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Malaysia Today - Your Source of Independent News


Outrage greets latest spending spree involving Najib's family

Posted: 31 Oct 2011 06:32 PM PDT

"A few city retailers reaped the rewards, with one first lady known to have bought AU$150,000 worth of WA pearls, while Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak's daughter is believed to have spent AU$60,000 in David Jones," reads the report.

Harakah Daily

An image showing a paper cutting of an Australian daily's report on a shopping spree involving the family of prime minister Najib Razak has been making waves among Malaysian netizens.

The report, said to be carried by The West Australian, claimed that Najib's daughter had spent A$60,000 (RM195,000) on shopping during a sight-seeing tour for delegates and families attending the just concluded Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting hosted by the city of Perth.

NOT AGAIN ... This picture posted on a blog points red arrows on Rosmah Mansor (extreme right) to show her jewellery

Without mentioning name, the report also said that a first lady had bought West Australian pearls worth A$150,000 (RM488,000) during a stop at a department store.

"A few city retailers reaped the rewards, with one first lady known to have bought AU$150,000 worth of WA pearls, while Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak's daughter is believed to have spent AU$60,000 in David Jones," reads the report.

David Jones is one of Australia's most established department stores selling a variety of products from top brands.

The report adds that for many delegates, the Commonwealth summit "has been an opportunity for a shopping spree and sightseeing around Perth".

All brakes were removed for the news to spread on the internet, at a time when the heat had barely eased over Najib's wife Rosmah Mansor's alleged attempt to purchase a US$24 million diamond ring, details of the purchase seen from a screenshot of a Royal Malaysian Customs' computer screen. Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Nazri Aziz later tried to quell speculations by saying that the ring "had been returned".

Cyber outrage

The latest report meanwhile is causing another round of intense commentaries on social networking sites.

"Cyber world really exposes everything .....good work editor and keep posting ....you are reaching every corner of the world .....imagine we Malaysian in Brazil are talking about it & we are with you too.... vote out this corrupted BN," wrote one who commented on the news piece," runs one response.

"Why Rosmah and Najib junior there? If we found they went there using tax payers money, they are in deep deep trouble," asks another.

One netizen promised to get the truth of the matter during a trip to Perth:

"I'm only going 2 Perth on d 5th... If can I'll bring back a copy of tat paper 2 show 2 all Malaysian..."

Several blogs also accompanied their postings with a picture of Rosmah sporting her necklace. It is not immediately known whether the necklace had anything to do with the pearls bought by the unnamed "first lady" in the report.

CHOGM ran from October 28 to 30 under the theme of Building National Resilience, Building Global Resilience.

Both Najib and Rosmah are currently performing the Hajj. That however did not alleviate her of the continuous criticism from netizens. Accompanied by a photograph of the couple leaving for the pilgrimage (right), one blog chided her for not donning the Muslim headscarf even for such a sacred journey.

"Does she think going to Makkah is like going for sight seeing in Kazakhstan?" it asked, referring to an equally controversial official trip by Najib and his family to the Central Asian republic in June. Then, it was revealed that Najib, who was attending the World Islamic Forum, was also making preparations for the marriage of his daughter to the son of the Kazakh leader, igniting a debate about abuse of public funds meant for an official trip.

 

A student revolt in the making

Posted: 31 Oct 2011 06:03 PM PDT

A bigger uprising – student power combined with people power – will truly be a force for change, which the government cannot beat back with all the bullets in its armoury.

In many universities academicians have come out in support of the right to speak their mind and they are roundly supported by their students. This is a significant development because for far too long, campus life has been debilitated by the energy-sapping restrictive laws. 

Free Malaysia Today

A bullet for speaking your mind. But bullets cannot destroy the spirit that moves people to fight for principles, ideals, ideas, causes. Throughout history people have been killed for their belief and vision and yet the tide of change kept sweeping down the road of human affairs. Many of the great ideas were forged in the heat of revolutions, conflicts, upheavals. Resistance to change often by the elite class long corrupted by wealth, power, greed had proven effective as it finally crumbled against the "great movements of popular passion". Governments in whatever form inevitably die when the popular will turns into an all-conquering force for transformation. It is impossible to stop citizens – be they young or old, farmers or students – from rushing forth to rally round the banner of an idea whose time has arrived. In Malaysia, the fight for basic rights and freedom of expression has surfaced again and its arrival cannot be halted.

First it was the mammoth Bersih 2.0 rally that the government tried to crush with an iron fist. It failed. The protest spawned reforms in its wake that lent strength to the movement for democracy. People rose up in anger against injustice, corruption, dirty politics, electoral fraud and showed their steely determination in the face of a harsh crackdown. The state employed its full power to beat back the brave citizens but it was unable to trample on their free spirit. Bodies were crushed but the spirit remained unshackled and soared to greater heights. Now another movement is welling up and this time it is flowing out from the portals of universities. At the vanguard are students whose battle cry has resonated through the campuses. They took up the cudgels on behalf of an academician who was villified for speaking out in the hallowed tradition of freedom of thought. The professor had merely expressed his opinion on a matter of public importance, which is his indisputable right. He did not challenge or deride the institution of monarchy.

The state read an old, out-dated script when it masterminded the attack on the don. It continues to believe that academic freedom is bad and must be gagged at all cost. It sees students as chattels and academicians as sheep. Any murmuring of discontent in the halls of academia is seen as a threat to the stability of the governing class or even the monarchy. Scholars have always been persecuted for their learned and reasoned arguments against the deceitful and devious ways of the state. Minds forged on the academic anvil cannot be easily bent to serve the interests of the political leaders. The students who warned the government of a "bigger uprising" if it does not act to restore academic freedom are not acting out of ignorance. Their protest against injustice is born out of conviction. They have their own mind and they know that the nation's leaders are not governing according to acceptable standards of democratic behaviour.

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