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Thursday 21 November 2013

White Van Stories - reporting on Sri Lanka's disappeared



The making of White Van Stories was not a scripted journey. It was rather mystical. Maybe my constant urge to tell stories that otherwise had been forgotten pointed me towards that direction.
by Leena Manmekalai, director of White Van Stories

I was furious when I learned from my civil society activist friends in Sri Lanka that their attempts to mobilise families of the disappeared for the street protests had been crushed every time by the authorities.

Life instinct

When the UN Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillai visited Sri Lanka in August this year, families were fully geared to make their voices heard. I volunteered with a team of activists when they held pocket meetings in Mannar, Vavuniya, Kilinochi, Mullivaickal and Mullaitheevu.

I met almost five hundred families whose members were abducted or taken for enquiry or who surrendered in the last stage of war in 2009. They told me horror stories of how family members were picked by snatch squads in white vans and had never been seen again.

The howls and tears of the families in despair started haunting me. But it was their sheer resilience, hope, apathy and perseverance that restored my faith in humanity.
What I found in them was not death instinct but life instinct. I decided to walk their hard path to justice in an effort to find out how can a human being just disappear?
Families told me how enforced disappearance victims do not disappear willingly or by accident.

Extraordinary bravery

I filmed the historical protests of the families of the disappeared in Jaffna and Colombo who were asking for justice, truth and reparation, declaring "No Peace" until their loved ones return. And I followed seven women who shared their stories across the east, south and north provinces.

Access was incredibly challenging. North of Sri Lanka is heavily militarized and this is a story that had been largely impenetrable to the media as enforced disappearances also include journalists who are considered even slightly critical of state and its policies.

Ultimately the film had to be made under severe vigilance and intimidation by the Lankan military.

On one occasion I was asked to leave the country and on another detained for hours of questioning at a check post where they confiscated our tapes and denied us permission to film.

I had to free myself of the paranoia of danger to continue filming. I felt I had nothing to lose compared to the magnitude of injustice faced by the families in my film describing their eternal search for their beloved.

White Van Stories is testament to the extraordinary bravery of desperate families speaking out in the face of unthinkable adversity.

White Van Stories, the story of the disappeared in Sri Lanka, is on Channel 4 News on Thursday 14 November 2013 at 7pm.

David Cameron on Sri Lanka in the Commons - video


David Cameron makes a statement on Sri Lanka in the Commons, having last week insisted that President Mahinda Rajapaksa hold an independent inquiry into allegations of war crimes in the country.

Anwar: Bloger Umno reka 40,000 pengundi hantu

Ops Cantas: Jenayah berat, kes bunuh turun 23 peratus

Arakanese young girl aged( 6) was raped and brutally murdered by Bengali muslims at Kra Nyo Pyin village

15-11-2013 A high-level delegation from the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) was greeted by an estimated 3,000 protestors Friday, when the group that includes foreign ministers from Islamic countries arrived in western Burma’s troubled Arakan State.
18-11-2013 An Arakanese young girl aged( 6) was rapped and brutally murdered by Bengali muslims at Kra Nyo Pyin village of Kyauk Taw township in Arakan State,Western Burma..
17-11-2013 An Arakanese young girl aged( 5) was brutally murdered
and keep underground . Peolpe found 18-11-2013 10:00 morning at Paut Taw – west phayoungka iland Soe Mea Kyi village .Bengali Muslims physically tortoured and gang-raped an arkanese minor girl at Rakhine State, western Myanmar.A six-year-old girl, namely Mi Mi Nge, daughter of U Shwe Aung and Daw Moe Moe San living in Kyar Nyo Village in Kyawtaw Township, was abducted by Bengali Muslims from Ywar Hnyar Village on Monday evening.When dawn broke, her body was found dumped at paddy field outside the village.She was found to be wounded on the head and injured on both cheeks.
It is reported that one of suspects has been arrested and is interrogating.
The dead body is under medico-legal examination at Apaukwa hospital
1450956_612977015425442_702831604_n 1458632_174703582728149_1117436387_n17-11-2013 An Arakanese young girl aged( 5) was brutally murdered and keep underground . Peolpe found 18-11-2013 10:00 morning at Paut Taw - west phayoungka iland Soe Mea Kyi village .

Saudi Doctor Kills Himself in Suicide Attack in Aleppo

TEHRAN (FNA)- A Saudi militant doctor has killed himself during a suicide attack on Syrian soldiers in Northern province of Aleppo, sources close to the Syria militants reported.
Saudi Doctor Kills Himself in Suicide Attack in Aleppo
The Asia News Website reported on Tuesday that Moshari al-Anzi, a Saudi heart surgeon and one of the first people who came to fight in the more than two-and-half year bloody conflict, killed himself in a suicide attack on the Day of Ashura (November 13).

The website quoted sources close to the militants that Anzi, who picked the name Abu Samak al-Jarzawi worked in field hospitals during his presence in Syria.

According to the source, he had applied before to take part in the battles but his requests were denied because of the need for doctors.

However he managed to steel a bomb-laden car during an offensive against Syrian soldiers near Aleppo and killed himself.

He is the second Saudi doctor who has died in Syria, fighting alongside other foreign militants.

Many from Europe, the Middle East and North Africa have been influenced by Al-Qaeda and other extremist groups to enter Syria and fight to overthrow the Syrian government.

Experts believe lack of true information published by mainstream media, and the fact that the whole war is supported by western and regional countries, has given Al-Qaeda an upper hand in feeding people with false information.

Many of the militants in Syria believe that they are fighting in a holy war while Al-Qaeda has announced seeking to establish a state of its own in Syria.

The crisis in Syria started in March 2011, when pro-reform protests turned into a massive insurgency following the intervention of western and regional states.

The unrest, which took in terrorist groups from across Europe, the Middle East and North Africa, has transpired as one of the bloodiest conflicts in recent history.

According to the United Nations, more than 100,000 people have been killed and millions displaced due to the turmoil that has gripped Syria for over two years.

Is Petronas giving too little to bumis?

KINIBIZ Is one of the founding objectives of national oil company Petronas to aid the bumiputera community and improve its participation in business?
To get the answer to the question, Tiger scrutinised the Petroleum Development Act 1974 (PDA) closely but the legislation under which Petronas was formed reveals no such thing; no, nothing at all.
It reminds Tiger of that other piece of agreement, the elusive social contract under which this nation was formed which no one has seen but presumably exists somewhere, perhaps in the minds of those who imagined it. But that's a topic for another time.
So where did our former prime minister and current Petronas adviser Dr Mahathir Mohamad get the idea that Petronas is "caught" between championing its founding objective of uplifting the bumiputera business community and opening up its business for foreign participation in line with its business globalisation plan?
Go to KiniBiz for the complete article.
This article was written by P Gunasegaram.

Mahathir responding well to treatment

Dr Mahathir Mohamad has responded well to treatment since his admission to the National Heart Institute (IJN).

A statement from Dr Mahathir’s office said today, the former prime minister was currently undergoing treatment which involved chest physiotherapy and exercise.

He has been warded at the IJN’s General Ward.

“The medical team is satisfied with his progress,” said the statement.

Doctors have advised that visits be confined to immediate family members.

Dr Mahathir was admitted to the IJN on Monday, following a chest infection.

- Bernama

Rosmah's Qatar trip personal, jet approved by DPM

Pengerang MP Azalina Othman, who accompanied Rosmah Mansor during a women's summit in Qatar, which the prime minister’s wife had gone on in a private jet, admitted that the invitation to attend the summit was extended to Rosmah in her personal capacity and not to the government.

kuala terengganu by election bn launching machinery 050109 azalina 1However, it is unclear whether Azalina (left) had also travelled on the private jet alongside Rosmah.

"The invitation was not on a government basis but on a personal basis," Azalina admitted in Dewan Rakyat today while debating the Budget 2014 allocation for the Rural Development Ministry.

However, Azalina said, it was Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin who chaired the cabinet meeting that approved the use of the private jet for the trip and not Rosmah's husband, Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak.

"It was not just her (Rosmah). There were also senior government officials, media personnel and NGOs," Azalina said, also without specifying if the other officials also boarded the jet.

Azalina went on to defend the usage of the private jet by claiming that the event was a success and that the opposition is trying to "deny the success of BN politicians and their wives".

'She could have brought in investors'
Fellow BN MP, Tanjong Karang's Noh Omar also chipped in by saying that Malaysians should be proud because "no other first lady in the region gets the prominence she gets".

"She has brought a good name to the country," he said.

To this, PAS' Shah Alam MP Khalid Samad criticised the move, saying that a "wrong decision can't be justified because cabinet made the decision".

"If you want to go, you go on your personal expenses," Khalid said.

NONELater, in a separate press conference at the Parliament lobby, Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Shahidan Kassim (right) said that Rosmah was being treated "unfairly".

"During her trip, she may have attracted investors to the country. What has the critics done for the country?" he asked.

He said that all the criticisms levelled upon the government "would not bring investors to the country".

Meanwhile, Rompin MP Jamaluddin Jarjis said there was nothing wrong in Rosmah representing Malaysia as she was invited officially by the Qatari government.

"The rest of the world is the same, too. If a president's wife is invited, they will also go. If it's for the good of the country, why not?" Jamaluddin was quoted by Astro Awani as saying.

Jamaluddin, a former Malaysian ambassador to the United States, added that Malaysians should be "proud" that the prime minister's wife was getting such recognition from another country.

Anwar: No way there were 40,000 Bangla voters

Anwar Ibrahim today denied making any claims that there were 40,000 Bangladeshi voters during the 13 th general election

KUALA LUMPUR: Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim today denied making claims about the 40,000 Bangladeshi phantom voters in the 13 th general election, saying that the statement was put in his mouth by his political opponents.

He said Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak misled the public in his Budget 2014 speech by saying that the opposition’s claims were untrue; whereas there were no such claims in the first place.

“We have checked our statements; we have never made such claims before,” he said during the media conference at the Parliament’s lobby today.

“This is a spin by Umno blogger; who ever said there were 40,000 Bangladeshis?” he added.

In announcing the Budget 2014 last month, Najib jibed Pakatan to “ask for forgiveness from god” for making the supposed wild allegation about the Bangladeshi voters.

“Until today, no one has even seen them or their shadow. Enough of the lies,” Najib said.

In reply, Anwar said his statement was that there are foreign nationals; as well as from Sabah and Sarawak who were flown in to the Peninsular to vote.

“Besides, the election commission chairman Abdul Aziz Yusof has said there were 62,000 dubious voters in the electoral roll.

“Thirdly, after the advanced voting process, I have said with proofs that foreign nationals from India, Bangladesh, Philippines and Indonesia were allowed to vote.

“My question was how did people with these nationalities made as advanced voters?” he said.

Anwar also chided Najib for dragging the Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina into the picture during the premier’s recent visit to Bangladesh.

“He asked the Bangladesh PM to say there is no Bangladeshi voters. But this is a domestic affair, how would she know?” he said.

He further said an independent commission should have been set up to verify the claims, since the EC has lost its credibility.

No foreigners on election day

Election watchdog Bersih, had mobilised thousands of Malaysians to rally for clean elections in the past; slammed the EC prior to the May 5 polls for not having done enough to address the issue.

“You can’t trust the EC as the referee, as the referee is keeping silent about this,” Bersih co-chairman Ambiga Sreenevasan had said then.

“We know this is happening because the government has a history of giving foreigners citizenships for votes,” she was quoted by news reports.

This was subsequently picked up by the opposition which had urged its supporters to be on a lookout for foreign-looking voters at polling stations around the country on voting day.

During polling, several people were hauled up by opposition supporters but they all turned out to be Malaysian citizens with foreign parentage.

After the polls, Anwar called for a rally at the Kelana Jaya sports complex and vowed a ‘fierce’ campaign for electoral reform and said he would soon produce evidence of fraud by what he called an ‘illegitimate’ government.

He said the election was stolen via “unprecedented electoral fraud.”

Anwar had alleged a government scheme to fly tens of thousands of ‘dubious’ and possibly foreign voters to flood key constituencies.

A report released a few days after the polls by two independent watchdogs said the polls were marred by pro-government bias and irregularities that indicate “serious flaws” in the electoral system.

The Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs and Centre for Public Policy Studies cited concerns including partisan use of government machinery, pro-government media bias and doubts over the integrity of voter rolls.

The election was “only partially free and not fair”, the report said. It did not mention of any foreign voters, voting in the 13th general election.

Najib ‘controlled by’ Rosmah, says Mahfuz

He said instead of sending the wife, the prime minister should have sent his minister or an official to attend the 4th Qatar International Business Women.

KUALA LUMPUR: The Cabinet’s decision to allow Rosmah Mansor to travel on a government jet for an official visit to Qatar signals that the prime minister’s wife is meddling in government affairs.

Stating this at the Parliament lobby today, PAS’ Pokok Sena MP Mahfuz Omar said Rosmah has no capacity to represent the country, what more on an official visit to foreign soil.

“The cabinet decision is pointing to the prime minister wife’s meddling in government affairs. This cabinet is irresponsible and without dignity in making decision in the interest of one person,” he said.

He was referring to Minister in the Prime Minister Shahidan Kassim statement on Monday that Rosmah is allowed to travel on government jet provided that the cabinet endorses her trip.

Shahidan also said the cabinet adhered to the principles of responsibility and transparency when approving Rosmah’s recent trip to the 4th Qatar International Business Women.

Mahfuz said instead of sending the wife, the prime minister should have sent his minister or official to attend an important meeting.

If the invitation is indeed addressed to the prime minister’s wife, then Rosmah should have gone without using the public resources, he added

‘Imagine the prime minister comes to the cabinet and says ‘hey, my wife needs to go overseas, please approve her trip’, how funny is that,” he told FMT after the media conference.

“If (the fourth prime minister) Mahathir Mohamad once said (the fifth prime minister) Abdullah Ahmad Badawi was controlled by the fourth floor boys, then Najib is now controlled by his wife,” he added.

He urged the government to cease the nepotism practice.

Najib’s overseas’ trips were put under the microscope recently after Seremban MP Anthony Loke highlighted that a whopping RM182 million was spent by Najib on 372 flights to 339 destinations.

The issue was brought into the Dewan later, as Azalina Othman (BN-Pengerang) pointed out that Rosmah was invited by the organiser to the forum.

“I accompanied her to the forum. Nothing is wrong with the visit because she was invited, and it is a form of recognition for her work and ability,” she said.

Khalid Samad (PAS- Shah Alam) and Hanipa Maidin (PAS- Sepang) however said the main issue is that she boarded a government jet to Qatar, and it is a conflict of interest for the prime minister who chaired the cabinet meeting to approve her trip.

Meanwhile, when asked to comment later, the prime minister’s special advisor to the United States Jamaluddin Jarjis said he believed even Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim who served as the Selangor economic advisor would be paid for his overseas trip representing the state.

“Is he even a Selangor assemblyman? No! I think the people are wise enough to judge the issue,” he said.

PSM: Govt not serious about minimum wage

The government is not serious in implementing the minimum wage ruling and no action will be taken against errant employers, said Socialist Party Malaysia (PSM) and Jerit.

KUALA LUMPUR: Socialist Party Malaysia (PSM) and Jerit, a coalition fighting for oppressed people, said the government is not serious in enforcing the minimum wage order and errant employers will not be brought to book.

PSM secretary-general S.Arutchelvam said several letters had been sent to the Human Resources Minister for a discussion on how the ruling would be implemented but until today there had been no response.

Arutchelvam said if the government was serious in enforcing the order they should have carried out an awareness campaign before the end of this year to inform employers because many were not aware of the ruling.

The Minimum Wage Order 2012 came into force on Jan 1, this year, for employers who have more than six workers but full enforcement will only be carried out from January next year.

“I am confident the government will play a ‘wayang kulit’ not to seriously enforce the ruling.

“The implementation of minimum wage order early this year is merely to entice labour votes for Barisan Nasional in the last general election,” he said at the PSM office today.

According to a written reply made by Human Resource Minister during parliament session to Othman Abdul (BN-Pendang) on Oct 3, 2013, the minister stated that there would be no more postponement of enforcing the ruling and all employers must comply beginning January next year.

In the same reply, the minister also pointed out that the postponement was given as an interim for the employers to restructure the wage policy of their companies.

If the employers failed to enforce the ruling, the ministry will penalise the employers according to National Wage Facilitation Act 2011 and among the action taken are:

First offence – a fine not more than RM10,000 for each worker;

General penalty – a fine not more than RM10,000 for non-specified offence;

Continuous offence – RM1,000 fine for each day as per conviction; and

Repeated offence – RM20,000 fine or imprisonment not more than five years.

Prosecution against employers will only be taken after all the steps above are taken.

Percaturan politik ala COMANGO

ESP_Pics_ComangoBagi kebanyakkan orang Melayu dan juga Muslim, campurtangan daripada bukan Melayu dan juga yang dilabel sebagai Melayu liberal dalam perkara yang berkaitan dengan Islam adalah sangat merunsingkan.

Umum tahu bahawa Islam adalah agama rasmi Persekutuan and tiada tolak ansur atau kompromi mengenai perkara ini. Begitu juga dengan Raja-Raja yang merupakan ketua agama di peringkat negeri juga persekutuan. Kedua-dua perkara ini termaktub dalam Perlembagaan Persekutuan.

Bagi bukan Melayu dan golongan Melayu liberal ini, mereka secara terbuka mahu supaya Perlembagaan Persekutuan ini dipinda kerana bagi mereka perlembagaan ini sudah lapuk dan ketinggalan.

Bagi meminda perlembagaan yang sedia ada, mereka hanya memerlukan majoriti dua per tiga di Parlimen walau dalam sesetengah kes hanya sedikit majoriti sudah mencukupi. Tetapi dalam kes yang menyentuh isu berkaitan Islam, Bahasa Melayu dan juga hak-hak keistimewaan Melayu, mereka terlebih dahulu memerlukan kelulusan dari Majlis Raja-Raja sebelum sebarang pindaan dibuat.

Di sinilah semuanya menjadi masalah kepada mereka. Ini kerana, sebagai ketua agama Islam, Majlis Raja-Raja tidak akan pernah berkompromi mengenai perkara yang membabitkan akidah dan Islam. Ia harus kekal sebagai status quo.

Walau Pakatan Rakyat mengambil alih pentadbiran negara sekalipun, mereka tidak akan dapat merubah apa-apa klausa dalam Perlembagaan terutama sekali yang berkaitan dengan Islam.

Kerana itulah mereka kini menjalankan strategi baru bagi mencabar Islam.

Mengheret kerajaan ke mahkamah mengenai hak orang Kristian bagi menggunakan nama Allah. Membawa isu hak asasi manusia di Malaysia (atau lebih kepada kekurangannya) bagi meraih perhatian dunia dengan melahirkan COMANGO.

COMANGO adalah gabungan 54 NGO Malaysia yang kebanyakkannya terdiri dari NGO bukan Islam dan mereka mahu masyarakat antarabangsa mengisytiharkan Malaysia sebuah rejim pariah kerana tidak membenarkan orang Islam untuk meninggalkan Islam dan untuk tidak membenarkan orang Islam untuk mengamalkan gaya hidup gay / transeksual.

Antara yang ada di dalam senarai tuntutannya, COMANGO menggesa kerajaan mengiktiraf hak-hak Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI) terutamanya LGBT dan juga International Covenant on Civil & Political Rights (ICCPR) yang memberikan kebebasan beragama serta kebebasan untuk menukar agama yang dianuti.

Sedar atau tidak, kedua-dua perkara tersebut adalah isu yang paling sensitif bukan hanya bagi umat Islam, malah bagi penganut Yahudi dan Kristian. Al-Kitab sendiri jelas menyatakan bahawa sesiapa yang sesat atau murtad MESTI dijatuhkan hukuman mati. Ini bukan lagi isu yang hanya menyentuh perihal umat Islam. Apa yang mungkin gagal diambil kira oleh COMANGO adalah implikasi sosial yang mampu memangkin keruntuhan moral serta implikasi lain yang hanya akan menyumbang kepada kebejatan masyarakat di Malaysia.

COMANGO tahu bahawa ini adalah sesuatu yang tidak akan mendatangkan kejayaan bagi mereka, begitu juga dengan mencabar kerajaan berkenaan isu hak orang Kristian dalam penggunaan perkataan Allah.

Namun matlamat mereka memang bukan untuk memperoleh apa-apa kejayaan dari dua isu tersebut. Matlamat mereka yang sebenarnya hanyalah untuk memalukan kerajaan yang mereka lihat sebagai kerajaan Melayu Umno.

Jadi semua ini sebenarnya bukanlah tentang isu agama, tetapi tidak lebih daripada satu lagi strategi politik yang menggunakan isu agama sebagai topeng untuk membangkitkan rasa benci di kalangan rakyat terhadap kerajaan Umno.

Over-regulation of Islam won’t help resolve interfaith issues

PETALING JAYA: Any move to "over-regulate" the practice of Islam as Malaysia's official religion
is not the solution to resolve issues surrounding interfaith relations.

Jihad for Justice president Datuk Thasleem Ibrahim said the process should instead start from an early stage where children are taught religious values in the "right way".

"Faith is between you [as a person] and Allah SWT. Let us as Muslims examine ourselves first.

"Are we doing the right things or are we going to over-regulate until the day we find our children going overseas, only to realise that this [what they were taught] is not Islam in its entirety?" he told theantdaily.

Thasleem also said that the Department of Islamic Development Malaysia (Jakim), as well as state religious authorities, should reconsider its approaches towards regulating Islam in Malaysia.

The first step, he said, is to stop propagating government-sanctioned ideologies during the weekly Friday prayer sermons.

"Some of the sermons today are just ridiculous. Nowhere in the world are the sermons prepared in this way," he said in echoing criticisms to the perceived pro-government stand adopted in the name of Islam and delivered through the pulpit.

A sense of disillusionment with the message delivered had even driven National Laureate Datuk A Samad Said to perform his Friday prayers at Masjid India where the sermon is delivered in Tamil.

"I moved to the Masjid India mosque on purpose. I do not understand Tamil, so I feel more relieved," said the octogenarian, who is fondly known as Pak Samad, in an interview with an online portal last week.

This, Thasleem argued, is a clear sign of the extent that religion and Islam have been "politicised" in Malaysia, particularly by the ruling Barisan Nasional government led by Umno.

"They [Umno] have tried the racial, economic and religious cards but [many] people today have progressed beyond the stupidity of Jakim," he said.

Thasleem also said that there has been no proof to back up claims of Islam and Malays in Malaysia being under threat from non-Muslims.

"There is only a perceived threat orchestrated and engineered by Umno to stay in power," he said.

Thasleem was initially asked to comment on the message delivered by Prof Dr Sirajuddin Syamsuddin, as head of Muhammadiyah (Indonesia's largest Muslim non-governmental organisation), at the World Council of Churches 10th General Assembly in Busan, South Korea earlier this month.

Sirajuddin had reportedly called upon Muslims and Christians to focus on their similarities as believers of the Abrahamic faiths towards achieving common solutions for modern-day challenges.

Malaysia was represented at the general assembly by the Council of Churches Malaysia secretary-general Rev Dr Hermen Shastri who told theantdaily that Sirajuddin's views were well received by the Christian world leaders in attendance at the event held once every seven years.

Indonesia has the largest Muslim population in the world with its last official census in 2010 estimating the figure at around 88% from the total 237,424,363 citizens.

The island republic, however, remains a secular state and Hermen said this is in comparison to Malaysia where the government will find itself in a bind when the special position of Islam in the country is invoked.

"The only way to deal with interfaith issues [in Malaysia] is to always return to the Federal Constitution and interpret it in the spirit in which it was conceived," he said in an email interview.

To a question on reported cases of attacks against churches in Indonesia, as well as the long-standing strife between Muslims and Christians in Ambon, Hermen noted that the Indonesian government has taken actions against those who preach extremist views and engage in violent provocation among their followers.

"The [Malaysian] government, however, has not been consistent to act against some groups that espouse extremist religious views," he said in pointing out how ethnic and religious differences have been politicised by certain quarters.

"Interfaith dialogue is also difficult [in Malaysia] because Islam is seen as part of the state apparatus and dialogue partners are not considered equal at the table," he added.

One thing is for sure: any form of dialogue can only take place if its participants are well-equipped with knowledge to argue their case, coupled with the humility to accept varying opinions.

The government's role, in this case, should not be to "over-regulate" the practice of Islam but rather to ensure that the rights of all religious communities are protected as provided for under the Federal Constitution.

Why Najib didn't boycott CHOGM in Sri Lanka

KTemoc Konsiders  
Some Malaysians and NGOs had urged PM Najib to boycott the recent CHOGM (Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting) in Sri Lanka to show Malaysia's concerns over (allegations of) Sri Lanka's human rights abuses by its military during and after the country's 26-year old civil war which ended in May 2009.




What was this civil war then?

Most Malaysians know or at least have heard of it. It started as an armed insurrection in July 1983 by the separatist group Tamil Tigers against the Sri Lankan government. Its origin lies in the usual story of the ketuanan ('supremacy', but contextually 'racial supremacy') of one bangsa (race) and its acute marginalization of another.



In more than one way, from language to citizenship issues coupled with ketuanan institutionalized racism affecting miscellaneous aspects such as discrimination against the Tamils in university admissions, the Sri Lankan acrimonious socio-political-economic problem mirrored that of Malaysia's.
Because of this, the Sri Lankan Tamils wanted to bring about a forced but alas for them, failed separation from the Singhalese controlled state. 'Twas to be an unilateral secession, so to speak, of the north and eastern (Tamil populated) parts of the Island State from the rest of Singalese dominated Sri Lanka.
The aim of the Tamils was to form an independent state of Tamil Eelam, a home for Sri Lankan Tamils and members of the Sri Lankan Tamil Diaspora (note: not Indian Tamil Diaspora, wakakaka), in short, a serious kind of SARSI, where in the confrontational pursuit of this, several thousands of lives were lost on both sides during the conflict, including those of PM Rajiv Gandhi* of India and Sri Lankan President Ranasinghe Premadasa, .


Rajiv Gandhi

* Though Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated by a suicide 'human bomb' in Tamilnadu at Sriperumbudur village, 30 miles from Chennai, investigation after his death showed that the assassination was ordered by Thiruvenkadam Velupillai Prabhakaran, the leader of the Tamil Tigers. Sri Lankan President Ranasinghe Premadasa was also killed in the same way, by a Tigers' suicide bomber.
* I believe that the origin of terrorism and assassination by suicide 'human bombs' started with the Tigers. The Japanese kamikaze aeroplane and mini submarine attacks against the Americans were in a different category altogether, not as acts of terrorism per se but desperate 'final' acts of defence of the Japanese homeland.

The civil war ended officially on 19 May 2006, a day after Velupillai Prabhakaran was killed by Sri Lankan troops.
green areas claimed by various groups of Tamil separatists

During the war the protagonists on both sides committed human rights abuses, many of which were alleged to be war crimes. The Tigers were notorious in this respect though it's difficult to say which side was worse in their criminal violations.

The Sri Lankan Tamil Diaspora has been a major financial and powerful political backer (in lobbying Western powers) of the secession for a Tamil Eelam, and thus also of the Tamil Tigers.
It would not be far fetched to say the accusations of alleged war crimes or human rights abuses directed against the Sri Lankan military today have in large part been 'pushed' by the Sri Lankan Tamil Diaspora.
Incidentally the Sri Lankan Tamil Diaspora includes the Sri Lankan Tamil Malaysians but not those descended from Indian Tamils (including those from the central highlands of Sri Lanka) - sorry lah, wakakaka.


Malaysian Tamil 'Ceylonese' wedding

Mind, this didn't mean our own Sri Lankan Tamils had actively backed the Tigers or would have wanted to stay in the would-be Tamil Eelam, but I personally suspect they probably would have lots of sympathy for the Tamil Eelam separatists.

I wonder whether the Sri Lankan Tamils in Malaysia are still referred to by Indian Tamils as, I believe derogatorily, Panamkottai, wakakaka, though I understand the Sri Lankan Tamils (not just those in Malaysia) prefer to be identified as Ceylonese or Jaffnese, rather than Tamils.

This lamentable race-class-caste consciousness is probably due to the Sri Lankan Tamils, sorry I mean, Ceylonese wakakaka, preferring to, or rather, insisting on differentiating themselves from Indian Tamils, whom they consider from a historical viewpoint as of 'common labourer' stock (coolie? wakakaka) in contrast to their own and far more prestigious 2000 year old 'nobler'(?) pedigree, as descendants of the people of ancient Jaffna Kingdom. 



a Jaffna King
ampun tuanku or ampu tuan? wakakaka

It's known in Malaysia that their snobbery extends to looking down on Indian (non-Ceylonese) Tamils, particularly in areas such as cross-marriages, almost an impossibility. I recall a Indian Tamil (non-Ceylonese, wakakaka) mate of mine, who had the hots for a Panamkottai sweetie, but in their romance encountered umpteen zillion barriers, all from her family. Mind you, he was a doctor, a prestigious profession among Indians and a prospective and highly desirable son-in-law for Indian families, yet sweetie's Ceylonese (wakakaka) family's silly belief in their superior-ketuanan heritage rejected my matey's request for their daughter's hand.


Anyway, only the PM of two Commonwealth members, namely India and Canada, did not attend the Commonwealth summit meeting in Colombo, although they sent their respective delegations to Colombo.

Just more than a week ago, Tamil Nadu's chief minister J Jayalalithaa and the state assembly passed a resolution demanding that India completely boycott CHOGM, but alas for those Aneh's, India sent her external affairs minister and his team.

Thus the calls to boycott CHOGM in Colombo had limited appeal among Commonwealth leaders.

I don't like to sound cynical but my guess is that the Canadian PM's reason for personally boycotting the 2013 CHOGM has a lot to do with the significant Indian community among its citizenry, therefore he was no doubt playing to the Canadian domestic gallery.



have to use a Canadian Bhai photo as I couldn't get one with Canadian Tamils, wakakaka 



Similarly, the Indian PM (and his ruling Indian Congress Party) has been obviously wary of the voters in Tamilnadu, not that he or Congress has forgotten it was the Tigers who murdered PM Rajiv Gandhi, the late hubby of Sonia Gandhi, the lady who's the real power behind the Indian Congress Party.



Incidentally, the Indian PM in boycotting the Colombo CHOGM was a damn bloody hypocrite as the Indian government had directly helped Sri Lanka in finishing off the Tigers - read my post Tamil Tigers mauled by Indian government? in which I wrote:



The people in Tamilnadu and the Tamil Diaspora (including those in Malaysia) have been outraged at what they see as the Indian government’s treacherous act of fratricide, but it's hardly likely the Congress Party-led Indian government would be sweet to the Tigers, bearing in mind Rajiv Gandhi's widow, Sonia, is the real power in Congress!

Now really, given this background and the lack of appeal towards the numerous calls to boycott CHOGM, how could one expect PM Najib to join in the boycott?

A second factor would be about an even handed approach to the vexatious problem of the Sri Lankan civil war, namely, human rights abuse.



Okay, this contentious issue behind the boycott calls, namely, allegations of human rights abuses by the Sri Lankan military, is no doubt important. But for Najib to boycott the event would show Sri Lankans that Malaysia deplores their military's excesses, but unfairly, not our fair sense of outrage towards the excesses of the Tamil Tigers and their suporters too, which had killed, maimed and destroyed the lives of not only many Singhalese families but also those of many Sri Lankan Tamils who were pro government.




Yup, the Tamil Tigers had been equally as guilty as, if not worse than the Sri Lanka military, in committing such alleged human rights abuses, so how would a Commonwealth nation (or its PM) boycotting the Sri Lankan organized CHOGM show an even handed and constructive approach to dealing with the issue of human rights abuse in that country?




I believe Australian Foreign Minister, Julia Bishop, said the more constructive words, that it was better to engage with Sri Lanka on the issue.
She stated, ''I have been having ongoing discussions with the Sri Lankan government and I have encouraged all member nations of the Commonwealth to attend the … meeting to engage with Sri Lanka on these issues rather than isolate Sri Lanka."
But wait, there is another far more important reason for Najib not to boycott CHOGM. It's the issue of the Tamil ... ooops ... sorry, wakakaka, Ceylonese intended secession.
Secession? Man, for a start that's a f**king no-no for Najib or any Malaysian PM to support, directly or indirectly, because that's a bloody dirty word in Malaysia - now go wash your mouth, wakakaka.
And to know why, read my KTemoc Konsider's post Will Sabah secede?



Therefore, there is no f**king blooming way a PM of Malaysia would ever show support for whatever issue, including alleged human rights abuses, when the musty malodorous mephitic secession (failed or otherwise) lurks like the proverbial doggie bola in the background.
Now, Aneh Ah Jib Gor certainly has far more Tamils than Stephen Harper (PM of Canada) to appease on the domestic political front, but despite or in spite of this, there's a snowflake's chance in burning hell he would ever support his tambee or tangechee fixed deposits(?), wakakaka, in opposing Colombo, no, not when the Ceylonese or if you like, Tamils had attempted to secede from Sri Lanka.
Rightly or wrongly there's no way Najib wants to 'encourage' blokes like dear Jeffery boy, or anyone else wakakaka, by planting the idea that it's okay to have a local version of Tamil Eelam in our backyard.



look like Malaysians but certainly smarter and better looking than those threadbare badly dressed MCP insurgents, wakakaka

AMK: ISMA tak faham, jumud & berniat jahat

Pemuda PKR (AMK) menyelar kenyataan Ikatan Muslimin Malaysia (ISMA) yang mengaitkan Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim dengan fahaman "liberal demokratik", yang menurut NGO itu akan membawa Malaysia ke arah negara tiada agama.

timbalan ketua penerangan amk najwan halimiTimbalan ketua penerangannya Najwan Halimi berkata, kenyataan Presiden ISMA Abdullah Zaik Abdul Rahman (kanan) itu berniat jahat, terkepung dalam ideologi tajaan PERKASA dan sekadar mengulangi pandangan perkauman yang jumud.

Malah, menurut Najwan, ia boleh mencetuskan sentimen agama dan perpecahan kaum.

"Apa yang jelas adalah, Abdullah Zaik sendiri tidak memahami kerangka liberal dalam konteks yang menyeluruh," kata Najwan.

Dalam kenyataannya hari ini, Najwan juga berhujah, kritikan Abdullah Zaik (bawah) terhadap Buku Jingga dinyatakan tanpa menyebut komitmen bersama Pakatan Rakyat untuk mempertahankan perlembagaan, Islam sebagai agama rasmi dan melindungi keistimewaan Melayu.

abdullah zaik pembela seminar on islam under seigeBerhubung dakwaan Institut Kajian Dasar (IKD) pimpinan pimpinan pusat PKR Khalid Jaafar, mempromosikan fahaman liberal secara terancang, Najwan menafikannya.

"IKD sebagai sebuah institusi pemikir bukan sekadar mengangkat wacana liberal sebagai tema perdebatan bahkan turut mempromosi aliran pemikiran Islam klasik dan kontemporari sejajar dengan pergulatan pelbagai isu dan krisis pemikiran, sosial dan budaya di negara ini," katanya.

BLOG: For New Straits Times to be truly repentant …

The newspaper now acknowledges that the report, written by Farrah Naz Karim, was “groundless” and “false”, and that it “should not have been published”.
NST
Last Friday, the New Straits Times ate humble pie and apologised to four NGOs for having defamed them in a front-page report it published last year that carried no substance and offered no evidence whatsoever to support its accusation that they were involved in a plot to destabilise the Government.

The newspaper now acknowledges that the report, written by Farrah Naz Karim, was “groundless” and “false”, and that it “should not have been published”.

When it came out on September 21, 2012, I was appalled by its blatant disregard of journalistic ethics – in fact, of any kind of ethics. I thought it pathetic that the newspaper had sunk so low. This was the worst transgression the paper had committed perhaps since 1998, when it carried on its front page a couple of stories that were editorials rather than news reports aimed at assassinating the character of Anwar Ibrahim after he was sacked by then prime minister Mahathir Mohamad for accusing the latter of paranoia and resisting the need to weed out corruption and cronyism.

For those who may not remember the contents of the 2012 story, which carried the headline ‘Plot to destabilise govt’, let me recap the essentials. I know it well because I have since used it in my workshops on writing for the media to promote the need for ethics in journalism.

The story was well played up because it was the front-page main story of the newspaper. Its first paragraph, or lead, read:

Investigators probing into the financial background of several non-governmental organisations have uncovered attempts by foreign hands to destabilise the government.

This was a lead given to sensationalising. The accusation it made was serious. The reader would be prompted to ask what the evidence was and to find it in the next paragraph, but this was all that NST offered:

Sources revealed that from 2005 to 2011, almost RM20 million, courtesy of the Washington-based National Endowment for Democracy (NED) had allegedly been channelled to:

Suaram (RM1.6 million);

National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI) (RM4.6 million);

Mkini Dotcom Sdn Bhd (RM298,000);

and others (RM13.3 million).

It also claimed:

From last year, several other set-ups, namely Bersih, Merdeka Centre for Opinion Research, Lawyers for Liberty, Liberal Banter Sdn Bhd as well as the International Republican Institute, began receiving funds from NED, an organisation that had been claimed to have “played a significant role in attempting to destabilise legitimate governments and replace them with client proxies”.

Who were the sources? Are they reliable? Is the mere claim about NED’s role in “attempting to destabilise legitimate governments” enough for the report to stand on?

Without substantiating anything, the report then proceeded to demonise Suaram, the human rights NGO that had angered the Government for bringing the Scorpene submarine issue to the French courts:

Sources also revealed that Suaram, which is under several investigations, including for allegedly raising funds while operating as an unregistered society as well as for serious violations of at least five sections of the Companies Act … had four known foreign funders.

The targeting of Suaram went on for several paragraphs. As for its four foreign funders, there was nothing said about their having enlisted Suaram’s help in destabilising the Government, merely that they gave Suaram money. Any intelligent reader by now would have begun to doubt the credibility of the report and realised that the newspaper was actually embarking on a hatchet job on Suaram. As Kua Kia Soong, Director of Suaram, recently put it, NST was behaving like “the ruling party’s media assassin”.

Kua is also right in remarking, “And a poor assassin at that!” Because NST did a poor job that actually made it look stupid. If you wanted to shoot down anyone, you should at least have the ammunition to do so. NST was shooting blanks. And they were flying about without any direction.

NST thought its report could gain legitimacy by quoting an academic, but of course that was wrong thinking. Even worse, it had to pick Chandra Muzaffar, who had already come to be regarded as a ruling party abettor, not only because he was also Chairman of 1Malaysia Foundation:

In an interview with Berita Harian last night, International Movement for a Just World (JUST) president Professor Dr Chandra Muzaffar said NED had been known to lend substantial financial support to NGOs in particular countries like Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and Syria.

He claimed it had been uncovered that such efforts had been going on aggressively over the past five years in the name of democratic freedom with the objective of making people rise up against leaders who were allegedly deemed to be cruel.

Chandra made numerous claims about NED’s activities in the Arab world, Russia, South and Central America. He also said “the credibility of such an organisation which claims to support institutions of freedom and democracy was questionable as it could threaten global security”. Why and how is supporting freedom and democracy a threat to global security?

His claims were sweeping and bore no direct relation to the Malaysian situation. Even if NED were indeed as heinous as he said it was, did he have any proof that it was using Malaysian NGOs to destabilise the Malaysian government? How were these NGOs destabilising the Government? What means were they using? It was surprising that this so-called intellectual had not thought of that himself.

The report ended with:

He added that those behind the body included Zionist groups which maintain good relations with the Jewish government.

Why was that relevant at all?

Clearly, the entire report was characterised by a lack of understanding of what it was actually trying to do and of how it could be effectively done.

It did not even get the other side of the story, i.e. interview Suaram, Malaysiakini, Bersih or any of the other NGOs it named as being in cahoots with NED. This was journalism that was neither fair nor balanced.

Lawyers for Liberty advisor Eric Paulsen was prompted to ask, “If NST had been a proper media organisation with integrity, why didn’t they ask Chandra Muzaffar about his track record or from where he receives funding?”

“I cannot understand the stupidity this country can sink to,” said Masjaliza Hamzah, Executive Officer at the Centre for Independent Journalism (CIJ).

What befuddled me then, as it still does now, is why the experienced journalists of NST didn’t realise at the time that a report like this could not hold water because it lacked evidence, made sweeping statements and was unconvincing about its so-called sources. Why did they proceed to publish – on the front page, no less – such a sensationalised, ‘nothing’ story?

Even if they were doing it to serve their political master and major owner, Umno, and knew they were being unprofessional, they must surely have realised that they needed to be intelligent about it and do it right?

Well, in the end, some justice has prevailed. To get out of the defamation suit filed against it by Bersih, Suaram, CIJ and Merdeka Centre, NST has apologised and agreed to pay the four NGOs RM120,000. The amount is of course minuscule, considering that the NGOs have suffered significant damage to their reputation because of that reprehensible report.

One important question remains, however. What action will be taken by NST itself against the staff members responsible for the publication of something that was “false” and “should not have been published”?

I ask this for the sake of accountability for a transgression that is highly serious. I ask this because we don’t seem to have been upholding it in this country.

With Ling Liong Sik having been acquitted of cheating the Government and the Attorney-General not appealing the verdict, who is to be held accountable for the Port Klang Free Zone (PKFZ) multi-billion-ringgit fiasco?

With the rakyat’s money being misspent by government departments year after year, as exposed by the Auditor-General, who have been held accountable and brought to book so that it doesn’t happen again?

With the Serdang Hospital having experienced ceiling collapses at four areas within it in the last three years – the latest being the one last week in the intensive care unit for newborn babies – why hasn’t anyone been held accountable? Do we wait till there are fatalities?

With Negeri Sembilan Menteri Besar Mohamad Hasan having transferred RM10 million out of the country illegally in 2008, why was he cleared of wrongdoing whereas the moneychanger involved in the transaction got fined and lost his licence? Why wasn’t Hasan held accountable?

Accountability should be seen to be upheld not only in the public sector but also in the private sector. So the people responsible for the NST’s dastardly report have to be punished, if they are still working there.

This is what I propose. In degrees of accountability starting with the lowest – which should determine the severity of the punishment – the people to be held accountable are 1) the reporter; 2) the news editor who gave the reporter the assignment; 3) the editor-in-chief who must assume full responsibility for everything the editorial department of the newspaper does.

There may be others in the editorial decision-making process who were involved, like senior editorial executives. They should also be punished.

Only when this is done, can it be said that NST has realised its grave mistake and truly repented.

It will also set the standard for professionalism, and renounce the practice of gutter journalism.

* Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of, and should not be attributed to MSN Malaysia

* Kee Thuan Chye is the author of the new book The Elections Bullshit , now available in bookstores.

Dr Subramaniam Slightly Injured, Bodyguard Seriously Hurt In Crash


MELAKA, Nov 21 (Bernama) -- Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr S. Subramaniam sustained a minor injury in the neck while his bodyguard was seriously hurt when the car they were travelling in was involved in an accident at KM220 of the North-South Expressway near Pedas-Linggi Wednesday night.

Melaka police chief Datuk Chua Ghee Lye said based on the preliminary findings, the car was believed to have knocked into the back of a lorry which suddenly switched lanes from the middle to the right lane in the 8pm incident.

"Datuk Seri's (Dr Subramaniam's) injury is not serious but his bodyguard suffered abdomeninal injuries and is still in the operating theatre of the Melaka General Hospital (MGH) at the moment.

"They were initially given treatment at the Alor Gajah hospital before being transferred to MGH," he told reporters here.

He added that the driver of the car was not hurt and that Dr Subramaniam would be kept at MGH overnight as a precautionary measure.

Chuah said the lorry involved had driven off from the accident scene and police were tracing the vehicle.

Meanwhile, Melaka MIC chairman Datuk M.S Mahadevan said Dr Subramaniam was on his way to Melaka to attend a meeting on the MIC General Assembly on Nov 30 here.

The ambulance which brought Dr Subramaniam arrived at MGH at 11.10pm and he was conscious with neck braces to support his injured neck.

Melaka Yang Dipertua Tun Mohd Khalil Yaakob visited the victims at the hospital.

-- BERNAMA