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Saturday, 26 June 2010

Jaguh Oxford Khairy vs Jaguh kampung Ibrahim

By Stephanie Sta Maria - Free Malaysia Today

KUALA LUMPUR: The verbal spat between UmnoYouth chief Khairy Jamaluddin and Perkasa boss Ibrahim Ali continued today with the conferring of condescending titles on each other.


In a Twitter posting, the Oxford-trained Khairy had labelled Ibrahim a “jaguh kampung (village champion) in a globalised world whose time is up”.

He also described the outspoken independent Pasir Mas MP as an “obstacle” to Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak's 1Malaysia campaign.

In retaliation, Ibrahim claimed that Khairy's meteoric rise was due to his father-in-law, former premier Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's influence.

“I feel proud to be called jaguh kampung,” he told FMT.

“At least I am close to nature, meaning 'barang asli'. Jaguh bandar or Oxford means nothing to me if your rise and wealth is because of your father-in-law's position or because of money politics.

“I am like a bull fighter. Whatever comes in front of me which is not right, I will wallop,” he said.

'He's not a Rembau voter'

Khairy had criticised Ibrahim following the latter's demand that the Rembau MP vacate his post.

In his posting, Khairy said Ibrahim has no grounds to make such a call. “He's not a Rembau voter or a member of Umno. He has no business telling me to resign.”

The two began locking horns when Khairy defended MCA Youth chief Wee Ka Siong who came under attack from Ibrahim.

The Perkasa boss went on the offensive against Wee, who is also deputy education minister, for asking if the government would consider scrapping Mara scholarships meant for the Bumiputera following its plan to do away with Public Service Department scholarships for the other races.

Ibrahim considered this a challenge to Malay rights, while Khairy accused the former of making a “ridiculous” fuss over nothing to seek cheap publicity.

Wee also denied Ibrahim's claim, saying that he never intended to question Malay rights and demanded that the Perkasa chief stop “talking rubbish”.

No access for Anwar to Saiful's witness statement

PUTRAJAYA: Once again, Anwar Ibrahim failed to get access to all statements, including the witness statement of his accuser, Mohd Saiful Bukhari Azlan, in his sodomy trial when the Court Of Appeal upheld the High Court's decision today.

Justices Sulong Matjeraie, Ramly Ali and Zaharah Ibrahim held that they did not have the jurisdiction to hear and entertain the appeal because the High Court's ruling on that matter was not a final order which had the effect of finally determining the rights of the party.

The three-man bench dismissed the Opposition Leader's appeal and upheld the High Court's decision delivered on May 12, this year, in denying him access to Saiful's statements which were recorded by the police.

Anwar wanted all statements, including Saiful's witness statement, because he claimed that there were contradictions in Saiful's testimony adduced in the trial, and the sodomy charge framed against him (Anwar), which could lead to a possible impeachment of Saiful's credibility.

The 63-year-old Permatang Pauh MP claimed that the star witness (Saiful) had testified that the alleged sodomy took place without his consent, but Anwar was charged under Section 377B of the Penal Code, with consensual sexual intercourse.

In a unanimous decision, Sulong agreed with Solicitor-General II Mohd Yusof Zainal Abiden's submission that the court did not have the jurisdiction to entertain appeals on interlocutory matters which were decided in the course of a trial, by virtue of the amendment to Section 3 of the Courts of Judicature Act, because the ruling was considered not a final order.

He said the amendment to the section was to avoid trials being delayed as the losing party would bring the matter up to the higher court for appeal.

No contradiction

However, Anwar's counsel Karpal Singh submitted in the appeal proceedings today that his (Anwar's) matter was appealable because it was a final order which disposed of his rights.

Karpal said this was so, because if the star witness (Saiful's) credibility was impeached and his testimony was discredited, the prosecution's case would collapse and Anwar would be entitled to an acquittal.

Mohd Yusof, however, said there was no basis to warrant the request of the defence to be supplied with Saiful's statement because the law gave wide discretion to the attorney-general on the institution of criminal prosecutions.

Mohd Yusof said there was also no contradiction in the evidence given by Saiful in court, adding that the element of consent or non-consent was not an ingredient of the offence.

Anwar is on trial for allegedly sodomising Saiful, his former aide, at Unit 11-5-1 of the Desa Damansara Condominium, Jalan Setiakasih, Bukit Damansara between 3.01pm and 4.30pm on June 26, 2008.

He faces up to 20 years in jail and whipping, if convicted. The trial resumes on July 14.

Outside the court, Karpal said he would file for appeal to the Federal Court on Monday. Anwar was not present in court.

- Bernama

Sack the conspirators, Zaid urges Anwar

By Stephanie Sta Maria - Free Malaysia Today

PETALING JAYA: PKR supreme council member Zaid Ibrahim believes that party de facto leader Anwar Ibrahim should sack the 15 MPs who are allegedly plotting a “Selangor rebellion”.

News broke of an alleged revolt against Menteri Besar Abdul Khalid Ibrahim by a group of 15 MPs aligned to PKR vice-president Azmin Ali, who recently resigned from the board of Selangor State Corporation on Wednesday. Azmin has denied any involvement in the alleged plot.

According to reports, the group is dissatisfied over the unilateral manner in which Khalid appointed his new political secretary, Faekah Hussin, as well as his inability to make quick decisions.

An exasperated Zaid, however, called the move “a blatant show of indiscipline” and criticised the 15 MPs' disrespect for authority.

“This issue of Khalid has been going on for over a year,” he said. “At the recent party congress, (party president) Dr Wan Azizah (Wan Ismail) clearly said that Khalid was not going to be removed and Anwar reaffirmed this statement. Once the top leaders have made a decision, the rest of the leadership are expected to follow suit.”

“It's not just Khalid who is on trial but the the credibility of the whole party leadership. If Anwar and Wan Azizah's words don't carry weight within PKR, then how can it mean anything to the rest of the world?”

Zaid observed that Anwar's leniency has encouraged brazenness among the leaders and called on him to start putting his foot down. He also expressed annoyance over the longstanding argument that a firmer stand would drive people to abandon ship.

“Let them jump!” he said. “Let them join (prime minister) Najib (Tun Razak), enjoy the two-thirds and do whatever they want. But PKR is a reform party that has to stick to certain principles and if that means settling for a small but committed pool of leaders, then so be it.”

Zaid added that he found it odd that the pressure for Khalid's removal came from MPs and not state assemblymen and councillors.

“The assemblymen and councillors know him best... they seem to have no problems with him,” he said. “DAP and PAS have also been silent. They are very seasoned parties and if Khalid is a liability, they would have surely spoken up. They want to win the next election too, you know.”

Stop behaving like Umno

While he is staunchly against Khalid's removal, Zaid advised disgruntled leaders to use the proper channels if they truly wanted him to step down. He outlined two avenues for doing so – through the party election and vying for the presidential position.

“If you want to be the menteri besar, then aim for the number one position in PKR,” he said. “Stop this power play which only drives you to do silly things that make the headlines. Right now, PKR leaders are behaving like Umno by holding secret meetings and then a surprise press conference.”

Zaid also likened PKR to Umno in its belief that the party must control the state government. He said that such a belief belongs to a communist party and PKR should steer clear of such ideology by respecting the institution of the state.

“Selangor is all we've got and our priority should be safeguarding it,” he said. “If we owned two-thirds, we would have the luxury of playing such games.”

“This is the time for PKR to show resilience, strength, unity and respect but these are also things that it needs to earn from the rakyat. We can't dole out projects like Najib does or offer to strike deals with certain people.”

“PKR has nothing to offer but leaders who are credible and who command respect for their sincerity in their struggle. These are the leaders we want. And if we don't have them, then we have nothing.”

Sabah contractors and UMS on a warpath

By Michael Kaung - Free Malaysia Today,

KOTA KINABALU: The battle for the RM1-billion Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS) project contracts is about to turn nasty as USM is in danger of being dragged through the mud over the way it doles them out.
Local contractors, who have been sidelined by a dubious arrangement between UMS and a company owned by an employee, have made known their grievances.
They are planning to take the matter a step further after the university authorities dismissed their complaints.
UMS yesterday denied allegations by local contractors that one of its employees was the owner of the company that has a stranglehold on projects being tendered out by the university.
Vice-chancellor Kamaruzaman Ampon said an internal investigation conducted following the allegation found nothing amiss.
"This is a serious allegation. After carrying out our internal auditing, we have found that the allegation is baseless," said Kamaruzaman.
He described the allegation that the USM officer was also operating a company that is undertaking projects for UMS as "untrue".
"The officer concerned resigned from the company before joining us, so there is no conflict of interest as reported in the papers recently," added Kamaruzaman.
The local contractors, many of whom are close to the government and Sabah Umno, however, dismissed the vice-chancellor's claim.
Two of them said they had found out that the officer concerned has a 70% stake in the private consultancy company, which has a contract with UMS.
According to one contractor, a check with the Companies Commission of Malaysia on June 16 revealed that the UMS employee was still the majority shareholder of the company.
Kamaruzaman said the employee in question is a contract officer, adding that UMS' central board committee is authorised to find contractors to carry it out all projects within the university.
"I do not understand why such matter was brought up by these contractors as they have been awarded projects (in the university), too.
"We have done our internal audit and a special task force was also set up to carry out a thorough investigation into the case.
"We will know the truth once their investigation is over. If there is any hanky-panky in the university, we will take action," he said.
MACC looking into allegations
Kamaruzaman said the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) had also visited UMS following the allegations and UMS had given its full cooperation.
"This whole issue has caused a minor distraction but it will not detract us from our core business (providing education).
"I will be meeting the Higher Education Minister (Mohamed Khaled Nordin) to brief him on the progress of the investigation," he said.
The controversy came to light after several local contractors alleged that a senior UMS official, who was tasked with monitoring the implementation of the projects, also owned a private consultancy firm doing contract works for the university.
Contractors said this was a clearcut case of a conflict of interest and had put them at a disadvantage.
Meanwhile, a check with the Social Security Organisation found that despite what Kamaruzaman's preliminary investigation has revealed, contributions were still made to the officer by the company in 2009 and 2010.
State minister in charge of education affairs in Sabah, Masidi Manjun, has also stepped in, saying UMS should "assure the public that every decision made in respect of any tender exercise is above-board and done in compliance with existing financial procedures".
He said UMS should make public the results of its investigation.

MIC plans to send 5,000 'troops' to gate-crash GAS rally

By G Vinod -Free Malaysia Today

KUALA LUMPUR: The MIC plans to send 5,000 members to gate-crash the Gerakan Anti-Samy Vellu (GAS) rally slated at Dewan Hamza, Klang, on July 4.

Selangor MIC Information chief Siva Subramaniam said the police must not allow GAS to gather on that day.

“If the police insist on giving them a permit, then we have no choice but to bring our people there to ensure GAS does not slander MIC and party president S Samy Vellu,” he said after filing a report at Klang police station.

On June 22, GAS coordinator KP Samy had announced the movement will organise its next gathering in Klang after delaying it for three weeks due to safety concerns.

Siva said that GAS' main purpose is nothing more than to create disunity among the Indian community.

“We heard that GAS is planning to distribute 500,000 CDs and posters that may tarnish the president's image. This is not important to the community and the nation,” he said.

He added that former MIC central working committee member KP Samy is “doing this for his own self-interest as he knows that he will not be accepted in MIC again”.

When contacted, KP Samy refused to comment on Siva's statement.

“I will call for a press conference to address this matter once I have consulted my other comrades.” he said.

GAS practises non-violence

Another GAS coordinator G Kumar Aamaan said this (plan to gate-crash) shows who are the real troublemakers of the community.

He said the threat to disrupt the gathering was a deliberate move to intimidate GAS supporters, adding that the rally will be peaceful.

“ GAS is an ahimsa (non-violent) movement which aims to pressure the party president to step down soon. You don't see us trading blows with our own people unlike the Maika annual general meetings,” he said, referring to the infamous Maika AGM in 2007 that saw its shareholders been physically assaulted for raising questions.

Kumar added that Samy Vellu should just step down as he is the primary cause of all the troubles now.

“Former leaders like Dr Mahathir Mohamad, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, Ling Liong Sik and Lim Keng Yaik had stepped down gracefully, earning respect from the people.”

“Why can't the MIC president do the same for the betterment of MIC and the Indian community?” he asked.

Show your faces, exco dares 'plotting' MPs

By Teoh El Sen - Free Malaysia Today

PETALING JAYA: The PKR MPs involved in an alleged plot to topple Selangor Menteri Besar Abdul Khalid Ibrahim should reveal their identities, said state exco Elizabeth Wong.

Daring them to “show their faces”, the Bukit Lanjan state assemblywoman said they should not be making press statements requesting anonymity.

The PKR leader also said there is nothing wrong with harbouring grouses towards Khalid.

“That's fair enough since nobody is perfect. They should speak up and not hide. No one can steer away from criticism and whatever needs to be corrected should be corrected. That is a more productive way of doing things," she told FMT.

The exco was reponding to reports that a group of 15 MPs aligned to PKR vice-president Azmin Ali have hatched a campaign to oust Khalid, whom they feel is not a team player and under-performing.

Azmin, who is said to be eyeing the menteri besar post, has denied masterminding the conspiracy.

Meanwhile, Wong said she does not believe that there is a campaign to push for the menteri besar to resign.

Furthermore, she added, the problems concerning Selangor is not one of the main agendas for this weekend's party retreat, where a major reshuffle is expected.

"I think both the party president (Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail) and de facto leader Anwar (Ibrahim) have made it clear that there will be no change (in the state's top echelon),” she said.

'Uncalled for' criticism

Wong said it will be interesting to see how these alleged conspirators respond to questions from members during the retreat.

"I can predict that we are just going to look at each other and no one will dare come out to say what has come out in the press,” she added.

Wong also labelled the criticism over Khalid's move to appoint Faekah Husin as his new political secretary without consulting party leaders as “uncalled for”.

"A political secretary is like a private secretary, it is a personal decision. It has to be someone the MB can work with and trust to make decisions,” she said.

Khalid's former secretary Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad is tipped to be appointed as PKR's new communications director.

DAP exco: MB is liked by all

Meanwhile, Selangor exco Ronnie Liu also rejected the conspiracy theory.

"Perhaps there are one or two (MPs) who are not happy with Khalid, that's all. Khalid is performing and doing very well. So there is no basis to topple him," said the DAP leader.

According to Liu, Khalid is well liked by the people and his exco members have a good working relationship with him.

"He is also a workaholic and practises a very transparent and accountable style of management,” he said, adding that Azmin also has close working ties with the MB.

Exco Yaakob Sapari, on the other hand, said Khalid should be allowed to complete his term

“Let him finish his term and then go back to elections and let the people decide. Let us do our job until our term finishes,” he added.

State excos Ean Yong Hian Wah and Dr Xavier Jayakumar refused to comment on the matter.

Ean, who is also Selangor DAP chief, termed it as PKR's internal issue. “They should resolve it within the party. At the exco level, we work as a team."

Altantuya murder: Summer sizzle from private eye Bala, MACC

Wong Choon Mei, Malaysia Chronicle

An explosive summer encounter in London with potentially far-reaching consequences can be expected if the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission does indeed carry out its plan to interview private investigator P Balasubramaniam sometime in the middle of next month.

“Sorry to be cynical but I’ll believe it when I see it. It is high time that the MACC walk its talk. It has been promising to meet Bala but has it gone to London yet? I mean this is not a new development, it should have already met and interviewed Bala,” PKR Youth Chief Shamsul Iskandar Akin told Malaysia Chronicle.

“It is also high time for the MACC to make public the status of their investigations. No less than Nazim Razak, the brother of our prime minister, has been identified by Bala as the one who gave him money to retract his statutory declaration and flee Malaysia. The MACC cannot close one eye just because the very top people are involved.”

Two men sentenced to hang

Bala’s sensational revelation about the Altantuya Shaariibuu murder case has made him the focal point of fresh investigations that may possibly alter the fate of two policemen sentenced to hang for her killing.

Both men were the former bodyguards of Prime Minister Najib Razak and his wife Rosmah Mansor. They have insisted they did not know Altantuya and could not have any motive to kill her. In his plea for mitigation, one of the men told the court that he was a mere pawn in a bigger game. However, he named no names or gave further details.

The Altanutya case is a complex tale of greed, international intrigue, sex and homicide. The beautiful 28-year old Mongolian was a translator, who could speak four languages including Russian. Since her 2006 murder, she has been tagged as a modern-day Mata Hari by the foreign press for her role as a go-between in a multi-billion dollar deal between the Malaysian defense ministry and French defense firms DCNS and Thales.

Najib, Rosmah and his close associate Razak Baginda have been implicated in her killing. Altantuya was believed to have been shot in the head and blown up with military-grade explosives after threatening to expose Baginda because he did not pay her a share of the RM570 million kickback obtained from DCNS and Thales.

Currently, there is a separate investigation being conducted by the French police who are probing the corruption angle and if French authorities were involved in inducing Najib – who was then the defense minister – to order two Scorpene submarines worth RM6.7 billion from DCNS and Thales.

Najib and Rosmah have denied ever knowing Altantuya. Baginda, who admitted being her lover, was controversially acquitted of having abetted the two cops in her killing.

Statements taken from Nazim, Deepak

Bala was the private investigator hired by Baginda to keep an eye on Altantuya and to persuade her to return to Mongolia. He was among those who last saw her outside Baginda’s house before she was taken away in a car by the two cops. On that night, Bala also saw seated in a Proton car parked nearby to Baginda’s house Nasir Safar, a long-time special aide to Najib.

He has gone on record with this information and has also stated several more pieces of information that drags the Malaysian premier deeper into the conspiracy. One of the more shocking revelations was that she had been Najib’s mistress and it was he who had introduced her to Baginda, who later also became her lover.

Other shocking revelations were that she was pregnant and that she had pleaded with the cops not to kill her.

However, less than 24 hours after making the statutory declaration and announcing it at a press conference, Bala retracted it and went missing until late last year.

When he resurfaced, Bala told of how Nazim and Deepak Jaikishan, a businessman close to Rosmah, had threatened him and offered him money to leave Malaysia.

According a Berita Harian news report, the MACC will send three officers to meet Bala at a venue in London to be agreed upon by both sides. The news report also said that the MACC had already taken statements from both Nazim and Deepak.

3 pegawai SPRM ke London temui Balasubramaniam


Oleh Norfatimah Ahmad, Berita Harian

Tiga pegawai Suruhanjaya Pencegahan Rasuah Malaysia (SPRM) akan berlepas ke London pertengahan bulan depan untuk mengambil keterangan penyiasat persendirian, P Balasubramaniam berhubung kes pembunuhan wanita Mongolia, Altantuya Shaariibuu.

Pengarah Siasatan SPRM, Mustafar Ali, berkata ketiga-tiga pegawai Bahagian Siasatan suruhanjaya itu akan bertemu Balasubramaniam di lokasi yang dipersetujui kedua-dua pihak.

Kami sudah memaklumkan supaya beliau (Balasubramaniam) menyediakan apa saja yang berkaitan dengan kes itu, termasuk dokumen yang boleh menyokong keterangannya, katanya ketika dihubungi di sini, semalam.

Baru-baru ini, di Dewan Rakyat, Menteri di Jabatan Perdana Menteri, Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Aziz, berkata siasatan SPRM berhubung kes itu menjadi sukar kerana lokasi penyiasat persendirian terbabit tidak diketahui.

Berikutan itu, SPRM mengeluarkan kenyataan sedia memenuhi permintaan Balasubramaniam untuk merakam percaka-pannya mengikut lokasi dipersetujuinya, termasuk luar negara.

Setakat ini, hanya kenyataan Balasubramaniam diperlukan bagi membolehkan SPRM melengkapkan kertas siasatan kes itu.

Sehingga kini, SPRM sudah mendapatkan keterangan daripada adik Perdana Menteri, Datuk Mohamad Nazim Razak dan seorang ahli perniagaan, Deepak Jaikishan berhubung isu akuan bersumpah Balasubramaniam mengenai pembunuhan Altantuya.

Mustafar berkata, kerjasama Balasubramaniam diperlukan bagi membolehkan SPRM melengkapkan siasatan dan menyerahkannya untuk pertimbangan lanjut pejabat Peguam Negara.

Friends of Pakatan Rakyat ditubuh di London

(Harakahdaily) - Friends of Pakatan Rakyat, sebuah persatuan penyokong dan pendokong Pakatan Rakyat, telah ditubuhkan di kota raya London, kata Timbalan Presiden PAS, Ustaz Nasharudin Mat Isa.
Beliau yang baru sahaja pulang dari London berkata, persatuan tersebut adalah gabungan profesional rakyat Malaysia yang menginap dan bekerja di United Kingdom yang mewakili semua kaum Melayu, Cina dan India.
Menurutnya, satu pertemuan bersama jawatankuasa penaja persatuan tersebut telah diadakan di kotaraya London baru-baru ini sempena dengan lawatan beliau ke United Kingdom (UK).
Katanya, majlis pelancaran Friends of Pakatan Rakyat akan dilakukan pada awal Julai depan dengan dihadiri oleh pemimpin Pakatan Rakyat.
Menurutnya, Friends of Pakatan Rakyat adalah satu lagi perkembangan positif tanda sokongan rakyat Malaysia terhadap Pakatan Rakyat.
“Ini adalah kerana persatuan ini menggabungkan rakyat Malaysia yang berbilang bangsa di luar negara,” katanya kepada Harakahdaily.
Tambahnya, dalam pertemuan bersama jawatankuasa penaja persatuan tersebut, mereka telah memberikan komitmen yang cukup tinggi untuk bersama Pakatan bagi menyumbangkan kepakaran mereka membangunkan negara bersama dengan Pakatan.
“Selepas dari UK, mereka bercadang untuk melebarkan lagi Friends of Pakatan Rakyat ke negara-negara lain seperti di Eropah dan juga di Amerika Syarikat,” ujarnya lagi.
Menurutnya lagi, pengerusi jawatankusa penaja persatuan tersebut, seorang juruterbang sebuah syarikat penerbangan di UK memaklumkan bahawa setakat ini mereka telah berjaya menghimpunkan seramai tiga ratus penyokong dan yakin lebih ramai akan menyertainya selepas majlis pelancaran nanti.
Beliau yang juga Ahli Parlimen Bachok baru kembali dari lawatan selama seminggu ke UK bagi menghadiri beberapa siri jemputan organisasi Islam di sana.
Beliau telah dijemput berucap pada seminar The Future of The Muslim Ummah; Hopes and Challenges anjuran Islamic Unity Forum di London.
Nasharudin juga dijemput sebagai tetamu di Muslim Council of Britain di London.
Timbalan Presiden PAS itu kemudiannya ke bandar Nottingham sebagai tetamu kepada sebuah badan kebajikan Islam yang dikenali sebagai Muslim Hands International.
Di Nottingham, beliau turut diminta berucap di Masjid University of Nottingham.
Ustaz Nasharudin juga turut ditemubual selama satu jam oleh TV Al-Hiwar, sebuah rancangan TV berbahasa Arab yang berpusat di London.

Non-Muslim rights: What Rais can do

By Teo Nie Ching | The Nut Graph
Rais Yatim (source: kppk.gov.my)
Rais Yatim (source: kppk.gov.my)
THE Information, Communications and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim was right to say that the social rights of non-Muslim Malaysians were contained in the Federal Constitution. However, he was extremely wrong to claim that the government must issue the sports betting licence for non-Muslim rights to be recognised and respected.
In a recent Anti-Gambling at Internet Cafes signature campaign organised by the Klang and Kapar MCA divisions, more than 2,000 signatures were collected in two hours. That seems to contradict Rais’s view that gambling is a precious part of “non-Muslim culture”.
If Rais was serious about recognising the rights and lifestyles of non-Muslims, [who are predominantly non-Malays in Malaysia], there is something he can do immediately in his capacity as information, communications and culture minister.
Currently, Finas incentives in the form of the Compulsory Screening Scheme and a 20% tax rebate only apply to films with 70% of the dialogue in Bahasa Malaysia (BM). Malaysian-made films in other languages do not enjoy these incentives.
As such, local Chinese- and English-language films like Tiger Woohoo, Ice Kacang Puppy Love and The Malay Chronicles (The Chronicles of Merong Mahawangsa), though fully produced in Malaysia, are not entitled to the exemption on entertainment duty.
Since the rights of non-Muslim Malaysians are contained in the Federal Constitution, then all Malaysian-made films, irrespective of the language used, should be entitled to the same incentives.
Ice Kacang Puppy Love poster
Ice Kacang Puppy Love poster
The Chinese-language movies Tiger Woohoo and Ice Kacang Puppy Love proved that Malaysian productions can compete with films from Hong Kong and China. Both movies collected more than RM5 million at the box office — the most successful non-BM films in Malaysia to date.
There is a market for locally-made non-BM films. Unfortunately, not many producers are willing to make them because of the risks involved. Giving non-BM films the same incentives will definitely help to promote the local non-BM film industry, spur local creativity and inspire budding filmmakers to greater heights.
Umno leaders should stop pretending that they are sensitive to Chinese [Malaysian] rights. There are sufficient gambling avenues available to non-Muslims to indulge their habits. The non-Muslim communities have never requested for more opportunities to gamble.
Since Rais has admitted that the rights of non-Muslim Malaysians are constitutional, he should immediately abolish the restrictions on locally-made films which do not adhere to the “preferred language” condition.
He should also stop pretending he is an expert on non-Muslim lifestyles and stop using non-Muslims as scapegoats to pursue the government’s move to legalise sports betting.
Teo Nie Ching

Malaysia Bans Cartoonist’s ‘Unsuitable’ Works

From Times live
By Sapa

Malaysia has banned a book and two comics by a political cartoonist that were critical of the government, saying they were “undesirable” and could incite people to revolt.

The artist, Zulkifli Anwar Ulhaque, whose publications have highlighted issues such as opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s sodomy trial and police shootings, dismissed the allegations and vowed to continue drawing.

Mahmood Adam, secretary-general of the powerful home ministry, said Zulkifli’s three publications were banned because they were “deemed unsuitable and undesirable for public reading.”

“All three publications have been banned for its contents can influence the people to revolt against the leaders. The contents are not suitable and are detrimental to public order,” he said in a statement on Thursday.

Prime Minister Najib Razak, who took office in April last year in the mainly Muslim country, had promised to promote openness and transparency but the opposition has accused the government of trying to silence critics.

Why Pakistan is not a nation

Image(Asia Sentinel) And how it could become one.

Pakistan has been a state since 1947, but is still not a nation. It is a land and a people inside a certain geographical boundary that is still lacking the crucial components needed for nationhood: a strong common identity, mental make-up, a shared sense of history and common goals. The failure so far to create a cohesive national entity flows from inequalities of wealth and opportunity, absence of effective democracy and a dysfunctional legal system.

While it is true that most Punjabis think of themselves as Pakistani first and Punjabi second, this is not the case with the Baloch or Sindhis. Schools in Balochistan refuse to hoist Pakistan’s flag or sing its national anthem. Sindhis, meanwhile, accuse Punjabis of stealing their water, the Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) runs Karachi on strictly ethnic grounds, and in April the Pashtun of th North West Frontier Province successfully had the province officially renamed Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (against the wishes of other residents). In getting a job, caste and sect matters more than ability, and ethnic student groups wage pitched battles against each other on campuses throughout the country.

The lack of nationhood can be traced to the genesis of Pakistan and the single factor that drove it – religious identity. Carved out of Hindu-majority India, Pakistan was the culmination of the competition and conflict between natives who had converted to Islam and those who had not. Converts often identified with Arab invaders of the last millennium. Shah Waliullah (1703-62), a ‘purifier’ of Islam on the subcontinent who despised local traditions, famously declared ‘We [Hindustanis] are an Arab people whose fathers have fallen in exile in the country of Hindustan, and Arabic genealogy and the Arabic language are our pride.’

The founder of Pakistan, Mohamed Ali Jinnah, also echoed the separateness of Muslims and Hindus, basing the struggle for Pakistan on the premise that the two peoples could never live together peacefully within one nation state. But Jinnah was unrecognizably different from Waliullah, a bearded religious scholar. An impeccably dressed Westernized man with Victorian manners, a secular outlook and an appreciation of fine foods and wines, Jinnah nevertheless eloquently articulated the fears and aspirations of an influential section of his co-religionists. Interestingly, he was opposed by a large section of the conservative ulema, such as Maulana Maudoodi of the Jamaat-e-Islami, who said that Islam must not be confined to national borders. But Jinnah and his Muslim League won the day by insisting that Muslims constituted a distinct nation that would be overwhelmed in post-British India by a larger and better-educated Hindu majority.

Thus Pakistan, in essence, was created as the negative of India: it was not India. But what was it, then, beyond being a homeland for Muslims? Decades after the horrific bloodbath of Partition, the idea of Pakistan remains hotly debated. It did not help that Jinnah died in 1948, just a year after Pakistan was born, with his plans still ambiguously stated. He authored no books and wrote no policy paper. He did make many speeches, of which several were driven by political expediency and are frankly contradictory. These are freely cherry-picked today, with some finding in them a liberal and secular voice; others, an embodiment of Islamic values. The confusion is irresolvable.

After Jinnah, the Objectives Resolution of 12 March 1949 was the first major step towards the transformation of Pakistan from a Muslim state into an Islamic state. The Resolution starts with the statement that sovereignty rests with Allah. This obviously limits the legislative power of a representative assembly, since the fundamentals are already defined. Another consequence was the grudging concession that “Adequate provision shall be made for the minorities to freely profess and practice their religions and develop their cultures.” This created the concept of minorities in the Pakistani polity, and hence negated the right of equality – a basic requirement of modern democracy.

The basis in religious identity soon led to painful paradoxes. An overbearing West Pakistan was to ride roughshod over East Pakistan, and become despised as an external imperial power. Jinnah’s ‘Two Nation’ theory was left in tatters after the separation of East Pakistan in 1971, and the defeat of the Pakistani military. The enthusiasm of Muslim Bengalis for Bangladesh – and their failure to ‘repent’ even decades after 1971 – was a deadly blow against the very basis of Pakistan. Nevertheless, contrary to dire predictions, the Pakistani state survived. Its powerful military easily crushed emerging separatist movements in Balochistan and Sindh.

For a while after 1971, the question of national ideology fell into limbo. Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto attempted to create a Pakistani identity around the notion of revenge for the loss of the East Wing. He promised ‘war of a thousand years’ against India, and started Pakistan’s quest for the atomic bomb in 1972. While this served temporarily as a rallying cry, the military coup of 1977 that sent him to the gallows was to revive the identity issue.

Zia's project
Soon after he seized power, General Zia ul-Haq announced his intention to remake Pakistan, and end the confusion of the country’s purpose and identity once and for all. In a sense, he wanted to emulate Napoleon Bonaparte’s achievement of creating a nation from a nation state. Eric Hobsbawm, the influential Marxist historian, persuasively argues that the state of France made the French nation, not vice-versa. Similarly, Zia sought to create a nation – albeit one based on religion rather than on secular principles – using the power of the state. The word soon went out that Pakistan was henceforth not to be described as a Muslim state. Instead, it was now an Islamic state, where Islamic law would soon reign supreme. To achieve this re-conceptualisation, Zia knew that future generations of Pakistanis would have to be purged of liberal and secular values.

Thus began a massive, decade-long state-sponsored project. Democracy was demonized and declared un-Islamic, culture was purified of Hindu ‘contamination’, Urdu was cleansed of Hindi words to the extent possible, capital punishment was freely used, dress codes were introduced, university teachers had their faith examined under a microscope, and religion was introduced into every aspect of public and private life. Education was the key weapon for Zia’s strategy. In 1981, he ordered the education authorities to rewrite the history of Pakistan. All new school textbooks would now “induce pride for the nation’s past, enthusiasm for the present, and unshakeable faith in the stability and longevity of Pakistan.”

Jinnah and other icons of the Pakistan Movement had to be portrayed as pious fundamentalists, whether or not they carried beards; their lifestyles had to be hidden from public view. To eliminate possible ambiguities of approach, a presidential order was issued to the University Grants Commission that, henceforth, all Pakistan Studies textbooks must:

Demonstrate that the basis of Pakistan is not to be founded in racial, linguistic, or geographical factors, but, rather, in the shared experience of a common religion. To get students to know and appreciate the Ideology of Pakistan, and to popularise it with slogans. To guide students towards the ultimate goal of Pakistan – the creation of a completely Islamised State.

In a matter of years, Pakistani schoolchildren grew up learning a catchy but linguistically nonsensical jingle about the “ideology” of Pakistan: “Pakistan ka matlab kya? La illaha illala!” (What is the meaning of Pakistan? There is no god but Allah!) Although the purported answer has nothing to do with the question, Zia’s strategy soon began to show results.

Barely a decade was needed for Pakistan’s transformation from a moderate Muslim-majority country into one where the majority of citizens wanted Islam to play a key role in politics. The effects of indoctrination are now clearly visible. Even as members of the Sharia-seeking Taliban were busy blowing up schools in Swat and elsewhere, a survey in 2008 by the online World Public Opinion found that 54 percent of Pakistanis wanted strict application of Shariah, while 25 percent wanted it in some more dilute form. Totaling 79 percent, this was the largest percentage in the four countries surveyed – Morocco, Egypt, Indonesia and Pakistan. A more recent survey, of 1,226 young Pakistanis between 18 and 29, was carried out across Pakistan by the British Council in 2009. It found that “three-quarters of all young people identify themselves primarily as Muslims. Just 14 percent chose to define themselves primarily as a citizen of Pakistan.”

Clearly, the country’s youth is deeply worried by lack of employment, economic inflation, corruption and violence. In this turbulent sea, it is not surprising that most see religion as their anchor. For some, violent change is the answer to the country’s problems. This is precisely what Zaid Hamid, one of Pakistan’s fiery new demagogues, advocates. Hamid, a self-proclaimed jihadist who claims to have fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan, builds specifically on the insecurity of the youth, enthralling college students who pack auditoriums to listen to him.

Millions more watch him on television, as he lashes out against Pakistan’s corrupt rulers and other “traitors.” Hamid promises that those who betrayed the nation’s honor by joining the US-led ‘war on terror’ will hang from lampposts in Islamabad. In his promised Islamic utopia, speedy Taliban-style justice will replace the clumsy and corrupt courts established by the British. Just as Adolf Hitler dwelt on Germany’s ‘wounded honor’ in his famous beer-hall oratory in Munich (where he promised that Germany would conquer the world), Hamid calls for the Pakistan Army to go to war against India and liberate Kashmir, Palestine, Chechnya and Afghanistan. One day, he says, inshallah, Pakistan’s flag shall fly from Delhi’s Red Fort. The students applaud wildly.

Still no Islamic state?




Notwithstanding the enormous impetus given by Zia, final success still eludes Pakistan’s Islamists. The explosion of religiosity did not produce a new Pakistani identity, and a shariah state is nowhere to be seen.

Why? Ethno-nationalism is part of the answer. This natural resistance against melding into some larger entity is the reflexive response of historically constituted groups that seek to preserve their distinctiveness, expressed in terms of dress, food, folklore and shared history. Assimilation of Pakistan’s diverse peoples into a homogenized national culture is opposed by this force that, like gravity, always acts in one direction.

Ethno-nationalism is, of course, vulnerable. It can be overcome by integrative forces which arise from the natural advantage of being part of a larger economy with correspondingly greater opportunities. But for these forces to be effective, it is essential that the state machinery provide effective governance, demonstrate fairness and is indifferent to ethnic origins. Pakistan’s ruling elite, unfortunately, is both incompetent and ethnically partisan, drawing its roots from the powerful landed and feudal class. The army leadership and the economic elite had joined forces after Partition to claim authority, but they were transparently self-serving and therefore lacked legitimacy.

Dangling the utopia of an Islamic state raised expectations but did little else. To the chagrin of the political and army establishment, it ultimately backfired and became the cause of infinite division. The post-Zia generation – which believes that every issue would be solved if the country were to go back to the fundamentals of Islam – muddles on in a state of deep confusion and deadly divisiveness. It believes that adherence to “true Islam” will solve all problems and lead to a conflict-free society. But, in reality, the Quran and Hadith can be interpreted in multiple ways, and “Islamic fundamentals” can be defined in many contradictory ways.

These differences fuel violent political forces, each convinced that they alone understand god’s will. Murderous wars between Sunni and Shia militias started during the late 1980s. Today, even those favoring the utopian vision of an ideal Islamic state are frightened by the Pakistani Taliban, which seeks to impose its version of shariah through the Kalashnikov and suicide bombings.

All this was easily predictable, as sectarian divides are almost as old as religion itself. Basic questions are fundamentally unanswerable: Which interpretation of Islam, for instance, is the ‘right’ Islam? Of the four schools of Sunni jurisprudence (Hanafi, Shafii, Maaliki, Hanbali), which version of the shariah should be adopted? Will all, or most, Pakistanis accept any non-elected amir-ul-momineen (leader of the pious), or a caliph?

And what about the Shia? Democracy is excluded in any theocratic state, which, by definition, is a state governed according to divinely revealed principles wherein the head of state, elected or otherwise, interprets such principles and translates them into practical matters of the state. So, for example, although Abul Ala Maudoodi, in his Islamic Law and Constitution, states that “Islam vests all the Muslim citizens of an Islamic state with popular vice-regency,” he is quick to point out that all vice-regents need not be of equal consequence. He demands that constitution makers should “Evolve such a system of elections as would ensure the appointment of only those who are trustworthy and pious. They should also devise effective measures to defeat the designs and machinations of those who scramble for posts of trust and are consequently hated and cursed by the people in spite of their so-called ‘victories’ in the elections.”

In this “state without borders.” any Muslim anywhere can be a citizen. It will be the best governed not only because its leaders are pious, but also because the only ones who will vote will be the pious themselves.

In fact, religion cannot be the basis of Pakistan, or move it towards integration. This can be said categorically, although religion was undoubtedly the reason for Pakistan’s formation. Coming over a half-century after Partition, Pervez Musharraf’s call for “enlightened moderation” was indeed a tacit admission of this fact. He realized that a theocratic Pakistan could not work, even though this conflicted with his other responsibility, that of being chief of the Pakistan Army.

Since the days of Zia, the army had arrogated to itself the task of “defending Pakistan’s ideological borders” and, since the end of the 1980s, had consciously nurtured radicalism as an instrument of covert warfare in Kashmir and Afghanistan. Although Musharraf’s successor, General Pervez Kayani, also seeks to distance the army from its past, it is unclear as to what extent he or other senior officers actually have control. The Islamists, for their part, hope for, and seek to incite, action by zealous officers to bring back the glory days of the military-mullah alliance led by Zia.

While it is true that religious political parties have yet to receive any sizeable fraction of the popular vote, the secular system of power was never regarded by Pakistan’s citizens as just, appropriate or authoritative. So, by default, Islam became accepted as the basis of Pakistan, and any suggestion to the contrary continues to evoke a fierce public reaction.

On the other hand, any serious move in the direction of making Pakistan a shariah state would almost certainly lead to civil war. Why so? This is because while the shariah is considered a panacea for Pakistan’s multiple problems of corruption, inequity and poor governance, its true nature is revealed only once there is an actual move towards its implementation.

In the past, terrible and uncontrollable forces have been released against the people. As in Swat, the Pakistani Taliban’s Wahabi-Deobandi-Salafi understanding of shariah calls for forbidding females from leaving their houses, being educated or holding jobs. Men must have beards, wear shalwars rather than trousers, and never miss prayers. Killing apostates, decapitations, floggings and amputation of limbs are an essential part of the Taliban’s penal code. Fortunately, those who defend this notion of shariah constitute no more than perhaps 10 percent of Pakistan’s population. Of course, that still means millions.

Pakistan must remain
In common parlance, the ‘state’ refers to the government, and an entity in international law. Recognition by other states of the state’s claim to sovereignty enables it to enter into international agreements. Moreover, it needs a government to control its internal affairs. A more standard political-science definition of a nation state goes something like this: A state is an organized political community, occupying a territory and possessing internal and external sovereignty, which enforces a monopoly on the use of force. Max Weber, the political economist, defined the state as ‘a human community that (successfully) claims the monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force within a given territory.’

Pakistan is a nation state by the above definition and must continue to remain one. In effect, it must be because it is! The cost of the disappearance or destruction of this nuclear-weapon state is too awful to contemplate. Pakistan can indeed become a nation; moreover, it will almost certainly become one in time. Although religion will certainly remain an important part of Pakistan’s social reality for the foreseeable future, it must seek new roots lying within the country’s social reality rather than religion.

Look at it this way: rain inevitably grinds down stony mountains over centuries and ultimately creates fertile soil. Similarly, nations are inevitably formed when people experience a common environment and live together for long enough. How long is long enough? In Pakistan’s case, the timescale could be fairly short. Its people are diverse, but almost all understand Urdu. They watch the same television programs, hear the same radio stations, deal with the same irritating and inefficient bureaucracy, use the same badly written textbooks, buy similar products and despise the same set of rulers.

Slowly but surely a composite, but genuine, Pakistani culture is emerging. Of course, stable nationhood is still not guaranteed. Both the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia broke apart after seven decades. If Pakistan is to stay together and chart a path to viable nationhood, it must identify its most pressing problems and seek their amelioration. What might be a suitable manifesto of change?

First, Pakistan needs peace. This means that it must turn inwards and devote its fullest attention to ending its raging internal wars. The 60-year conflict with India has achieved nothing beyond creating a militarized Pakistani security state that uses force as its first resort even when dealing with its own people. Attempts to solve the Kashmir issue militarily have bled the country dry, leaving it completely dependent on foreign aid. The army’s role must be limited to defending the people of Pakistan, and to ensuring that their constitutional and civil rights are protected.

Indeed, given that the country could otherwise be rapidly overwhelmed by extremists who openly declare their disdain for democracy, the army is obligated to fight its progeny – the Taliban. There should be no illusion that extremism can be defeated by purely peaceful means. Indeed, the way ahead must be subtle and complicated.

How can one develop the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and ameliorate the anguish of their people when the insurgents are out to stop development, bomb schools and kill doctors? In such a situation, Pakistan must say yes to negotiations, but no to surrender. It currently appears that the future will be one of ‘talk, fight, talk, fight’.

Second, Pakistan needs economic justice. This is not the same as flinging coins at beggars. Rather, it requires organizational infrastructure that, at the very least, provides employment but also rewards according to ability and hard work. Incomes should be neither exorbitantly high nor miserably low. To be sure, ‘high’ and ‘low’ are not easily quantifiable, but an inner moral sense tells us that something is desperately wrong when rich Pakistanis fly off to vacation in Dubai while a mother commits suicide because she cannot feed her children.

A welfare state in Pakistan is a distant ideal. India abolished feudalism upon attaining independence. But the enormous pre-Partition landholdings of Pakistan’s feudal lords remained safe and sound, protected by the authority of the state. The land reforms announced by Ayub Khan and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto were eyewash. In later years, with the consolidation of military rule in national politics, the army turned itself into a landlord-and-capitalist class. Military officers own assets that have no relation to national defense. This includes vast amounts of farm lands and valuable urban real estate, banking, insurance, advertising companies, cement and sugar industries, airlines and ground transportation, cornflakes and commercial bottled water. Most countries have armies but, as some have dryly remarked, only in Pakistan does an army have a country.

Third, Pakistan must shed its colonial structure of governance. Different historically constituted peoples must want to live together voluntarily, and see the benefits of doing so. A giant centralized government machine sitting in Islamabad cannot effectively manage such a diverse country. The demand for creating more provinces should be carefully examined and not peremptorily rejected, as is currently taking place. Having smaller administrative units does make sense, especially due to the rapidly rising population. On the other hand, to fan the flames of nationalism can hardly be a good thing.

As in India, Pakistan should be reorganized as a federation in which provinces and local governments hold the critical economic and social powers, while defense and foreign affairs are held in common by the Centre. In particular, Islamabad’s conflict with Balochistan urgently needs resolution, but using political sagacity rather than military force. Blaming India will not achieve anything – the Baloch are angry for good reason.

At a recent lecture to senior Pakistan civil-service officers in Peshawar, this writer was taken aback at the intensity with which senior officers from Balochistan spoke. They said that Baloch wounds are too deep, and that the time for healing and reconciliation with Pakistan had passed. A decade ago, one would only have expected this language from student radicals – now, it is the mainstream Baloch who articulate such sentiments.
Fourth, Pakistan needs a social contract and economic justice. This is a commitment that citizens will be treated fairly and equally by the state and shall, in turn, willingly fulfill basic civic responsibilities. But today, Pakistanis are denied even basic protections specified in the Constitution. The poor suffer outright denial of rights – such as personal security and access to water in cities – while the rich are compelled to buy these.

Rich and poor alike therefore feel no obligation to fulfill their civic duties. Most do not pay their fair share of income tax, leading to one of the lowest tax-to-GDP ratios in the world. Seeing that the rulers flagrantly flout the very laws they claim to espouse, it is no surprise that the common citizen does the same.

Fifth, the country’s education needs drastic revision in the means of delivery and content. Money goes some way towards the first – better school infrastructure, books, teacher salaries, etc. But this is not enough. Schools teach children to mindlessly obey authority, to look to the past for solutions to today’s problems, and to be intolerant of the religion, culture and language of others. Instead, students need to be taught to be enquiring, open-minded, creative, logical, socially responsible, and to appreciate diversity.

Pakistan paid a very heavy price because its leaders could not understand that a heterogeneous population can live together only if differences are respected. The imposition of Urdu upon Bengal in 1948 was a tragic mistake, and the first of a sequence of missteps that led up to the awful slaughter of Bengalis by the West Pakistani military in 1971. A myopic education system is squarely responsible for the fact that ethnic and religious minorities are viewed with suspicion and disdain by the majority. This must change.

In the end, for Pakistan to succeed, it must want to become a nation held together by mutual interests rather than by some abstract Islamic ideology. This is the only way to deal with the multiple civil wars that have started in the country. The path to creating a Pakistani nation is doubtless difficult. As the population explodes, oceans of poverty and misery deepen, limbless beggars in the streets multiply, water and clean air become scarce, education is stalemated, true democracy remains elusive, and the distance from a rapidly developing world increases. One is strongly tempted to step aside, give up and admit helplessness.

But surely that is wrong, for what we fear will then actually come to pass. The political philosopher Antonio Gramsci spoke of “pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will.” Indeed, with the pessimism of the intellect, one must calmly contemplate the yawning abyss up ahead. But then, after a period of reflection, one should move to prevent falling into it.

Pervez Hoodbhoy teaches at the Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad. This is printed with the permission of Himal Southasian, with which Asia Sentinel has a content-sharing agreement.

First, DPM Muhyiddin should tell us what is going wrong in our education system?

by N K Khoo

Many Malaysia generations are made guinea pigs by our flip-flopping
education policies after independence such as teaching medium from
English to Malay, 3M, bahasa Malaysia to bahasa Melayu, teaching maths
and science in English and vice versa, SRP to UPSR, grading system,
etc.

The trend is when a new education minister clinches to this important
post, they will propose new policies hastily. No doubt change is
constant for us to keep abreast the outside world. But we have to know
the problem first before proposing a change of policy or solution.

I have a question to DPM Muhyiddin and his Education Ministry, what
are the actual problems in our education system before you simply
throw a proposal (a bomb!) to public members.

I and many educationists can propose a hundred possible or plausible
solutions to any hypothetical problem, but nobody knows are we
addressing the root causes.

The list of problems can be

- Rote learning

- Too examination orientated

- Poor in arithmetic skill

- Poor in English/mother tongue/languages

- No participation in sports and co-curriculum

- Too many grade A scorers

- Too many homeworks

- Too many textbooks

- Too many learning hours

- Too many tuition classes

- Obsolete syllabus

- Poor teaching standards

- Poor in comprehension skill

- Plagiarism

- Lack of analytical skill

- Lack of problem solving skill

- Lack of creativity

- Lack of IT skill

- Malnutrition

- Moral decay

- etc.

Let define the problem, its scope and magnitude first before DPM
Muhyiddin proposes something like abolishing UPSR and PMR to rakyat.
Such as proposal causing more confusions than solutions by itself.

Government Won't Issue Sports Betting Licence, Says PM

KUALA LUMPUR, June 26 (Bernama) -- The government decided not to issue the sports betting licence to Ascott Sports Sdn Bhd.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak said the decision was made after taking into consideration the views of various quarters which clearly showed that the majority did not agree to the issuing of the licence.

Najib, who is also the Umno president, said the decision was also agreed upon unanimously by members of the Umno Supreme Council which met Friday night.

"Since the approval was decided in principle and a survey was carried out, although there were groups who supported as well those who did not support or opposed the decision, it was clear to the government that a majority of the people did not agree that the licence be issued to Ascot Sports.

"As such, I hereby wish to announce that the government has decided that the licence will not be issued," he told reporters after chairing the meeting.

Najib said the licence was issued in 1989 but the company had returned it to the government in 1990 after suffering huge loses.

Since the company had tried to renew the licence a number of times but only recently the government had approved the issuance of such a licence on principle, based on a number of terms.

Najib said the government's aim was to control illegal betting that was said to be in the region of RM10 billion, as well prevent other social problems.

At the same time the Prime Minister said the government had also decided that Muslims were totally prohibited from being involved in any sports betting whether buying, working or becoming a member of the Board of Directors in a betting company.

"This condition was firmly specified by the government," he pointed out.

When asked whether the decision was agreed upon by other Barisan Nasional (BN) component parties, he said they all accepted the decision in the interest of the nation.

Najib who is also the Finance Minister emphasized that Ascott would not be paid any compensation because the finance Ministry had the right to revoke any gambling licences issued.

He said Ascott had also been informed of the decision and they understood why the government did not issue the licence.

ADAKAH NAJIB DIUGUT UNTUK TERIMA KEPUTUSAN RUNDINGAN MALAYSIA – SINGAPURA YANG MERUGIKAN ?

Kenyataan Media
25 Ogos 2010
Ogos 1965, regim pemerintah Negara telah menyerahkan Singapura. Kelemahan regim ini ditutup dengan perbagai sentiment. Rakyat yang terbakar dengan perbagai sentimen pada waktu itu melupakan kelemahan regim sehingga tergadai hak dan kedaulatan Negara. Semenjak itulah perbagai isu hubungan dua negara ini muncul dan tidak selesai.
Antara isu yang tidak diselesaikan dan berpanjangan sejak dulu antaranya ialah isu pembangunan tanah milik KTMB dan sekitar tambak Johor. Walau apa pun tuduhan terhadap Perdana Menteri sebelum ini namun jelas mereka mempertahankan kedaulatan Negara dan tidak mahu menerima tawaran rundingan Singapura yang jelas berat sebelah.
Namun baru – baru ini hasil pertemuan tertutup Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak dengan rakan sejawat di Singapura. Kononya telah menyelesaikan beberapa isu tertangguh sekian lama. Dilaporkan di media Malaysia bersetuju memindahkan stesen Keretapi Tanah Melayu Berhad (KTMB) di Tanjong Pagar di Singapura ke Pusat Pemeriksaan Kereta Api Woodlands (WTCP) menjelang 1 Julai 2011.
Dilaporkan juga Najib turut menyatakan, 271 hektar tanah milik KTMB di Tanjung Pagar, Kranji dan Woodlands serta tiga keping tanah di Bukit Timah kini diserahkan kepada sebuah syarikat yang belum lagi ditubuhkan.
Syarikat usaha sama Malaysia-Singapura yang dikenali sebagai M-S Pte Ltd, akan ditubuhkan sebelum 31 Disember tahun ini di mana Khazanah Nasional memegang 60% kepentingan dan Temasek Holdings Limited akan memegang baki 40%.
Ini, bermakna dari jumlah 271 hektar tanah milik KTMB, 40% kini sudah sah menjadi milik Singapura melalui perkongsian pelaburan.
Walaupun belum ada kepastian mengenai status pemilikan tanah, tetapi projek sistem transit laju (RTS) menghubungkan Tanjung Puteri, Johor dengan stesen di Woodlands yang dijadual beroperasi pada 2018 melalui projek usaha sama ini, kini dibahagi dua kepada Singapura.
Najib juga, gagal memberikan penjelasan terperinci tentang cadangan memindahkan Stesen KTMB di Tanjong Pagar ke Pusat Pemeriksaan Kereta Api Woodlands (WTCP) milik Singapura menjelang 1 Julai 2011.
Tanah milik KTMB di Tanjung Pagar, Kranji dan Woodlands serta tiga keping tanah tambahan di Bukit Timah, yang kesemuanya berjumlah 271 hektar akan diserahkan kepada syarikat usaha sama Malaysia-Singapura yang dikenali sebagai M-S Pte Ltd, yang akan ditubuhkan sebelum 31 Disember tahun ini.
Malaysia juga dikatakan bakal memindahkan kemudahan kastam, imigresen dan kuarantin (CIQ) kereta api di WTCP.
Hampir pasti bahawa kos operasi KTMB pasti akan meningkat dan bayaran penyewaan WTCP milik Singapura akan membebankan pada masa akan datang.
Maka KTMB bakal menyertai senarai syarikat milik kerajaan yang rugi seperti Pos Malaysia Berhad dan Sime Darby Berhad yang juga dibawah perlaburan Khazanah Nasional.
Apa yang berlaku ialah kita bakal membentuk satu lagi perjanjian seperti perjanjian air dengan Singapura yang jelas amat berat sebelah dan menggadaikan kedaulatan Negara.
Semua ini mengarut dan tak masuk akal. Selepas pengumuman di Singapura , banyak bantahan kedengaran di Malaysia. Namun Perdana Menteri Singapura hadir pula ke Kuala Lumpur seolah ‘mengingatkan’ Najib mengenai sesuatu agar Najib terus mempertegaskan persetujuan Malaysia dengan keputusan berat sebelah yang dipersetujui di Singapura.
Seolah seperti ada sesuatu yang mengikat Najib untuk akur walaupun ia jelas merugikan Negara. Dari aspek politik juga Najib jelas akan rugi kerana suara bantahan yang keras sudah mula kedengaran. Namun Najib seolah terpaksa meneruskan.
Adakah Najib diugut dalam mempersetujui perjanjian ini ?
Berdasarkan kenyataan bersumpah yang di ikrarkan oleh Balasubramanian pada 1 Julai 2008 menyatakan Antara dakwaan Bala dalam surat akuan itu ialah, Najib telah memperkenalkan Altantuya yang dikenali sebagai 'Aminah' kepada Razak di Pameran Berlian di Singapura. Maknanya Najib pernah berada di Singapura bersama Altantuya.
Adakah ‘perisik’ Singapura telah mengumpulkan rekod tersebut ? Adakah rekod tersebut digunakan untuk mengugut Najib dalam akur dan bersetuju dalam satu lagi penggadaian hak dan kedaulatan Negara ?
Najib perlu tampil dan berterus terang depan rakyat Malaysia. Jika benar dia diugut rakyat Malaysia seharusnya bangkit bersatu bersama Najib yang sedang menghadapi ugutanmelalui rekod maklumat risikan Singapura ini.
Solidariti Anak Muda Malaysia (SAMM) melihat isu ini sebagai isu besar kedaulatan, maruah dan masadepan Negara. Untuk itu 2 Julai ini Solidariti Anak Muda Malaysia akan menghantar surat terbuka kepada Perdana Menteri Malaysia mengenai isu ini dan surat terbuka ini akan dicetak sekurang – kurangnya 20,000 naskah akan diedar seluruh Negara bagi mempertingkatkan pemahaman rakyat agar bangkit mempertahankan kedaulatan Negara.
BADRUL HISHAM SHAHARIN a.k.a che’GuBard
Penyelaras
Solidariti Anak Muda Malaysia (SAMM)

Friday, 25 June 2010

Athens blast kills at least one

Police guard the entrance to the Ministry of Citizen Protection in Athens, Greece, after Thursday's bombing.

(Right) Police guard the entrance to the Ministry of Citizen 
Protection in Athens, Greece, after Thursday's bombing.

Athens, Greece (CNN) -- One person was killed in an explosion at the Ministry of Citizen Protection in Athens, Greece, on Thursday, a ministry official said.

The blast took place not far from the office of the minister, Michalis Chrysochoidis, journalist Elinda Labropoulou reported for CNN.

It is not clear whether he was in his office when the blast happened. But he appeared on Greek television shortly after the explosion, saying, "we are not afraid," Labropoulou reported.

"I lost a colleague and a friend," Chrysochoidis said.

The bomb was in a parcel delivered to the desk of the assistant to the secretary of the ministry, CNN affiliate Mega Channel reported. It is not clear whether the package was opened.

There has been no claim of responsibility, police said.

The ministry is responsible for public order, including policing.

Government buildings, banks and international businesses in Athens are targeted fairly regularly by bombers, but it is unusual for people to be killed.

Bombers often phone warnings to newspapers or police before the explosions. It is not clear whether a warning was issued Thursday.

CNN's Stephanie Halasz contributed to this report.

Taib’s fortune: Trio will return to MACC with ‘own copies’

BY FMT Staff

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian Anti- Corruption Commission's (MACC) refusal to forward a copy of a report lodged by three Sarawakians alleging corruption by Sarawak Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud has shocked the trio and thrown further suspicion on the agency, which is already struggling with its battered image.

Describing the situation as “ridiculous”, the trio – James Wong Joon Min, Ting Chek Ming and Ahmad Nazib Johari – have decided to make their own copies and return on a later date to lodge again their reports with the MACC in Putrajaya.

Said Wong: “We’ve decided to come back on another day. We’ll make our own copies of the report. We want MACC to investigate it. The report touches on Taib and family’s business empire and properties in Canada.”

The trio had yesterday lodged a report against Taib at the MACC yesterday. Having done so, they asked for a copy and were denied.

Shocked, they demanded an explanation only to be told that there was “no ruling allowing for a copy to be issued to the complainant”.

Billionaire daughter

Strangely enough, said Ahmad Nazib, the officer told them that “this case was different, this is a high-profile case”.

“After hearing this, we decided to be cautious. We told them that whether it is high or low-profile, the law is the law and should be applied to all,” said Ahmad Nazib.

Their MACC report was based on a series of articles published on the web portal sarawakreport.org last week.

The report noted that Taib had assets worth RM3 billion in Canada, London and Australia.

It also placed Taib’s billionaire daughter Jamilah as the owner of Sakato Development Corporation,an Ottawa-based construction company which owned assets worth millions of US dollars, with offices in the US and other countries.

The web report also alleged that the Taib family owned a company, Sitehost Pty Ltd, which was worth millions of ringgit in Australia. The family also allegedly owned the Kuching Hilton and Mulu Resort in Sarawak.

The web has alleged that Taib had used his wealth in Sarawak to invest all over the world, thus avoiding domestic taxes.

The report also exposed several other alleged abuses by Taib in construction and timber concessions through his family-owned company Cahya Mata Sarawak.