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Friday, 1 August 2014

Preacher says sorry for insult to Hindus

Boko Haram Mass Abduction: Fears Chibok Girls Being Used as Suicide Bombers

Boko haram
Fears are growing that Boko Haram terror group is using the 220 girls it abducted in Chibok last April as suicide bombers.

Speculations come as two students were killed and eight were injured in a suicide bombing at a university in Kano, northwest Nigeria. Information Nigeria reported the suicide bomber was a girl.
Thirteen people were later killed as two women blew themselves up in two mosques in the town of Potiskum, Yobe State.

The same day, Nigerian authorities arrested two suspected Boko Haram members travelling with a 10-year-old girl who was carrying explosives.

According to local daily Punch, two female suicide bombers struck in different parts of Kano killing and injuring many people while Muslims had gathered together to celebrate Eid, the end of Ramadan.
A woman also blew herself up at a petrol station in northern Nigeria killing three people. Another suicide bomber struck in a supermarket; nobody was killed.

A 15-year-old girl was reported to have blown herself up near a temporary university site with five police officers suffering minor injuries.

Members of the #BringBackOurGirls group, created after the Chibok girls were abducted, fear the girls are being forced by the terrorists to carry out suicide attacks.

Former education minister Oby Ezekwesili urged the Nigerian government not to "move on," as the Chibok girls may be "indoctrinated or coerced into being used as suicide bombers".

"This new trend and serial pattern of female suicide bombers surely should particularly worry us," she said.

"Female suicide bombers are again and again becoming the trend and our Chibok girls are still in the enemy's den. It worries me stiff. Are we thinking? Our Chibok girls really need to be rescued from the clutches of evil."

The Human Rights Writers Association (HURIWA) urged the government to investigate the identity of the female suicide bombers.

"In the event that these female suicide bombers are identified to have been the same kidnapped girls, then the government should immediately deploy all resources and strategies to bring to an end, once and for all, this shameful scenario, since the military have repeatedly stated that they are aware of the whereabouts of the kidnaped Chibok girls," the organisation said.

Political blogger Japheth Omojuwa suggested that Boko Haram might be using the girls for suicide attacks, to save its members for combat.

Who are Boko Haram? 

Boko Haram – which translates from Hausa into 'Western education is forbidden' - wants to impose sharia law in Nigeria.

The militants, currently led by Abubakar Shekau, are known for targeting civilians and government members who oppose the Islamisation of the country.

The group carries out its attacks primarily in northern Nigeria, where three states – Borno, Yobe and Adamawa - have been under a state of emergency since May.

Violence linked to the Boko Haram insurgency has resulted in an estimated 10,000 deaths between 2002 and 2013.

Acid attacks on women cast pall of fear

QUETTA: A recent spate of acid attacks in Balochistan, a region previously untouched by the crime, has sparked an impassioned debate about rising extremism that is forcing an increasing number of women to stay at home.

The horrific crime, which disfigures and often blinds its overwhelmingly female victims, has long been used to settle personal or family scores with hundreds of cases reported every year.

But two fresh attacks on consecutive days in Balochistan last week, where until a few years ago such assaults were unheard of, suggests a new pattern is emerging.

Last Tuesday, two men on a motorcycle sprayed acid using syringes on two teenage girls who were returning from a market in Mastung town, 40 kilometres from Quetta.

The day before, four women aged between 18 and 50 had suffered the same fate in Quetta, in the market area of Sariab. They were partially burned.

“In accordance with our Baloch traditions, they were wrapped in big shawls as well as covering their faces. That… saved (them) from severe injuries,” said Naz Bibi, mother of two of the victims.

Asked about the attackers, she said: “I can only request that they should not treat women in such a cruel way.”

In most acid attack cases around Pakistan, the majority of victims know their attackers. When caught, relatives found guilty speak of punishing their victims for having sullied their “honour” or that of their family with “indecent” behaviour.

But, in these latest cases, the victims had no known connection to their assailants — which has led campaigners to suggest the attacks are part of rising religious extremism in the province.

“The aim of these inhuman acts is to prevent women from participating in education, as well as social, political and economic aspects of life by creating a climate of terror,” said Jahanzaib Jamaldini, vice president of the Baloch National Party.

This week, three more women suffered injuries to their legs and feet in yet another attack — though police and senior officials have so far said the latest incident was a case of a “family feud”.

Mohammad Munzoor, a brother of one of the victims, lamented that the attackers were still at large.

“They roam the area on motorcycles and the local people have spotted them,” he said.

In the Sariab district of Quetta, the scene of one of last week’s attacks, the Ahl-e-Sunnat Wal-Jammat (ASWJ), are increasingly coming to the fore.

“ASWJ controls the area with dozens of armed men,” said one young resident.

The group said the accusations were “without any basis”. “We condemn these attacks,” Ramzan Mengal, the group’s leader in Balochistan said.

The acid attacks also fit a wider pattern of a steady erosion of women’s rights.

Al-Furqhan, an obscure militant group, recently appeared in the one-time separatist rebel stronghold of Panjgur district, which borders Iran, threatening private schools over the teaching of girls, according to residents.

In an atmosphere rife with fear, no suspects have so far been arrested and no group has claimed responsibility.

The first recorded acid attack in Balochistan came in 2010, with two more reported in 2012.

Mohammad Aslam, a women’s tailor in Sariab, has seen sales drop by three-quarters since the market attack. “Women are afraid to step out of their homes or their men stop them from going,” he said.

Shopkeepers in Mastung reported a similar decline in sales.

“We fear that such incidents could increase and leave no space for women in an already male-dominated society,” said human rights activist Saima Jawaid.

‘Sorry’ not enough, Muslim preacher must be charged, say Indian groups

Penang MIC and the state Hindu Endowment Board are not satisfied with Muslim preacher Shahul Hamid Seeni Mohd's (pic) public apology today for insulting Hindus and Indians.

They said although it was good that Shahul apologised, he must still be punished.

State MIC chairman M. Karuppannan said damage has been done and that it is a serious offence in this multiracial country.

"If an apology is all it takes, then anyone can simply make an offensive remark and then apologise for it later," he told a press conference at Wisma MIC today.

He said Shahul is free to talk about the goodness of his religion without condemning other faiths.

Karuppannan was referring to the viral video of Shahul telling the audience in a religious talk not to buy curry powder products from "Hindu companies" such as Alagappa's and Baba's.

Shahul also made fun of a Hindu deity's statue located at the premises of an Alagappa factory in Bukit Mertajam in the video.

Karuppanan, who is also a lawyer, said Shahul's more damaging remarks touched on the famous Hindu celebration, Thaipusam, and the Snake Temple.

"He said 'orang Hindu tak ada Tuhan' (Hindus have no God). That is seditious," he said, adding that the remark also incited racial disharmony.

Karuppanan said Hindus are upset over the remarks and urged the Attorney-General to take immediate action to charge him.

"He has to face the consequences. When he mocked the religion, he also damaged the reputation of Alagappa's and Baba's.

"The two companies that sell halal products should consider taking legal action. His remarks were defamatory," he said.

He added that Shahul should also be taken to task for questioning the authorities in charge of halal certification.

Penang Hindu Endowment Board chairman Dr P. Ramasamy said, "You can't simply say something (offensive) and then say sorry".

Ramasamy, who is also the Penang deputy chief minister II, said what Shahul said was "highly seditious and inflammatory".

He said this was no isolated incident as there has been an increase in cases of religious intolerance in the country.

"In the last five or six years, there had been many remarks ridiculing the Hindu faith and its deities," he said

Ramasamy cited how former Perkasa vice-president Datuk Zulkifli Noordin had insulted Hinduism several times in the past but never faced action.

"With Shahul making fun of a Hindu deity, we feel he is playing with fire. The police must act immediately and not drag their feet in this case too.

"There is a heightened anger among Hindus over this," he said, adding that he also learned that curry powder was thrown on Shahul's car.

Earlier today, Shahul apologised for making the remarks, which he said was not intended to insult Hinduism and the Indian community.

He said he never meant to be offensive when he made the reference, adding that the viral video was something unexpected.

He incurred the wrath of Hindus after the video of him insulting the religion was uploaded on YouTube.

MIC Youth and several non-governmental organisations yesterday staged a protest in Brickfields, calling on the authorities to take action against him.

In George Town, Penang, yesterday morning, some 30 people representing MIC, PPP and several Hindu NGOs lodged police reports against him. It was reported that over 400 police reports had been lodged against Shahul nationwide

Putrajaya denies report that Hamas fighters trained in Malaysia

Putrajaya today refuted a report claiming that Hamas fighters were trained in Malaysia, saying that the country has never offered any such education to Hamas or other groups fighting in troubled countries, Astro Awani quoted the deputy home minister as saying.

Datuk Dr Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar (pic) said that the Malaysian government had neither prepared training nor allowed such a training ground to exist in the country.

"It is impossible that such a training took place in this country. The fighter's comment is not true and this does not exist at all here.

"It doesn't matter what kind of fight it is, including one categorised as good in fighting Israel, we have never allowed nor given any approval for such a training," he was quoted as saying by Astro Awani.

Wan Junaidi also said that any fighter who wanted to undergo such training could do so in countries where such a thing was offered, but not in Malaysia.

"I want to stress again that we do not have war training for such fighters. Those who want and are interested can train in other countries, " he said.

The deputy minister was asked to comment on a report by Jerusalem Post in which a Hamas cell commander told Israeli interrogators that members of a cell had trained to carry out cross-border attacks using powered parachutes in Malaysia.

The training was part of Hamas's preparation to fight Israel in the Gaza Strip, he told investigators.

The commander, who was part of Hamas's regional battalion, was arrested by the Israeli Defence Forces on July 21 in Khan Yunis.

The Jerusalem Post report said he had travelled to Malaysia in 2012 with nine others and learned how to fly powered parachutes.

It also said that the commander joined Hamas seven years ago and became part of its military wing.

Enough of racist policies

Stop all the racist policies and implement ANTI RACISM ACT urgently

Saravanan, Hindu Human Rights Organization (Hindhor) Belgium

I would like to remind Mr.PM and IGP that Malaysia got independence by mutual understanding of the three main races. All three races should be treated equally by the Malaysian Government. Tunku and Abdul Razak Hussein requested and assured the Reid Commission that the Malay special position would be implemented “only for 15 years, between 1957 and 1972, and after that all citizens shall be treated with equal status.”

The Umno-led government later manipulated and colluded with the British to make the provisions in Article 153, which governs the Malay special position which is against the submissions and undertakings of the Reid Commission.

The country’s citizens and the world are watching how every case has been manipulated and delayed to act for the favor of one race. Favoring wrong-doers is not a religious act or constitutional law.

The citizens of Malaysia are becoming fed up with the current ruling system. UMNO-led government with the knowledge of PM funds racist organizations to target the Non-Muslims. This has been disclosed by NGOs. Mr.PM please let us know what you are trying to do with this country and by funding racist NGOs?

* Recently a road bully woman was given priority in radio channels with the knowledge of the government and an UMNO-funded NGO collected funds for the wrong-doer who was charged in court. You watched this and zero action was taken.

* On 17 July 2014 a Nezha deity statue standing more than 10 metres tall at a temple in Kampung Tembioh, Johor, was taken down because your party (UMNO) youth members weren’t happy but the temple existed before Independence.

* On 10th July 2014 an ustad from SK Port Dickson hit an 8 year old girl with a shoe. As per normal, the teacher was transferred to another school but no arrest was made even though it was a clear child abuse case. PDRM, where is your action in this case?

*On 22nd July 2014 a police investigation officer wrote in his Facebook that Indians are PARIA and threatened to demolish Hindu temples. The police officer by the name Ahmad Tarmizi was transferred as per normal and PDRM failed to arrest him for being threatening and seditious.

* On 28th July 2014 an ustaz (Shahul Hamid) insulted Hindu Gods and Goddesses at the same time he was stirring racial sentiments such as Muslims should not buy Indian products in Malaysia. Responsible citizens of the country have made more than 100 police reports around the country yet no arrest was made even though you have enough evidence.

We Malaysians are not surprised by your policies. This has been carrying on since Tun Dr. Mahathir’s era. We are also used to the idea of the home minister, AG and IGP teaming up to sideline the marginalized communities in Malaysia. Enough is enough; stop all your racist policies urgently. By funding and keeping silent on every racist act by individuals and Malay NGOs will not bring harmony or extra support for your ruling government.

Malaysians need an ANTI RACISM ACT urgently. If you fail to announce this soon we will conclude that the whole team of UMNO, IGP, AG and Racist NGOs are working against the peaceful and harmony marginalized community.

Ustaz promises never to insult Hindus again

An ustaz who insulted Hindus four years ago has apologised again, this time publicly.

GEORGE TOWN: Muslim preacher Ustaz Shahul Hameed Seeni apologised today for insulting Hindus at his ceramah four years ago.

Shahul said he never meant to offend Hindus when he told his audience not to buy curry powder brands Alagappa and Baba, which were owned by Indians.

During the ceramah, he also made fun of the statue of a Hindu deity at the Alagappa’s factory in Bukit Mertajam.

Shahul had said: “If you go to the Alagappa’s factory near Permatang Pauh, you will see a statue (goddess) at the entrance, and the tongue is out. Why is the tongue out? Because the goddess must taste all the curry powder before they sell it.”

“I never wanted to insult or incite racial tension. I only wanted to attract the audience’s attention,” he told reporters at the Seberang Prai Tengah district mosque today after having his statement recorded by police.

The Hindu community became enraged after a video recording of Shahul insulting Hindus went viral on YouTube.

MIC Youth and several non-governmental organisations staged a protest in Brickfields yesterday, urging action to be taken against Shahul.

About 30 representatives from MIC, PPP and Hindu NGOs lodged police reports against him.

Shahul has since apologised to Hindus and Malaysians on his Facebook page and through a video clip.

“I assure you that this will never happen again. Give me a chance to make amends,” he said.

Shahul said he was willing to meet Indian leaders to explain his actions.

He said he hoped the police reports against him would be retracted and no legal action taken against him.

Shahul confirmed he had lodged a police report after receiving death threats on his phone and Facebook page.

‘Hidden hands’ steering our path

Some claim these unseen hands operate through us being a democratic nation, where we get to vote our leaders into power and also have a say in what we want for our country.

Marina Mahathir, The Star


LET me first wish everyone Selamat Hari Raya, maaf zahir batin. This Ramadan has been a particularly sad one with the MH17 tragedy, especially when it came so soon after the disappearance of MH370. Our hearts and prayers go to all those who lost their loved ones in both tragedies.

But even without MH17, Ramadan was no less rancorous with attempts to ban soup kitchens and bad-tempered drivers behaving without restraint towards old people.

Then in a misplaced attempt to be “even-handed”, some radio stations made the perpetrator look like a celebrity, much to the disgust of many.

Whatever it was, a month that is supposed to be about restraint and moderation turned out to be ill-tempered.

I can’t help thinking that if it hadn’t been for the very sobering effect of MH17, things would have been much worse.

Not that we can truly expect the rest of the year to be calm and peaceful.

Already people whose sole purpose in life seems to be being as divisive as possible have declared that democracy is an evil invention of the West that we should not follow.

Its worst effect, it seems, is that it gives “citizens the right to determine their own future”.

Funny, I thought that’s why we wanted independence from our colonisers, so that we could decide the future of our country for ourselves.

But I suppose their argument here is that we are still not independent because there are many “hidden hands” actually steering our path.

The thing about these “hidden hands” is that apparently they operate through us being a democratic nation where we get to vote our leaders into power and also have a say in what we want for our country.

Thus, an undemocratic concept like the “hidden hands” operates through being democratic.

So if we didn’t have democracy, their logic goes, these invisible unknown hands wouldn’t control us.

The funny thing is there must be a lot of these unseen hands around the world since there are so many democratic countries.

If they vote in the people we like, then the hidden hands fail.

But when they vote in people we don’t like, then those hands managed to win.

Since it is democracy that works in both cases, it’s hard not to think that those hands are really inconsistent.

So perhaps we should follow the undemocratic nations where the hands are not hidden at all, like, for example, Saudi Arabia?

So after 57 years of democracy, more or less, there are now people who think this is not a good idea. Not that they have any idea what should replace it, apart from that we should have an “Islamic” state. But a true Muslim state is a democratic one. Indeed the Quran warns us against despots and tyrants.

In chapter 4, verse 135, the Holy Book says “O You who have attained to faith! Be ever steadfast in upholding equity, bearing witness to the truth for the sake of God, even though it be against your own selves or your parents and kinsfolk. Whether the person concerned be rich or poor, God’s claim takes precedence over [the claims of] either of them. Do not, then, follow your own desires, lest you swerve from justice: for if you distort [the truth], behold, God is indeed aware of all that you do!” (Translation by Assad).

There are some whose sense of history seems to have little to do with facts.

The Constitutional monarchy, they claim, existed long before we became independent.

Which is an interesting re-telling of history, given that we did not have a Constitution before independence.

So what was “Constitutional” about the sultanates before then? Is that what they are proposing we revert to?

There are others who claim we should not have democracy because our Federal Constitution doesn’t contain the word.

I do love selective literalists who don’t know their history.

Did our forefathers clamour for independence because they wanted to be under anyone else’s yoke?

Why on earth did they decide we should have a Parliament we should vote for in elections if they did not want democracy?

Do they have to spell out every single word or did they know that “self-determination” meant democracy and nothing else? Perhaps people in 1957 were more intelligent than today?

And as for claiming we should not have democracy because it’s not mentioned in our Federal Cons­titution, I find this disingenuous of the selective literalists.

After all, they’re quite happy to want to do things that aren’t mentioned in the Quran. Like, the punishment for apostasy or for drinking. Or to do the opposite of things enjoined in the Quran such as not respecting people’s privacy and raiding them in their homes.

‘Sorry’ not enough, Penang reps demand action against Islamic teacher

(Malay Mail Online) – Despite a public apology, Penang MIC and DAP’s P.Ramasamy (pic) want the authorities to book Islamic religious teacher Shahul Hamid for his curry powder jibe, which they say signals a deeper intolerance of minority groups in Malaysia.

“What he said has angered Hindus all over Malaysia so even though he has apologised and it’s good he realised his error to say sorry, but it’s not enough,” M.Karuppanan, state MIC chief, told a news conference here, hours after Shahul issued a public apology for his remarks seen as ridiculing Hinduism and ethnic Indians.

A video clip of Shahul’s speech, in which he told Muslims not to buy curry powder from “Hindu companies” such as Alagappa’s and Baba’s was uploaded to social media sites recently, provoking fury from the minority communities.

“If you go to the Alagappa’s factory near Permatang Pauh, you will see a statue at the entrance, and the tongue is out. Why is the tongue out? Because the goddess must taste all the curry powder before they sell it,” the preacher was heard saying in the video.

Shahul had posted a short apology on his Facebook yesterday following the uproar.

Karuppanan said Shahul’s remarks were not only seditious but could incite racial disharmony.

“That was not the only clip. There was also another clip where he made even more serious damage where he accused Hindus of not having a God,” he said.

Karuppanan said Shahul’s argument, that his speech was for Muslims, was not a defence as the latter had clearly insulted Indians and Hindus.

“You can’t say something and then apologise as if nothing happened when the damage is already done. Otherwise, I can just kill someone and apologise,” he said.

He reminded Shahul that he did not only insult one person whom he could apologise to and try to make amends but that he had insulted up to a million people of the Hindu faith.

“Even the non-Hindus, the Muslims and Christians are unhappy about this because such things are unacceptable in our society.

“I hope the Attorney-General takes action immediately,” he said.

The MIC leader also urged curry powder makers Alagappa’s and Baba’s to initiate legal action against Shahul, saying the latter’s remarks could be deemed defamatory.

“These companies are halal-certified, so he did not only insult the Hindus but also questioned the halal-certification of these companies,” Karuppanan said.

Indian Malaysians and Hindus took to social media this week condemning the Islamic religious teacher for his speech about their communities made several years ago but which surfaced recently.

A group of MIC members held a demonstration in the Kuala Lumpur Indian enclave of Brickfields yesterday in protest.

In a separate news conference, Ramasamy who is Penang deputy minister II, also demanded strict action against Shahul.

Echoing Karuppanan, the DAP lawmaker said Shahul’s apology was not enough.

The Penang Hindu Endowment Board chairman said there have been cases of insults against Hindus in the last five to six years without any action taken against the perpetrators.

“He should be expelled from PAS. We can’t allow religious preachers to insult other religions,” Ramasamy said.

Fear that Malaria Parasite is Mutating

Currently-effective treatment programs could be endangered across the world

By Asia Sentinel

As was probably inevitable, the parasites carried by mosquitos in Southeast Asia are mutating genetically to become resistant to the most popular drug used to combat malaria, according to a study in the New England Journal of Medicine, causing deep concern that heretofore-effective malaria treatment programs could be endangered, both in Asia and Africa.

The World Health Organization reported in 2010 that 219 million documented cases of malaria were recorded across the world, killing 660,000 to 1.2 million people, many of them children in Africa. The actual number is not known given that many cases in rural areas are undocumented.

Resistance to artemisinin, the main drug used to treat malaria, is now widespread throughout Southeast Asia, particularly in areas of Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam, according to the study, conducted by an international team of scientists including those from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in the United States. It now takes a six-day course to combat malaria instead of the standard three-day course, according to the study,

Although that is likely to be a temporary solution. The history of mutation of parasites is grim. Poor drug compliance during treatment can lead to failure to fully clear a malaria attack, allowing the remaining parasites, which were less susceptible to the drug, to survive and reproduce. As the infected persons are bitten by new generations of mosquitoes, the hardier disease spreads. As parasites’ life cycles are short, with successive generations natural selection leads to the evolution of strains of new, resistant parasites. Mass drug administration programs in areas where malaria is endemic may also give people doses of the drug that are too low to kill the parasite. If treatment of ill patients fails for some reason, they retain parasites in their blood which can carry on reproducing.

Quinine was the first effective western treatment for malaria, remaining the drug of choice and leading to the famed gin and tonic highball. It was introduced by the army of the British East India Company after it was discovered in the 1700s that quinine could be used to prevent and treat the disease, although the bitter taste was unpleasant. British officers in India took to adding a mixture of water, sugar, lime and gin to the quinine. In the 1940s other drugs such as chloroquine, with fewer unpleasant side effects, replaced it.

Chloroquine was replaced by sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP), but resistance to SP also emerged in Western Cambodia and spread to Africa. SP was replaced by ACTs, and now there are concerns that history will repeat itself for a third time.

According to a report by the National Institutes of Health, artemisinin was regarded as something of a wonder drug. It was used by Chinese herbalists for the treatment of skin diseases as well as malaria going back to 200 BC. In the 1960s, the People’s Liberation Army established a screening research program to attempt to find a malaria treatment program that would rid its soldiers of the debilitating disease, Of a list of nearly 5,000 traditional Chinese medicines, scientists discovered that artemisinin, found in the leaves of wormwood trees, could be extracted and subjected to purification. A number of other products were found by Chinese scientists to be used in combination with artemisinin.

The drug was widely distributed and was considered to be an effective treatment. However, the parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, appears to have mutated genetically, according to the New England Journal of Medicine study, threatening treatment programs. The study, which analyzed blood samples from more than 1,000 malaria patients in 10 countries across Asia and Africa, found that artemisinin resistance in P.falciparum - the most deadly form of malaria-causing parasites – is now firmly established in western and northern Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam and eastern Myanmar. There are also signs of emerging resistance in central Myanmar, southern Laos and northeastern Cambodia, the study said.

“It may still be possible to prevent the spread of artemisinin-resistant malaria parasites across Asia and then to Africa by eliminating them, but that window of opportunity is closing fast,” Nicholas White, senior author of the study and Chairman of Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit (MORU), told reporters. “Conventional malaria control approaches won’t be enough – we will need to take more radical action and make this a global public health priority, without delay."

“Frontline ACTs are still very effective at curing the majority of patients. But we need to be vigilant as cure rates have fallen in areas where artemisinin resistance is established,” said Elizabeth Ashley, lead scientist of the TRAC study and a clinical researcher at MORU. “Action is needed to prevent the spread of resistance from Myanmar into neighboring Bangladesh and India.”

“If resistance spreads out of Asia and into Africa much of the great progress in reducing deaths from malaria will be reversed,” said Jeremy Farrar, Director of the Wellcome Trust in a prepared news release. “Our ability to respond to these rapidly emerging health problems depends on swift gathering of evidence, which can be quickly translated into public health and clinical interventions that are then implemented. Antimicrobial resistance is happening now. This is not just a threat for the future, it is today's reality.”

While new antimalarial medicines are in development, and another paper published in the New England Journal of Medicine has shown some promising trial results for a potential new antimalarial drug in development at Novartis, they are unlikely to be available for widespread distribution for several years, according to the group. “The artemisinin drugs are arguably the best antimalarials we have ever had. We need to conserve them in areas where they are still working well,” Ashley concluded.

WikiLeaks gag order: open justice is threatened by super-injunctions

Australian courts have increasingly been issuing suppression orders preventing the publication of legal proceedings – and an implicit dislike of the media is partly to blame
WikiLeaks screensaver
In a statement published with the leak, Julian Assange, Wikileaks founder, said the gagging order relates to a case that “concerns the subsidiaries of the Australian central bank”. Photograph: Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Images
Last month, an Australian judge issued a super-duper injunction preventing the reporting of bribery allegations which involved south east Asian political figures, and in some cases their family members.

The allegations have arisen in a criminal case before the supreme court of Victoria. The super-injunction, which not only prevents publication of the allegations, but the detailed terms of the injunction itself, only came to light because WikiLeaks published the intimate details on July 29.
So while WikiLeaks, anonymous blogs and social media are buzzing with the details of these sweeping court orders, which apply Australia-wide, the mainstream media cannot trespass in this territory for fear of facing proceedings for contempt of court. This is the ludicrous nature of overreaching suppression orders, and this one is to last for five years unless earlier revoked.

The internet has made them so porous as to be useless. Only those who publish above the radar with sizeable assets and readily identifiable journalists and executives (at least ones that are not corralled in foreign embassies) are effectively injuncted from publishing.

Among the parties to these proceedings, which can be reported, are lawyers for the Commonwealth of Australia, instructed by the department of foreign affairs. So you can put two and two together and guess that the government was the applicant for this injunction.

Maybe the judge was trying to protect people whose names would come up in the criminal trial without warning or without legal representation. At the same time, it does seem an extraordinarily wide order to grant on the application of someone who is not a party to the criminal proceedings and whose self-interest lies beyond the issues to be tried and determined by the court.

Is it a contempt to tweet from Australia a link to the WikiLeaks story? “Yes”, says media lawyer Peter Bartlett, because it would reveal the names of the parties whose identity in this context is now protected.

At the same time, it would be acceptable to use a #WikiLeaks hashtag without a link. Anyone vaguely interested in this can easily find out in this global news village what we are not allowed to publish from Australia. Such is the disjuncture between proscriptive court orders and the real world of information.

The erosion of the principle of open justice has been steadily ratcheted-up with each passing year. Almost on a daily basis, the courts are issuing suppression orders preventing publication of entire proceedings or aspects of proceedings. In Victoria alone, there were 1,502 suppression orders over a five year period.

Since the passage of legislation in both NSW and Victoria that purports to create a presumption in favour of openness, the opposite has been the case and there seems to be a steady rise in orders restricting reporting of proceedings. Rarely are they accompanied with judicial reasons that carefully balance the argument between open justice and protecting the administration of justice – a flexible term which means more or less whatever a judge wants it to mean.

Judges do bang-on about the importance of open justice and love to quote Jeremy Bentham:
Publicity is the very soul of justice ... it keeps the judge himself, while trying, under trial.
Yet, in their hearts they don’t like things being too open at all. There’s also an implicit dislike of the media trampling on their patch.

The overriding judicial belief is that the administration of justice is a delicate flower that can all too readily wilt if reporters are telling their readers, viewers or listeners what is going on chapter and verse inside their courtrooms.

This is not to say some suppression is not be justified, including where the physical safety of witnesses is at stake; interconnected criminal trials; family law cases; victims of sexual assault; and trials involving children come to mind. National security is also a popular one for governments to trot out, particularly in terrorism cases or hearings involving security assessments of refugees. Judges have a tendency to be far too craven in the face of overblown claims for suppression on grounds of national security.

Human Rights Watch in New York has been drawn to comment on the Victorian orders, with general counsel Dinah PoKempner saying:
The gag order published by WikiLeaks ... is disturbing on its face as it suggests the Australian government is suppressing reporting of a major corruption scandal to prevent diplomatic embarrassment. The embarrassment of diplomatic partners is not the same thing as a threat to national security, or to the integrity of the judicial process.
Britain saw a spate of suppression orders on privacy grounds in relation to the extra-mural sexual activities of sports stars, and in the infamous Trafigura case involving suppression of a report about the company dumping toxic waste on the coast of west Africa. Ultimately, these court orders were rendered worthless by hundreds of thousands of tweets and even questions raised under parliamentary privilege in the House of Commons.

In Australia, the courts have issued internet take down orders in relation to pending criminal trials. The mainstream media tends to comply, while the rest of the internet, including Google, studiously ignores these attempts to quarantine the jury system.

Surprisingly, this pressing issue is missing from the agenda of next week’s big free speech spectacular put on by the Australian Human Rights Commission. The courts have failed to adjust to an environment where suppression orders, injunctions and super-injunctions can be steadfastly ignored by countless self-proclaimed publishers.

Justice Wilmot, an 18th century English judge, said the law of contempt was important to keep the courts surrounded by a “blaze of glory”. Issuing orders whose observance most people now regard as optional does not assist in that mission.

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3,000 illegals take up amnesty deal

The Star

PUTRAJAYA: More than 3,000 illegal foreign workers have taken up the amnesty deal under the “voluntary deportation programme” since July 21.

The number is expected to reach 30,000 by year-end, Immigration Department deputy director-general Datuk Sakib Kusmi said.

Home Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi had announced last week that 200,000 Indonesian illegal workers could have a safe one-way trip home for Hari Raya by paying a minimum RM300 compound fine.

He said the offer was open from July 18 to Dec 31 to protect them from syndicates who charged them up to RM2,000.

Before the amnesty deal, each illegal worker caught for overstaying had to pay a maximum compound fine of RM2,000.

Sakib said a total of 15,109 illegal foreign workers had also surrendered to the department in the first half of the year.

They included 2,028 from Sri Lanka, 1,959 from Nepal, 1,858 from India, 1,629 from Philippines, 1,606 from Indonesia, 1,016 from Myanmar, 1,009 from Pakistan, 952 from Bangladesh and 948 from Vietnam.

He said the department would review the effectiveness of the programme over three months.

Sakib said those who surrendered would undergo biometric processing to ensure that they did not return to Malaysia using another identity.

The amnesty deal is another initiative of the Government to weed out illegal immigrants following the 6P Bersepadu programme conducted from October 2011 to January this year.

Statement By Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak On Flight MH17 Tragedy

THE HAGUE, July 31 (Bernama) -- Following is the statement by Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak at a joint press briefing here on with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte on the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 tragedy:

"Like the Netherlands, Malaysia is in mourning. We mourn the loss of all 298 lives on board MH17.

"And as we watched the first bodies arrive in Eindhoven, our hearts reached out to the people of the Netherlands, who have lost so much.

"The flags flying at half-mast told their own story: of the nations who lost their sons and daughters. And of our determination to work together to bring them home.

"Malaysia stands with the Netherlands, with Australia; with all countries whose people have been lost. We stand together, united in grief, and ready to help however we can.

"Earlier, Prime Minister Rutte and I spoke about the continued military activity at the crash site; the inability of international investigators to deploy across it; and the human remains that may still lie there.

"For the sake of the grieving families, it is imperative that all remains at the crash site are repatriated as soon as possible. Every single victim must be given dignity and a decent funeral.

"Our other priority is to ensure that the international investigators are given full and unfettered access to the site, so that they may collect evidence and carry out their vital work.

"Only then will we be able to find out what happened to MH17; only then can we achieve justice for the victims and their families.

"The conflict in eastern Ukraine may not be easily resolved. But the people on board that plane had no part in it.

"We ask that there be an immediate cessation of hostilities in and around the crash site - by both Ukrainian and separatist forces.

"We ask that all sides respect the lives lost, and the integrity of the site, so that the investigation may proceed. The long walk towards justice begins with this step.

"A team of 68 Malaysian police has arrived Kiev today. They will work together with the Dutch and Australian teams to help secure access to the site. Malaysia fully supports the international investigation, and we are grateful to the Netherlands for their lead role in the international team.

"Repatriating the remains of victims as fast as possible is a shared priority. Malaysian experts are already helping here in the Netherlands with the painstaking task of identification - and we stand ready to provide more assistance if required.

"On behalf of Malaysia, I would like to thank Prime Minister Rutte and the Dutch people for all they have done, and continue to do, for the victims of this senseless and tragic act.

Minority groups demand sedition charge against curry powder preacher

BY BOO SU-LYN (Malay Mail)

KUALA LUMPUR, July 31 — MIC, MCA and some Indian groups rejected today Islamic preacher Shahul Hamid’s apology for his wanton insult of Hinduism and called for the PAS member to be charged with sedition.

MIC vice-president Datuk M. Saravanan said action must be taken against Shahul to discourage people from insulting other religious beliefs in future.

“Don’t ever touch religion,” Saravanan told Malay Mail Online when contacted today.

“If you forgive and just let go, you’re going to open the floodgates for someone else to condemn religions, like Islam and Christianity, and to simply apologise,” added the leader in the Barisan Nasional (BN) Indian component party.

Shahul issued a public apology earlier today after controversy erupted when a video clip of his speech made several years ago, in which he told Muslims not to buy curry powder from “Hindu companies” like Alagappa’s and Baba’s, was uploaded on social media sites recently.

“If you go to the Alagappa’s factory near Permatang Pauh, you will a statue at the entrance, and the tongue is out. Why is the tongue out? Because the goddess must taste all the curry powder before they sell it,” the Indian-Muslim man was heard saying in the video.

Malaysia Hindu Sangam president Datuk R. S. Mohan Shan said Shahul’s offensive remarks amounted to a “criminal offence”.

“Some kind of action must be taken by the government. He should be punished as another person condemning Islam would be punished,” Mohan, who heads the group representing Hindus, told Malay Mail Online.

Malaysian Indian Progressive Association (Mipas) secretary-general S. Barathidasan said an apology cannot not undo the damage caused by Shahul.

“He should be charged under the Sedition Act. Punish him. This will be a lesson for others,” he told Malay Mail Online.

Barathidasan said police inaction against former Perkasa vice-president Datuk Zulkifli Noordin for his racial remarks had emboldened people like Shahul to make offensive statements.

“They think police will not take action against them,” he said.

Zulkifli sparked outrage last year when a video of him questioning the purity of the Ganges River in India, which Hindus consider sacred, was uploaded on social media.

MCA deputy secretary-general Datuk Wee Jeck Seng said in a statement today that Shahul had violated the Sedition Act.

“Despite his excuse that the insensitive statement was made at a closed-door meeting, the fact of the matter is that he had instilled hatred and racism. Thus, action must be taken to show that a ‘closed-door’ meeting is no excuse to speak against religious harmony,” Wee said.

A DAP representative also expressed similar sentiments at a separate news conference today.