The syringe attack on the 12-year-old son of Pandan MP and former Economy Minister, Datuk Seri Rafizi Ramli, has shaken Malaysia. What initially appeared as a rare and bizarre incident now echoes a disturbing pattern witnessed abroad, notably in France. In June 2025, during the FĂȘte de la Musique festival, over 145 people across France reported being pricked with syringes in crowded public areas. In both cases, the weapon of fear was not a gun or bomb but a syringe. When viewed together, the Rafizi incident and the mass needle attacks in France reveal an alarming global trend of unconventional, psychological violence that leaves behind not just physical uncertainty but emotional trauma. The question we must now ask is: are these acts simply random criminality, or should they be treated with the gravity of terrorist attacks? A Pattern Beyond Borders In France, the attacks spanned multiple cities, with 13 confirmed cases in Paris alone. Victims included women, men, and even min...
The syringe attack on the 12-year-old son of Pandan MP and former Economy Minister, Datuk Seri Rafizi Ramli, is more than a political incident. It is a disturbing reflection of how vulnerable ordinary people, especially children, have become in public spaces. The boy was attacked in a mall car park in Putrajaya in the early afternoon, in broad daylight, while simply getting into a car with his mother. According to Rafizi, two men on a motorcycle had been trailing them before one of the men jumped off, grabbed his son, and jabbed him with a syringe. That a child could be harmed so easily in a public area, while accompanied by a parent, raises serious concerns about the safety of civilians not just political families, but any member of the public who could find themselves in the wrong place at the wrong time. What is most chilling about this incident is the nature of the attack itself. Injecting someone with an unknown substance is a deeply invasive, intimate, and frightening form ...