign affairs is not something that happens somewhere else. It happens here, in every household, every month.

When food prices rise because of supply-chain disruptions elsewhere, foreign policy is felt at the dinner table.

When oil revenues shift because of decisions made in distant capitals, foreign policy is involved.

When investment slows and graduates struggle to find work, economic diplomacy matters.

When Brunei's voice at a regional table determines whether an agreement serves us or merely includes us, foreign policy becomes national life.

We are not insulated from the world.

We are embedded in it.

There are partnerships to deepen - in education, food security, Islamic finance, green economy and digital infrastructure.

There are relationships to tend carefully, with neighbours and partners watching Brunei's trajectory.

There are conversations in ASEAN and beyond where Brunei's presence, or absence, will shape outcomes for years.

This is the moment to be present.

And to be present with something to say.

Prince Mateen's appointment is not a story about a popular figure taking on a serious title. It is a story about Brunei placing real responsibility in the hands that have already demonstrated discipline, preparation and public connection in different arenas.

The country needs both continuity of established purpose and the energy of a new generation willing to carry it forward.

The two are not in tension.

They are exactly what effective diplomacy requires.

His Majesty's words — interests, inclinations and early exposure — describe a person who has been watching, listening and preparing, even while the world was watching him for different reasons.

That is the distinction Brunei must now make clear, to international audiences and to itself.

The visibility that preceded this appointment is not separate from the responsibility that now defines it.

One was the man the world came to know.

The other is the minister Brunei now needs.

The world is watching because of who Prince Mateen is.

Now Brunei has the opportunity — and the obligation — to show the world what Brunei stands for.

Not as a country forced to choose sides.

Not as a small state waiting to be interpreted by others.

But as a nation that understands the value of balance, the weight of continuity and the discipline of quiet confidence.

That is the real story.

And it has only just begun.


KopiTalk with MHO is published on Substack and distributed via LinkedIn. Views are the author's own.


Saturday, June 6, 2026

The Farmer-Hours We Never Count

Brunei knows how to count man-hours in industry. The question is whether we have ever counted what our farmers lose.


KopiTalk with MHO  |  Malai Hassan Othman



Not long ago, I visited a friend whose company was a vendor with Brunei Shell Petroleum.


His business was in transportation and waste management. In that line of work, safety is not decoration. It is discipline. It is reputation. It is contract survival.


Before I even walked through the door, something stopped me.


Near the entrance was a safety board. It showed the company had achieved more than one million man-hours without a Lost Time Incident.


I stood there for a moment.


One million man-hours.


No serious incident. No worker losing time to injury. No broken chain in the flow of work.


I remember thinking how seriously the oil and gas industry treats time. Every hour counted. Every exposure tracked. Every incident investigated.


If time was lost, the system wanted to know why.


That is what a serious industry does. It counts what matters.




Not long ago, I had coffee with a retired farmer.


He talked about the years he tried his hand at padi planting. He did not speak like a policy expert. He did not reach for words like productivity, national output or food security.


He spoke like a man who had tried.


He had spent money. He had spent energy. He had spent time.


But much of that time did not become harvest. It did not become income. It did not become progress.


It became experience.


And, quietly, disappointment.


There was no dashboard behind him. No board showing how many hours he had put into the field. No figure recording how much time was lost waiting for water. No measure of the hours swallowed by poor drainage, limited access to machinery, land that was difficult to reach, or markets that were never quite certain.


Yet those hours were real.


They were his life-hours.


They were farmer-hours.


And many of them were lost.




That conversation stayed with me.


Brunei knows how to count man-hours in industry. We have the boards, the systems, the discipline.


But do we count farmer-hours in agriculture?


Do we know how many hours our farmers lose because the farming ecosystem is incomplete? How much working time is swallowed by poor irrigation, broken drainage, limited machinery, bad access roads, uncertain buyers and fragmented support?


In oil and gas, lost man-hours are taken seriously because they signal a failure in safety and productivity.


In padi farming, lost farmer-hours disappear without record.


But they may be one of the missing links between our food security speeches and our food security reality.




This is not only about time. It is about what time converts into.


When a farmer loses hours, the field loses productivity. When fields lose productivity, the farming sector loses momentum. When farming loses momentum, food security stays weak. And when this goes on long enough, Brunei does not only lose harvest.


It loses farmer knowledge. It loses youth interest. It loses productive land. It loses confidence in agriculture itself.


The numbers carry their own quiet argument.


Rice self-sufficiency in 2023 still sat at around 8.1 per cent — far below the targets we have been setting for years. Meanwhile, the wider agrifood sector tells a clearer story: livestock leads, agrifood processing follows, and crops — including padi — remain the smallest piece of the picture.


That contrast is worth sitting with.


Livestock attracts organised capital. It works with controlled environments, feed supply chains, biosecurity protocols, processing facilities and distribution networks. Capital understands how to enter it because the ecosystem is already assembled.


Padi is different.


Most padi farming is still carried by small operators — kampong people, older pesawah, and family farmers working with uncertain water supply, limited machinery and weak market access.


They are not running integrated businesses.


They are running on patience.


That is not enough.


If rice is a matter of national security, then padi farmers cannot be treated as small players carrying a small problem. They are small players carrying a national burden. And when their time is wasted, the country loses alongside them.




A farmer does not only invest money.


He invests life-hours. Days under the sun. Time spent preparing land, managing water, clearing drains, searching for inputs, waiting for machinery, harvesting, hauling and trying to find a buyer who will pay a fair price.


If the system supports him, those hours become yield. They become income. They become local supply. They become resilience.


If the system is incomplete, those same hours become frustration. They become lost productivity. They become a quiet argument against ever farming again.


This is why the youth participation problem will not be solved by campaigns or slogans.


Young people are watching. They see what the hours cost and what they return. They see older farmers working hard with uncertain reward. They see padi farming leaning too heavily on personal endurance and too lightly on institutional support.


Then we ask why they do not come.


They are not avoiding farming because they lack grit. They are avoiding it because nobody has shown them a credible future in it.


If Brunei wants young people to enter agriculture, farming must look like a vocation with a system behind it — not a test of character conducted without one.




Perhaps what our food security conversation has been missing is not another policy commitment.


It is a different unit of measurement.


We count hectares. We count tonnes. We count output. We count allocations.


But do we count wasted farmer-hours?


Do we know how many hours disappear in a single padi season because a farmer is solving problems the system should have solved long before he reached the field? Do we know how much productivity evaporates before the first stalk is planted? Do we know how many farmers quietly stop — not because they failed, but because the return stopped justifying the time?


These are not peripheral questions. They go to the centre of what food security actually requires.


Because food security is not built by policy alone. It is built by human hours converted into food. Protect those hours, and the country gains. Waste them, and the country pays — in import dependency, lost knowledge, weak youth participation and a farming sector that struggles to grow with the urgency food security requires.




The way forward does not need another grand framework.


Take one padi area. Study it properly — not by land size alone, not by yield alone. Study the farmer’s actual working day.


How much time goes into preparing the land? How much is spent waiting for water? How much is lost to drainage failures? How much to machinery that does not arrive on time? How much to a market that offers no certainty?


Then fix the system. Fix the irrigation. Fix the drainage. Open the access. Provide shared machinery. Connect farmers to reliable buyers. Then measure again.


Did yield improve? Did income improve? Did wasted hours fall? Did anyone young start paying attention?


That would tell us more than another plan that looks complete on paper and arrives incomplete in the field.




In oil and gas, a board showing one million man-hours without a Lost Time Incident tells you something important. It tells you that time — and the people who give it — were taken seriously.


Brunei’s padi farmers have been giving their time for a long time.


Maybe it is time we started counting it.



— MHO