Compiled by ARFA YUNUS, C.ARUNO and R. ARAVINTHAN
ACTOR Fattah Amin (pic), who is married to celebrity Nur Fazura, has dispelled chatter that he is a controlling husband, Berita Harian reported.
“If I were domineering over Fazura, even (movie) ‘shooting’ isn’t allowed,” said Fattah, who is the star of the film Mat Kilau: The Rise of a Warrior.
Fattah, 33, said it was common for husbands and wives to know about each other’s friends.
“As a husband, of course I have to find out who my wife is friends with. She also knows who I am friends with,” he said.
Fazura, 40, recently posted on Instagram that she is cautious about her choice of friends.
She also spoke about giving priority to the husband’s consent.
According to Fattah, the act of a wife getting her husband’s permission in all matters including making friends is not wrong and in fact, it is encouraged.
“Whether it’s about making friends or going out of the house, a wife needs to ask for her husband’s permission.
“A husband’s approval is a blessing for the wife,” he said.
> A glimpse of a white apparition that was captured in a video footage has become a talking point among some netizens, Kosmo! reported.
It all started when someone filmed his friends who were carrying out fogging works.
The footage, which was shared on Penang Kini’s Facebook page, showed a “shadow” at the balcony area of a second floor apartment building.
It appeared that the apparition was observing the two men who were fogging the area.
“It was almost dusk (on Tuesday). I was recording my friends who were doing fogging. Suddenly, I noticed an ‘entity’,” according to the posting.
But other social media users were sceptical, saying that they believed it was the shadow of a woman wearing prayer clothes in preparation to go to the mosque since it was almost Maghrib.
“Sikit-sikit hantu, sikit-sikit entiti (everything is about ghosts),” remarked netizen Mohd Nadzir Mohajir.
“The makcik (aunt) was preparing for Maghrib prayer but you guys are still not done with the fogging yet,” he said.
The above articles are compiled from the vernacular newspapers (Bahasa Malaysia, Chinese and Tamil dailies). As such, stories are grouped according to the respective language/medium. Where a paragraph begins with a >, it denotes a separate news item.