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Saturday, 22 November 2014

Parents blame hospital for teen's death



Orang Pasir Mas merasai kehilangan saya, kata Ibrahim Ali

ISIS accused of using stills from ‘Hungarian porn’ in propaganda which suggested Western soldiers were raping women

  • The US State Department is actively countering ISIS propaganda online
  • The terrorist organisation was accused of using Hungarian pornography
  • The US is trying to dissuade young western Muslims from joining ISIS

The US State Department has accused ISIS of taking screen grabs of Hungarian pornography and claiming the images show the rape of Arab women by western soldiers.

The original image was tweeted from an account claiming allegiance with the terrorist group.

The tweet features three images, one of a distressed, small child. The second features a woman being held by men in military fatigues and the final image shows a man in Arab dress being abused by a soldier.

In the tweet, ISIS claims that they are the 'sole saviour of millions of Sunni Muslims against Iraqi-Syria army butchers'.

In response to the ISIS tweet, the US State Department using their Think Again Turn Away social media account, said the middle rape image was taken from Hungarian porn.

The tweet claims that ISIS should 'stop using fake photos to trick people' into supporting their 'lost cause'.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2839708/ISIS-accused-using-stills-Hungarian-porn-propaganda-suggested-Western-soldiers-raping-women.html

Yazidi families reclaim girls seized by Islamic State – for a price

In interviews, girls who escaped or were bought back by their families tell of their brutal treatment at the hands of IS militants. Almost 150 girls have returned to Kurdish-controlled areas in recent weeks, according to activists, with families paying as much as a year's income to get them back.

By Jane Arraf, Correspondent

Near Zakho, northern Iraq — Suzanne twists the heart-shaped pink plastic ring on her finger as she talks about the women and children who beat her for trying to escape the self-described Islamic State.

The Yazidi 14-year-old, now living with an uncle’s family near Zakho, is one of an estimated 5,000 girls and women from the ancient minority taken captive by IS to be sold or given to fighters as slaves – and one of an increasing number who have recently escaped or been bought back by their families.

Activists believe almost 150 girls and women have returned to the Kurdish-controlled territories in the last several weeks. Some see it as a sign of an overstretched IS that no longer has the resources in Iraq or Syria to hold large numbers of captives.

The women's capture and harsh treatment had raised fears they would not be accepted by their families if they managed to return, and has created challenges for the secretive, ancient religion and deeply conservative society, where some women are still killed to maintain family "honor" for even the appearance of impropriety.

But the sheer numbers of women seized from a small community that does not accept converts has helped prompt a religious decree that the women need to be brought back and re-integrated. In most cases, it seems to have worked.

Like other girls interviewed by the Monitor, Suzanne and her sisters and mother were separated by IS from their male relatives after gunmen took control of villages near Sinjar mountain over two days in August. She and her sisters were first taken to Mosul and then to the IS stronghold of Raqqa, Syria. After US-led airstrikes in Raqqa, their captors moved them to the outskirts of Aleppo, where she escaped, only to be handed back to IS by a Syrian family she had asked for help.



“They beat me with a plastic hose and a cable,” says Suzanne, whose parents and two sisters are still missing. “They were saying ‘it is useless for for you to try to escape’ … They hit me everywhere, my hands, my legs, my back. Everyone took a turn – even the children from the village and the wives.”

The children encouraged to hit her were as young as five, she says.

When the Aleppo prison she was held in was bombed, she and a friend managed to escape. They made their way to the Kurdish region of Syria and then to Turkey, where she was picked up by relatives.
Ending up in an isolated farmhouse

Sabreen is 15. When Kurdish forces protecting Yazidi towns retreated in early August, IS fighters took her to a school in Tel Afar near the Syrian border with several hundred other women. There, IS took all children between the ages of five and 10 from their mothers. When the women screamed and tried to take back their children, the gunmen fired in the air and said they would kill them if they didn’t stay back, she says.

Sabreen also ended up in Syria, in an isolated farmhouse near Raqqa.

“Lots of men used to come and look around and when they would see a girl they liked they would say ‘I want to buy that one,’” she says. “There was an emir who was taking money for the girls – $1,000 to $1,500.” Sabreen says she escaped from her Palestinian and then Saudi "owners" and is now living with an uncle’s family near Dohuk.

The uncle, Hamid, said he was sending his sons to retrieve another distant relative who is believed to be the only surviving member of her family. He raised $5,000 – a year’s income for many families here – to buy her back from Tel Afar through a middleman.

“Suddenly you get a phone call out of the blue saying ‘We have your daughter.’ They don’t tell you their names or anything like that,” says Hamid. “Or ‘We have your girl. We want this amount of money.'”

“If you can find someone you can trust, that man goes and says, 'I want this girl to marry,' and he pays it straight to IS,” he says. “You can’t say ‘I want to buy three girls back’ – they won’t give them to you like that.”

Hamid and others said most families with missing wives and daughters were trying to raise money to buy back them back. He says they paid $10,000 for the first girl rescued in the family but that price has now dropped.

“People were willing to pay any amount of money,” says Hamid. “But now in my own family, we have about 30 girls missing. If you have to pay $5,000 for each one of them … you will not be able to buy all of them back.”

While IS has murdered members of all religious groups during its takeover of northern Iraq and systematically stolen cash and property, it has meted out special punishment to the Yazidis – whom it considers pagans.

Suzanne, Sabreen, and other abducted girls and women say they were told they were infidels and allowed to be bought, sold, or given to fighters. The issue is not spoken of even by Yazidi women, but many of the girls and women who were sold or given away were believed to have been raped.

A Christian woman who was told her family had to convert to Islam says she and her children were held in a house in Mosul with dozens of Yazidi girls.

“At two in the morning we heard the girls screaming,” says the woman, who asked that her name not be used. “The gunmen were raping the girls. You could tell they were being raped and they were hurting them. They said, ‘these ones don’t have religion.’"

Initial reports of some girls and women killing themselves after escaping from IS to avoid shaming their families have been impossible to corroborate. While such cases may exist, the religious ruling by Yazidi elders as women started to return appears to have protected those who have escaped.

“We would never allow anything to happen to them,” says one Yazidi man in Zakho, who is still trying to find his missing mother and sisters. “If anything, they are more deserving of our respect because of all they have endured for our religion.”

Dec 4 set for evidence notes’ application by family of custodial death victim

The Court of Appeal will on December 4 hear an application by a custodial death victim’s uncle who is challenging a coroner’s decision not to give the family lawyer notes of evidence in an inquest and not allowing the counsel to make submissions.

Lawyer M. Visvanathan, representing Cheah Ewe Yeow, said he was notified by the court registry today of the hearing date.

Cheah, whose nephew Chin Lee died in police custody in Penang two years ago, last week filed the application together with a certificate of urgency.

"Hopefully, the Court of Appeal will deliver a ruling soon as the inquest has been adjourned to January 14," he said.

Human rights lawyers and activists had voiced their disapproval following coroner L. Umma Devi's ruling on September 26 not to give the notes of evidence and court recordings of the inquest, and also not to allow Visvanathan to make submissions.

Describing her decision as shocking, they said it would have wide implications, as it had reversed the tradition of allowing lawyers holding a watching brief on behalf of the deceased's family and to address the court.

Visvanathan said four legal questions have been framed for the appellate court's approval before the appeal could be heard.

He said the Bar Council had agreed to send its representative to hold a watching brief during the proceedings since it was a public interest case.

Umma Dewi, when delivering her decision, said only the Attorney-General's Chambers was entitled to such documents.

Cheah Yeow, the paternal uncle of Chin Lee, then applied to the Penang High Court for a revision of the coroner's decision.

On November 6 judicial commissioner Datuk Nordin Hassan upheld the coroner's decision, and said it was her discretion to provide copies of the proceedings and to allow Visvanathan to make submissions.

Chin Lee, a furniture shop sales assistant, died while in police custody on August 13, 2012.

He was arrested on suspicion of attempting to steal a motorcycle earlier that day. – November 21, 2014

- See more at: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/december-4-set-for-evidence-notes-application-by-family-of-victim#sthash.qAa3htgW.dpuf

Accused of abuse, Najib threatens legal action against Tony Pua

Petaling Jaya Utara MP Tony Pua with Rafizi Ramli (left) at a forum on 1Malaysia Development Bhd on Wednesday. Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak wants Pua to issue an apology over his remarks on 1MDB on November 3.– The Malaysian Insider pic, November 21, 2014.
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak today issued a letter of demand to Petaling Jaya Utara MP Tony Pua over the DAP lawmaker’s “defamatory” remarks against him on November 3 about the state-owned 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB), which caused him “tremendous stress and embarrassment”.

In a letter signed by Najib’s lawyer, Datuk Mohd Hafarizam Harun, Pua was told to publish a retraction and apology within 14 days in two national newspapers, or face legal action for his speech recorded in the November 3 video: “Tony Pua: Najib is creating the biggest scandal ever in the history of Malaysia”.

The DAP national publicity chief was also told to remove the video from the Internet, stop further defamatory statements, and pay Najib for the damages over his remarks.

Najib’s lawyers said Pua’s statements in the video “mean and were understood to mean” that Najib was an incompetent prime minister and leader of Barisan Nasional; creating the biggest scandal in the history of Malaysia; was a cruel, harsh autocratic not open to criticism; and was tyrannical and oppressive.

The letter, which Pua’s staff received at about 3.30pm today, also said Pua had said in the video that Najib was incompetent in managing the country, had conspired against the nation; was corrupt; had robbed and misused the people’s monies; and abused his power as a political and party leader.

“Our client’s instructions are that the above defamatory statements and such similar statements amount to a very serious slander and/or libel against our client and have caused him tremendous stress and embarrassment,” read the letter.

The video was of Pua’s speech regarding the controversial 1MDB during the DAP fundraising dinner on November 3. According to a transcript in the letter, Pua had said:

“Let me tell you this is the problem with Barisan Nasional. No one dares to stand up to the Prime Minister, and Najib now is like a king. A king that is creating the biggest scandal ever in the history of Malaysia. Huge! No one dares to say a thing, nothing, not even the pin drop from any of MCA of Gerakan leader or even Umno leaders...

“It is disgraceful it is scandalous for 100% Ministry of Finance owned entity with the board of advisors chaired by the Prime Minister himself not being able to submit accounts on time especially when the company is so big when the public looks at it with great interest 36 billion in debt they are not able to submit their account on time…

“There is only one reason why I think can. The reason why can is because all these MCA, MIC, Gerakan kakis all don’t dare to challenge their prime minister, all say okay okay thank you you, please carry on and rob the people’s money.”

Najib’s lawyer said Pua reproduced the statements “time and time again” and was continuing to have them published in various forums, news portals, social media and online media.

“Contrary to your defamatory statements above, our client being the chairman of the Board of Advisors of 1MDB only renders advice to the Board of Directors of 1MDB who is tasked for the management and operation of 1MDB, not a tyrannical and oppressive autocratic who is not open to criticism and shuns criticism, not a leader involved in corrupt practices and not a leader who robs the peoples’ money.

“Accordingly, these entirely baseless and false allegations made by you are with the primary intention of attacking and damaging our client’s goodwill and reputation for no .justifiable reason.

“In doing so, you are/were acting with malice,” read the letter.

The letter stated that if Pua failed to provide a satisfactory response, it would commence legal proceedings against him, “including applying for an injunction to restrain any such further publication”.

Pua told The Malaysian Insider that his lawyer, Gobind Singh, was looking into the matter and would respond accordingly.

He added that TV3 staff were also present when the law firm’s representatives presented the letter to his staff today, although he was not in the office.

When contacted, Hafarizam confirmed that his own dispatch had sent the letter to Pua’s office, but denied all knowledge of inviting the media along.

“I got my dispatch to just send the letter, it was just like any other dispatch – they went by bike. It wasn’t a big entourage.

“I deny having any knowledge, intention or design to have publicity for this. It was a normal dispatching letter of demand.”

He added that he had yet to receive reports from Pua that the latter had acknowledged receiving the letter. – November 21, 2014.

- See more at: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/accused-of-tyranny-najib-threatens-legal-action-against-tony-pua#sthash.rkUxI9Ze.dpuf

Parents blame hospital for teen's death

Minutes after a press conference during which the anguished parents of G Tinasha accused a private hospital in Petaling Jaya of negligence, the Form Two student passed away.

Tinasha, 14, who was suffering from fever, was taken to Assunta Hospital on Sunday night by her mother, I Uthayabavani.

"She was admitted at the emergency ward around 8.30pm. Around midnight, my daughter complained of headaches and felt nauseous.

"A nurse then administered a medication, on the instruction of a medical officer present," Uthayabavani (right) recalled, in between sobs.

The 46-year-old housewife believes her daughter could have been given the wrong medication.

Around 5am, Tinasha suffered a cardiac arrest and her oxygen levels dropped drastically, forcing the medical staff to perform Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and she was put on life support.

Tinasha's uncle, I Ramesh (left), who was also present at the press conference, described his niece as an active teenager, who participated in various NGO activities.

"Only last week, she was practising for a school concert.

"She wore a mock crown on her head, and was running around the house and showing it to everyone," he said, unable to hold back his tears.

Uthayabavani and her husband, B Ganesan Rao, a taxi driver, have also filed a police report against the hospital.

The uncle also said the medical officer  in charge of Tinasha was not at all bothered about her condition.

"We told the medical officer that she seemed to be motionless and her pupils were not moving.

"The medical officer replied that it was a side effect of the medicine and there was nothing to be worried about," Ramesh said.

Uthayabavani, who was present at her daughter's bedside the whole time, said the medical officer did not even check her at all.

"The medical officer stood from afar and assessed her. He said that he assumed that she looked fine from her breathing," she said.

'Physician-in-charge not aware of happenings'

Ironically, Ramesh said the physician who was in charge of Tinasha was not aware at all of the happenings until she was admitted into the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) after her resuscitation.

"The physician specialist in charge of Tinasha was not aware of what was happening. No one told her anything, even the medicine administered was not approved by the specialist," he said.

The grief-stricken parents said they had a couple of meetings with the hospital administration, including its chief executive, but all to no avail.

Ramesh said the hospital even advised that not much could be done about Tinasha's condition and requested them to take her off life support.

"They told us that we were prolonging the agony of the child if we wanted her on the machine. They offered to provide an ambulance for us to take Tinasha home and let her pass away in a natural state," he agonisingly added.

Bukit Gasing assemblyperson Rajiv Rishyakaran (left), who organised the press conference. said what happened was indeed tragic and the hospital's standard operating procedure (SOP) was doubtful.

"This is a very tragic incident that should not happen to anyone. We still have not got any satisfactory answer from the hospital’s side.

"The SOP of the hospital is questionable. The hospital should not cover-up, it should share everything with the family," he told reporters.

Assunta Hospital has denied any negligence on the part of its medical staff and claimed that procedure was followed.

Hospital: No negligence in teen's death


KAMLES KUMAR is a trainee reporter at Malaysiakini.
 

Is gov't sweeping JCY riots under the carpet?

 
COMMENT The Malaysian Trades Union Congress is alarmed at the manner in which the issue of JCY HDD Technology Sdn Bhd (JCY) foreign workers' industrial action is being swept under the carpets by the police.

MTUC is disappointed with Deputy Home Minister Wan Junaidi Wan Jaafar's statement in the Dewan Rakyat that industrial action taken by JCY foreign workers was due to misunderstanding among the foreign workers themselves, especially since this claim is not supported by any facts.

On Sep 4, 2014, we wrote to the Human Resources Ministry to hold a tripartite meeting to discuss the issues raised by JCY’s workers. However, despite several follow-up calls to the ministry, to date our request has fallen on deaf ears.

Our Johor division officers on the ground, who have been following the case closely with some of JCY’s migrant workers, have been informed by the workers that their protest escalated when one of JCY’s staff provoked them by throwing stones at the workers when they refused to engage in a game of throwing stones at one another at their workplace at Kulaijaya.

Initially a group of about 20 workers were forcefully moved to Kulaijaya for participating in the industrial action in Tebrau over the death of their coworker who had complained of having difficulty in breathing.

In Kulaijaya, they were forced to play a game of “volleyball with stones” as a form of punishment for taking part in the said incident.

'Management ignored concerns'

According to the workers, they resorted to industrial action as they were dissatisfied with the manner in which the management handled their grievances.

Their concerns regarding their health, work conditions, poor hostel facilities, calculation of overtime, not adhering to off days entitlement, unfair deductions in their salaries and low compensation for accident and injuries, were ignored by the management.

Furthermore, the workers were also displeased with the attitude of the management, such as for beating them for minor mistakes, and not treating them with dignity and respect.

The workers claimed that their concerns at the workplace worsened over the years and therefore they were left with no other option but to resort to industrial action.

Clearly the police had failed to address and neglected the issues concerning the workers at their workplace.

The police investigation only concentrated on one side of the incident.

This not only raises concerns on the confidence in and the credibility of the police investigation but also raises the issues of bias in the investigation process, especially in the absence of a  transparent and independent inquiry.

On Nov 11, a separate meeting was held at the Johor Bahru Labour Department with JCY's management to discuss the repatriation process and unpaid salary for the 55 workers who were arrested.

MTUC was also informed that five out of 55 workers arrested have been wrongfully charged under Section 6(3) of the Immigration Act for entry into the country without proper documents, as all of them have valid work permits with JCY.

They were scheduled to return to their homeland after the clearance made at Immigration Department.

Unfortunately during the police raid this group of workers was picked up.

Permits expired during detention

At the time of arrest, these workers were documented but during the process of investigation their work permits expired. As such, they were charged under the Immigration offences.

MTUC has engaged the assistance of the Johor Bar Council to represent these workers.

Nevertheless we are deeply concerned with the bureaucracy that is taking place in amending the charge at the expense of these workers, who have been detained since Sept 9, 2014.

These workers did not take part in the industrial action as they were scheduled to return home after completing their contract with JCY.

MTUC is very concerned with the continuous lack of political will by the government in addressing the issues and concerns of migrant workers.

The Home Ministry should not shoot their mouth off without consulting all stakeholders especially when workers’ rights are adversely affected.

Internationally, Malaysia has been continuously criticised for forced labour practices especially as highlighted in the recent Verite report on the electronics industry. The government should no longer ignore this report.

MTUC urges the Human Resources Ministry to step in and take proactive measure in addressing these concerns.

MTUC urges the Human Resources Ministry not to delay any longer our proposal for a tripartite meeting to discuss JCY’s case.




N GOPAL KISHNAM is MTUC secretary-general.

Isma flays DAP's Malay MP over Umno link

 
 Ikatan Muslimin Malaysia (Isma) has launched a broadside on DAP MP Ariff Sabri Abdul for claiming that the movement is an Umno tool.

Isma syura council chief Sharipuddin Ab Kadir described the Raub MP as a politician "who clings to other races for survival" and "earnestly attempts to please his masters to hold on to his position".

Sharipuddin also claimed that Ariff (right) was "bankrupt" in terms of knowledge and information.

"Accusing Isma of being an Umno tool with no evidence reveals the character of a cowardly politician. He cannot understand Isma’s struggle in total.

"He only sees Malays in the context of Umno whereas Isma champions the rights of Malays, the original inhabitants of this land, and rights enshrined in the federal constitution and social contract," he said.

Sharipuddin stressed that Isma’s struggle is not premised on political parties, especially Umno.

He was responding to the DAP lawmaker's call on Malays to reject Isma on the grounds that it is working towards achieving an Umno objective.

Continuing his salvo, Sharipuddin (left) said the accusation came from a "cheap politician" who is unaware of his roots.

"As a Malay and Muslim, Ariff should reveal what is his agenda for the Malays and Islam as an MP, as well as his party’s agenda for the Malays and Islam in Malaysia.

"It would not be wrong to say he was chosen as DAP MP for the process of diluting his Malay and Muslim identities because his party will never champion these rights," he added.

Sultan wants all illegals out of Pahang, says report

Following his outburst against palace insiders who had issued “yellow letters” allowing illegal land clearing in Cameron Highlands, Pahang Sultan Ahmad Shah (pic) now says all illegal immigrants in the state should be deported.

“You had better tell these undesirable ­workers we mean business. They can no ­longer encroach on Pahang without permission,” he was quoted as saying by The Star today.

“We must not allow them to wander around, not only in Cameron Highlands, (but) in other districts in Pahang as well.”

He added in the report that there was a plan to get rid of all illegal foreign workers in the state, expressing confidence that Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak would be able to help.

“My prime minister is from Pahang. I will appeal to him personally on behalf of my people,” he was quoted as saying.

Sultan Ahmad Shah also praised Najib as a “working prime ­minister” who was doing a good job.

The sultan’s statement comes in the midst of a crackdown on illegal immigrants in the state, following the event of mudslides and floods on November 5, which saw five dead and another five injured.

Illegal land clearing is believed to have caused the mudslides in Ringlet and Bertam Valley.

Yesterday, the Pahang ruler said the state government would work hard to resolve the issue of illegal immigrants not only in Cameron Highlands but also other districts in the state.

Sultan Ahmad Shah also said the state needed Putrajaya’s aid as it did not have enough resources to deal with the problem alone. – November 21, 2014.

- See more at: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/sultan-wants-all-illegals-out-of-pahang-says-report#sthash.J8kPqCNe.dpuf

Special unit to handle insults to Islam

(Bernama) – The Malaysian Islamic Development Department (Jakim) will work with the state Islamic religious departments (Jain) and the Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) to form a special unit to monitor insults to Islam.

Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Jamil Khir Baharom said the unit would focus on the new media.

“Jakim and Jain would convey any information concerning insults to Islam to the MCMC to stop it from being spread further.

“In 2013, a total of 38 websites which insulted Islam were blocked by MCMC,” he said in reply to an oral question from Mohd Fasiah Mohd Fakeh (BN-Sabak Bernam) in the Dewan Rakyat, Thursday.

Fasiah wanted to know what steps had been taken by the government to block seditious actions, and insults to Islam and Prophet Muhammad among non-Muslims, leading to tensions in society.

Asylum seekers pay RM3,500 for UNHCR cards in Malaysia!

UN body suspends all resettlement of refugees and launches a probe into fraudulent practices.

FMT

KUALA LUMPUR: An Al-Jazeera investigative report for its Asian current affairs programme, 101 East, has apparently discovered that the issuance of United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) cards in Malaysia, supposedly free, has degenerated into a racket.

The going rate, allegedly created by UNHCR officials who act as middlemen, is in the RM1,700 to RM3,500 range for each card.

These cards, according to senior presenter Steve Chao in a media update, are being sold to those who want to jump the queue.

Also, the queue jumpers included about 3,000 asylum seekers who allegedly used false identities to secure early interviews with UNHCR staff to determine their refugee status. “About 1,000 of them have since been resettled in countries like the US, Canada and Australia,” alleged Chao.

Chao’s exclusive, Malaysia’s Unwanted, aired on the Qatar-based news broadcaster’s channel on Astro.

Chao went undercover, posing as a priest, to check on the Immigration Department’s detention centre in Kuala Lumpur. This followed a tip-off from inside sources in UNHCR that the UN body, at one time, had suspended all resettlement of refugees and launched a probe into fraudulent practices.

UNHCR head Richard Towle, who confirmed the suspension and probe in a media update, added that “if a complaint is brought forward, it is investigated by an independent body out of Geneva”.

Malaysia on US watch list for ‘forced labour’

“It could be that a small and isolated group of companies did not fully comply with international labour requirements and practices.”

FMT

GEORGE TOWN: Malaysia risks being placed on a US watch list from December 1 for the export of electronic products following allegations that it uses forced labour in the electronic industry. The net effect of being placed on the watch list is that there would be restrictions on exports to the US.

The allegations on forced labour are contained in the Verite Report, funded by the US Labour Department. The report, released in September 2014, alleged that forced labour makes up 28 per cent of workers in the electronics industry in the country.

“The International Trade and Industry Ministry (Miti) and the Human Resources Ministry should work together to rebut the allegations published in the recent Verite report,” said Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng in an immediate reaction.

“The export of electronic products to Europe may also be affected, as Europe normally follows in the footsteps of the US.”

Lim alleged that there had been a delay in responding to the threat as Miti had passed the buck to the Human Resources Ministry. “Invest Penang has addressed some of the issues with the US authorities, but it was only a state body with limited powers.”

About half of Malaysia’s exports of electronic products are from Penang.

“It could be that a small and isolated group of companies did not fully comply with international labour requirements and practices,” said Heng Huck Lee, the chairman of the Association of Free Industrial Zone Penang Companies.

“The Malaysian authorities should act quickly against these companies and gather evidence and data to prove that the majority of the electronics companies are not engaging forced labour.”

Forced labour takes different forms, including debt bondage, trafficking and other forms of modern slavery. The victims are the most vulnerable: women and girls forced into prostitution, migrants trapped in debt bondage, and sweatshop or farm workers kept there by clearly illegal tactics and paid little or nothing.

All Malaysians should be concerned that Malaysia has shot up to the Top 50 countries under Global Terrorism Index when we should strive to be one of the 40 countries with no terrorism problems

By Lim Kit Siang Blog


Kiwanis Club of Skudai, like Kiwanis Clubs all over Malaysia, is to be commended for the noble motto to serve the children of the world.

All Malaysians, regardless of race, religion or region, must be united in a common Malaysian Dream to make the country a better place for our children where there is justice, freedom, unity, harmony and prosperity for all.

I have many differences with the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Najib Razak but I agree with his call for the Global Movement of Moderates, which he has articulated in international forums including thrice in four years in his speeches to the United Nations General Assembly.

However, Najib seems to be waging a lose battle in his call for moderation to oust extremism in Malaysia.

I call on all Malaysians, regardless of race, religion or region, to fully endorse moderation and reject extremism in all aspects of their lives, for Malaysia must seek to be a model of multi-racial and multi-religious tolerance, harmony and understanding in an increasingly troubled world.

This has now become even more urgent with Malaysia shooting to the top 50 countries in the Global Terrorism Index 2014, rising from 91st in the 2012 Global Terrorism Index to 48th spot, when Malaysia should be one of the 40 countries in the world with no terrorism problems so as to show-case our multi-racial and multi-religious harmony, tolerance and understanding.

Recent years have seen racial and religious intolerance, hatred and extremism raising their ugly heads in the country, and this should be the concern of all Malaysians because such intolerance, hatred and extremism will spell a future of conflict and disaster for our children.

Malaysians of good sense and goodwill, who want the best for our children and our country, should not give room or opportunity for the extremists and merchants of hatred and intolerance to spread their evil teachings but should instead unite in pursuit of a common Malaysian Dream to make Malaysia a better model of multi-racial and multi-religious harmony and diversity through the path of moderation!

(Speech at the Kiwanis Club of Skudai’s 13th Grand Installation and Annual Charity Dinner at Restoran Pekin Sutera, Skudai on Thursday, 20th November 2014 at 8 pm)

Public caning a no-no, say former judges

Malay Mail
by IDA NADIRAH


PETALING JAYA, Nov 21 — Former judges said caning of young offenders in an open courtroom was unheard of during their days on the Bench.

Former Court of Appeal judge Datuk Shaikh Daud Ismail he had never come across or meted such punishments.

He also questioned why the Kuala Lumpur Sessions Court had called Mohamed Shaznee Jahn Mohamed Yasin, 19, and Redzohaan Abdullah, 20, who had been found guilty of gang robbery, as they had already been sentenced to 18 months and 24 months in jail, respectively.

Shaznee Jahn received seven strokes, and Redzohaan eight, in front of prison officers, a medical doctor, and those in the court gallery, including reporters.

“If they had been sentenced several months ago, what was the purpose of the duo returning to the courtroom?” Shaikh Daud asked.

“Why wasn’t the caning done in prison as the offenders were serving time?”

Shaikh Daud said there were numerous grey areas on why the caning was carried out within the court’s premises before a public audience.

“The court should have explained to the offenders if the caning was done as a replacement for their jail terms,” he said.

Retired Court of Appeal judge Datuk Low Hop Bing said the caning should have been carried out by the Prisons Department within the prison compound.

“It is unusual for it to take place inside the court and it was not proper for it to be done in public,” he said.

Low said even if the offenders had not appealed and were satisfied with the sentence, the caning should have been executed in prison itself.

A former High Court judge, who declined to be named, said he could not recall such occurrence taking place during his time.

He said if the High Court, which was higher in authority than the Sessions Court, suspected something amiss in this case, they could retrieve the case papers and rectify it.

“The High Court could inform the Sessions Court that what had taken place was not right,” he said.

Muhyiddin Wants Classical Literature Works Spread Using Multimedia, Digital Technology

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 21 (Bernama) -- Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin has called for Malay classical literature works to be spread wide and far using multimedia and digital technology.

The Deputy Prime Minister said this way, it would make these literature works more attractive and fresh.

He said it would also attract the interest of people of all ages and from all races to read and appreciate them.

"Getting to know and understanding these works will help in forming character that is truly Malaysian," he said at the prize-giving ceremony for the "Sastera Perdana Malaysia" awards organised by Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (DBP) here, Friday night.

Also present were Deputy Education Minister Datuk Mary Yap Kain Ching, Education Ministry secretary-general Tan Sri Dr Madinah Mohamad and DBP director-general, Datuk Awang Sariyan.

Muhyiddin, who is also Education Minister, also said intellectual works in Bahasa Melayu should also be accorded the same recognition as "Hadiah Sastera Perdana Malaysia".

DBP's effort along this line for works in science and technology, for which he presented awards last month, was a good start, he said.

Apart from this, he said experts and men of letters in the Malay language also should be accorded due recognition.