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Monday, 18 January 2010

Policeman forgot to report death

There is no legal history of Malaysian Court ordering charge of murder or manslaughter.

But in this latest case of death at the Sentul police station of R. Gunasegaran. It is ridiculous that the policeman forgot to report the death of this detainee in the police lock up.

As usual UMNO puts an Indian policeman mandore One Sjn Mejar Rajinder Singh to tone down the racist and religious extremist Malay-sian police force. Remember they did the same thing in the case of the murder in police custody of A. Kugan when another only are Indian mandore policeman was prosecuted and that too not for murder but only a token criminal offence.

S.JAYATHAS

HRP Information Cheif

police-forgetmusahassan_igp

PKR cheats 74 poor Indian families, low cost houses denied

These 74 poor families from Kampong Bunga Raya, Shah Alam were cheated into moving into temporary longhouses. (The Star 13/1/10 at page N48). But then this longhouses can be demolished at any time as is the case forced now imminently on some 100 poor Indians in Kampong Medan in Petaling Jaya.

The Indians form about 25% of the Selangor population and voted in PKR, DAP and PAS in Selangor in the last elections. But having come to power PKR, DAP and PAS are playing almost the very same political games played by the previous UMNO led state government.

P. Uthayakumar

pkr1ABDUL KHALID IBRAHIM / MENTERI BESAR SELANGOR

Orphaned dead body of Maniam (41) – poverty related

(Malaysia Nanban 14/1/10 at page 17).

This kind of news reports are only reported about poor Indians from time to time and that too only in the Tamil press.

We never read of reports of this nature involving a Malay, Chinese, Orang Asli, Iban, Kadazan etc in Malaysia. This happens only to the Indians because it is poverty related and no care is extended to them.

P. Uthayakumar

orphaned

Makkal Sakti president sacked, ball in Najib’s court

By Baradan Kuppusamy - The Malaysian Insider

KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 17 — A faction led by deputy president of the Malaysia Makkal Sakti party today formally sacked president R. S. Thanenthiran.

The move brings to head a bitter feud between the two that started on the very day Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak launched the party on Oct 10 last year.

Both factions are almost even in strength with A. Vathemurthy controlling 14 Central Committee members and Thanenthiran having 13.

With their strength almost even it is up to Najib to either find a way to unite the two factions or take sides.

But increasingly Najib is not waiting for these, or other Indian leaders, to shape up but is reaching out to the Indian community on his own steam and charisma.

The feud has its origins during the launch of the party.

Vathemurthy felt slighted that Thanenthiran did not share the limelight during that grand launch and the ill feelings later developed into major disagreements on handling of party funds, alleged nepotism and mismanagement.

Their feud has seriously set back Najib’s strategy to win over the alienated Tamil working-class that rejected the MIC/BN for the Pakatan Raykat in the 2008 general election.

Vathemurthy told The Malaysian Insider that he is now the acting president “until a new president” is found to head the party which carries and enjoys the prestige of the Makkal Sakti name, the PR rallying cry in 2008.

Thanenthiran had ignored the Vathemurthy faction, changing the locks to the party’s headquarters and tried to carry on as party president.

Vathemurthy’s faction used its one-vote majority to lodge police reports, change the locks at the head office and hold the CC meeting that today sacked Thanenthiran.

However, Thanenthiran, anticipating the sacking has flown to Madras where he is expected to meet Najib, who is on an official visit to India, and brief him of what “actually” transpired.

He will be asking Najib to recognize himself as the “rightful” president.

Vathemurthy said they will seek a meeting with Najib on his return to brief him of the developments and explain why Thanenthiran was sacked.

“We will be seeking his blessing for the new party line-up,” Vathemurthy said.

“The CC will meet on Feb 7 to decide on the new leader,” he added.

Najib, however, is not waiting for the Makkal Sakthi leaders to close ranks and come around to win the hearts and minds of the Tamil masses.

Neither is he waiting on the MIC to reform, reinvent itself and prepare for the next polls because with long-time president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu clinging on to power, the belief is taking hold that there is no hope for reform in the MIC.

The same dilemma is blighting the PPP where long-time president Datuk M Kayveas is also clinging on to power although in the PPP’s case a dynamic and popular leader in Datuk T. Murugiah is making waves in the community.

Najib, political sources said, is forging ahead, relying on his own steam and charisma and on individuals like Murugiah, grassroots leaders and Indian NGOs to reach out to the Indian voter.

“He is not sitting back and waiting for the “has been” leaders to deliver,” the sources said.

“He is building up a network involving individuals, emerging leaders like Murugiah, Datuk M. Saravanan in the MIC and new and old NGOs to come together to help win Indian votes,” the sources said.

As an example, they said, numerous NGO leaders and others are all heading for Madras this week to meet Najib to talk strategy and touch base.

“We are going to network among ourselves, listen to the PM and prepare to work the ground,” said one prominent Indian leader flying to Madras for the discussion.

“We are happy that the community is getting recognition from the PM himself,” the leader said, declining to be named.

Kit Siang demands government withdraw ‘Allah’ appeal

By Shazwan Mustafa Kamal - The Malaysian Insider

IPOH, Jan 17 — Lim Kit Siang urged the government today to withdraw its appeal against the High Court ruling made on Dec 31 last year allowing the Catholic Church to use the word “Allah” in the Bahasa Malaysia edition of its newspaper, Herald.

Lim’s statement comes a day after Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin was quoted as stating that the time for an inter-faith council had “arrived.”

“I call on the government to withdraw the appeal against the High Court judgment by Judge Lau Bee Lan to show that it is serious in finding a solution,” said Lim to reporters here.

The DAP advisor asserted that it was the government’s prerogative to demonstrate its sincerity in starting the inter-faith dialogue.

“The government must walk the talk when it comes to this matter. They say they are sincere in this dialogue, but they have never invited any parties for a roundtable to address this issue,” said Lim.

Yesterday Muhyiddin reminded all parties not to undermine the peace and harmony enjoyed by the nation at the moment, in reference to the ongoing furore over the “Allah” issue.

“We will not politicise the issue because this is not a political issue. This is about peace and harmony in the country. We should defend it at all cost. We should not be careless or adopt a lackadaisical attitude,” he said.

Amid the uproar over the ‘‘Allah’’ ruling, ten churches have been either firebombed or vandalised while a Convent school and one Sikh temple were also attacked.

Yesterday a mosque was also reportedly vandalised when bottles were thrown at the building.

A new twist to Allah’s name

In the old days, you swear in Allah’s name and the benefit of the doubt is given to you. Today, Allah’s name has no weight. No one puts any value to Allah’s name. Yet the Malays are fighting to retain exclusivity to the usage of a name that, when you invoke, everyone will laugh till they pee in the pants and then send you to jail.

NO HOLDS BARRED

Raja Petra Kamarudin

Nik Sapeia bersumpah nama Allah, dakwa dianiaya

Datuk Nik Sapeia Nik Yusoff yang didapati bersalah oleh mahkamah kerana menyembur bahan berbahaya terhadap Tun. Dr. Mahathir Mohamad hari ini tampil mempertahan dirinya dengan membuat akuan sumpah menggunakan nama Allah.

Beliau berbuat demikian di kediamannya di Pasir Tumboh pagi ini.

Menurutnya, tindakan bersumpah dengan nama Allah itu dibuat berikutan perbicaraannya telah selesai dan hukuman telah dijatuhkan namun merasakan dirinya dianiaya.

"Hari ini saya bersumpah dengan Nama Allah, Wallahi, Wabillahi, Wattallahi, demi Allah sesungguhnya saya dengan ini bersumpah tidak menyerang atau menyembur Tun Dr.Mahathir Mohamed sebagaimana yang dituduh kepada saya” ujar beliau yang juga Naib Presiden Parti Progresif Penduduk (PPP).

"Saya sedar akan sumpahan saya ini dan saya sudah mendapat pandangan daripada orang alim dan pimpinan parti demi menjaga maruah diri dan parti saya," katanya lagi.

Nik Sapeia juga berkata beliau akur dengan keputusan yang dijatuhkan oleh mahkamah dan kini sedang membuat proses rayuan ke mahkamah tinggi.

Mahkamah Majistret Kota Bharu baru-baru ini menjatuhkan hukuman penjara enam bulan selepas beliau didapati bersalah menyebabkan kecederaan dengan menyembur bahan berbahaya terhadap bekas Perdana Menteri Tun Dr.Mahathir Mohamed dan tiga yang lain dalam satu insiden di Lapangan Terbang Sultan Ismail Petra di sini.

Majistret Azman Mustapha bagaimanapun membenarkan perlaksanaan hukuman penjara ditangguhkan sehingga rayuan selesai di putuskan oleh Mahkamah Tinggi dan Mahkamah Rayuan nanti. – Harakah Daily (16 January 2010)

**************************************************

While the country is up in arms about the use of the word Allah by the non-Muslims (not only the Christians but the Sikhs have also been using the Allah word for a long, long time), the Allah word for found another very useful purpose. The man alleged to have sprayed Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad with mace at the Kota Bharu airport a couple of years ago, Nik Sapeia Nik Yusoff, has swore in the name of Allah he did not do it as alleged.

Based on eyewitnesses’ testimonies during the trial, the court found Nik guilty and sentenced him to six months jail. He is of course appealing the verdict and will only start serving his sentence once he exhausts all avenues to get his verdict set aside, which could take another couple of years.

I was there with my wife when the incident happened. And although we were standing quite a distance away when it happened, we still felt the effects of the spray. Those closer to the scene were gasping for breath and looked like they were suffering a heart attack.

We were at the airport probably an hour or so before Dr Mahathir’s private jet arrived. Sufi, Dr Mahathir’s personal assistant, was also there, together with many other supporters.

Nik Sapeia zoomed in with a bunch of tough looking Malays, who we later found out were army personnel, and surrounded Sufi. It looked like there was going to be a fight and we came forward to see what assistance we could offer Sufi. I feared that heads were about to be broken and poor Sufi was very pale and looked extremely scared. I resigned myself to the fact that we may have to swing fists to extricate Sufi from what was about to become a very bloody skirmish.

Ibrahim Ali stood at a distance, busy sending text messages on his mobile phone. I walked up to him to ask what was going on and he replied that Nik is a local gangster and he wants to ‘hijack’ Dr Mahathir. It seems Nik resented the fact that Ibrahim Ali was ‘in-charge’ whereas he (Nik) was the local warlord and should instead be the one ‘hosting’ Dr Mahathir.

When Dr Mahathir finally arrived, they ushered him to Ibrahim Ali’s Pajero and as Mahathir was about to address the supporters and thank them for turning out to greet him, Nik and his bunch of army people surround the Pajero and sprayed mace into it. Nik then ‘grabbed’ Dr Mahathir and bundled him into his own car and zoomed off. The others were left gasping for breath, not really aware of what was going on other than they appeared to be suffering from some sort of chemical attack and could not breathe.

It could be Nik who sprayed Dr Mahathir as what the witnesses in the trial said. I was not close enough to see who actually held the spray. But without a doubt someone in Nik’s gang sprayed Dr Mahathir, presumably at the behest of Nik or as part of a pre-planned move.

What no one can deny is Nik was not alone. There was a big group of toughies, all looking like army commandos. And now we know they were in fact army commandos. Another army chap who was with us confirmed this because he recognised some of the chaps.

But none of these army personnel were arrested, charged and put on trial. Only Nik was brought to book. He may have been the ‘commander’ of this ‘special operation’ and that was why they arrested, charged and put him on trial. But there were many other people involved, not only Nik. Why were the others let off?

Nik may have been telling the truth when he said he did not spray Dr Mahathir. I really don’t know. Anyway, in that Harakah Daily news item above, he swore in the name of Allah that he did not spray Dr Mahathir. That may be true because I doubt any Muslim would dare swear in the name of Allah he is innocent if he is really guilty. Malays are good Muslims and never would any Muslim dare use Allah’s name in vain.

Or would they?

Is there any value in swearing an oath in Allah’s name? Anwar Ibrahim swore in Allah’s name that he never sodomised Azizan while Azizan testified under oath (in Allah’s name) THREE TIMES during the trial that Anwar did not sodomise him. Yet the court found Anwar guilty and sentenced him to more than 15 years jail on two charges.

Sukma swore that Anwar never sodomised him and the doctor who examined him said that Sukma suffers from piles. He has problems emptying his bowels, let alone allow something to penetrate his anus. Yet Sukma was found guilty and together with Dr Munawar was sent to jail for six months for ‘allowing’ Anwar to sodomise him -- even when the doctor said it was impossible to have happened and even though the accused invoked Allah’s name to swear innocence.

Saiful swore in the name of Allah (in a mosque on top of that) that Anwar sodomised him but the doctor who examined Saiful said that there is no evidence to show the young man had been sodomised.

Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak swore in Allah’s name that he never met ‘that Mongolian woman’ although the Honorary Mongolian Consul to Malaysia said many times that he has seen a photograph of Razak, Najib and Altantuya taken together and has in fact handed the photograph to the IGP. Syed Rahman has told many people this story including Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah and many other top Umno leaders.

It looks like, based on what we have seen thus far, swearing an oath in Allah’s name has absolutely no value whatsoever (they still send you to jail like in Anwar’s, Sukma’s, Dr Munawar’s, etc., cases) although the Quran does say that if you are accused of sexual misconduct and if you swear four times in the name of Allah that you are innocent (three times in lieu of witnesses and the fourth time to invite Allah’s wrath in the event you are lying) then you are to be presumed innocent and no action can be taken against you.

In the old days, you swear in Allah’s name and the benefit of the doubt is given to you. Today, Allah’s name has no weight. No one puts any value to Allah’s name. Yet the Malays are fighting to retain exclusivity to the usage of a name that, when you invoke, everyone will laugh till they pee in the pants and then send you to jail.

I can’t swear in the name of Allah whether the spray was in Nik’s hand or the hands of one of those army commandos who were with him. But I can swear that they all surrounded Dr Mahathir and one of them certainly did spray Dr Mahathir. I also can’t swear in the name of Allah whether if one of the army commandos, instead of Nik, sprayed Dr Mahathir, that it was done with or without Nik’s knowledge or instruction. But I can swear that they all arrived together in the same convoy and kept a very tight formation when they surrounded Sufi -- and later surrounded Dr Mahathir when he arrived. I can also swear that Nik was 'commanding' the tough looking commandos and they were not ‘independent’ but working as a unit and appeared to take instructions from Nik and treated him like their ‘commander’.

This is what I saw and I can swear to that. But only Nik was hauled in while the gang of commandos 'disappeared' and were never seen again. And how many times Nik may swear in the name of Allah that he is innocent, this still does not explain the presence of that bunch of army personnel who were part of his gang and it does not explain why they were 'untouched' and only Nik is going to be sent to jail. In a criminal act perpetuated by a gang, is it not normal for the entire gang to face the law?

Four reasons for controversial ‘Allah’ ruling - The Malaysian Insider

By Debra Chong

KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 17 — High Court judge Datuk Lau Bee Lan’s controversial ‘Allah’ ruling that rocked the nation over who had rights to the term cited that the Home Minister and government’s actions had been illegal, unconstitutional, irrational and had failed to satisfy that it was a threat to national security.

She also wrote about the apparent conflict in the matter between the Federal Constitution and the various state enactments apart from claims by Muslim groups that the matter cannot be taken to a civil court.

The judge released the written grounds of her Dec 31 judgment late on Friday while the increasingly acrimonious public debate over who has the right to use the word “Allah” continues to rage on.

The Malaysian Insider obtained a copy of her 57-page judgment where the judge lays out the reasons and the laws behind her oral pronouncement.

In laying out her judgment, Justice Lau ruled that the Home Minister and the Government of Malaysia, who were named as 1st and 2nd Respondents respectively, has the discretion under Section 12 of the Printing Presses and Publications Act to issue or revoke a permit to the Archbishop of Kuala Lumpur Reverend Tan Sri Murphy Pakiam (the Applicant) to publish the Church’s newspaper, Herald — The Catholic Weekly.

But, she stressed, the respondents had made decisions that were illegal, unconstitutional and irrational when they barred the Catholic newspaper from publishing the word “Allah” in its Bahasa Malaysia section.

The case was brought by the Roman Catholic Church, represented by the Archbishop of Kuala Lumpur Reverend Tan Sri Murphy Pakiam on February 16 last year when he filed for a judicial review against the Home Minister for barring it from using the word “Allah” as part of conditions for getting a publishing permit.

Pakiam is officially the Herald’s publisher.

The Home Ministry has successfully applied for a stay of execution in the ruling pending an appeal.

Below are excerpts highlighting the main disputes.

On why the Home Minister’s ban is illegal

“The Applicant submits the 1st Respondent has failed to take into account one or more of the relevant considerations...

1. The word “Allah” is the correct Bahasa Malaysia word for “God” and in the Bahasa Malaysia translation of the Bible, “God” is translated as “Allah” and “Lord” is translated as “Tuhan”;

2. For 15 centuries, Christians and Muslims in Arabic-speaking countries have been using the word “Allah” in reference to the One God. The Catholic Church in Malaysia and Indonesia and the greater majority of other Christian denominations hold that “Allah” is the legitimate word for “God” in Bahasa Malaysia;

3. The Malay language has been the lingua franca of many Catholic believers for several centuries especially those living in Melaka and Penang and their descendants in Peninsular Malaysia have practised a culture of speaking and praying in the Malay language;

4. The word “God” has been translated as “Allah” in the “Istilah Agama Kristian Bahasa Inggeris ke Bahasa Malaysia” first published by the Catholic Bishops Conference of Malaysia in 1989;

5. The Malay-Latin dictionary published in 1631 had translated “Deus” (the Latin word for God) as “Alla” as the Malay translation;

6. The Christian usage of the word “Allah” predates Islam being the name of God in the old Arabic Bible as well as in the modern Arabic Bible used by Christians in Egypt, Lebanon, Iraq, Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei and other places in Asia, Africa, etc;

7. In Bahasa Malaysia and Bahasa Indonesia, the word “Allah” has been used continuously in the printed edition of the Matthew’s Gospel in Malaysia in 1629, in the first complete Malay Bible in 1733 and in the second complete Malay Bible in 1879 until today in the Perjanjian Baru and the Alkitab;

8. Munshi Abdullah who is considered the father of modern Malay literature had translated the Gospels into Malay in 1852 and he translated the word “God” as “Allah”;

9. There was already a Bible translated into Bahasa Melayu in existence before 1957 which translation was carried out by the British and Foreign Bible Society where the word “Allah” was used;

10. There was also already in existence a Prayer Book published in Singapore on 3.1.1905 where the word “Allah” was used;

11. There was also a publication entitled “An Abridgment of the Christian Doctrine” published in 1895 where the word “Allah” was used.

12. Anther publication entitled “Hikajat Elkaniset” published in 1874 also contains the word “Allah”

13. The Bahasa Indonesia and the Bahasa Malaysia translations of the Holy Bible, which is the Holy Scriptures of Christians, have been used by the Christian natives of Peninsular Malaysia; Sabah and Sarawak for generations;

14. The Bahasa Malaysia speaking Christian natives of Peninsular Malaysia, Sarawak and Sabah had always and have continuously the word “Allah” for generations and the word “Allah” is used in the Bahasa Malaysia and Bahasa Indonesian translations of the Bible used throught Malaysia;

15. At least for the last three decades the Bahasa Malaysia congregation of the Catholic Church have been freely using the Alkitab, the Bahasa Indonesia translation of the Holy Bible wherein the word “Allah appears;

16. The said publication is a Catholic weekly as stated on the cover of the weekly and is intended for the dissemination of news and information on the Catholic Church in Malaysia and elsewhere and is not for sale or distribution outside the Church;

17. The said publication is not made available to members of the public and in particular to persons professing the religion of Islam;

18. The said publication contains nothing which is likely to cause public alarm and/or which touches on the sensitivities of the religion of Islam and in the fourteen years of the said publication there has never been any untoward incident arising from the Applicant’s use of the word “Allah” in the said publication;

19. In any event the word “Allah” has been used by Christians in all countries where the Arabic language is used as well as in Indonesian/Malay language without any problems and/or breach of public order/ and/or sensitivity to persons professing the religion of Islam in these countries;

20. Islam and the control and restriction of religious doctrine or belief among Muslims professing the religion of Islam is a state matter and the Federal Government has no jurisdiction over such matters of Islam save in the federal territories

21. The subsequent exemption vide P.U.(A) 134/82 which permits the Alkitab to be used by Christians in churches ipso facto permits the use of the word “Allah” in the said publication;

22. The Bahasa Malaysia speaking congregation of the Catholic Church uses the word “Allah” for worship and instruction and that the same is permitted in the Al-Kitab.

“The Applicant further submits that none of the above-mentioned factual considerations were ever disputed or challenged by the 1st Respondent as factually incorrect. I am incline to agree with the Applicant as the response of the 1st Respondent to the factual averments is a feeble denial in paragraph 41 of the Affidavit of the 1st Respondent which reads “Keseluruhan pernyataan-pernyataan di perenggan-perenggan 50, 51 and 52(i)-(xxii) Affidavit Sokongan Pemohon adalah dinafikan...” (Emphasis added)

“Therefore I find the 1st Respondent in the exercise of his discretion to impose further conditions in the publication permit has not taken into account the relevant matters alluded to above, hence committing an error of law warranting this Court to interfere and I am of the view that the decision of the Respondents dated 7.1.2009 ought to be quashed,” she ruled.

On why the Home Minister’s ban is unconstitutional

Justice Lau also said the applicant’s grounds for the reliefs of certiorari and declaratio is premised on the unconstitutional acts and conduct being inconsistent with Articles 3(1), 10, 11 and 12 of the Federal Constitution...”

“Applying the principles enunciated in Meor Atiqulrahman Ishak (supra) to the instant case, there is no doubt that Christianity is a religion. The next question is whether the use of the word “Allah” is a practice of the religion of Christianity. In my view there is uncontroverted historical evidence allueded to in paragraph 52 (i) to (xxii) alluded to above which is indicative that use of the word “Allah” is a practice of the religion of Christianity. From the evidence, it is apparent the use of the word “Allah” is an essential part of the worship and instruction in the faith of the Malay (Bahasa Malaysia) speaking community of the Catholic Church in Malaysia and is integral to the practice and propagation of their faith.

“The next consideration is the circumstances under which the “prohibition” was made. The circumstances to my mind would be the factors which the Respondents rely on to justify the impugned decision which have been alluded to in paragraph 9(i) to (ix) above.

“As to the ground in paragraph 9(i) in my judgment, this is unmeritorious for the reason which has been dealt under the issue of whether the use of the word “Allah” endangers public order and national security. As to the ground in paragraph 9(ii), (iii), (v) and (ix), I have shown unchallenged evidence that there is a well established practice for the use of the “Allah” amongst the Malay speaking community of the Catholic faith in Peninsular Malaysia, Sabah and Sarawak and the origin of the word and its translation...

“Considering all the factors, in my judgment, the imposition of the condition in the publication permit prohibiting the use of the word “Allah” in the said publication, “Herald – the Catholic Weekly” pursuant to the 1st Respondent’s exercise of powers under the Act contravenes the provisions of Articles 3(1), 11(1) and 11(3) of the Federal Constitution and therefore is unconstitutional,” she added.

On why the Home Minister’s ban is irrational

“The Applicant challenges the impugned decision under this head of irrationality/ Wednesbury unreasonableness which applies to “a decision which is so outrageous in its defiance of logic or of accepted moral standards that no sensible person who had applied his mind to the question to be decided could have arrived at it...”

(a) It is utterly irrational and unreasonable on the part of the Respondents on the one hand not to prohibit the congregation of the Catholic Church to use the word “Allah” for worship and instruction in their faith and in the AL-Kitab and on the other hand to state that the same word cannot be used in the said publication which serves to assist these persons in their worship and provide a medium of instruction in their faith and to disseminate news and information (see paragraph 52(xxii) of Applicant’s Affidavit).

(b) It is also utterly irrational and unreasonable on the part of the Respondents to require the Bahasa Malaysia speaking congregation of the Catholic Church to use another word to denote the Bahasa Malaysia word for “God” instead of the word “Allah” when such is and has always been the word used for the word “God” in the Catholic Church and throughout the Bahasa Malaysia speaking community of the Church in Malaysia...

“In relation to the 2 additional grounds mentioned in paragraph 17.1 above, the Respondents responded —

1. Merujuk kepada perenggan 20 Afidavit Sokongan Pemohon, Responden-Responden menegaskan bahawa Pernyataan YAB Perdana Menteri tersebut yang telah dikeluarkan melalui media cetak “The Star” pada 20/4/2005 adalah amat jelas mengarahkan agar di kulit “Bible” dalam versi Bahasa Melayu dinyatakan secara jelas bahawa ianya bukan untuk orang Islam and ianya hanya dijual doi kedai-kedai orang Kristian. Walau bagaimanapun saya sesungguhnya mempercayai dan meyatakan bahawa kenyataan media yang dirujuk itu adalah berhubung dengan Al-Kitab (Bible) sahaja dan tidak relevan kepada isu permit Herald – the Catholic Weekly yang mana syarat yang dikenakan adalah amat jelas dan perlu dipatuhi oleh Pemohon (paragraph 22 of the 1st Respondent’s Affidavit); and

2. the circulation of the Al-Kitab vide P.U.(A) 134 dated 13.5.1982 was made subject to the condition that its possession or use is only in churches by persons professing the Christian religion, throughout Malaysia.

“I find the 2 additional grounds submitted by the Applicant in paragraph 17.1 above to be of substance. It is to be noted that a common thread runs through like a tapestry in the Respondents’ treatment of restricting the use of the word “Allah” which appears in the Al-Kitab are (i) that it is not meant for Muslims; (ii) to be in the possession or use of Christians and in churches only. In fact, these restrictions are similar to that imposed as a second condition in the impugned decision save for the endorsement of the word “Terhad” on the front cover of the said publication. Relying on the chapter on maxims of interpretation at paragraph 44 p.156 of N.S Bindra’s Interpretation of the Statute, there is a maxim “Omne majus continet in se minus” which means “The greater contains the less”. One would have thought having permitted albeit with the usual restrictions the Catholic Church to use the word “Allah” for worship and in the Al-kitab, it would be logical and reasonable for the Respondents to allow the use of the word “Allah” in the said publication drawing an analogy by invoking the maxim “The greater contains the less”. Indeed I am incline to agree with the Applicant that the Respondents are acting illogically, irrationally and inconsistently and no person similarly circumstanced would have acted in a like manner...

“I find there is merit in the Applicant’s contention that when viewed on its merits, the reasons given by the Home Ministry in the various directives defies all logic and is so unreasonable,” Justice Lau wrote in her judgment.

On the seeming conflict between the Federal Constitution and the state enactments to control and restrict the propagation of religious doctrine among Muslims

She also wrote that, “Pursuant to Article 11(4) of the Federal Constitution, ten States have enacted laws to control and restrict the propagation of religious doctrine or belief among Muslims. The laws are –

(i) Control and Restriction of the Propagation of Non Islamic Religions Enactment 1980 (State of Terengganu Enactment No.1/1980)

2. Control and Restriction of the Propagation of Non Islamic Religions Enactment 1981 (Kelantan Enactment No.11/1981)

3. Control and Restriction of the Propagation of Non Islamic Religions Enactment 1988 (Malacca Enactment No.1/1988)

4. Control and Restriction of the Propagation of Non Islamic Religions Enactment 1988 (Kedah Darulaman Enactment No.11/1988)

5. The Non Islamic Religions (Control of Propagation Amongst Muslims) Enactment 1988 (Selangor Enactment No.1/1988)

6. Control and Restriction of the Propagation of Non Islamic Religions Enactment 1988 (Perak Enactment No.10/1988)

7. Control and Restriction of the Propagation of Non Islamic Religions Enactment 1989 (Pahang Enactment No.5/1989)

8. Control and Restriction of the Propagation of Non Islamic Religions Enactment 1991 (Johor Enactment No.12/1991)

9. The Control and Restriction (The Propagation of Non Islamic Religions Amoing Muslims) (Negeri Sembilan) Enactment 1991 (Negeri Sembilan Enactment NO.9/1991); and

10. Control and Restriction of the Propagation of Religious Belief and Doctrine which is Contrary to the Religion of Islam Enactment 2002 (Perlis Enactment No.6 of 2002)

“It is not disputed that s. 9 of the various State Enactments provide for an offence relating to the use of certain words and expression listed in Part 1 or 11 of the Schedule or in the Schedule itself as the case maybe of the State Constitutions and which includes the word “Allah”. Further, all these State Enactments are made pursuant to Article 11(4) of the Federal Constitution which reads “State law and in respect of the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Labuan and Putrajaya, federal law may control or restrict the propagation of any religious doctrine or belief among persons professing the religion of Islam.” (Emphasis added)...

“Mr Royan drew to the Court’s attention (i) that Article 11(4) which is the restriction does not state that State law can forbid or prohibit but “may control and restrict”; does not provide for State law or for any other law to control or restrict the propagation of any religious doctrine or belief among persons professing a religion other than Islam...

“I find there is merit in Mr Royan’s submission that unless we want to say that s.9 is invalid or unconstitutional to that extent (which I will revert to later), the correct way of approaching s.9 is it ought to be read with Article 11(4). If s.9 is so read in conjunction with Article 11(4), the result would be that a non-Muslim could be committing an offence if he uses the word “Allah” to a Muslim but there would be no offence if it was used to a non-Muslim. Indeed Article 11(1) reinforces this position as it states “Every person has the right to profess and practise his religion and, subject to Clause (4), to propagate it”. Clause 4 restricts a person’s right only to propagate his religious doctrine or belief to persons professing the religion of Islam. It is significant to note that Article 11(1) gives freedom for a person to profess and practise his religion and the restriction is on the right to propagate.

“I find Mr Royan’s argument is further augmented by the submission of Mr Benjamin Dawson, learned Counsel for the Applicant which I find to be forceful stating that this rule of construction is permissible in the light of the mischief the State Enactments seek to cure and the provision has to be interpreted to conform to the Constitution. … For completeness I shall now spell out the preamble in full “WHEREAS Article 11(4) of the Federal Constitution provides that State law may control or restrict the propagation of any religious doctrine or belief among persons professing the religion of Islam. AND WHEREAS it is not desired to make a law to control and restrict the propagation of non-Islamic religious doctrines and beliefs among persons professing the religion of Islam.” (Emphasis added) …

“Applying the said test to the factual matrix of the present case the Court has to bear in mind the constitutional and fundamental rights of persons professing the Christian faith to practise their religion and to impart their faith/religion to persons within their religious group and in this case, the Catholic Church comprises a large section of people from Sabah and Sarawak whose medium of instruction is Bahasa Malaysia and they have for years used religious material in which their God is called “Allah”; for that matter there is a large community who are Bahasa Malaysia speaking from Penang and Malacca. On the other hand the object of Article 11(4) and the State Enactments is to protect or restrict propagation to persons of the Islamic faith. Seen in this context by no stretch of the imagination can one say that s.9 of the State Enactments may well be proportionate to the object it seeks to achieve and the measure is therefore arbitrary and unconstitutional.

“As to the concern of the Respondents there is no guarantee that the magazine would be circulated only among Christians and it will not fall into the hands of Muslims, I agree with Mr Royan there is no requirement of any guarantee be given by anyone in order to profess and practise an even to propagate it.

“In my view if there are breaches of any law the relevant authorities may take the rleevant enforcement measures. We are living in a world of information technology; information can be readily accessible. Are guaranteed rights to be sacrificed at the altar just because the Herald has gone online and is accessible to all? One must not forget there is the restriction in the publication permit wich serves as an additional safeguard which is the word “TERHAD” is to be endorsed on the front page and the said publication is restricted to churches and to followers of Christianity only,” she added.

On the claim that the Home Minister’s ban was to safeguard public security and order

“There is merit in the Applicant’s argument that the Respondents in paragraph 45 of his Affidavit (also in paragraphs 6, 25 and 46) sought to justify imposing the condition in purported exercise of his powers under the said Act on a mere statement that the use of the word “Allah” is a security issue which is causing much confusion and which threatens and endangers public order, without any supporting evidence. A mere statement by the 1st Respondent that the exercise of power was necessary on the ground of national security without adequate supporting evidence is not sufficient in law....

“I find there is merit in Mr Dawson’s argument that the Court ought to take judicial notice that in Muslim countries even in the Middle East where the Muslim and Christian communities together use the word “Allah”, yet one hardly hear of any confusion arising (see paragraph 52(xix) of the Applicant’s Affidavit which is not rebutted). Further, I am incline to agree that the Court has to consider the question of “avoidance of confusion” as a ground very cautiously so as to obviate a situation where a mere confusion of certain persons within a religious group can strip the constitutional right of another religious groiup to practise and propagate their religion under Article 11(1) and to render such guaranteed right as illusory,” Justice Lau said.

On claims from the Muslim groups that “Allah” cannot be challenged in court

On this, she wrote, “I had on 31.12.2009 dismissed the applications of the Majlis Agama Islam (MAI) of Wilayah Persekutuan, Johore, Selangor, Kedah, Malacca, the MAI and Adat Melayu Terenggganu and MACMA to be heard in opposition under O.53 r.8 of the RHC (It is to be noted that the MAI and Adat Melayu Perak and MAI Pulau Pinang did not file any applicatio under O.53 r.8). That being the case, their submission contending the issue of whether any publication in whatever form by a non-Muslim individual or body or entity that uses the scared word of “Allah” can be permitted in law is one that is within the absolute discretion of the Rulers and the Yang di-Pertuan Agong (YDPA) (in respect of Penang, Malacca, Sabah, Sarawak and the Federal Territories) as the respective Heads of Islam and is therefore non-justiciable is irrelevant at the substantive hearing of the judicial review application and need not be considered by this Court.

“I adopt the following responses of the Applicant contending the application is justiciable and I am of the view there is substance –

1. the Federal Constitution and the State Constitutions clearly provide that the Rulers and the YDPA as the Head of Islam in the States and the Federal Territories have exclusive authority only on Islamic affairs and Malay customs;

2. subject to Articles 10 and 11 of the Federal Constitution, the control and regulation of all publications and matters connected therewith are governed by federal law namely the Act and only the Minister for Home Affairs is involved in the implementation and enforcement of its provisions. Under this Act, only the Minister can decide what is permitted to be published and in this regard the Rulers and the YDPA have no role whatsoever under the scheme of this Act;

3. the present judicial reiew is not a judicial review of the decision of the Rulers or the YDPA as Head of Islam concerning the exercise of their duties and functions. It is only a judicial review of the 1st Respondent’s decision to impose a prohibition on the use of the word “Allah” by the Applicant in a publication. Since the Rulers or the YDPA cannot make any decision in respect of any publications and matters connected therewith, the issue of non justiciability does not arise.

On what the Court really ordered

She also listed out the orders from the court in the landmark case, “ In conclusion in the circumstances the Court grants the Applicant the following order:

1. an Order of Certiorari to quash the decisio of the Respondents dated 7.1.2009 that the Applicant’s Publication Permit for the period 1.1.2009 until 31.12.2009 is subject to the condition that the Applicant is prohibited from using the word “Allah” in “Herald – the Catholic Weekly” pending the Court’s determination of the matter;

2. Jointly the following declarations:

(i) that the decision of the Respondents dated 7.1.2009 that the Applicant’s Publication Permit for the period 1.1.2009 until 31.12.2009 is subject to the condition that the Applicant is prohibited from using the word “Allah” in “Herald – the Catholic Weekly” pending the Court’s determination of the matter is null and void;

(ii) that pursuant to Article 3(1) of the Federal Constitution the Applicant has the constitional right to use the word “Allah” in “Herald — the Catholic Weekly” in the exercise of the Applica’ right that religions other than Islam may be practised in peace and harmony in any part of the Federation;

(iii) that Article 3(1) of the Federal Constitution which states that Islam is the religion of the Federation does not empower and/or authorize the Respondents to prohibit the Applicant from using the word “Allah” in “Herald — the Catholic Weekly”;

(iv) that pursuant to Article 10 of the Federal Constitution the Applicant has the constitutional right to use the word “Allah” in “Herald – the Catholic Weekly” in the exercise of the applicant’s right to freedom of speech and expression;

(v) that pursuant to Article 11 of the Federal Constitution the Applicant has the constitutional right to use the word “Allah” in “Herald — the Catholic Weekly” in the exercise of the Applicant’s freedom of religion which includes the right manage its own religious affairs;

(vi) that pursuant to Article 11 and 12 of the Federal Constitution the Applicant has the constitutional right to use the word “Allah” in “Herald — the Catholic Weekly” in the exercise of the Applicant’s right in respect of instruction and education of the Catholic congregation in the Christian religion.

Rais: Internet can erode the country's culture

(The Straits Times) - The Malaysian government has warned against excessive use of micro-blogging sites like Facebook and Twitter, arguing that they could erode the country's culture, a report said on Sunday.

Rais Yatim, the information and communication minister, said Muslims and other religious groups must be wary of the Internet as it was introduced by the West.

'We are not saying they cannot use Facebook or Twitter, but when using such facilities, they must upkeep the values taught by Islam, Buddhism or Christianity to maintain our culture,' he was quoted as saying by the New Sunday Times newspaper.

Mr Rais said users must not be influenced by what they see and hear when using the Internet. 'We must be strong in our belief and culture because the identity and image of our country depends on us,' he said.

The government decided last August not to implement a controversial plan to create an Internet filter blocking 'undesirable' websites after coming under fire from rights groups.

Malaysia's lively blogosphere has been a thorn in the side of the Barisan Nasional government, which was been in power for more than half a century but was dealt its worst ever results in the 2008 elections.

Is a Malaysian Indian subject to subtle genocide?

Being a Muslim and a favoured ethnic with the present day government, this question doodles in our Muslim brothers’ mind constantly whether the Malaysian Indians do indeed suffer a subtle genocide/ethnic cleansing in Malaysia.

As a Muslim and more so as a Malaysian, one would find plenty of historical facts and the contribution of the Malaysian Indians are being slowly eradicated and redressed to depict them as the new underclass society that is not worth their existence in Malaysia.

Look up on genocide at http://www.hrweb.org/legal/genocide.html and you would realise in the modern era, a conceptual argument towards history cases and contemporary issues is a definition that we as individuals make out for ourselves when we argue on the predicament of the Malaysian Indians without admitting the reality that they face.

Rather than looking at the intention and the perpetrators, most would look for a structured conflict based on historic cases and individual conception although the reality does bite the bullet for the majority Malaysian Indians in Malaysia.

Whichever way you look at it, when violations or crimes against humanity is undertaken by the state in any form to deprive humanity to survive, genocide and cleansing do occur only that we tend to measure it by our own conception.

Now looking at the http://www.humanrightspartymalaysia.com/2010/01/09/the-malaysian-indian-minority-human-rights-violations-annual-report-2009/. I feel there is a concerted effort by the government in exercising genocide against the Malaysian Indians. Most of the details entailed in this report are factual as they are procured through major government controlled newspapers such as Star, NST, Malay Mail, Utusan Malaysia, Berita Harian, Bernama news that clearly indicates on the deprivation of a Malaysian Indian in participating in the socio development of Malaysia through oppressive government policies.

For example how does it make sense in Malaysia, that UiTM that only allows Malay Muslim to enroll in its university but nevertheless allocates 10% of foreign students of the Muslim belief into their university when deserving Malaysian students from other beliefs are deprived even if they qualify? Is Onemalaysia religious based?

Even if the Malaysian Indians were to pursue their education elsewhere, for instance in the field of medicine in various other countries through their own efforts, the government steps in to derecognize these universities because the students are of Malaysian Indian origin. If this is not indirect cleansing, then what is this?

There are many instances similar. Look at the agricultural field, FELDA is a giant, yet the Malaysian Indians were there initial contributors, yet there is a systematic exclusion of these Malaysians in participation or in the plans of the government.

Biro Tata Negara (BTN) and latest brazen torching of the churches only further indicates the state of affairs that is being conducted by the government. Whether it is an indirect genocide or cleansing is a subjective approach that each Malaysian should take heed and protect each other from the modern day government that we have created.

Saying all these, nothing is going to change a status quo as a preferred Malay Muslim but that is not what those would desire as for for them being a Malaysian is a confluence of the ethnicity, culture, belief without infringing another what they rightly deserve that has molded them to be a part for a better Malaysia.

The government has been the forerunner in various blatant provocation based on its own volition, but it is up to us as individual to recognize the flaws to create and make the change for the society. At present, the Malaysian Indians do face a dilemma in an indirect form of genocide and cleansing, and we as Malaysian need to hold the fort and forge together in entertain their needs to participate in the socio development of Malaysia.

Check this out and you will know what I mean http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GUcXI2BIUOQ

Thank you.

Mydin Baharuddin

Semua anak kita. Ngapa harus beza?

By Haris Ibrahim

The Saya Anak Bangsa Malaysia Roadshow & Forum hits KL this coming Saturday, 23rd January, 2010. For more details, click on the image below.

Umno-BN Langgar Federalisme, Biadap Terhadap Raja-Raja Isu Peruntukan

Dari TV Selangor

Isu diskriminasi Kerajaan Persekutuan menyekat peruntukan Ahli Dewan Undangan Negeri dan Ahli Parlimen Pakatan Rakyat jelas mengingkari amalan federalisme negara ini.

Setiausaha Politik Menteri Besar, Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad menyifatkan pemimpin Umno-Barisan Nasional berfikiran jumud dan kolot hingga sanggup mempolitikkan isu peruntukan yang akhirnya menindas kebajikan rakyat selaku pembayar cukai.

Sebaliknya peruntukan itu disalahgunakan apabila disalurkan terus kepada parti Umno-BN sekaligus membantutkan usaha kebajikan rakyat terbabit.

“Wang yang disalurkan oleh kerajaan itu bukannya wang parti, tetapi wang rakyat, dan ini bertitik tolak daripada perkara yang lebih asas lagi iaitu tentang isu pembiayaan politik dan sebagainya di Malaysia masih lagi tidak ada peraturan yang jelas, dan sebab itu hari ini disalurkan dalam peringkat parti,”katanya.

Bercakap kepada Tv Selangor semalam beliau menambah Kerajaan Pakatan Rakyat (PR) Selangor bersikap profesional dalam pengagihan peruntukan negeri tanpa mengira kerajaan mahupun pembangkang.

Ini kerana Pakatan Rakyat sentiasa mendukung perlembagaan negara demi kesejahteraan rakyat tanpa mempunyai sebarang kepentingan tertentu sepertimana yang diamalkan Umno-BN.

“Jadi kita bersedia sekiranya Ahli Parlimen kita misalnya menerima saluran daripada kerajaan pusat saya rasa tidak ada masalah kita akan terus serta merta kita akan bagi sama semua wakil rakyat yang ada di negeri Selangor bantuan tersebut,”katanya.

Nik Nazmi kesal sikap kerajaan persekutuan berpolitik kesukuan kerana tiada kawalan terhadap pembiayaan politik di negara ini.

Selain peruntukan, keengkaran mereka menyerahkan royalti sumber galian seperti petroleum di Kelantan jelas menafikan hak kerajaan negeri sekaligus merencatkan pembangunan prasarana dan kebajikan rakyat terbabit.

“Isu paling jelas, paling ketara permainan politik ialah isu royalti, yang mana kalau kita lihat bagi pihak sebelum ini dalam hansard pun Tun Razak dan sebagainya memaklumkan bahawa kerajaan negeri berhak terhadap royalti minyak,”katanya.

Nik Nazmi membidas kerajaan pusat kerana tidak menghormati kerajaan berperlembagaan sekaligus menafikan kedaulatan Raja-Raja yang memerintah negeri-negeri kerana menyekat peruntukan.

“Saya fikir kalau dibawa ke mahkamah dan sebagainya kerajaan negeri mempunyai hak yang jelas dan sebab itu kerajaan persekutuan begitu risau tentang tindakan mahkamah yang diambil oleh kerajaan Terengganu di bawah Pas terhadap kerajaan persekutuan dalam isu royalti minyak ini,”katanya.

Menurutnya, Pakatan Rakyat tetap memperjuangkan kepentingan hak rakyat dengan mengembalikan kuasa semua negeri menuntut royalti dan peruntukan yang wajib disalurkan oleh kerajaan persekutuan

Home Ministry should withdraw appeal against KL High Court judgment on “Allah” controversy

By Lim Kit Siang,

The Home Ministry should withdraw its appeal against the Kuala Lumpur High Court judgment on the “Allah” controversy to demonstrate the government’s seriousness and commitment to resolve the issue through inter-religious dialogue.

Deputy Prime Minister, Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin said yesterday that it is time to set up an inter-faith council to reach a mutual understanding on religious matters, with the Star report giving the headline : “’Time for interfaith council’ – Muhyiddin: Mutual understanding needed among all religions.”

Barisan Nasional leaders, from the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Najib Razak downwards have said that the “Allah” controversy must be resolved through inter-religious dialogue and not through the court process.

However, certain Umno Ministers and leaders have given the impression that when they speak about inter-religious dialogue, they are not talking about an open, full and free discussion and interaction but using the inter-religious dialogue to achieve a pre-determined outcome, in the case of the “Allah” controversy, to achieve the same objective as the Home Ministry ban on the Catholic weekly Herald from using the word “Allah”.

If this is the case, then the whole idea of an inter-religious dialogue would be discredited and would not be able to produce a lasting solution to the problem.

It is for this reason that I am proposing that the Home Ministry withdraw its appeal against the Kuala Lumpur High Court judgment and to convene an inter-religious dialogue to find a solution to the “Allah” controversy without any conditions as to the final outcome.

Yesterday, Muhyiddin said that Malaysians, irrespective of ethnic and religious background, must stand together to defend the country’s unity.

He said that unity among the various communities was essential, more so with the recent attacks on the churches following a court decision in the “Allah” controversy.

I cannot agree more with Muhyiddin on the need for all Malaysians, regardless of race or religion, to unite to defend national unity in the wake of the stresses and strains over religious issues like the “Allah” controversy.

However, like other Barisan Nasional leaders Muhyiddin does not walk the talk. For instance, can Muhyiddin explain why after some three weeks, the Barisan Nasional government has not convened an all-party, all-religious roundtable or conference to discuss the national unity problems arising from the “Allah” controversy although I had made this suggestion many a time?

Najib To Warm Up India-Malaysia Ties During Winter Visit

By P. Vijian

NEW DELHI, Jan 17 (Bernama) -- India-Malaysia relations can be better and warmer if time-tested recipes are slightly altered and whipped up to suit current tastes, say many a keen observer of relations between the two countries.

So, when Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak visits India beginning Tuesday, he might need to use a fresh concoction to spice up relations between "two old friends" before diplomatic fatigue sets in, they say.

For over two decades or so, India-Malaysia watchers feel that India had blipped mildly on Malaysia's radar as they claim that Malaysians might have overlooked their old Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) ally as they calibrated their focus on the "Look East" policy from the 1980s.

The result was that India got less attention as most Malaysian key decision-makers had a less than favourable view of that country's shielded economy then.

But today, it is a different ball game altogether. India has ascended from its touristy type of magazine images of the land of "sadhus" (holy men) and soothsayers.

With a population of 1.2 billion, it is now telling the rest of the world of rainbow-coloured stories, like its US$1.2 trillion (RM4.0 trillion) economy is Asia's third largest, only rivalled by China and Japan.

Its sizzling economy, growing at about seven per cent annually, is propelled by a 300-million strong middle-class of affluent Indians, larger than even the entire American population put together.

India's foreign reserves currently stand at US$280 billion (RM935 billion) and last year it pulled in a staggering worth of US$18 billion (RM60 billion) in foreign investments even as money supply dried up in international markets.

In the last three decades, India has progressed since its economy was liberalised. The kind of activities that had taken place in India since then is certainly remarkable. For example, the India Space and Research Organisation (ISRO) had launched 53 satellites and Indian scientists are even developing artificial human hearts based on cockroach breathing techniques!

India is definitely a rising economic supremo with a large scientific reservoir and it would definitely be of strategic importance for a nation like Malaysia to have close ties with the Indians.

Observers say that Najib can profit from this trip with the right strategy. Having a broad-based template, with pragmatic sustainable investment policies coupled with new geopolitical strategy with India, is the need of the hour, especially when the region's geopolitical and economic contours frequently change and overlap.

The India-Malaysia watchers also say that Najib needs to remove policies that are vague or draw ire among Indians and its influential and free Indian media.

They add that the Malaysian leader also needs to embark on diplomatic initiatives to convince the Indian political elite that Malaysia is a serious player, like its neighbour Singapore, the second largest investor in the Indian economy last year with investments of US$3.4 billion (RM11.35 billion).

India's cultural and political tempo is on a different plateau today. With its growing economic might, it is charting a new destiny in the region as it tries to revive its influence.

Engaging India more deeply is surely to Malaysia's economic and security advantage, but there needs to be improved diplomatic housekeeping as well to complete the recipe, the observers say.

When Najib travels to Tamil Nadu in southern India, he has to win over hard-core Tamil leaders, who may have blood ties and strong cultural links with Malaysians of Indian descent.

Another area where Najib can score is bringing to book unscrupulous labour recruiters and employers who had given Indian migrant workers a raw deal.

The observers say that Najib should be able to triumph in both northern and southern India, given his pragmatic perspective or world view on many issues and his ability to think on his feet.

And the prime minister's genial personality should certainly defrost the iciest of India's winters and warm the hearts of his hosts to break new ground for stronger bilateral ties, they hasten to add.

Fatimah belonged to the nation, says son

The Sun
S.Tamarai Chelvi

PETALING JAYA (Jan 17, 2010): The country's first female minister, the late Tun Fatimah Hashim who died on Jan 9, belonged to the nation, said her son Mohamed Shah Abdul Kadir, 63.

Mohd Shah, the second of her six children, said he realised at her funeral at the National Mausoleum that "she did not belong to the family, she belonged to the nation".

He said his mother was strategic in her "thinking and actions, especially for the woman of Malaysia".

"We always shared her with people," another son, Abdul Karim Abdul Kadir, 59, said. He described Fatimah as a concerned mother and grandmother who kept an eye on all of them.
"She was a strict disciplinarian. She expected all of us to have the same virtues. She expected a lot from herself and I think, she taught all of us to become achievers," Abdul Karim said. "Most importantly, she taught us that everybody else comes first before us."

He said Fatimah would make it a point to fetch him and his siblings from school. "If we don't shower and dress up before dinner, we are not served. That's how discplined she was."

Abdul Karim said the family had been discussing a series of lectures which his mother was supposed to give (after she won the Merdeka Award). He said that as she was physically unable to do so, they had planned a series of video lectures.

He said the moment she realised she wanted to fight for independence and her thoughts when she entered politics were things the family could share.

Mohd Shah and Abdul Karim were at a gathering organised by the National Council of Women's Organisations (NCWO) here in honour of the late Fatimah today. Fatimah was the president of NCWO for 24 years from 1965 to 1989 and pioneered the women's movement in Malaysia.

NCWO current president, Prof Tan Sri Datuk Dr Sharifah Hapsah Syed Hasan Shahabudin, who gave a welcome address said Fatimah was admired both for her role as mother and a public figure.
(At one point, she was on the verge of breaking down. She took a pause and a tissue was handed to her. She apologised and she continued to speak about Fatimah.)

Those who gave speeches honouring Fatimah's contibution to the nation also represented various religions in Malaysia. Among the speakers were Toh Puan Uma Sambanthan (widow of the late Tun V.T. Sambanthan) who said: "She (Fatimah) was much more than a woman minister. She fought for women from all races."

Images from the DAP national convention - Anil Netto

Some 1,000 delegates are attending the DAP national convention at a hotel in Ipoh today.

Photos by Kinta Kid (Click the arrow in the centre and then click the icon at the bottom right to toggle to full-screen slideshow mode)

The theme this year is “Transformasi Malaysia“.

Siapa bunuh Altantuya ? lahirnya buku dalam usaha merungkai misteri


dalam proses akhir 'susun letak' InsyaAllah hujung minggu depan akan siap 3,000 terbitan eksklusif pertama - Di sebalik misteri pembunuhan Altantuya, tulisan che'GuBard dengan dibantu oleh Nora.

100 naskah pertama yang dijual / tempah melalui internet dijual dengan harga RM10.00 (tidak termasuk kos pos)

Di pasaran biasa akan dijual dengan harga RM15.

Sunday, 17 January 2010

Where bodies go after natural disasters


(CNN) -- Four days after Haiti's massive earthquake, efforts are under way to bury the dead as thousands of bodies crumpled in the streets of Port-au-Prince lay exposed to the sun or draped in sheets and cardboard.

Throughout the city, people covered their noses from the stench and some resorted to face masks. CNN correspondents in Haiti reported efforts to remove the bodies, including the creation of a mass grave. It's still unclear how many people have been killed in Tuesday's earthquake; the prime minister suggested there could be several hundreds of thousands.

CNN's Anderson Cooper, reporting Friday from a mass grave on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince, described seeing hundreds of bodies mixed with garbage in open pits. Some bodies were bulldozed into the half-filled pits.

"These people will vanish," Cooper said in a phone report. "No one will know what happened to them. That's one of the many horrors.

"There's no system in place here. Literally these people here are being collected off the streets, dumped into a dump truck, then brought out here and dumped in the pits," he said.

The fear of disease is frequently the reason for rapidly burying bodies in mass graves. But contrary to popular belief, bodies do not cause epidemics after natural disasters, experts said.

"The reality is that most of the disease that live in us -- once our body is dead they can't survive very long," said Oliver Morgan, an epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Fecal matter from the deceased could contaminate the water supply, posing a risk, but "it's nowhere near the risk of all the survivors living in the streets with no sanitation," said Morgan, who contributed to the World Health Organization's guidelines on managing bodies after a natural disaster.

There has never been an epidemic after a natural disaster that was traced to exposure to bodies, according to the WHO.

The chief priority must lie with the living, experts said.

"Body collection is not the most urgent task after a natural disaster," according to the WHO's 2006 guidance on the Management of Dead Bodies after Disasters. "The priority is to care for survivors. There is no significant public health risk associated with the presence of bodies. Nevertheless, bodies should be collected as soon as possible and taken away for identification."

Mass graves, it warned, are "not justified on public health grounds. Rushing to dispose of bodies without proper identification traumatizes families and communities and may have serious legal consequences."

"There's always talks about mass graves because that's always the easiest solution," said Frank Ciaccio, vice president of commercial services at Kenyon International Emergency Services, a disaster management company that responds to mass fatality accidents. "We don't strongly recommend them. However, sometimes in situations in very developing nations, that's the only thing to do."

In cases of mass graves, teams should at least document or photograph the individual for future identification, he said. Kenyon has deployed an emergency response assessment team to Haiti. Ciaccio was part of the crew that responded to the tsunami in Southeast Asia in 2004 and New Orleans, Louisiana, after Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Having bodies on the street is very distressing to survivors.

"That's going to be very stressful," Ciaccio said. "It's hot temperatures and that's not a pleasant sight. There's decomposed bodies. And the hotter the weather, the quicker the decomposition."

Decomposition starts as early as the day of death, bringing stench and pests.

"When you have bodies on the street that begin to decompose, you eventually get maggot infestation because of flies and you have a potential of rats," said Vernie Fountain, the disaster task force leader of the National Funeral Directors Association.

At one of the capital city's cemeteries, people opened up old crypts and shoved corpses of quake victims into them before resealing them. Workers loaded bodies -- piled on the sides of roads -- into the basket of a front-loader tractor, which then deposited them into blood-stained dump trucks, according to CNN correspondents in Haiti.

Sometimes in situations in very developing nations that's the only thing to do.
--said Frank Ciaccio, vice president of commercial services at Kenyon International, about mass graves

"There's little dignity in death in Port-au-Prince these days," Cooper said in his report.

The United States is deploying mortuary teams to identify and bury the dead in a public safety rescue mission, Kathleen Sebelius, secretary of Health and Human Services, said Thursday.

After huge disasters, mortuary teams often face logistical nightmares, working with little resources, thousands of bodies, collapsed infrastructure, language barriers and different cultural and religious views.

After working in the aftermath of landslides, cyclones, hurricanes and tsunamis with mass fatalities, Morgan realized the lack of a guidelines for handling the bodies was a recurring problem.

"What we often see are these pictures of mass graves which are dug three feet deep with hundreds of bodies thrown into this large hole," Morgan said. "That's discouraged in preference to having a more organized situation with a long trench grave and putting bodies in an ordered way, or marked graves so people know where the victims are buried."

One possible solution is to move the bodies to a temporary, organized collection point and to gather as much information to help with future identification, said Fountain, who served as a national officer for Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Team, a national response team designed to provide mortuary assistance in mass fatality incidents.

After the tsunami killed 225,000 people in 2004, various Southeast Asian countries handled the dead differently based on location and available resources.

While none of the countries affected by the tsunami had enough refrigerated storage to handle the corpses, many found alternatives by burying the dead in temporary, shallow graves with the intent to exhume them later. Other bodies were hastily buried within 24 hours in mass graves.

"The parallels are mass fatalities and catastrophic events," Ciaccio said. "We have a significant loss of life; we have people that are unknown; we have a significant number of missing people. The one minor difference in Thailand was that it was isolated to shoreline about a mile in. Here you have total destruction of an infrastructure system."

Speak up on ‘Allah’, Kit Siang urges Borneo ministers

Failure to speak up only serves to move away from 1 Malaysia, charges Lim. — file pic

By Clara Chooi - The Malaysian Insider

IPOH, Jan 16 — DAP strongman Lim Kit Siang has asked all Cabinet ministers from East Malaysia to declare if they agreed with Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz’s bid to strike a compromise by allowing only Christians in Sabah and Sarawak to use “Allah”.

The Ipoh Timur MP today slammed Nazri for his statement, which was front-paged in Kuching daily The Borneo Post yesterday, saying that his words made a total mockery of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s 1 Malaysia concept.

“It seems now we are having more and more segmentation and departmentalisation rather than 1 Malaysia,” Lim noted.

“I was struck by Nazri’s announcement because just a day earlier, our deputy prime minister (Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin) said, in his talk at the Oxford Islamic Centre, that there would be no more Allah contention in the future.

“I wonder what he meant by that?” he added.

He questioned if, by making such a statement, Muhyiddin had meant that there would no longer be any “insensitive statements” made by both the home minister and the prime minister — such as those stating they would not object to any demonstrations over the “Allah” issue — which he said had caused the series of attacks on churches nationwide.

“Or did he mean that in the future, the home minister would never impose a ban on the use of the word ‘Allah’ like what happened in 2007?

Nazri mooted separate rules for East and West Malaysia. — file pic

“But now, looking at Nazri’s statement, it appears that the deputy prime minister probably meant different things,” said Lim.

He said that all ministers, whether from Umno, MCA, MIC or Gerakan should speak up and voice their opinions on the matter.

“Do they agree with Nazri’s contention? Because if they do not speak up, they are only serving to move away from 1 Malaysia,” he said.

Lim also accused the government of being insincere in talking about resolving the issue through an inter-religious conference or a dialogue.

“What Nazri said makes nonsense of the talk of resolving the matter through an interreligious dialogue.

“It appears that the government has already decided that the dialogue is not to find a solution to the controversy but to ensure that the government’s approach is accepted by all,” he said, adding advocating such a dialogue meant no pre-conditions should be set.

“All must be open, all must come without a pre-set mind, which does not appear to be the case, with Nazri’s statement,” he said.

Lim also lambasted Nazri for saying that the present spate of church attacks was proof that the use of the word Allah by non-Muslims would spur acts of violence.

“What he is doing is justifying the act and he is not contributing to a proper solution to the problem,” said Lim.

Nazri’s statement, which was made during an interview with The Borneo Post has received flak from many parties from both sides of the religious divide.

Church ministers were quick to slam his words, saying that it was a ridiculous arrangement and undermined freedom of expression.

The federal government’s highest Islamic body, the Islamic Development Department (Jakim) also maintained today that the “Allah” ban should affect all Christians in the country.

The department’s director-general Datuk Wan Mohamad Sheikh Abdul Aziz said that by allowing Christians in East Malaysia to use the word, it would not solve the present controversy due to the migration of people from Sabah and Sarawak to the peninsular.

DAPSY aims to get more voters, be stronger in party

By Clara Chooi - The Malaysian Insider

IPOH, Jan 16 — The DAP Socialist Youth (DAPSY) today pledged to register more voters and become a stronger force within the party to match its counterparts and more significantly, Umno.

Wing chairman Anthony Loke Siew Fook today admitted during the wing’s special congress that DAPSY had not performed at its optimum level and had plenty of room for improvement.

“We need to work harder as advocates of what we believe in and help the DAP broaden its base of supporters in both the national and state levels,” he said in his opening address.

Loke noted that as youths themselves, DAPSY should use its powers and position to spread DAP’s influence to the wide pool of young voters in the country.

He reminded DAPSY members of the party’s national objective of at least a 10 per cent increase in voters registered, in each constituency won by the DAP in the last general election.

“We have set this KPI (key performance indicator) so that we increase our voter base by at least 10 per cent.

“Meaning, if a constituency has 20,000 voters, we want an increase of at least 2,000 new voters registered in the constituency over this year,” he said.

Loke urged all the party’s voter registrars to take note of this and ensure that the target was met.

“It is achievable. The whole idea here is to increase the number of registered young voters,” he said.

DAPSY, he said, recognised that a large number of youths in the country were hungry for change and were big supporters of the Pakatan Rakyat.

According to Loke, the DAP needed to tap into that pool of youths in order to help secure a bigger win for the Pakatan Rakyat coalition in the coming general election.

“That is why we are encouraging voter registration. The young hunger for change but if we do not increase voter registration, then these youths will be unable to influence change for they have no voting rights,” he said.

Another method to mobilise the support of youths for the party, added Loke, was by using technology.

“We have many young representatives in the party and many of them are technology-savvy. Most of us have Facebook accounts and we use Twitter and blogs.

“This is a great way to reach out to the youths,” he said.

Loke added that the results of today’s special congress would also help clean up the organisation of DAPSY as a whole and strengthen it at the grassroots level.

During the congress today, DAPSY delegates passed amendments to 16 out of the wing’s 18 clauses in its constitution.

One of the amendments was to create a better balance among the delegates that represent the wing’s divisions at the state and national congress

With the amendments, the wing has set a minimum of eight delegates and a maximum of 23 for each division, depending on the number of members that attend the respective division’s annual general meetings.

“We also hope to increase the number of DAPSY divisions in the country. In fact, with the strengthening of DAPSY at the division level, we hope to be more active nationwide — not just in the big towns but also everywhere where there are DAP members,” said Loke, adding that DAPSY presently had 50 divisions in Malaysia.

He noted that since Election 2008, there has been a number of new branches set up in three states — Perak, Penang and Selangor.

“These are the three major states that have recorded a huge influx of new branches,” he said.

Anti-Christian Violence Erupts in Egypt and Malaysia

The notion that Malaysians will somehow wander into a Church by accident and become Christians is, of course, laughably absurd. As in Egypt, Christians make up a small minority of the population of Malaysia: about nine percent.

New American

Although the Christmas day “underwear bomber” Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab has been the focus of a great deal of media attention, and his plot the enabling action for a new round of security measures, attacks on Christian congregations in Egypt and Malaysia have not received similar levels of attention.

In Egypt, where the Coptic Church celebrated Christmas on January 7 (following the old Julian and Coptic calendars), seven people were murdered following midnight Mass. According to press reports, riots then erupted during the funeral processions for six of the seven victims of the massacre. Six of the seven victims were Coptic Christians; the seventh victim was a Muslim.

Coptic Christians make up a mere 10 percent of the population of Egypt, and anti-Christian violence has long been a fact of life for the suffering minority. Attacks on the Coptic community are carried out with the slightest of provocations. As the MSNBC.com report notes,

In 2000, the deadliest Christian-Muslim clashes in years left 23 people dead. All but two of the 23 were Copts. The clashes were touched off by an argument between a Coptic merchant and a Muslim shopper in the southern village of el-Kusheh.

However, the Christmas massacre was different than much of the persecution that Copts regularly suffer: It appeared to be a planned assault with many victims. Again, according to the MSNBC report:

The latest attack, however, was unusual because it appeared to have been planned, rather than the customary spontaneous violence that arises from misunderstandings or disputes between Muslims and Copts....
 Egypt's Interior Ministry said it suspected that Wednesday's attack was in retaliation for the alleged November rape of a Muslim girl by a Christian man in the same town. The man is in custody awaiting trial.

But the account takes an even darker turn when it is revealed that not only was the attack possibly a carefully planned assault, but that the bishop of the Nag Hammadi diocese may have been the intended victim. According to Asianews.it:

Coptic bishop Anba Kirollos was the real target in last Wednesday's drive-by shooting against a Coptic church in Nag Hammadi. Meanwhile, police [have] found one of the car[s] used by gunmen in the attack on the Eve of Orthodox Christmas, but thousands of Christians attending the victims' funeral slammed law enforcement and pelted police cars with rocks.

"I was the one intended to be assassinated by this plot, and when it failed the criminals turned round and started shooting and finishing off the young ones," Bishop Kirollos of the Nag Hammagi Diocese told Middle East Christian Association (MECA) today in an interview.

In the evening of 6 January, at the end of the Christmas vigil, at least three gunmen began spraying bullets from two cars against people filing out of the church.

A security guard and six Christians were killed, mostly young men in their early 20s. A young couple and a 14-years-old boy were also among the dead.

Bishop Kirollos said there had been threats in the days leading up to the Christmas Eve service, a reason he decided to start Mass an hour earlier than normal. "For days, I had expected something to happen on Christmas Eve," he said.

The bishop left the church minutes before the attack. "A driving car swerved near me, so I took the back door," he said. "By the time I shook hands with someone at the gate, I heard the mayhem, lots of machine-gun shots."

According to a Canadian Press account on January 10, three suspects have been taken in to custody:

Three men suspected in the drive-by shooting that left six Christians and one Muslim dead in southern Egypt have denied they were behind the bloody attack on Coptic Christmas Eve, officials said Saturday.

The attack was the worst to target Christians in Egypt in nearly a decade. Gunmen sprayed a group of Coptic Christians leaving a local church after mass on Wednesday night. Six worshippers and a Muslim guard died, and nine people were wounded.

The shooting touched off two days of rioting in which 40 people were arrested, and underscored sectarian tensions in the town of Nag Hamadi, some 40 miles (64 kilometres) north of the famed Luxor ruins.

On Saturday, Christian residents of Bahjora, a village near Nag Hamadi, inspected damage from overnight arson that charred their homes. They blamed Muslims for the attacks.

The three suspects in the Christmas Eve attack surrendered to police on Friday after security forces closed in on their hideout in sugar cane fields outside the town.

Whether or not the men who have been arrested were involved in the massacre, and regardless of whether they constitute the entirety of those who allegedly plotted and executed the attack, the Christmas massacre cannot be viewed in isolation from a systematic pattern of anti-Christian violence that the Egyptian government is either unwilling or unable to stop.

At the same time, Christians in Malaysia are also suffering open persecution following a court decision over a question of translation. According to January 8 Associated Press story:

Religious tensions in Muslim-majority Malaysia turned violent Friday with firebomb attacks on three churches following a court decision that allows Christians to translate God as Allah.

"Allah is only for us," said a poster waved at one of at least two protests outside mosques in Kuala Lumpur on Friday, the Muslim holy day.

Many Muslims are angry about a Dec. 31 High Court decision overturning a government ban on Roman Catholics' using "Allah" for God in the Malay-language edition of their main newspaper, the Herald.

The ruling also applies to the ban's broader applications, such as Malay-language Bibles, 10,000 copies of which were recently seized by authorities because they translated God as Allah.

"We will not allow the word Allah to be inscribed in your churches," a speaker shouted over a loudspeaker at the Kampung Bahru mosque.

The Herald says its Malay edition is read mainly by Christian indigenous tribes in the remote states of Sabah and Sarawak.

But the government contends that making Allah synonymous with God may confuse Muslims and ultimately mislead to them into converting to Christianity, a punishable offense in Malaysia despite a constitution that guarantees freedom of religion.

It suggests using "Tuhan," but Christians say Tuhan is more like "Lord," and can't replace "Allah."

The notion that Malaysians will somehow wander into a Church by accident and become Christians is, of course, laughably absurd. As in Egypt, Christians make up a small minority of the population of Malaysia: about nine percent. Unlike in countries where substantially larger Christian communities seem unwilling to assert their legal rights, Christians in Egypt and Malaysia are not prepared to just acquiesce to such discrimination and persecution, and they are receiving support from other Christians living under Muslim rule. Thus, according to the AP article:

Bassilius Nassour, a Greek Orthodox bishop in Damascus, called the Malaysian government's position "shameful."

"It shows Malaysia to be a backward, pagan state because God teaches freedom for everyone, and the word 'Allah' is for everyone," he said.

The extent to which Christian leaders in the nations formerly known as “Christendom” will also speak out to denounce such anti-Christian violence remains to be seen.

Home Minister Hishammuddin should explain why he allowed police officers like the Selangor CPO Khalid to play politics with an eye to replace Musa Has

By Lim Kit Siang

Home Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein should explain why he allowed police officers like the Selangor Police Chief Deputy Comm Khalid Abu Bakar to play politics with an eye to replace Tan Sri Musa Hassan as the next Inspector-General of Police instead of focusing on the core police function of conquering crime in Selangor.

The record and conduct of Khalid as a professional police officer suffered a grave dent when he was more interested in politicking, to the extent of publicly threatening to arrest Penang Chief Minister and DAP Secretary-General Lim Guan Eng on completely baseless grounds, instead of ensuring that the Selangor state is safe from criminals.

In Selangor, guarded and gated communities are mushrooming all over the state, the most potent indicator of the failure of the police to perform its core function to ensure that the people are safe and secure in the streets, public places and the privacy of their homes.

One important measure whether the police are making progress in turning the tide of endemic crime is whether the people are dismantling or erecting guarded/gated communities, where the people have to impose on themselves a new levy of “income tax” to protect themselves from crime which should have been the basic duty of the state through the police force.

Nobody will buy Khalid’s denial in today’s press that he had threatened to arrest Guan Eng for allegedly refusing to give his statement to the police over investigations that Guan Eng had made seditious remarks about the death of Teoh Beng Hock at the Pakatan Rakyat convention on Dec. 19.

Khalid cannot deny the undeniable as his threat was reported by the media.

This is the Star report “We’ll not hesitate to arrest you, cops warn Guan Eng” on Thursday, 14th January 2010:

PETALING JAYA: The Selangor police chief has warned Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng that police will not hesitate to arrest him if he fails to give his statement on alleged sedition.

Deputy Comm Datuk Khalid Abu Bakar said a police team, including the investigating officer from Shah Alam, was sent to Penang on Saturday to record his statement but he had refused to co-operate.

Lim is being investigated for allegedly uttering seditious remarks during a Pakatan Rakyat convention in Shah Alam on Dec 19 last year.

He was alleged to have said that political aide Teoh Beng Hock’s death was murder.

“He demanded for the police report to be given to him first and ultimately no statement was recorded.

“Understanding his position and busy schedule as a chief minister, we made it more convenient for him to have his statement recorded in Penang but he continues to complicate the matter.

“I, too, have to carry out my duty as there is a police report lodged against him, forcing me to issue a notice under Section 111 of the Criminal Procedure Code to compel him to issue a statement,” said DCP Khalid.

The notice was issued yesterday. He did not specify the deadline for the notice.

That Khalid had issued such a threat is undeniable, which is most deplorable when it was completely baseless as Guan Eng had co-operated with the police team and even signed the statement concerned, although the police had failed to give a copy of the police report lodged against him.

What Khalid had done is most dishonest and dishonourable. The least he should do is to publicly apologise to Guan Eng for his unprofessional misconduct.

(Media Conference Statement at Wisma DAP Perak in Ipoh on Saturday, 16th January 2010 at 11.30 am)