He has also identified three immediate concerns for Puchong voters - public safety, traffic woes and vernacular schools.
PETALING JAYA: Gerakan’s candidate for Puchong, A Kohilan Pillay remains confident of winning the parliamentary seat
“I am very confident of winning the Puchong seat. I have been a regular face in Puchong for the past four years.
“We’ll go all out to regain the seat,” said the 46-year-old Kohilan when contacted today.
Yesterday, Gerakan named Kohilan as its candidate to wrest Puchong from the incumbent, DAP’s Gobind Singh Deo.
He was born in Kampung Tun Razak, 13th Mile, Puchong and he is currently based in Selayang.
Kohilan is currently national vice president and Selangor chief of Gerakan. He is a senator who was made the deputy foreign affairs minister in Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak’s cabinet.
In the 2008 general election, Gobind won the seat with a 12,593 vote majority defeating Gerakan’s Lau Yeng Peng.
The Puchong parliamentary constituency has about 108,000 voters of which 43% are Chinese. The balance are made up 40% Malays, 16% Indians and 1% others.
There are two state seats under Puching – Umno’s Mohamad Satim Diman won the Seri Serdang state seat while Teresa Kok of the DAP won the Kinrara state seat in 2008.
When asked on his immediate concerns relating to Puchong, Kohilan listed out three issues – public safety, traffic woes and vernacular schools.
“I will discuss with the Home Ministry to increase police beats in Puchong,” he said.
There are currently two district police headquarters in Puchong.
On the traffic woes in the constituency, Kohilan did not elaborate but said that the problem would be easily resolved if the state and federal governments were made up of BN.
On vernacular schools, Kohilan said that Gerakan would upgrade SJK(C) Feng Chi and have already obtained three acres of land for the construction of a Tamil school in Puchong.
“We are working on getting the building,” he said but did not mention the location of the school.
PETALING JAYA: Gerakan’s candidate for Puchong, A Kohilan Pillay remains confident of winning the parliamentary seat“I am very confident of winning the Puchong seat. I have been a regular face in Puchong for the past four years.
“We’ll go all out to regain the seat,” said the 46-year-old Kohilan when contacted today.
Yesterday, Gerakan named Kohilan as its candidate to wrest Puchong from the incumbent, DAP’s Gobind Singh Deo.
He was born in Kampung Tun Razak, 13th Mile, Puchong and he is currently based in Selayang.
Kohilan is currently national vice president and Selangor chief of Gerakan. He is a senator who was made the deputy foreign affairs minister in Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak’s cabinet.
In the 2008 general election, Gobind won the seat with a 12,593 vote majority defeating Gerakan’s Lau Yeng Peng.
The Puchong parliamentary constituency has about 108,000 voters of which 43% are Chinese. The balance are made up 40% Malays, 16% Indians and 1% others.
There are two state seats under Puching – Umno’s Mohamad Satim Diman won the Seri Serdang state seat while Teresa Kok of the DAP won the Kinrara state seat in 2008.
When asked on his immediate concerns relating to Puchong, Kohilan listed out three issues – public safety, traffic woes and vernacular schools.
“I will discuss with the Home Ministry to increase police beats in Puchong,” he said.
There are currently two district police headquarters in Puchong.
On the traffic woes in the constituency, Kohilan did not elaborate but said that the problem would be easily resolved if the state and federal governments were made up of BN.
On vernacular schools, Kohilan said that Gerakan would upgrade SJK(C) Feng Chi and have already obtained three acres of land for the construction of a Tamil school in Puchong.
“We are working on getting the building,” he said but did not mention the location of the school.

However,
there is no way Umno would ever endorse the blueprint because by doing
so, it would repudiate the racial power-sharing formula and the
so-called social contract they jealously guard. In addition, always
remember this election is a referendum on the decades-long Umno watch.
I have no idea on what basis DAP MP Charles Santiago (left) thinks that Pakatan is "not at war with Hindraf" since by the actions of their supporters and comments like
Pakatan
may have been derelict in fulfilling whatever promise they made to the
disenfranchised of the Indian community but the fact remains that the
plight of these people are a direct result of the decades-long Umno
hegemony through the MIC and the apathy of most Malaysians.
Hindraf
has managed to induce BN to recognise the plight of the disenfranchised
Indians by doing what they do best, enticing the electorate with
"goodies" as evidenced in their manifesto.

This
will be discussed at tonight’s emergency national committee meeting
called last night following PKR’s announcement of its own candidate for
Semenyih, Selangor.
“This decision was made in spite of PSM agreeing to stand under PKR logo in Semenyih.
When
queried why is a candidate was announced in Semenyih if it was not
finalised, unlike what was done with the Kota Damansara seat, she
replied, “You can look at it this way - PKR has candidates to offer in
these seats.
Meanwhile,
PSM has also been negotiating for the Jelapang state seat in Perak with
DAP. Arutchelvan said they had been promised the seat, but on the
condition it is contested under the PKR banner.
"PKR
is a party with many honest activists led by a bunch of scumbags. They
are not yet in power, but are already bullying the activists," tweeted
netizen Kris Khaira.
It is learnt that Muhammad handed his application paper to join PAS to the party's deputy spiritual leader Haron Din (left).
His
political career comes with baggage, for he had been charged in an
Australian court over irregularities in declaring cash amounting to
RM3.8 million that he was carrying.






That
means EPF was too hasty in accepting the offer a week and a day ahead
of the deadline and therefore sacrificing any possibility of haggling
further with Petronas for a better offer. Not just that, it has put
pressure on other shareholders, including national unit trust fund
manager Permodalan Nasional Bhd (whose units have the next highest stake
at 6.35 percent at last count) to accept the offer.
As
a matter of principle it should have refused to play ball with Petronas
and stuck it out for the best possible deal for MISC minority
shareholders. Instead it sold out of MISC, one of the bluest of blue
chips on the market (if you ignored the deleterious effects of unwise
diversification measures undertaken during Petronas’s stewardship) for a
song at virtually one of its lowest share price over the last 10 years (see chart). Shame on you, EPF!
Until
of course, MISC, under Petronas’s stewardship, started diversifying out
of the core LNG carriage business and entering into other shipping
areas. In its search for “excitement”, it got its fingers badly burnt
when the cyclical shipping downturn happened.
How
could you do these to your fellow minority shareholder investors who
include PNB-related funds, Felda, Kumpulan Wang Amanah Pencen, Lembaga
Tabung Haji and Penang Development Corp, amongst others.