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Saturday, 25 January 2014

Najib’s headache: Allah, kangkung or Dr M?

Najib is being attacked only because he is at his most vulnerable.
COMMENT

For Kedah Menteri Besar Mukhriz Mahathir to express an opinion about Najib Tun Razak and to act concerned for the hardship of the rakyat is quite unprecedented.

Perhaps Mukhriz should be given his own comedy show with his father former PM Mahathir Mohamad playing the part of the ventriloquist, and Mukhriz acting the part of the ventriloquist’s dummy, sitting on Mahathir’s lap. The “dialogue” between the two would be most entertaining.

During an interview with last Sunday’s edition of Berita Harian, Mukhriz warned that BN would be defeated in GE14 if it continued to be led by Najib. He blamed the rising cost of living on Najib’s unpopular decisions.

Mukhriz told Berita Harian, “Defeat is a real possibility if Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak continues with his present policy of correct but unpopular decisions, especially issues concerning the rising cost of living….If Putrajaya continues to ignore the rakyat’s grouses and complaints, Barisan Nasional will find the 14th general election a tough nut to crack.”

A few days later, before Najib had time to recover from being blamed for the state of the economy, Mukhriz launched another attack.

The pressure piled-on with Mukhriz saying without a hint of irony that corruption and wastage in government spending should be addressed.

He claimed that Najib had failed to strike a balance between taking popular measures and “doing the right thing”. He feared that Najib’s short-term approach would have long-term consequences.

Only the naïve would think that Mukhriz was acting off his own bat. It is obvious that when his own future was jeopardised, Mukhriz’s stand shifted.

For months, if not years, Mukhriz neglected the suffering of Malaysians but almost overnight Mukhriz demanded that steps be taken for urgent action and remedial measures to be engaged to sort out the economy.

Attacking Najib was an indirect way of saying that he was a better leader than Najib.

Does Mukhriz live in a cocoon? Was he unaware that the day before his Berita Harian interview pro-Umno-Baru champions had threatened to unleash violence onto the streets of Malaysia in a re-enactment of May 13?

Mukhriz did not question Najib for failing to censure the people who threatened the peace. He also failed to condemn the IGP who failed to arrest the people inciting violence and spreading fear.

Allegations have recently surfaced that back in 1969 Najib’s father Abdul Razak Hussein acted in collusion with Mahathir to remove Tunku Abdul Rahman from power. Ironically, Najib is today facing that grim reality of a repetition of this coup.

Mahathir’s SOP

It was not chance which led Mukhriz to forget his father’s role in fomenting dissent.

About seven weeks ago Mahathir turned on the Herald’s editor Father Lawrence Andrew for wanting to “hurt” Muslims. His father’s instigation has been used by extremists to whip up a frenzy of hate against Christians.

Mahathir’s standard operating procedure (SOP) is simple. First, he creates divisions in society with race and religion.

Then, he distracts them from important issues – like the GST and price hikes, and increasing energy bills.

Having paralysed people with fear Mahathir pretends to offer solutions. His son has been instructed to play the moderate role in what is seen as a highly volatile situation. Mukhriz’s concern about the rakyat is neither genuine nor sincere.

The whole carry-on by Mukhriz is a reflection of his father’s true character. Najib is being attacked only because he is at his most vulnerable. Najib’s kangkung faux pas gave Mukhriz the opening to make his “kill”.

Most people will know that Mukhriz is not capable of such protracted thinking. What goes around, comes around. The fate that awaits Najib is the one similar to the ignominious departure of his predecessor Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.

Like a pack of hyenas circling their injured prey and waiting to pounce are Mahathir and his men.

Mukhriz is very vocal against Najib for one simple reason. This is payback time for Najib who insulted Mahathir during the last Umno-Baru internal election.

The anger of the poor Malays and the Muslim population who have genuine concerns about feeding their families or paying for medical help when they are sick have struck fear into Mahathir.

The distractions created by the Allah issue and Najib’s kangkung faux pas will blow over and the rakyat will soon be forced to focus once again on the economy and rising cost of living.

When the GST kicks in next year things will get much worse. Mahathir knows this and has instructed his son to act now.

Any delay may lead to public dissatisfaction and unrest. Mahathir’s living and recurring nightmare is the possibility that Pakatan Rakyat will finally occupy Putrajaya.

Mukhiz’s critique of Najib has little to do with your suffering, the future of the country or Najib’s failure to combat corruption.

This is Mukhriz making sure his father’s unfinished business is continued. Mahathir’s legacy has to flourish at any cost.

Najib, Umno Baru and Mukhriz are all part of the problem but the greater share of the problem lies with you!

If you had a hand in returning Umno Baru to power, especially if you were in the 47% portion of the rakyat who voted for Umno Baru; your reward has been that you will suffer the price hikes, alongside the people who voted for Pakatan.

Mariam Mokhtar is a FMT columnist.

‘Almost there!’: The end of democratic Constitutionalism in Malaysia?


ketuan melayuClive Kessler, The University of New South Wales, Sydney

Almost there!

Or so some may say.

One does well to be clear that, although he now serves as the current Agong, the recent royal declaration that “the name of Allah” is “exclusive” to Muslims was made by Sultan Abdul Halim Mu’adzam Shah in his capacity as the Sultan of Kedah, at his state-level royal birthday ceremonials.

Interestingly, it was Utusan Malaysia —— which broke this news and which can seldom be accused of underplaying things in this area of “official, national Malay interest” —— that chose to present it as an authoritative pronouncement by him as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, Tuanku Abdul Halim Mu’adzam Shah.

A royal declaration

One needs to remember that the Sultan of Kedah is just one of nine “traditional” Malay state rulers.

But he is no ordinary one, no “also-ran” royal. He is the first among equals and pre-eminent.

He is the most senior of the state rulers both in years and also in length of royal service in occupancy of the throne. He is, so far uniquely in modern Malaysian history, serving a second term as Agong, the first having come almost half a century ago in the early 1970s.

So his declaration was just one ruler’s affirmation. But a most significant one.

Just one ruler’s view, perhaps. But, not surprisingly, with his strategic acumen and sharp sense of timing, the Perkasa head Ibrahim Ali soon saw the opportunity, seized the moment, and stepped into the inviting gap.

It was now time, he immediately insisted, that all state rulers follow suit with the issuing of similar prohibitive, exclusionary declarations.

Once that begins to happen, once the royal snowball begins to roll, it is not hard to envisage the time, and soon, when, beyond staking their own separate claims, the royal heads of the Malay states will come together in the Council of Rulers to reach a consolidated common stance to the same effect, to be proclaimed by the Agong speaking as the Constitutional monarch —— as the personification of the Federal Constitution and of the principles of Malaysian Constitutionalism.

And with that, whatever its historical merits or accuracy, the royally affirmed position will become authoritatively implanted in national life —— in effect unappealable, undisturbable and irreversible.

And that will be that. It will stand, whatever its merits, because a combination of powerful forces will be determined that it must. That, once formally affirmed, it can never be put aside.

When that happens, the end of the journey will have been reached —— a journey that has been seriously and purposefully under way since the morrow of the 2008 national elections, GE12.

Then, when that happens, people, some people, will be happily able to say “Here at last! Destination reached.”

A journey begun

It is a journey that began in a time of uncertainty, even apprehension —— a largely unwarranted apprehension —— and an “existential” Malay political fearfulness.

The results of the 2008 election came as a shock to some. Certainly to Umno, and also to many whose political fates were tied to it.

Umno was not only dealt a severe setback, it had not taken simply a body blow. More, its political nerve “was shot”, its confidence in its own ability to rule, and maintain the terms of its own domination, was badly shaken.

As it faltered, others boldly stepped forward: most notably, the core of that network of pro-Malay pressure groups —— groups that seek to exercise a hard-line, adamant Malay “veto power” over national politics —— that are centred upon Perkasa.

The component organizations of this ramifying network —— some with apparently large memberships, but many with more “chiefs” than “Indians”, all shielding their meagre numbers behind grandiose titles and ornate display letterheads —— like to describe and portray themselves, misleadingly, not as outright and explicit political organizations but, more reassuringly, simply as NGOs. (NGOs are supposed to be “warm, fuzzy”, and unthreatening —— so who can decently be against them and what they wish to do? It’s a clever and disarming ploy, but, like all ploys, misleading.)

As this network of organizations began to take shape and be “bedded down”, something else also happened.

A parallel exercise in political buttressing and consolidation also began to take place, and be purposefully pursued, at the doctrinal or ideological level.

Attentive observers could see what was beginning to happen, and were disquieted.

A position was now beginning to be developed, and at that stage tacitly suggested more than openly promoted, that would only become fully explicit several years later, with the approach of the next national elections, GE13, in 2013.

Before then the radical new doctrine was promoted and projected almost subliminally. It was only those attentive observers who could see the different parts; who could “connect the dots”; and who could therefore discern, when still offered only in hazy outline at first, the overall shape of the new “ruling doctrine” that was being developed and brought together.

It was a doctrine that would only be made fully explicit, and promoted forthrightly, in the post-GE13 period when, unlike in 2008, Umno emerged once more as the dominant force in national politics, able to dictate terms (or so it seemed) to all other political parties, both on its own side of the political fence and also in the opposition.

The new doctrine

The new political doctrine that was assembled at that moment of what was seen by some as one of “Malay political crisis” —— where the entire “Malay stake in the nation” was suddenly seen to be, or so it was suggested, in jeopardy —— was based upon a very simple and economical exercise in “Constitutional expansionism”.

Expansionism, or “claim inflation” and interpretive “over-reach”, on two points, two key articles of the Federal Constitution.

First, it came to be suggested that Article 3, affirming the status of Islam as the “official religion”, meaning the symbolic and emblematic religion of the state, somehow entailed —— and had always been intended to imply —— that Islam was Constitutionally entitled and even destined to exercise a kind of “religious over-lordship” in Malaysian public, including religious, life, and for all of its citizens, non-Muslim and Muslim alike.

No such thing. That idea was repudiated not only by the Umno’s Alliance Party counterparts in the pre-Independence negotiations, the MCA and MIC, but forthrightly by Umno itself, through Tun Razak’s explicit affirmation of the “secular” (his word!) nature of the new nation-to-be. And, no less strenuously, it was rejected by the “traditional Malay rulers”, who were determined to keep any mention of Islam entirely out of the Constitution, or failing that to an absolute minimum, as a way of protecting their own standing, and basis of social power, as the heads of Islam in their various states.

Yet, even further, for some, notably those of the Syarie Lawyers Association, Article 3 now also means, or is taken to mean, that Islamic law is entitled and even destined to be —— and had always been prospectively and legitimately —— the basis of the national legal system, holding ascendancy over the so-called “Common Law” tradition.

To help advance this claim, legal practitioners and commentators of that “shari’ah-minded” inclination invoke the famous case of Rahmah v. Laton of 1927, in which the relevant judge held that Islamic law was, or was part of, “the law of the land”, meaning an integral part of the nation’s complex and evolving common law tradition.

But they do so (as I have pointed out elsewhere) by adhering to and promoting a perverse reading of Justice Wilson’s judgment and of what it is intended to convey. They read Wilson’s words as a charter for Islamic legal expansionism, of “shari’ah ascendancy” within the nation’s legal traditions, institutions and life. For making the entire Malaysian legal system both “shari’ah compliant” and shari’ah based.

They cling to and rely upon an unsustainable reading of what that judgment means; one that, if they are sound readers and competent construers of legal decisions, they must know is simply wrong. But they have persisted with it all the same. Presumably because, whether their view is in itself right or wrong, it can be used as an effective weapon —— especially against people who do not see or understand what they are doing and who are hence unable to “call their number”, call them to account.

And second, it was similarly suggested in that moment of great Malay political anxiety and fearfulness, and with similarly extravagant expansionist intent, that Article 153, which made —— and had only ever been intended to make —— some quite specific and circumscribed provisions concerning the “special position of the Malays” in state employment and the like, carried within it —— and had always done, and, so some now claimed, had always been recognised as doing —— the seeds and the deeply embedded rationale or justification of the ambitious, and radically “revisionist”, doctrine of “Ketuanan Melayu”: of overall Malay political ascendancy in perpetuity over all the state’s other citizens, all other members of the nation.

Expansionism in action: strategic use of the new doctrine

These two, vastly “inflationary” new readings (of Articles 3 and 153) had not only to be devised. They had also to be subtly and quietly promoted, until they became —— if not yet the standard or general “default” positions for understanding these two articles —— then at least something which people had gradually become habituated to hearing. Habituated, that is to say —— even without accepting them as true —— at least to hearing them without shock, surprise or dismay. These improbable but disquieting new views had to be in some measure “normalized”, made unremarkable.

Once that had been achieved, the new weapon was ready for use. The radical new doctrine could be deployed with strategic purpose.

And it was.

Its champions soon began to suggest —— at first merely by implication and later explicitly, in a defiant challenge to any who might think otherwise —— that whoever refused to accept that Article 3 directly, and by formative intention, provided for Islamic religious ascendancy, even over-lordship, and shari’ah legal centrality and primacy was, for that reason, not just against “the new revisionist doctrine” and its proponents but against and in defiance of the Constitution itself. Whoever disagrees, it was implied and suggested, is in rebellion against the nation’s very foundations.

And they also similarly began to suggest that anybody who did not accept that Article 153 provides, and had always been intended to provide, the deeply and authentically embedded foundations for Ketuanan Melayu was similarly against the Constitution.

That is to say: the champions of the new revisionist doctrine now claimed, and were prepared to assert explicitly and defiantly, that to be against Islamic religious domination, a sharia’h-centred state and Ketuanan Melayu was not simply to misunderstand Articles 3 and 153 of the Constitution. It was to reject, to be at odds and even at war, with the Constitution itself.

More, since the Malay rulers had an acknowledged Constitutional role as the heads of the Islamic religion in their states and to protect Islam —— and since, at any time, one of their number has a similar role and obligation as Agong at the national level, as well as to safeguard Malay interests and the Malay “stake” in the country generally —— to oppose the new doctrine, with its extravagantly expansionist constructions of Article 3 and 153, was to be against not just the Constitution as a whole but, most reprehensibly, against the Malay rulers with their important Constitutional responsibilities, and against the position of the Malay rulers themselves, or the “royal institution” as some call it.

It was to be radically and grievously at odds with the Constitution and its foundations. It was to be “at war” against the Malay rulers and (as some now claimed, in a bizarre further elaboration of the new doctrine of “modern Malay monarchy”) against the supposedly uninterrupted “sovereignty” which the Malay rulers had exercised, unbroken throughout the colonial period, over national society from the time of the Malacca sultanate to the present.

Daulat and kedaulatan: An aside

An aside, but a crucially important one. The argument is too complex to put in detail here. But, in short, “daulat”, or royal sanctity —— as was enjoyed under the rubric of sakti by the pre-Islamic Hindu-Buddhist “god-kings” or dewa raja of Southeast Asia, and later by their Islamic successors —— is one thing, “sovereignty” in the modern technical, jurisprudential sense is another.

No end of confusion has arisen from the combination of two facts, or linguistic “elisions.”

First, the rendering of the sakti of the dewa raja, when the Malay rulers became Muslims and their states Islamic polities, with the derivatively Arabic term daulat.

And second, and perhaps even more fatefully and confusingly, the more recent choice of rendering the modern notion of “sovereignty” in Malay as —— or the practice of “glossing” it with —— the abstract noun kedaulatan, formed as a secondary derivative construction upon the term daulat.

Just because the Malay rulers of the past had daulat (or an aura of cultural authority grounded in supernatural, cosmic forces), and though they continued to enjoy a measure of mystical and social and political “prestige” under British colonial rule, does not mean that they continued to exercise effective “sovereignty” in the modern sense.

Clearly they did not.

The sovereign power lay with the state, with the colonial regime and state structure, and with those in decisive control of it.

The daulat of the Malay rulers may have survived the colonial interlude. But not their kedaulatan, their overall effective political sovereignty —— or whatever formal, technical sovereignty that they had previously managed to exercise.

To confuse the two is to create uncertainty and invite chaos. But, for some, doing so is not just a “fudge” but a politically useful, a very serviceable, fudge.

The new ‘expansionism’ and ‘The Social Contract’

An important part of the story how this new Constitutional revisionism was advanced, “bedded down” and “normalized” has to do with the powerfully promoted notion of “the Malaysian Social Contract.”

Much has been said on this subject, and needs no repeating here.

Only two points need be made.

First, while the idea of “the social contract” here in Malaysia goes back to the landmark address given in Singapore by Abdullah Ahmad in 1986, it took a while to mature and take hold.

It was only in the Badawi years and after, as efforts to promote the idea of Ketuanan Melayu became more assertive (and also problematic, notably with the florid symbolic unsheathing and brandishing of the Malay keris at Umno Youth Assemblies), that the idea of the “social contract” and debate over it became central in Malaysian political life.

The matter became central because of the ideas of Ketuanan Melayu and the “social contract” were twins, born together in that same Singapore address by Abdullah Ahmad. They go and will always be yoked together because the idea of the “social contract” is an artful device for suggesting that the principle or doctrine of Ketuanan Melayu is, and has always been, integral to the Malaysian state and Malaysian public life; that it was a part, even a key part, of the pre-Independence “Merdeka negotiations and agreements” that became embedded in the Federal Constitution.

And, taking grip slowly after its original enunciation in 1986, it was really only in the immediate wake of GE12 in 2008 that a serious reconsideration of the idea of Ketuanan Melayu, and debate about it, began to take shape —— and was then abruptly terminated, under official government pressure following a Bar Council forum, when a number of the new, outspokenly pro-Malay pressure groups objected to the discussion and in effect forced the hand of the Umno-led government to close down any further public consideration.

It is from that time, and not before, that warnings about discussing the “social contract” and authoritative advice about its undisputable and “untouchable” nature, from the government and even the Council of Rulers, became a major feature of Malaysian public life.

The second point is this. Nobody sits down and at the time decides or even suggests, “Let us agree to create and then live by a binding national social contract.”

The view, or judgement, that one has been solemnly agreed to and formed is something that is always decided in retrospect. Anybody with the most elementary familiarity with the work of Hobbes and Locke, which established “social contract theory” in modern political philosophy (not that many people in Malaysia understand what all this is about, even though they are happy to pontificate endlessly on questions of “the social contract”), knows this.

We need to be clear. People everywhere have a need to consider the nature of the political community that they live in and its foundations. As they do, people sit down and subsequently wonder whether, or argue that, such a social contract has been, or must have been, agreed to; and they eventually conclude that —— even if none was agreed, or though there is no way now of knowing for certain that one ever was —— it may still be useful to look at things as if such a social contract had been negotiated. It is a retrospective process. It is how, in the present, the continuing existence of “political society” is explained.

(A small aside: The origins of most modern national political communities and the brokering of their foundational “social contracts”, whether historical or merely notional or imputed, lie shrouded in the mists of remote antiquity. But not those of Malaysia. They took place in a finite recent period between 1955 and 1957, with some supplementary work between 1961 and 1963, and are now made accessible in a substantial archive of historical documents and memoirs and through the scholarly monographs that analyse them. Yet strangely, when the moment came to develop a public notion of “the Malaysian social contract”, those who addressed the task chose to do so not on the basis of those documents and analyses —— or of the historical memory of still living actors and participants in the process —— but altogether independent of them, indifferent to and in defiant disregard of what they might reveal.)

What is clear in the Malaysian case is that there was no agreement to anything like Ketuanan Melayu as any part of the “Merdeka negotiations and agreements” that were to become embodied in the Federal Constitution.

On the contrary.

Those discussions and agreements were about drawing up a Constitution for a nation that was in-the-making and yet to come fully into being. The Federal Constitution was to be the basis for such a nation. It was to be framed as the primary and explicit means, the enabling device, whereby it might come into being; to support its emergence and consolidation, social and political.

And that nation-in-the-making, it was clearly resolved, was to be one grounded neither in Ketuanan Melayu, pure and simple ethnic ascendancy or “ethnocracy”, nor in any Islamically “sacralized” version of the same thing, an Islamic-Malay polity.

The Federal Constitution was, instead, to be the foundation expressly of and for a modern, progressive, democratic, ethnically complex, religiously plural, secular society and nation —— one in which all components might have the right to adhere to and retain their ancestral ways in their own separate lives and social “life-space” yet a society, a national society, that was to be based upon the principles and processes of inter-communal and inter-religious conciliation and rapprochement: upon an acceptance yet management of differences in public life; upon their combination and convergence, where possible, and, where not, their moderation, overcoming and transcendence, not their accentuation, in the political sphere.

Yet Abdullah Ahmad and those who take his lead were radical revisionists, not upholders and expounders of the original “Merdeka Agreements” or national “contract”.

Their wish is to set aside all that history, the real history of the nation and its origins, and instead, by a conscious act of modern revisionist political “myth-making”, to retrofit the idea of Ketuanan Melayu —— via the notion of the “social contract” (or their own strangely fabricated notion of it) —— into the very processes and discussions and history through which the Constitution, as the foundation of Malaysian national life, was produced.

These basic facts are clear, and should be well-known to and understood by any serious student or scholar of the Malaysian Constitution and its historical foundations.

It is a great pity that they are not much spoken of publicly these days, admitted, or taught to students in schools and universities. But that is another matter .. ..

And what follows from that

From those clear, basic facts something very important follows.

It is this.

You can argue that the Federal Constitution, as the product of the pre-Merdeka discussions and negotiations, is in effect a “national social contract.”

But if you do so, you cannot have Ketuanan Melayu. That idea was no part of the deal, of that foundational Constitutional charter of national life.

It is not part of those ideas, that process, that history.

Or, on the other hand, you can say that you want to have and uphold Ketuanan Melayu.

If people want to do so, that is their choice.

But it is one that has its price, one that comes with a cost.

You can make that choice, affirm that position, but you cannot argue for it on the basis, and with the authority, of the Federal Constitution and those who were its authors.

If you want to have Ketuanan Melayu, you must say —— and say openly and honestly —— that you are against the Federal Constitution, that you consider it a mistake, and that you wish to dismantle and replace it, “root and “branch”, with something else.

The “social contract” or Ketuanan Melayu: you can have one or the other. But not both.

Yet Abdullah Ahmad wants to have his cake and eat it too. More, he has persuaded many Malaysians, including most of those who are in a position to “call the shots” and set the terms of debate nationally on this question, that, with him, they can.

Even so, one or the other but not both: that is the only conclusion that is historically sustainable and reasonably supportable.

Yet recognition of the necessity of that choice goes against what has now become or is rapidly becoming the current orthodoxy, the “default position”.

It is directly contrary to the view that was identified and typified above as the radical revisionist view.

That new view asserts, or tries to, that Article 3 provides for Islamic religious supremacy and over-lordship and for the continuing and irresistible Islamization of the legal system; that Article 153 provides for, and carries deeply embedded within its words from the outset in 1957, the principle of Ketuanan Melayu, or categorical Malay political ascendancy and domination in perpetuity; and that to even question this radical view of the Constitution is to reject the Constitution and to be antagonistically at odds with, even in a state of insurrection or derhaka against, the “traditional” Malay rulers, the nation’s “Malay monarchical principle”, its central “royal institution.”

Well, if that new doctrine, which many these days claim to be the only acceptable view of the Constitution, is so historically dubious, flawed, counter-factual and unwarranted —— such a travesty of the real history of “the Merdeka process” —— how, we must ask, did it come about? How did it gain credibility, acceptability and even its current dominance?

How did it take hold?

A ‘purloined’ Constitutionalism

One can conclude only one thing.

That the Federal Constitution and the key ideas of Malaysian democratic constitutionalism have been “hijacked.”

That there has been, and it has suffered from, what we may call a process of Constitutional “grand larceny”, of illicit appropriation for improper purposes. A process whereby Malaysian citizens, at the mass or “wholesale” level, have been deprived of the Constitutional basis of their “personhood”, or core identity, as citizens of a modern democratic nation.

That is to say, something quite antithetical to the historic understanding of the Federal Constitution and contrary to the agreements that were reached between those who made the Federal Constitution possible, as a living and growing “national social contract”, has been substituted for it —— and is now being promoted and falsely justified in the name of a “purloined” constitutionalism.

Malaysia’s original, founding Constitution is now being dismantled, and its core democratic principles set aside, not by any coalition of avowed, explicit critics but by those who, so to speak, have seized the “title deeds” to the Federal Constitution and who now like to parade in the purloined mantle of its august and majestic authority.

This has been the work and achievement, as I and most of us can only view it from the sidelines —— I do not know what role the Malay rulers and their advisers may have played in this, and I have no interest in groundless, unscholarly speculation —— of those whom we may term the new Malay “political royalists”: the royalist theoreticians and ideologues, the rhetorically agile doctrinal innovators and quasi-jurisprudential proponents, of a post-modern yet still traditionalistic “Malay state”, supported in their cause by the local champions, in local political and cultural terms, of an Islamo-Malay political system.

Of course, it is an achievement of which they are presumably proud and one which they are determined to defend —— since they sincerely believe both that they are right and also in the ultimate justice of the national cause, and especially their own version of it.

But it is an achievement that has done, and threatens to go on doing, grave damage to the foundations and fabric of the Malaysian nation as we have known it for over half a century.

More, it is one whose continuing and unrelenting pursuit threatens to make this nation’s future uncertain, bleak, and painful.

Or, one could alternatively say —— using the three main words that Hobbes bequeathed to us to describe what we, and any nation, are left with if we or they are so foolish as to throw away the basis of the social contract that we really do have —— “nasty, brutish and short.”

That is not a pretty prospect as Malaysia heads, beyond GE14, to its chosen encounter with destiny, as a nation aspiring to functional and successful modernity, in 2020.

* Clive Kessler is Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at The University of New South Wales, Sydney.

Assembly law gives ‘life’ to rally rights, court told


i967.photobucket.com_albums_ae159_Malaysia-Today_Mug shots_DrMahathir_zps0f1f1e94V. Anbalagan, TMI

Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad hari ini menegaskan kalimah Allah hanya eksklusif kepada umat Islam dan percubaan pihak tertentu untuk memperkenalkan penggunaannya di semenanjung dalam Bible berbahasa Melayu adalah bagi memuaskan agenda tersendiri.

Bekas perdana menteri itu berkata sehari selepas Ketua Pemuda Umno Khairy Jamaluddin mengatakan semalam Kabinet kekal dengan penyelesaian 10 perkara, perkataan Arab tersebut tidak pernah digunakan oleh penganut Kristian sebelum kedatangan Islam 1,400 tahun dahulu.

“Ia tidak pernah digunakan dalam Bible, tidak kira dalam bahasa apa sekali pun,” katanya pada sidang media selepas menyampaikan ucapan di Pusat Islam, Kuala Lumpur hari ini.

Dr Mahathir berkata, kalimah Allah juga digunakan oleh sesetengah pihak untuk mengkristiankan umat Islam.

“Saya berpandangan kalimah Allah adalah hak orang Islam, tidak bukan Islam,” katanya.

Beliau berkata, semasa menjadi perdana menteri dahulu, beliau menyelesaikan kes tersebut tanpa sebarang konflik.

“Dulu kita dapat selesaikan, tiada masalah. Jadi mengapa sekarang?” katanya.

Dr Mahathir berkata, pihak berkuasa mesti memastikan Bible dalam bahasa Melayu hanya terhadap digunakan di Sabah dan Sarawak supaya tidak terlepas kepada umat Islam di Malaysia.

Assembly law gives ‘life’ to rally rights, court told

Malay Mail 
by IDA LIM

PUTRAJAYA, Jan 23 — Putrajaya’s controversial assembly law does not violate an individual’s constitutional right to rally but helps facilitate it instead, a government lawyer told the Court of Appeal today.

DPP Wan Shaharuddin Wan Ladin defended Section 9 of the Peaceful Assembly Act (PAA) 2012 — which stipulates a 10-day notice as requirement to hold a gathering — saying the court must refer to Parliament’s intention when it passed the law.

“Actually Section 9 memberi nafas (gives life) to Article 10 (of the Federal Constitution), facilitating peaceful assemblies that are carried out,” he told a three-man panel here.

The lawyer also showed the court an extract of the Hansard, which records Parliament proceedings.

PKR state lawmaker Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad is seeking a declaration that the two clauses under the Peaceful Assembly Act (PAA) — sections 9(1) and 9(5) — are unconstitutional.

Referring to the Hansard, Wan Shaharuddin also said the 10-day notice by rally organisers would enable the police to ensure “public order” and “public tranquillity”.

Under the PAA’s Section 9, the police would have time to collect feedback from the public on their views, which Wan Shaharuddin said was fairer than the police’s previous practice of consulting its Special Branch division before deciding on issuing permits for rallies.

Previously, rally organisers had to obtain police permits as required under Section 27 of the Police Act 1967, but now they are only required to inform the police 10 days ahead of the gathering and comply with any conditions imposed by the police.

When commenting on whether the 10-day notice requirement was a “reasonable” and “proportionate” restriction, the lawyer argued that the assembly rights of Nik Nazmi in this case has to be balanced against the rights of “the majority”.

One of the judges, Datuk Hamid Sultan Abu Backer, interjected and said that the issue at hand was not the “fundamental value” of citizens being allowed to assemble.

Hamid also pointed out the Federal Constitution’s status as the country’s supreme law, saying “Constitution comes before the Hansard”.

Earlier, when arguing that the clauses were unconstitutional, Nik Nazmi’s lawyer N. Surendran acknowledged that Article 10 states that “restrictions” may be placed on assembly rights in the interest of public order and security.

But Surendran argued that the PAA’s Section 9 blocked spontaneous assemblies and was “unreasonable”, saying: “The effect of it is no longer restriction but total prohibition.”

Claiming that Section 9 “impaired” the constitutional right to freely assemble, Surendran also complained that it “criminalised” peaceful gatherings even though Article 10 did not specify that criminal punishment can be meted out to impose restrictions.>

The three-man panel headed by Datuk Mohamad Arif Md Yusof said that both sides must hand in their additional written submissions by February 10, while their decision will be delivered on February 14.

After failing last November to get the Shah Alam High Court to quash a charge against him based on these PAA clauses, Nik Nazmi’s trial at the Petaling Jaya Sessions Court will start on February 17.

Nik Nazmi had also failed to get the Shah Alam High Court to declare the PAA’s sections 9(1) and 9(5) as unconstitutional on the grounds that the 10-day notice requirement would prohibit the holding of spontaneous assemblies when the need arises.

In her judgment last year, High Court judge Noor Azian Shaari said the two clauses of the PAA, which were the basis for Nik Nazmi’s charge, were “not unreasonable” and did not go against the Federal Constitution’s Article 10 as they were well within the ambit of upholding national security.

On May 17 last year, Nik Nazmi, who was then-PKR communications director, was charged in the Petaling Jaya Sessions Court for allegedly failing to give the police sufficient notice before organising the Black 505 rally at the Kelana Jaya stadium on May 8.

The rally was held to protest the allegedly widespread electoral fraud during the 13th General Election on May 5 last year, where the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition retained power, albeit with a diminished parliamentary majority and less than half the popular vote.

Nik Nazmi, who is also a deputy Speaker of the Selangor state assembly, could be fined up to RM10,000 if convicted, and faces the possibility of being disqualified from public office.

Under the Federal Constitution, an elected representative is disqualified from office if fined more than RM2,000 or jailed for a term exceeding one year.

BR1M 3.0 Payment In Mid-February

KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 24 (Bernama) -- The 1Malaysia People's Aid (BR1M) 3.0 will be distributed to 7.9 million eligible Malaysians in the middle of February.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak said the distribution of BR1M 3.0 would lighten the burden of the people who are facing rising prices of goods at the moment.

"The Umno Supreme Council (MT) was told that BR1M 3.0 payment would be done in two weeks time, that is in mid-February, to relieve the people of the problem of price hikes," he said after chairing the MT meeting here today.

When tabling the 2014 Budget last year, Najib, who is also Finance Minister, said the government had allocated RM4.6 billion for BR1M 3.0.

This year, the aid will be raised from RM500 to RM650 for each household with monthly income of RM3,000 and below, while unmarried individuals aged 21 years and above with monthly income of not more than RM2,000 would have their assistance raised from RM250 to RM300.

For the first time, BR1M 3.0 will be extended to households with monthly income of between RM3,000 to RM4,000 with aid amounting to RM450.

Najib said it could not be denied that the people were hit by the rising prices of goods and that the government was committed to combat the matter through various programmes and measures which were being taken.

He said Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin would be chairing a meeting of the Special Committee on Rising Cost of Living which was awaiting the results of a special laboratory study.

"Besides that, we are also seeing problems in the supply chain whereby wholesalers are raising prices to retailers unreasonably.

"We also took note of the monsoon season which caused the prices of goods to go up and we will take measures to contain the matter," he said.

Najib said the Umno Supreme Council also gave its undivided support to all government policies and measures taken to ease the people's burden as the nation's economy was still strong.

"From the aspects of investment, economic growth and inflation, the stock exchange is still in a healthy position and our economic strenght is still recognised both locally and abroad," he said.

Friday, 24 January 2014

Thaipusam Batu Caves: The dark side

Morocco amends controversial rape marriage law

Women from various regions of Morocco hold placards in the capital Rabat to protest against violence towards women (24 November 2013) Violence against women and gender inequality are the subjects of frequent demonstrations in Rabat

The parliament of Morocco has unanimously amended an article of the penal code that allowed rapists of underage girls to avoid prosecution by marrying their victims.

The move follows intensive lobbying by activists for better protection of young rape victims. The amendment has been welcomed by rights groups.

Article 475 of the penal code generated unprecedented public criticism.

It was first proposed by Morocco's Islamist-led government a year ago.

But the issue came to public prominence in 2012 when 16-year-old Amina Filali killed herself after being forced to marry her rapist.
Parliament in Rabat (April 2013) Parliament has voted unanimously to alter the controversial penal code article
 
She accused Moustapha Fellak, who at the time was about 25, of physical abuse after they married, which he denies. After seven months of marriage, Ms Filali swallowed rat poison.

The case shocked many people in Morocco, received extensive media coverage and sparked protests in the capital Rabat and other cities.

Article 475 provides for a prison term of one to five years for anyone who "abducts or deceives" a minor "without violence, threat or fraud, or attempts to do so".

But the second clause of the article specifies that when the victim marries the perpetrator, "he can no longer be prosecuted except by persons empowered to demand the annulment of the marriage and then only after the annulment has been proclaimed". This effectively prevents prosecutors from independently pursuing rape charges.

In conservative rural parts of Morocco, an unmarried girl or woman who has lost her virginity - even through rape - is considered to have dishonoured her family and no longer suitable for marriage. Some families believe that marrying the rapist addresses these problems.

While welcoming the move, rights groups say that much still needs to be done to promote gender equality, protect women and outlaw child marriage in the North African country.

"It's a very important step. But it's not enough," Fatima Maghnaoui, who heads a group supporting women victims of violence, told the AFP news agency.

"We are campaigning for a complete overhaul of the penal code for women."

Analysis

Although women activists are pleased about the amendment - and it shows the Islamist-led government is slowly starting to listen to them - some say there is still much room for improvement as the law does not necessarily protect women from violence or put an emphasis on the seriousness of rape.

Rights groups say one in four women in Morocco is a victim of violence. The most vulnerable live in the countryside where only about 20% of women are literate and attitudes are more conservative. In such areas, child marriages and forced marriages after rape have been a common practice for centuries.
Women's rights groups now want new laws to reflect the spirit of the 2011 constitution. World leaders praised it, saying Morocco was a role model for democracy in the Arab world. It states that men and women should be treated equally, yet also included Article 475.

Moderate Muslim nation of Nigeria: Protesters throw stones, demand gays be executed

Thousands of protesters threw stones into the Shariah court in a north Nigerian city Wednesday, urging the speedy convictions and executions of 11 men arrested for belonging to gay organizations.

Security officials fired into the air to disperse protesters in Bauchi city so the accused men could be safely returned to the prison. Judge El-Yakubu Aliyu closed the court abruptly.

Nigeria — Death penalty for men and whipping and/or imprisonment for women in 12 northern Nigerian states. Up to 14 years in jail in the rest of the country. 51 million in aid.

As rakyat struggle, elite live in lap of luxury, says Ku Li

Veteran Umno leader Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah (pic) said today it was unacceptable that the majority of Malaysians struggled to survive in the current economic climate while the nation’s elite continued to indulge in a luxurious lifestyle.

In an apparent dig at Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak's frequent trips abroad, the former finance minister said the current capitalist system practised in Malaysia advocates a relationship between business and politics which then gives rise to corruption.

“What is unacceptable is the feeling that certain segments of the community are being hard done by the prevailing economic difficulties while a select few wallow in luxury as if there is no tomorrow,” he said.

"Financial pilferage as a result of corruption or political lobbying increases costs unnecessarily. In all likelihood, the costs will be borne by consumers.”

The Kelantan prince, affectionately known as Ku Li, said a strict implementation and management of Malaysia's economy under the Islamic system would eliminate this possibility.

"It is heartening and reassuring to note that Islamic economics and finance advocate efficiency, effectiveness, transparency, sharing and selflessness," Ku Li said.

He was speaking at a book launch organised by the International Institute of Advanced Islamic Studies (IAIS) and Malaysian Current Law Journal Sdn Bhd.

Also present at the launch was Prince Mohammed Al-Malek Feisal of Saudi Arabia, who is reportedly an ardent proponent of Syariah-compliant Islamic banking and finance system.

"The Islamic economic system is neither capitalistic nor socialistic in nature. It is a system which has been provided by the Quran," Ku Li said.

He said it was an ethical system which operated on the basis of shared risks and profits to the lender and borrower.

Pointing out the difference between the Islamic and conventional banking systems, Ku Li said the former chanelled wealth from the rich to the poor in the form of sadaqah and zakat.

"Under the conventional banking system, interest channels away wealth from the poor to the rich," he said.

"Islam views life as a compact whole and economics is one of its most important components. The Islamic economic system is balanced and everything has its place."

Ku Li said the system stood for simplicity, modesty, charity, mutual help and cooperation. It denounced miserliness, greed, extravagance and unnecessary wastage.

He cited the Pilgrims Management and Fund Board of Malaysia, or Tabung Haji, as an example of a successful system.

The brainchild of economist Royal Professor Ungku Aziz Ungku Abdul Hamid, Tabung Haji began with a total deposit of US$15,400 with an initial membership of 1,281 in 1963.

Last year, 8.2 million Tabung Haji members had deposits in excess of US$10 million (RM33 million). – January 23, 2014.

MIC: No thanks MCA, we've faith in the AG

It was an act of brotherhood.

Irked by what it perceived to be unwarranted delay on the part of the Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC) in prosecuting the man accused of assaulting a fellow BN party leader, MCA Youth sought to help.

However, the offer to prosecute the assault case of Deputy Education Minister II P Kamalanathan was today shot down by MIC itself and the MCA Youth legal bureau found itself being labelled “presumptuous”.

Instead, MIC’s legal adviser Selva Mookiah, in a statement, expressed full confidence in the AGC following a discussion on the case with AG Abdul Gani Patail (right) today.

“Having had the benefit of discussing the matter with Tan Sri Attorney-General today, I reiterate my confidence with the AGC in evaluating the investigation papers taking into consideration all evidence including but not limited to the eyewitness statements and medical report.

“....whilst I appreciate the MCA Youth bureau's support, but it is rather presumptuous of them to offer to prosecute without ever being privy to the investigation papers,” he said.

He further assured that Abdul Gani is giving “equally serious attention” to Kamalanathan’s case as he would any criminal report, and will decide on a course of action accordingly.

Kamalanathan had ealier this month lodged a police report claiming that Hulu Selangor Umno Youth assistant secretary Muhammad Rizuan Suhaimi had punched him in the former’s office on Jan 12.

However, with no action by the AGC despite receiving the investigation papers from the police, MCA Youth legal bureau chief Choo Wei Sern yesterday volunteered the party’s lawyers to be appointed as prosecutors on a pro bono basis to help with the case.

Choo had stated that such delays would reduce public confidence in the AGC.

Riza dropped from Oscar nominations

Buying over the rights and financing a film does not actually qualify one as a producer.

At least not according to Hollywood's premier motion picture body the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

In what the industry views as a "rare move", the Academy yesterday dropped prime minister Najib Abdul Razak's stepson Riza Aziz from the Oscars nominations list for best picture nominee Wolf of Wall Street.

Instead, in the list of producers nominated for the US$100 million film are director Martin Scorcese, lead actor Leonardo DiCaprio, Riza's business partner Joey McFarland and Scorsese's partner Emma Tillinger Koskoff.

The list of nominated producers for the 'Wolf of Wall Street' was finalised by the Academy yesterday, a week after the other nominations were announced.

This marks a departure from the Producers Guild Association, that nominated Riza as producer but not Scorsese and DiCaprio, for the controversial film about debauchery in the world of finance.

According to entertainment website Deadline Hollywood, DiCaprio had worked to get the film to screen as producer for six years and had roped in Riza and McFarland's fledgling production company Red Granite Pictures, that fully financed the venture.

Red Granite then purchased the rights from Warner Bros and was caught in a legal battle with the original producer Alexandra Milchan for compensation. The matter has been resolved out of court.

Responding to the Academy's announcement, Red Granite, in a media statement, said it will not contest the decision and that Riza is honoured to have been part of the project.

Riza is the son of Najib's wife Rosmah Mansor from her first marriage.

The movie has been banned in Malaysia, and his financing of the film has drawn scorn from right-wing Malay supremacists Perkasa.

Hollywood disdain

Meanwhile, whistleblower Sarawak Report as part of its expose on Riza cited “Hollywood insiders” as saying that the decision to dump Riza follow industry concerns over financiers “attempting to claim producer credits for films they bankrolled but did not make”.

“They are greener than green,” one “experienced producer” told Sarawak Report of Riza and McFarland, whom the portal reported previously acted as party planned for Malaysian wheeler dealer Jho Low (right).

They are financiers, but have also taken producer credits. The producer credits have gone to Riza, Joey and some other producers, but the actual work is being done by people working for Red Granite and the other producers,” another unnamed “senior Hollywood producer” is quoted as saying.

Those in the know credit Milchan as the main driver for the film, having procured the rights to the Jordan Belfort (the jailed financier played by DiCaprio) story and commissioned the script before the project was taken up by Warner Bros.

Insiders say it was her who roped in DiCaprio and Scorsese, despite the Red Granite duo claiming to have done so in media reports, citing their friendship with the Hollywood heartthrob.

They also claim that that Milchan “came back and took over” after Warner Bros dropped the film and then sold it to Red Granite.

“It's common knowledge. That is what producers do, but Red Granite just bought over a done deal. They aren't what I would call producers, they are financiers and money men,” one insider said.

Industry professionals told the website that while the film cost US$100 million, publicity and marketing would have cost an additional US$35-40 million.

The film has grossed US$80 million so far, the insiders said, but producers only get a fraction of the takings.

“The threatre keeps 60 percent and the studio 40 percent, then there are all the payments before the producers get anything back,” one Hollywood professional is quoted as saying.

Deep pockets

Insiders also revealed that the film was not “pre-sold” for three months after it started production, and everything was on Red Granite's expense.

Sarawak Report noted that the new kids on the block's deep pockets have also set tongues wagging, with seasoned professionals questioning the rookies' ability to raise so much funds.

It also reported that there is speculation that Riza was cut by the Academy over comments by "close friends" in Malaysian media which could be viewed as anti-semitic.

The Malaysian Gazette, a portal run by a journalist close to Riza's mother Rosmah Mansor, quoted these “close friends” as saying that Riza should be celebrated for “breaking the monopoly of Jews in Hollywood”.

Riza, it reported, has never made any overt statements of bigotry but such sentiments by Riza's “close friends” and his failure to “disown” the remakrs have “appalled the liberal and egalitarian community in Hollywood”.

“Many of Hollywood’s high flyers are indeed rightfully proud of being Americans of Jewish heritage.

“However, America is passionately committed to success through merit, unlike in Malaysia, where it is increasingly complained that only certain well-connected families can expect to monopolise money-making opportunities.”

Sarawak Report had earlier exposed that Riza had purchased a US$17.5 million ((RM58.21 million mansion) in Hollywood, after purchasing a US$33.5 million (RM110 million) apartment in New York in 2010.

It reported that Riza, 36, worked with HSBC Bank in London for three years before making his Hollywood bid.

'Consumer goods will be pricier due to toll hike'

The Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers (FMM) has warned that an increase in tolled road charges will raise prices of consumer goods.
 
In a press release today, FMM said that a survey among its members revealed that higher toll charges would result in an increase in the price of raw materials.
 
This would subsequently lead to higher operating cost for manufacturers, which will be passed down to consumers.
 
"Given the recent increase in electricity rates, the proposed toll hikes would definitely put pressure on inflation and FMM foresees that these increases would dampen domestic consumption and affect export competitiveness.
 
"FMM strongly urges the toll concessionaires to review their decision to increase the toll rates and the government to intervene to prevent any further increase in the cost of doing business in Malaysia," said FMM.
 
FMM did not state the number of respondents involved, but specified that 68 percent of its members are SMEs operating in the Klang Valley. 
 
The group said that all respondents agreed that transportation providers will increase their fees if toll charges were increased, coupled with an increase in travelling claims of their marketing staff.

Forty-six percent of respondents believe that the price of transportantion will go up by 2 to 10 percent, while 18 percent of respondents said 11 to 20 percent and 15 percent of respondents said 25 to 30 percent.

No alternatives
 
Lebuhraya Damansara Puchong (LDP) is the most frequently used highway among the respondents, followed by the Guthrie Corridor Expressway, Kajang Dispersal Link Expressway (Silk), Sungai Besi Expressway (Besraya) and Sistem Penyuraian Trafik KL Barat (Sprint).
 
"A total of 64 percent of the respondents informed that they or their transporters do not have alternative routes to deliver goods to points of destination," said the group.
 
Highway toll charges were supposed to increase on Jan 1, but nothing has been heard of since. 
 
Tolled road operators generally have an agreement with the federal government which allowed them to periodically increase charges. 
 
Should Putrajaya stop them from increasing the charges, compensation - either through subsidies or extension of concession period - would be arranged.
 
The Najib-administration is currently under pressure to keep the prices of essential goods down while reigning in on a budget deficit.
 
Since the 13th general election in May last year, Putrajaya has abolished sugar subsidies and reduced fuel subsidies, while increasing electricity tariffs to reduce public spending.
 
However, critics belive that Putrajaya should prioritise plugging leakages and rooting out corruption before increasing the financial burden of the public.

Stop being wishy washy on CSMU, Subra

From P Waythamoorthy,

Hindraf is disappointed with the lackluster attitude and indecisiveness of the health minister S Subramaniam in handling the re-accreditation of Crimea State Medical University (CSMU).

It is clear that both MMC and the health ministry are indulging in the passing the buck game between them with contradictory statements without having the ability to be transparent in addressing the issue.

On Sept 23, 2013, Subra’s deputy confirmed in Parliament that there are two MMC officers currently under investigation by the MACC for corruption and power abuse.

Lately, it has surfaced through local media that apparently there are two different reports by the MMC in their evaluation for re-accreditation of CSMU.

From the above, there is an obvious concern on the murky direction of MMC, its operations as well as its role as an independent governing body for the medical profession.

The health minister must make an assertive and firm decision as Section 8 of the Medical Ac 1971 gives him the authority to re-recognise the university instead of dragging the matter any further.

Approximately 1,500 Malaysian students have graduated from CSMU since 1997 until it was derecognised in 2005.

Many of these students were from struggling and middle class families who were able to pursue their medical education in the said university due to its affordable tuition fees.

The said university was derecognised in 2005 although former Health Minister Liow Tiong Lai told parliament on Aug 12, 2009 that there were no quality issues with CSMU.

For the last eight years the university has been fighting an uphill task in obtaining re-accreditation in futility.

The least the ministry could do is award the university a probationary accreditation subject to an undertaking by the university to comply with the ministry’s requirement.

This is so that in the interim, students can start enrolling with them and pursue their medical studies with affordable fees.

The writer is chairman of Hindraf

Court says MIC man got RM5.5m by fraud

The party's new treasurer-general, R Ramanan, is ordered to return the money to ex-government psychiatrist M Mahadevan.

KUALA LUMPUR: The High Court today ordered recently appointed MIC treasurer-general R Ramanan to return RM5.5 million to renowned psychiatrist Dr M Mahadevan, ruling that it was fraudulently received.

Judicial commissioner Lee Heng Cheong said Ramanan had misrepresented himself to Dr Mahadevan, resulting in the latter transferring the money into his personal account on May 19, 2010.

Lee also ruled that Ramanan had failed to prove that the money was for a township development project in Sungai Petani on a piece of land belonging to Dr Mahadevan.

The judge ordered Ramanan to pay the money within 14 days from today. Counsel for the defendant sought a stay and Lee ordered them to file a formal application by Monday.

Dr Mahadevan, 85, is a former chief government psychiatrist and founder of the Malaysian Psychiatric Association. He was in court when the judgment was delivered.

According to court documents, the plaintiff had filed a claim of RM26.6 million to the Defence Ministry for its use of his land as a firing range between 1968 and 1988.

In May 2010, Ramanan told Dr Mahadevan that he could help him secure the claim if he paid a sum of RM6.5 million. They subsequently agreed on reducing the amount to RM5.5 million.

In his statement of claim, Dr Mahadevan included a letter dated April 2010, furnished by the defendant, who claimed that it was from the Defence Ministry. The letter purportedly showed that the ministry had approved payment of the claim.

The plaintiff called nine witnesses, including four officers of the ministry and a handwriting expert. The witnesses testified that such a letter did not exist.

There were six witnesses for Ramanan, including himself and his father.

Dr Mahadevan was represented by Lavinia Kumaraendran and Cassandra Lee, while the defendant was represented by Harjit Singh and Mahendra Maheson.

Umno board to decide on Kamalanathan assault incident

The Umno member who punched Deputy Education Minister II P Kamalanthan has replied to the show-cause letter and it is up to the disciplinary board take action.

KUALA LUMPUR: The Umno disciplinary board will soon take action on the party member who assaulted Deputy Education Minister II P Kamalanathan during an event in Bukit Beruntung on Jan 12.

Umno secretary-general Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor said Hulu Selangor division youth assistant secretary Muhammad Rizuan Suhaimi had replied to the show-cause letter issued to him a week ago.

“I have forwarded his reply to the disciplinary board. It is up to the disciplinary board to take action.

“I asked him to reply to the show-cause letter within 14 days,” he said in a press statement today.

In the Jan 12 incident in Bukit Beruntung, Kamalanathan was punched after the deputy minister ignored Muhammad Rizuan’s request to transfer his relative to Selangor.

Tengku Adnan also said 10 show-cause letters would be sent to Pahang Umno Youth leaders who held a press conference to express their disappointment with Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin.

The Pahang Youth leaders were dissatisifed with Khairy’s appointment of Pekan Division Youth chief Shahruddin Ahmad as the state Youth chief.

Tengku Adnan said it was unbecoming of the youth leaders to behave in such a manner.

“They should have discussed with Khairy first, instead of speaking out at a press conference.

“Khairy had the right to appoint Shahruddin as the state Youth chief,” said Tengku Adnan.

He said he had also spoken to Kedah Menteri Besar Mukhriz Mahathir for coming out with statements regarding the party.

“Instead of coming out with statements, Mukhriz should voice it out to us or even meet the Prime Minister or his deputy to discuss any issues,” he added.

Cabinet stands by ‘Allah’ in Malay Bibles but…

...the 10-point solution cannot supersede state law, says Youth and Sports Minister Khairy Jamaluddin.

PETALING JAYA: Amid the re-ignited furore over the ‘Allah’ row, the Cabinet still stands by its commitment to the 10-point solution allowing Malay and Iban bibles to use the word ‘Allah’ and the import of the bibles into the country.

Youth and Sports Minister Khairy Jamaluddin said the issue of over 300 Malay and Iban language Bibles being seized by the Selangor Islamic Religious Department (Jais) earlier this month was a state matter and the federal government would not intervene.

“Our (Cabinet) position is clear. The federal government is committed to the 10-point solution.

“But the 10-point solution can’t supersede the state enactment of religious issues,” Khairy was quoted by Bernama as telling reporters after speaking at the 16th Malaysia Strategic Outlook Conference 2014 in Kuala Lumpur today.

He also reportedly blamed Selangor for reigniting the decades-long debate with Jais’s raid on the Bible of Society of Malaysia (BSM) earlier this month, which saw two of the society’s leaders arrested and released later that same evening.

Khairy, who is the Umno Youth chief, added the Selangor government should resolve that issue first before any dialogue was held between Pakatan Rakyat and BN.

“That issue has to be resolved first before any dialogue between BN and Pakatan. There’s nothing that we can do,” Khairy was quoted as saying by a news portal.

Khairy was referring to Anwar’s invitation yesterday for bipartisan talks between the two coalitions on economic and racial issues plaguing the country.

He added that the Cabinet had discussed the Allah issue in its meeting yesterday.

The 10-point-solution, announced by Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Idris Jala in 2011, allows bibles in all languages to not only be imported into the country, but to be printed locally in the peninsula, Sabah and Sarawak.

However, the Malay edition of those bibles contain the word ‘Allah’, a word non-Muslims were prohibited from using in Selangor.

The Yang di-Pertuan Agong Sultan Abdul Halim Mu’adzam Shah had also said last Sunday that several words including ‘Allah’ were the exclusive rights of Muslims, citing a 1986 decree by the National Fatwa council.

Suggest Barisan Nasional and Pakatan Rakyat form a joint Summit secretariat comprising three representatives to decide on date, place and agenda of BN-PR Summit

The Barisan Nasional secretary-general Datuk Seri Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor told The Malaysian Insider that the proposal by Pakatan Rakyat leaders for a Barisan Nasional-Pakatan Rakyat Leaders’ Summit will be discussed by the Barisan Nasional Supreme Council meeting tomorrow.

I welcome the prompt response of the Barisan Nasional in convening its Supreme Council tomorrow and hope that the BN Supreme Council will give a positive response to the PR proposal for a summit of the leaders of both coalitions to assure Malaysians that there could not be another May 13 riots, although there are irresponsible and reckless elements seeking to incite racial and religious hatred, conflict and tension to create the conditions for another May 13 in the country.

The proposal by the Pakatan Rakyat leaders from PKR, PAS and DAP stem from their love and patriotism to Malaysia and I hope that the Barisan Nasional leaders could be similarly motivated by their love and patriotism to Malaysia to give a positive response to hold the first BN-PR Leaders’ Summit in the nation’s history.

If the BN Supreme Council gives a positive response tomorrow, I suggest that BN and PR form a joint Summit secretariat comprising three representatives each to decide on the Summit’s date, place and agenda.

I am sure that all Malaysians look forward to the successful holding of the first BN-PR Leaders’ Summit.

PR leaders have proposed the agenda to assure Malaysians that there could not be another May 13. The Summit could also deal with the quintuplet of the national crisis in the country, national unity and nation building, economic, educational, security and the worsening corruption in the country.

(Media Conference Statement in Yong Peng after a Chinese New Year visit on Thursday, 23rd January 2014 at 5 pm)

“Allah”: The PR’s failure

The Nut Graph 
Shape of a Pocket by Jacqueline Ann Surin

As published in The Nut Graph on 13 Jan 2014.

IT’S not hard at all to be disappointed and distressed by the Barisan Nasional (BN) federal government over the way the “Allah” issue has developed and been handled. And there is no doubt in my mind that the Selangor Islamic Religious Department (Jais) raid on the Bible Society of Malaysia (BSM) would not have occurred if not for Putrajaya’s pivotal role in banning the word among non-Muslims.

It was the BN federal government that first banned the Al-Kitab, or the Malay-language Bible, nationwide in 1981. And then, in 1986, the BN government banned the use of “Allah” and three other words – “solat”, “Kaabah” and “Baitullah” – by non-Muslims.

Malay-speaking Christians in Malaysia have been using “Allah” and Malay translations of the Bible have existed since the 16th century. This neither created “confusion” among Muslims nor posed any “threat” to Islam before the ban in the 1980s.

And while all of that is true, it is equally disappointing and distressing to see how poorly the Pakatan Rakyat (PR)-led Selangor government and the coalition’s leadership are currently responding to the 2 Jan 2014 Jais raid. Even more troubling is the PR leadership’s failure in demonstrating that it will and can uphold the constitutional rights of minority non-Muslims in the state.

Worse than silence

Peace-loving Malaysians are justifiably outraged at Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s silence over the Jais raid. Najib has remained silent and invisible for far too long over numerous instances when bigoted voices have caused unnecessary tensions between Malaysians of different faiths. Is Selangor Menteri Besar Khalid Ibrahim’s response to the Jais raid any less disappointing?

It took Khalid, who is from Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR), six days to make a statement about the unconstitutional and illegal raid on BSM. This was despite Jais having no jurisdiction over non-Muslims. There was also no evidence that the over 300 Malay and Iban-language Bibles confiscated from a storeroom were being used to proselytise to Muslims, which is a crime according to Malaysian laws.

Shouldn’t Khalid have instantly spoken out against the use of force and aggression by a state apparatus against an entity that had not broken the law and was not threatening the peace? According to BSM president Lee Min Choon, Jais officers acted like “thugs”, repeatedly threatening to break down the door, causing him to fear for his staff’s safety. Lee added that the five Jais officers who were eventually allowed to enter the BSM office started ransacking and throwing around boxes that contained Bibles with no regard for the Christian holy book.

Instead, Khalid’s administration first claimed ignorance of Jais’s actions, saying the religious department had not given the Selangor government prior notice. Then, two days after the raid, the Selangor exco responsible for religious affairs, Sallehen Mukhyi, urged the public to abide by the Selangor sultan’s decree: “The state government takes the same position as the Selangor sultan that all parties must respect Islam as the official religion while non-Muslims may practise their respective beliefs according to the federal constitution.”

Will Selangor uphold rights?

Sallehen, on behalf of the Selangor government, shied away from stating whether non-Muslims could use “Allah” in Selangor. Neither did the Selangor government condemn Jais’s actions. Indeed, Sallehen has since come out to say that Jais’s actions, thuggish as they were, “was correct in terms of SOP (standard operating procedure)”. The only concession is that the state government has asked the religious department to revise its SOP. However, no time frame was given for this to happen. Additionally, the Selangor Islamic Religious Coun­cil is now at odds with the state government over the government’s authority to review Jais’s SOP.

This is vexing considering that this is the second time Jais has raided premises belonging to Christians. In 2011, Jais also illegally raided Damansara Utama Methodist Church during a fund-raising dinner.

These statements from the Selangor government demonstrate just how emasculated and unclear the PR seems to be over the issue. The Selangor sultan had decreed that non-Muslims in the state are barred from using “Allah”. As has been pointed out, this decree is not legally binding and is, thereby, unconstitutional. It is also problematic since the state anthem contains the word “Allah”.

And while the ruler may be head of Islam in the state, he is not above the constitution and does not have jurisdiction over non-Islamic matters such as how Malay-speaking Christians choose to worship. And yet, when asked about the Selangor government’s stand on the sultan’s decree, Khalid was reported to have said: “… We continue the Sultan’s decree.”

Additionally, it surely cannot have escaped the Selangor government that BSM had abided by the Cabinet’s 10-point agreement over Malay-language Bibles. Not only that, BSM’s storage and distribution of Malay and Iban-language Bibles for Christian use was neither illegal nor a sign of disrespect to Islam as the official religion.

And yet, Khalid, who is a second-term menteri besar, said the state government would advise non-Muslim religious leaders to abide by a flawed Selangor Non-Islamic Religions (Control of Propagation Among Muslims) Enactment 1988, which Jais used to raid BSM. It is this enactment that bans the use of 35 words by non-Muslims in Selangor including “Allah”.

“… We will advise maybe to not use these Bibles in Selangor, but to be used elsewhere,” Khalid was quoted as saying. This provides yet another dilemma. When it is proven that the confiscated Bibles have abided by the cabinet’s 10-point agreement with Christians, will Khalid still insist that these holy books cannot be used in the state?

How are minority faith groups supposed to “practise their respective beliefs according to the federal constitution” if their very constitutional right to do so is being threatened and forcibly snatched away by a department under the Selangor government? And how can Christians in Selangor trust the PR government when the menteri besar is advising them not to use their Malay-language Bible in the state?

None of these remarks thus far illustrate that that the current Selangor government will have the courage to uphold non-Muslim rights to “practise their respective beliefs”. Instead, the state’s official response has demonstrated a lack of understanding about what that constitutional right means. It has also shown a clear lack of commitment to speaking out against any decree or action that may threaten that constitutional right.

What’s the difference?

The PR keeps promising citizens it’s different from the BN, and that’s why we should vote for them. And yet in this particular instance, is the PR really any different from the BN?

First, the Selangor government has displayed a lacking in both clarity and courage. And then, PKR de facto leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim poured cold water on a proposal by three DAP assemblypersons to amend the Selangor Non-Islamic Religions (Control of Propagation Among Muslims) Enactment. The trio suggested a win-win situation – amending the enactment so that it could not be used to restrict anyone from practising their faith while ensuring that Muslims are protected from proselytisation.

Instead of supporting the trio’s initiative and leadership, Anwar was more interested in ticking the trio off. Not only that, he received PAS’s support for doing so. Furthermore, PAS Shah Alam Member of Parliament Khalid Samad told the three assemblypersons not to “interfere in Islamic affairs”.

We already know that the Najib administration will only act in Umno’s narrow ethnocentric interest. And that means continuing to suffer Najib’s silence and inaction when clear leadership is most needed. The recent Jais raid proves that it’s not much different with the PR, especially with PKR and PAS.

These politicians, who want us to vote them into federal government, aren’t ready to be courageous, principled leaders when it is their turn to demonstrate leadership. Apparently, like the BN, we can expect them to act in ways that are politically expedient. How disappointing when what is most needed now is clear, courageous and committed leadership in the public’s interest. 


Jacqueline Ann Surin thinks it’s disingenuous of the PR to blame the “Allah” issue on the BN. Why? Because the current Selangor government isn’t willing to oppose an enactment and a royal edict that expands on and supports the BN’s banning of the use of certain Arabic words by non-Muslims. She regards the Muslims who turned up to support Christians at Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Klang on 5 Jan 2014 as having more courage and integrity than either BN or PR politicians.

Optimise Use Of ILKAs To Produce More Skilled Workers - Najib

PUTRAJAYA, Jan 23 (Bernama) -- Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak said he wanted use of the 434 Public Skills Training Institutes (ILKAs) in the country to be optimised to achieve the nation's target of having 33 per cent of the workforce to be skilled workers by 2015 and 50 per cent by 2020.

He said the percentage of skilled workers in the country was still low, at 28 per cent last year, and as such various initiatives need to be taken to raise the figure.

"The ILKAs throughout the country have the capacity to train 200,000 people at any one time.

"Imagine, if the capacity of this 434 ILKAs can be optimised, we won't have to build new institutes and buildings but instead we can optimise assets already available in the public service system," he said at the Prime Minister's Golden Hand ceremony held at the Malaysia Agro Exposition Park in Serdang near here Thursday.

Also present were Human Resource Minister Datuk Seri Richard Riot Jaem and Works Minister Datuk Fadillah Yusof.

Najib said there were now 753 Private Skills Training Institutes (ILKS) authorised by the Skills Development Department to provide skills training nationwide.

"I believe ILKAs and ILKS play significant roles in assisting the government produce skilled manpower to meet the needs of industries and boost the country's competitive edge.

"Therefore, the programmes offered have to be modified in line with current developments to ensure marketability of graduates," he said.

He reminded both ILKAs and ILKS to cooperate holistically in raising the quality of skills training by optimising their facilities and expertise.

Najib also called on trainees to further their studies to internationally recognised institutions for better value in the employment market.

Recognising the need for skilled manpower, Najib said the government had allocated RM200 million in the 2014 Budget to upgrade and enforce double shifts at National Youth Skills Institutes as well as RM178 million to improve and maintain buildings and equipment at the Manpower Department Training Institutions in line with the latest technology.

Apart from that, he said Pembangunan Sumber Manusia Berhad also provided an allocation of RM400 million for registered companies to give employees upskilling and reskilling training.

"An allocation of RM330 million has also been channeled to the Skills Development Fund Corporation as loans for post-SPM youths take up skills training courses," he said.

Najib said the government had also created an initiative under the SkillsMalaysia InVITE programme with the aim of bringing in international students to undergo skills training in the country and currently, there were 2,119 international students taking up such programmes.

Meanwhile, Najib described skills competitions as an important agenda in mainstream skills training and platform to unearth talents, creativity and innovation among trainees and competent teaching staff.

He said the organising of the skills contests should be expanded and continued to support national skills manpower development for a competitive workforce.

"The skills competition profile in Malaysia should also be upgraded so that the agenda could be empowered to international level.

"I urge more private companies to give undivided support in sponsoring skills contests and employment opportunities to winners and participants especially at international level," he said.

Najib also expressed hope that national representatives in the Asean Skills Competition in Hanoi, Vietnam this year and the World Skills Competition in Sao Paolo next year would bring back honours for the country and prove Malaysian skills were of world class standard.

At the ceremony, Najib also announced additional incentives of RM10,000 for winners of the Prime Minister's Golden Hand Award for the MySkills category and the 2014 Malaysia Skills competition.