Isnin, 30 Mei 2011

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Malaysia Today - Your Source of Independent News


Lynas: where common sense left us

Posted: 30 May 2011 12:53 PM PDT

Why is a foreign country sending all the raw material over here to process and then take back what it wants, leaving behind what it does not want back on its shores?
 
By J. D. Lovrenciear
 
So much has been said about the Lynas project. The anti-Lynas voice is slowly drowning under the pro-Lynas marching on.
 
To give credence to the pro-Lynas propagators and champions, even threats have been hurled at concerned citizens and residents. People have been admonished in no uncertain terms that they may even lose everything else if they boycotted the Lynas project.
 
So many highly intelligent and so-called specialists are also seemingly working hard in the wake of anti-Lynas objections. The goal is to allay the fears, give assurances that all safety measures will be guaranteed and to allow the progression of the Lynas project that was already hatched a long time ago without public consultation.
 
But what happened to common sense? Does anyone want to ask that simple question:
Why is a foreign country sending all the raw material over here to process and then take back what it wants, leaving behind what it does not want back on its shores?
 
Whether you are putting in all the safety measures or whether you will see to the ultimate safe disposal of residual toxins, etc is not the issue. Why do it here? - that is the fundamental question that has not been answered.
 
Yet we are so busy debating and arguing with all kinds of scientific and attested benchmarks to keep the Lynas project on. We are refusing to pay homoge to basic common sense. And therein lies the rape of a young nation.
 
If only our leaders put citizens first before profits; if only we put health and well being before economic harvests - we may be poor by Adam Smith's standards, but healthy on all accounts.
 
We are just kidding ourselves. What we are looking for is big money in quick time. Sad but true. And in the final analysis, who cares if the pawns die owing to exposure to contaminants ten, twenty or thirty years from now.
 
By experience we know, the powers that be will in all likelihood cry when the Lynas project goes fowl in the distant future: "We did all we can; but the tragedy is beyond us - it is an act of God. So let us accept the unexpected tragedy in a manner that is  consistent with our respective faiths".
 
And that is because if have chosen to let common sense fly out of the window. We forget that without common sense there is no Vision 2020 in the first place.
 

Increasing Electricity Tariffs Without Restructuring The Power Industry Is Akin To An Attempt ...

Posted: 30 May 2011 12:47 PM PDT

By Tony Pua

The Najib administration announced that it will raise electricity prices by an average 7.12 per cent from June 1 this year.

According to Reuters, the price charged by Petronas for the sale of natural gas to electricity companies would rise to RM13.70 per mmBtu from RM10.70, and increase by RM3.00 every month.

The industrial and commercial consumers will bear the brunt of the tariff hike with an average increase of 8.35 per cent in their power bills.  This will inevitably fuel further inflation and reduce the competitiveness of our goods and services.

The Government has employed the excuse of the need to reduce subsidy bills as the basis for the tariff hike in order to reduce the "misallocation of resources", which leads to declining competitiveness.  However the Government has at the same time conveniently ignored the fact that the source of the "misallocation of resources" lies with the unbelievably lucrative Independent Power Producers (IPPs) power purchasing agreements (PPAs) with Tenaga Nasional Bhd (TNB).

As a comparison, the power industry structure in Malaysia and Thailand are highly similar, with a little more than 70% of the fuel-mix for electricity generation being natural gas.  However despite the fact that natural gas prices are more than double that of Malaysia's at RM23.10 mmBtu, commercial electricity tariff in Thailand is only 0.4% higher at RM38.01 kWh, compared to Malaysia's 37.85 mmBtu..

In fact after the latest revision, it has become stark clear that electricity rates for our commercial sector will be significant higher than that in Thailand, despite the fact that natural gas prices for the sector in Malaysia will still be 68.6% cheaper.

Using Thailand as a benchmark, Malaysian electricity prices should be 16.9% cheaper based on existing subsidy rates. Instead, the BN Government does the exact opposite to raise the electricity tariffs.

This shows clearly that our problem with electricity industry "distortions" as described by Minister in Prime Minister's office, Nor Mohd Yakcop is not with its prices, but with our highly "ineffcient" power producing sector which charges high prices despite lower cost of production.  And the key reason for that is the unfair PPAs which results in ridiculously high levels of electricity reserve margins.

According to TNB, our reserve margin is 54.6% in 2008 and 52.6% in 2010, which is double that of Thailand and Java, Indonesia, at 25.4% and 26% respectively.  The net effect is TNB is forced to purchase electricity which it does not need to the IPPs, resulting in inflated costs for TNB and correspondingly inflated profits for the IPPs.

The Government's decision to reduce the subsidies to the electricity sector is a clear attempt to right an existing "wrong" with another "wrong", which will only lead to further distortions in our market, and not reduce it.  Our export industries which are already affected by the strong ringgit will be dealt with a bigger blow due to higher electricity prices compared to the region as a result of an inefficient and distorted power sector which profits only the IPPs.

The only and proper way to correct the distortions in our power sector is to restructure the lobsided PPAs. In fact by doing so, the Government can kill two birds with one stone, reducing its subsidies and correcting the inefficiencies in the power sector as a result of our super-high reserve margins, while at the same time maintaining our existing electricity rates.

The fact that the Government chooses to punish our consumers and industries, without laying a finger on the IPPs only serves to prove that the Najib administration has no political will to carry out the necessary reforms to our economy, contrary to the rhetoric we hear every day.

 

TONY PUA is DAP National Publicity Secretary and MP for Petaling Jaya Utara

Make safety culture our own

Posted: 30 May 2011 12:39 PM PDT

By Terence Fernandez, The Sun

"WE began with a small group of orphans in a building built from timber we found while clearing the land. We cut the slope to make space for the building." These telling words of Mohamed Noor Ismail illustrate how we take things for granted when it comes to adhering to safety rules.

Mohamed Noor is the co-founder of Madrasah Al-Taqwa Al Hidayah in Hulu Langat which was lost to a landslide that killed 16 people, mostly young boys, on May 21.

To call it an orphanage is an anomaly, as our reporters discovered when they spoke to Mohamed Noor recently. Many of the children who were killed had parents and relatives. Anyway, we are not going to split hairs over this, as what is important is to prevent further occurrences of such tragedies – which are becoming all too common.

I was in two minds over writing about this tragedy. After the landslide in Taman Bukit Mewah, Bukit Antarabangsa, on Dec 6, 2008 buried 14 bungalows and killed five people, the authorities promised to be more pro-active and vigilant in ensuring that developers played by the rules.

Unfortunately this had not happened due to the turf war between the Public Works Department (PWD) and the local councils – both of which are pushing the buck to each other.

To make matters worse, a declassification exercise by the state government turned into a political tirade as both sides – the past and present administration as well as the federal government started pointing fingers at each other.

There were also games of one-upmanship being played as the state government was given the runaround between the police, the PWD and the Housing and Local Government Ministry in getting preliminary reports on the Taman Bukit Mewah landslide.

Now, with regards to the latest tragedy, someone needs to be held accountable for not fulfilling safety requirements when setting up the building. The fact that there was no certificate of fitness (CF) puts the Kajang Municipal Council (MPKj) in the spotlight.

It is not enough for council president Datuk Hassan Nawawi Abdul Rahman to say that the 17-year-old building existed before the council was even formed (in 1997). The fact is the council did not conduct the checks it could have done to ensure that homes and buildings on slopes are safe and issued with CFs.

Now suddenly, MPKj realises that all homes in this landslide-prone area do not possess this vital document. That those who ran the centre also did not feel compelled to ensure they got one also makes them culpable.

The architects, engineers and contractors must be equally held accountable. If they had breached their professional duties by cutting corners and bending the rules, criminal charges must be brought against them. It is encouraging that the police have opened a criminal negligence investigation.

Hopefully this time at least, someone pays for the lives lost.

PWD senior director Datuk Ashaari Mohamad had gathered that massive tree-felling had compromised the integrity of the soil, causing it to give way following abnormal rainfall in the days preceding the tragedy.

He also said the orphanage building had been erected too close to the hillside. This alone gives one a good head start to find out the cause and the culprits.

However, I risk sounding like a broken record. The same points were put forward by many columnists and yours truly after every landslide. These tragedies are often followed by visits by VIPs and politicians who come bearing sombre faces, cheques and strong words.

But once the focus of the media shifts to other pressing matters, the promises are forgotten or take a back seat to other issues that need immediate attention.

This has always been the case. And the fact that the Highland Towers verdict which absolved the local council from negligence "because local councils cannot be sued", is a slap in the face to those who are campaigning for stricter guidelines or even a ban on hillslope development.

That the release of the Taman Bukit Mewah tragedy report is impeded by the Official Secrets Act (OSA) flies in the face of logic and yes, decency. That the authorities want to keep things under wraps in bringing to book those responsible for flouting the law is mind-boggling and does not reflect any sincerity in wanting to put things right.

Now with Hulu Langat, there seems to be more urgency in wanting to fix faults of the past, probably due to the 14 young lives that were lost. The announcement of initiatives in this direction by Housing and Local Government Minister Datuk Chor Chee Heung while welcomed, begs the question: shouldn't requirements such as submitting plans and the imposition of deadlines be the basic necessities of any development?

Even so, it is good that the authorities and the rest of us have woken up. Hopefully these recent positive developments do not get side-tracked by politicking, cover-ups and short memories.

Power rates up 7.12%

Posted: 30 May 2011 12:35 PM PDT

By Karen Arukesamy, The Sun

PUTRAJAYA (May 30, 2011): Households that use 300 kilowatt hour (kWh) or less of electricity a month will not be affected by the higher tariff effective Wednesday, June 1. This means if your monthly bill is RM77 or less, there's no change.

"The average electricity tariff will be increased by 2.23 sen/kWh or 7.12% from 31.31 sen/kWh to 33.54 sen/kWh," Energy, Green Techno-logy and Water Minister Datuk Seri Peter Chin Fah Kui told a press conference today.

He said all domestic consumers with a monthly consumption of up to 200kWh (lifeline band) and the next 100kWh will not be affected.

"Domestic consumers in these bands will continue to enjoy the subsidised unit rate of 21.8 sen/kWh and 33.4 sen/kWh respectively.

"Domestic consumers in the 301 to 400 kWh per month band will experience minimal electricity bill increase (0.1%-6% or 7 sen-RM6.60)," he said.

Consumers whose monthly power bill is RM77 and below form 75% of the population. The other  25% will have to pay RM6 more (see table).

The 7.12% increase comprises: 

* 5.12% or 1.60sen/kWh due to higher natural gas price to the power sector from RM10.70/mmBTU to RM13.70/mmBTU in line with the increase in global energy prices; and

* 2% or 0.63sen/kWh for Tenaga Nasional Bhd to partly recover the increase of electricity supply cost since the last base tariff revision in June 2006.

"There will an additional 1% imposed on the monthly bill as the Feed-in-Tariff (FiT) to promote renewable energy fund to bear the additional cost. However, domestic consumers who use less than 300kWh/month will be exempted," he said.

The tariff review package also provides the following special rates and discounts:

* 10% discount on electricity bills enjoyed by local schools and higher learning institutions, places of worship and welfare homes registered with the government;  and

* 10% discount extended to partially government-funded educational institutions.

Industrial consumers will experience an average increase of 8.35% (ranging from 6.2% to 10.3%), he said.

Chin said the main rationale for the tariff revision was the higher price of natural gas supplied to the power sector effective Wednesday.

"The increase in natural gas price is unavoidable due to the increase in global energy prices since 2009 and is based on the government natural gas pricing mechanism in which the price is periodically reviewed in tandem with market price trend.

"Since natural gas cost constitutes around 54.2% of the total fuel cost mix (FY2010), the additional fuel cost incurred due to the gas price revision is reflected via the increase in end-use electricity tariff," he said.

Announcing the increase in the natural gas price earlier at the same press conference, Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yakcop said gas prices were determined based on their alternative fuel pricing.

"For example, if fuel oil is used in power generation and if gas is used to replace fuel oil as an energy source, then the price of gas will be the same as that of fuel oil. The practice of pricing gas relative to its alternative fuels has been adopted in all countries in the region," he said.


Pro-Lynas group bullies protestors as IAEA panel meets

Posted: 30 May 2011 12:34 PM PDT

By Shannon Teoh, The Malaysian Insider

KUANTAN, May 31 — For the second day in a row, demonstrators supporting the controversial rare earth plant forced anti-Lynas protestors to leave the Hyatt Regency here.

The group of about 100 men confronted a group of residents from Beserah, where the plant is located, just as they finished their meeting with the International Atomic Energy Agency-led (IAEA) team that is here to meet local stakeholders.

After a scuffle, the Beserah group led by their assemblyman Syed Mohammad Lonnik and community leader Andansura Rabu had to be escorted by police light strike force officers to their car.

Earlier in the morning, protestors wearing "Save Malaysia, Stop Lynas" T-shirts were also chased away from the beach in front of the hotel by the pro-Lynas group.

Many of the pro-Lynas group were those here yesterday holding up banners supporting the IAEA and also Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Adnan Yaakob.

Two reporters from Chinese daily Nanyang Siang Pau were also confronted by men who demanded they stop taking pictures.

One of the reporters said a man threatened to punch her if she did not stop.

"You want to report good or bad, think properly first. The government has already brought in a panel of experts.

"I am from Balok. We are more concerned than these people who come from Ipoh, Seremban and KL. Why do we want to chase away investors?" said members of the group to reporters later.

 

READ MORE HERE.

 

Ibrahim wields faith to ward off ‘Umno stooge’ claims

Posted: 29 May 2011 08:39 PM PDT

(The Malaysian Insider) - Datuk Ibrahim Ali declared today his willingness to swear on Allah's name that he acts of his own free will and has never been influenced by Umno.

In saying so, the fiery Perkasa president belittled Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim for refusing to do the same to prove his innocence in the sex video scandal and Sodomy II case.

"You, Anwar, were not brave enough to swear with (Mohd) Saiful (Bukhari Azlan) and Datuk Trio. Who is the real comedian here, if not yourself?" he asked.

The Pasir Mas MP was responding to Anwar's criticisms of him over the weekend where the PKR de facto leader called Ibrahim the "worst example of Malaysian politics".

Ibrahim's Perkasa has also often been accused of being an offshoot of Umno and part of the Najib administration's strategy to draw support from the hard-line Malay electorate.

But Ibrahim insisted today that by levelling such accusations against him, Anwar was merely adding to his already growing list of sins.

"O' my old friend, I am not as bad or as evil as you. I have never been anyone's stooge, or what's worse, your stooge for life," he said.

Ibrahim accused Anwar of destroying Umno as well as PAS and its spiritual advisor, Datuk Nik Aziz Nik Mat, with his support for pluralism and attempt to spread disunity among the Malays.

He further claimed Anwar was insincere, pointing to the latter's days in Abim, when he had been critical of Umno and later supported PAS, before shifting allegiances to Umno until he was sacked and entered PKR.

"Your story is long, Anwar. You are rotten to the core and you are the worst... but you are good at acting. So go ahead and act. You can cheat your family and your friends who are blind all the time but you cannot cheat me all the time," he said.

READ MORE HERE

 

Bigger landslide in the making

Posted: 29 May 2011 05:51 PM PDT

By Stephanie Sta Maria, Free Malaysia Today

KUALA LUMPUR: Double landslides occurred side by side in Bukit Antarabangsa, Hulu Kelang, Selangor, 10 days ago but escaped public attention for both struck on the same day as the Hulu Langat tragedy.

As rescue personnel and the media rushed to the Madrasah Al-Taqwa Orphanage, business owners and employees watched mounds of wet earth sliding down the slope behind their commercial centre in Taman Ukay Perdana.

Unlike Hulu Langat, however, no property damages or injuries took place in the Bukit Antarabangsa incident.

The Ampang Jaya Municipal Council (MPAJ) moved swiftly in dispatching a team from its hillslope division to begin immediate work in containing the situation and repairing the slope.

MPAJ is currently the only authority with an existing hillslope division which was formed after the 2008 Bukit Antarabangsa landslide, which claimed five lives.

When FMT visited the site last Friday a large tarpaulin sheet blanketed the landslide on the left. There had been a downpour that morning and workers swarmed the top of the slope hauling the sheet higher to better secure its position.

The other landslide, however, remained exposed. The slope face had previously been protected by a concrete structure which had gradually disintegrated over time. The rain had now rendered this raw surface slick once again.

Of greater concern was the row of small businesses fronting both landslides. None of them had been instructed or were compelled to temporarily cease operations.

Cars still filled the corner workshop and lined the affected roads. People continued patronising the outlets along the stretch. Personnel at the Ukay police station, directly across the covered landslide, were equally unperturbed.

The Public Works Department (PWD), meanwhile, has assured that the situation is under control and that there is no cause for alarm.

"This is just a small erosion and small debris flow," Professor Ashaari Mohamad, director of PWD slope engineering branch, told FMT. "Once repair work has started it will not pose any danger to the shop houses."


 

READ MORE HERE.

As panel meets, pro- and anti-Lynas groups face off

Posted: 29 May 2011 05:47 PM PDT

By Shannon Teoh, The Malaysian Insider

KUANTAN, May 30 — The situation at the Hyatt Regency here threatened to turn ugly this afternoon as both pro and anti-Lynas Corp groups gathered while the review panel began meeting stakeholders this afternoon.

Several demonstrators, including three Umno assemblymen, rushed to confront Kuantan MP Fuziah Salleh as she arrived to meet the International Atomic Energy Agency-led (IAEA) team at 3pm.

They demanded the PKR vice president, who has been leading protests against the controversial RM700 million rare earth plant, not be allowed to bring in signed petitions into her half-hour session and that those accompanying her remove their anti-Lynas T-shirts.

As police also pressed Fuziah to meet the demonstrators' demands, her team complied before entering the building where the meetings are to take place.

The demonstrators were part of a group of about 100 who arrived at 2pm, holding up banners supporting the IAEA and also Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Adnan Yaakob.

About half as many wearing "Save Malaysia, Stop Lynas" T-shirts also made their stand here until police told both groups to leave the hotel.

However, both groups refused to leave outright and loitered outside the hotel premises until 4pm.

About ten light strike force officers were also deployed until the protestors left.

Earlier, pro-Lynas demonstrators had also confronted Indera Mahkota MCA Youth chief David Choi.

Choi, who has not been supportive of the project, told reporters later that he was kicked by some of the protestors.

The three assemblymen leading the pro-Lynas group included state executive councillor Datuk Mohamad Sahfri Ab Aziz as well as Norolazali Sulaiman and Mohd Zaili Besar, Guai and Panching representatives respectively.

READ MORE HERE.

Power rates up 7pc June 1, gas prices also hiked

Posted: 29 May 2011 05:41 PM PDT

(Reuters) - PUTRAJAYA, May 30 — The Najib administration today said it will raise electricity prices by an average 7.12 per cent from June 1 in an effort to cut down on subsidies.

Officials said natural gas prices would also rise by RM3.00  per mmBtu each six months until it reached market levels.

Power prices would rise by as much as 2.3 sen per kilowatt hour.

The price charged by state oil company Petronas for power generation would rise to RM13.70 per mmBtu from RM10.70, they said.

MORE TO COME HERE

 

Perkasa defends Ibrahim Ali, calls Anwar ‘worst politician’

Posted: 29 May 2011 05:12 PM PDT

(The Malaysian Insider) -  Perkasa defended Datuk Ibrahim Ali today as a man of integrity who has earned both the trust and confidence of professionals as well as politicians.

Syed Hassan Syed Ali, the group's secretary-general, also launched a broadside against Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim for calling Ibrahim the worst example of Malaysian politics.

"Even when Ibrahim Ali was in Semangat 46... the government then could not find one fault against him because Ibrahim is well known to be a man of integrity, he would not do what is not right and he would cause trouble for those in the wrong even though they were his close friends," Syed Hassan said in a statement today.

He charged that it was Anwar who should have admitted that he was the "worst politician", pointing out that in all the years of Ibrahim's political career he had never been slapped with charges in court like Anwar.

Syed Hassan said that unlike Ibrahim, Anwar was always abandoned by his friends as soon as they "found out who he really was."

"Malay professionals are always approaching Ibrahim Ali, even in Perkasa's supreme council there is no shortage of professionals. Many people know Ibrahim Ali, and those in Perkasa and also outside Perkasa support him," he added.

READ MORE HERE

 

A ‘snap poll’ in Malaysia? Political surprise, journalistic cliché

Posted: 29 May 2011 05:07 PM PDT

Election campaigns in Malaysia — from the announcement of the poll, the proroguing of Parliament, the nomination of candidates, the campaign, the vote, and the declaration of the result of the poll — can accordingly be completed, from start to finish, in about 10 days. The whole business is usually "done and dusted" within two weeks.

Clive Kessler, The Malaysian Insider

Once again there is talk of an early or imminent election in Malaysia.

No surprise, nothing unusual in that.

And once again the commentators are considering the likelihood of a "snap poll."

Again, no surprise, nothing unusual in that. Just silly.

The expression "snap poll" a cliché.

And, as ever, hasty recourse to the irresistibly available cliché is a sure sign that clear, fresh and direct thinking about the matter at hand has been avoided, short-circuited. That an "end-run" (to use a cliché!) had been made around the moment of analysis, the need for thought.

What is, or was, a snap poll? The term was coined to denote an election that is called suddenly, at an unexpected moment, to take advantage of the element of surprise.

The snap poll is to political life, to electoral politics, what Pearl Harbor was to naval warfare. Suddenly, early one morning, unannounced, out of a clear blue sky...

It is an encounter, a contest, that is pretty much over before it has begun.

It is a fight — and this is the whole point of the manoeuvre or stratagem — that is as good as over from the outset: before the back-footed adversary, here the political opposition, has a chance to get up from its chair, onto its feet, and into action.

One has only to think about that for a moment and one thing becomes clear.

That the idea, and use of the term, "snap poll" in Malaysia is quite ridiculous. Not just strange, oddly inappropriate, but altogether ludicrous.

It is absurd for two reasons.

First, all Malaysian elections are in effect snap polls.

In 1969 the national election campaign period was a long one. The Tunku wanted to give the people plenty of time to consider the issues, to weigh the choice that they faced.

Never again.

Since then, all election campaign periods have been brief.

Reform of election legislation has made this brevity, this compression or "telescoping" of the political season — a concentration of pressure and, some would say, enforcing an unreflecting rush to political judgment — possible.

Election campaigns in Malaysia — from the announcement of the poll, the proroguing of Parliament, the nomination of candidates, the campaign, the vote, and the declaration of the result of the poll — can accordingly be completed, from start to finish, in about 10 days. The whole business is usually "done and dusted" within two weeks.

That kind of concentration and rapidity of electoral procedure falls fully within the ambit of the term "snap poll."

These are not elections that run for weeks, whose date is announced months ahead or else are calendrically set by law (as in the US) for the election of candidates to a fixed term of office, say four years.

You don't need to speculate in Malaysia whether there will be a snap poll. There always is.

Every election is sudden and a "quickie", fast to come and fast to be over and gone.

The only question is when.

When will the government decide to call it? When will it exercise its discretion, avail itself of the incumbent power's prerogative, to "pull the trigger" (another cliché!) or (yet another) to get the contestants to the line and "sound the starter's gun"?

That is one reason why the term "snap poll" in Malaysia is a silly misnomer.

There is a second.

Invariably in Malaysia, once the country is about two to three years further on from its previous election, and the next is felt approaching in two to three years' time, incessant election speculation begins to develop, mount and inexorably intensify.

How does this happen?

Quite simply, there is a popular interest in the matter.

Why not? The citizen wants to know. As a stakeholder in the political community, the citizen wants to be part of, and informed about, the process of deciding the community's common fate — not just a spectator.

Always politically adept, the government caters to and assiduously "plays upon" this interest.

It does so constantly and continually, raising and lowering the intensity of its hints, feinting and parrying this way and that, as in some exotic sword-dance or wrong-footing silat routine.

In doing so (to change our metaphor, or flee into a different cliché), it "plays the rakyat" the way a maestro plays a violin.

Its objectives in doing so are several.

It wants to "whet and feed" the rakyat's "political appetite."

If elections are eventually to be held, the enthusiasm of party workers must be sustained, the political attention of voters must be activated and focused, and people need to be reminded of their political obligations (especially, as the powers of the day in every country see the matter, to acknowledge gratitude for benefits already and most recently received).

Governments, by toying with speculation about imminent elections, also seek to "test the waters" (what, another cliché!) concerning their own popularity. They raise the hypothetical possibility of a snap poll to measure their own situation and prospects, "to see how they are running."

They also use the measured and very controlled encouragement of election speculation to "fly various kites": in other words to assess likely public reaction to certain provisional policy initiatives, as well as the popular acceptability, persuasiveness and effect of possible campaign stratagems and rhetorical innovations, such as new slogans.

Not least of its purposes in toying openly with ideas of an imminent poll is to dismay, disorient and "bamboozle" the opposition: to keep its strategists preoccupied with the short-run possibility, however unlikely, of having soon to face the polls and so force it to redirect and consume large amounts of its scarce energies and time.

Election speculation, no matter how fabricated or implausible, usefully distracts the opposition. It diverts the government's opponents from pursuing necessary longer-term tasks, such as the development of defensible policies and from necessary, and necessarily time-consuming, political planning.

Talk of early elections forces the opposition to operate in "rush mode", even "panic mode", not "thoughtfulness mode." It keeps the opposition "tied in knots."

By this logic, there may be an "inverse" relation between election speculation and the likelihood of an imminent poll. The louder the talk of a "snap poll", the less likely an early election may be.

Until, of course, the last indulgence in such talk, the last tactical flirtation with the idea before the election is finally called.

But by then the clock has largely run down, time is running out, and the calling of the election usually comes as no surprise...

After years of keen anticipation and bated breath, what you hear in the end is often just a sigh of relief.

So in sum, every Malaysian election is both, in one sense, a "snap poll" and, in another, not, since no Malaysian election ever can be.

Every election comes at the end of a two-to-three year-long cycle, or barrage, of election speculation.

A snap poll, a surprise, beyond all expectations, out of a clear blue sky? Hardly!

READ MORE HERE

 

No takers yet for Rolls Royce: M'sian businessman

Posted: 29 May 2011 04:53 PM PDT

(The Straits Times) - BUSINESSMAN Zamil Ibrahim is still waiting for someone who can find a Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim 'lookalike' to take up the offer of a vintage Rolls Royce and RM10,000 (S$4,080).

Mr Zamil, who is the Kedah Kita chief, had made the offer on Friday in connection with the sex video implicating the PKR adviser. 'The Rolls Silver 111 6700cc is mine, and the cash offer is made by someone who wants to remain anonymous.

'Anwar has been saying he was told the man looked like him but that he (Anwar) did not have a belly,' he said. Datuk T, comprising businessman Datuk Shazryl Eskay Abdullah, former Malacca chief minister Tan Sri Abdul Rahim Thamby Chik, and former Perkasa treasurer Datuk Shuaib Lazim, had on March 21 exposed the existence of a video of a man resembling Anwar having sex with a woman believed to be a foreign prostitute.

Anwar then lodged a police report claiming that he was not the man in the video. Zamil said he had decided to make the lucrative offer 'to help ease the confusion'.

'The public are confused. I believe Anwar can finally clear his name if we can help him find a man who looks like him, walks like him, and even smiles like him,' he said. Zamil also added that he would invite Shazryl, Kita president Datuk Zaid Ibrahim and Senator Ezam Mohd Noor to sit in a panel to identify the Anwar lookalike.

'The three of them were very close to Anwar. They can tell if someone looks exactly like Anwar,' he said. Several bloggers have also promised to run naked around KLCC if a man resembling Anwar could be found.

 

HRP eyes six seats in Kedah

Posted: 29 May 2011 04:21 PM PDT

Of the six, five are state seats. The sole parliamentary seat targeted is Padang Serai, held by N Gobalakrishnan.

(Free Malaysia Today) - The Human Rights Party (HRP) plans to contest in five state seats and one parliamentary constituency in Kedah which have 20% and above Indian voters.

The party's secretary-general P Uthayakumar said the five state seats were Bukit Selambau (29.5%), Lunas (22.5%), Merbau (22%), Sidam (20%) and Gurun (18.4%).

The sole parliamentary seat was Padang Serai, currently held by former PKR strongman, N Gobalakrishnan.

"PAS is ruling by a majority of a mere two seats when compared to 14 seats held by Umno/BN and PKR having five seats, DAP one seat and one Independent in the 36-seat Kedah state assembly.

"So if HRP wins in these five state seats, they will be the real 'kingmakers' and can seriously push for change vis-a-vis the Kedah Indian poor at the highest political level," said Uthayakumar.

He added that the Indian poor have to be politically empowered to effect changes at the highest political level as both Barisan Nasional and Pakatan Rakyat have refused to address the pressing Indian problems.

READ MORE HERE

 

WIKILEAKS: ‘Abu Sayyaf links turned Dr M red’

Posted: 29 May 2011 04:00 PM PDT

However, his attack against the Time magazine over the article was moderate as he was not personally mentioned and wanted to keep a lid on the possible links, said US diplomats.

The Time article appeared in its April 10, 1995 issue, alleging that Southern Philippine Muslim extremist group Aby Sayyaf was receiving arms, money and training for Islamic groups in various countries, including Malaysia.

K Kabilan, Free Malaysia Today

Dr Mahathir Mohamad was unusually moderate in his attacks against two articles which appeared to criticise his government in the Time and Fortune magazines in early 1995 as he was "not personally mentioned in the stories".

Also, Mahathir was not keen to pursue his attacks against the Time magazine article in particular as it involved his government's alleged links with the Abu Sayyaf movement from the Philippines.

"Given the murky general history of Moro-Malaysian dealings, he may feel it best not to go into too many details," wrote US diplomats based in the US embassy here in their confidential cable to the US State Department in Washington. The confidential cable was dated April 13, 1995.

The cable was leaked by whistleblower site WikiLeaks and handed over to FMT today.

The US diplomats felt that Mahathir was quick with his anti-West attacks when the two articles were published, especially since the general election was imminent then. However, they noted his reaction was "moderate and apparently shortlived".

The US diplomats felt the main reason for Mahathir's muted attack on Time and Fortune was largely due to the fact that he was not personally targeted in the two articles.

The diplomats also mentioned that Mahathir could have been mindful that his recent anti-British and anti-Australian outbursts had not given him clear-cut victories.

They said that they felt that the Malaysian government did not wish to make an issue of the Time article, especially considering the historical ties between the Moro movement and Malaysia.

The Time article appeared in its April 10, 1995 issue, alleging that Southern Philippine Muslim extremist group Aby Sayyaf was receiving arms, money and training for Islamic groups in various countries, including Malaysia.

The article further claimed that Abu Sayyaf used training camps in Malaysia and was expecting arms shipments from Malaysian supporters.

Western media campaign

Mahathir's reaction to the article was to immediately label it as "part of a campaign by the western media to discredit Malaysia" to deter investment and tourism.

The Time article came just after another article in the Fortune magazine which had said that the Malaysian currency was facing risk.

READ MORE HERE

*****************************************

C O N F I D E N T I A L KUALA LUMPUR 001919
 
 
EAP/PIMBS
 
E.O.12356: DECL: OADR
TAGS:  PREL, PGOV, MY
SUBJECT:  TIME UPSETS MAHATHIR
 
1.  PRIME MINISTER MAHATHIR RESPONDED WITH ANTI-WEST RHETORIC TO AN ARTICLE IN THE APRIL 10 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE WHICH ALLEGED THAT ABU SAYYAF, A SMALL MUSLIM EXTREMIST GROUP BASED IN THE SOUTHERN PHILIPPINES, WAS RECEIVING ARMS, MONEY AND TRAINING FROM ISLAMIC GROUPS IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES INCLUDING MALAYSIA.  THE ARTICLE ALSO REPORTED THAT "THE GROUP USES TRAINING CAMPS IN MALAYSIA AND IS EXPECTING ARMS SHIPMENTS FROM SUPPORTERS THERE."  THE PRIME MINISTER DESCRIBED THE PIECE AS A "PART OF A CAMPAIGN BY THE WESTERN MEDIA TO DISCREDIT MALAYSIA" TO "DETER PEOPLE FROM INVESTING AND VISITING HERE, GENERALLY AIMED AT UNDERMINING THE NATION'S ECONOMY AND ITS DEVELOPMENT."  PEOPLE UNHAPPY WITH MALAYSIA'S "VOCIFEROUS" STAND ON INTERNATIONAL ISSUES, HE EXPLAINED, WERE BEHIND THE WESTERN MEDIA'S CONSPIRACY.  HE ALSO CONFIDENTLY CHALLENGED TIME TO "COME TO MALAYSIA AND MAKE A REPORT HERE" THAT MALAYSIA IS TRAINING TERRORISTS.  THE INFORMATION MINISTER ECHOED THE PM'S LINE.  NO ONE FROM THE GOM HAS FORMALLY OR INFORMALLY COMPLAINED ABOUT THE ARTICLE TO US.  SEVERAL OF OUR MALAYSIAN CONTACTS ARE CURIOUS ABOUT THE STORY -- THEY WANT TO KNOW IF IT'S TRUE.
 
2.  COMMENT:  MAHATHIR WAS STILL ANXIOUS ABOUT THE NEGATIVE IMPACT OF A RECENT FORTUNE ARTICLE WHICH DESCRIBED THE MALAYSIAN CURRENCY AS AT RISK POST-MEXICO, WHEN THE TIME PIECE CAME OUT.  HE ORDERED A DELAY IN THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE TIME ISSUE BUT DID NOT BAN IT.  (OBSERVERS EXPECT THE MAGAZINE WILL BE ALLOWED ON THE SHELVES IN A COUPLE OF WEEKS.)  WITH THE GENERAL ELECTION JUST AROUND THE CORNER, HIS RHETORIC WAS VERY MUCH EXPECTED SINCE CONSPIRACY THEORIES STILL HAVE A FOLLOWING HERE.  HOWEVER, AS COMPARED TO HIS PREVIOUS BOUTS WITH WESTERN MEDIA (MOST NOTABLY, DENYING CONTRACTS TO BRITISH FIRMS IN RESPONSE TO AN UNFLATTERING ARTICLE IN THE BRITISH PRESS), THE PM'S REACTION TO FORTUNE AND NOW TIME PIECES HAS BEEN MODERATE AND APPARENTLY SHORT LIVED. THERE MAY BE SEVERAL REASONS FOR THIS.  DIFFERENT FROM PREVIOUS CASES, MAHATHIR WAS NOT PERSONALLY MENTIONED IN THE STORIES.  FURTHER, THE LAST TWO ANTI-BRITISH AND ANTI-AUSTRALIAN OUTINGS HAVE NOT BEEN VIEWED AS CLEAR-CUT VICTORIES FOR THE PM.  FINALLY, GIVEN THE MURKY GENERAL HISTORY OF MORO-MALAYSIAN DEALINGS, HE MAY FEEL IT BEST NOT TO GO INTO TOO MANY DETAILS.  THE FACT THAT WE HAVE RECEIVED ALMOST NO QUERIES FROM THE PRESS IS FURTHER INDICATION THAT THE GOVERNMENT DOES NOT WISH TO MAKE AN ISSUE OF THIS AT THIS TIME.
 
CHAMBERLIN
 

‘PKR failed to pay rent for 30 months’

Posted: 29 May 2011 03:54 PM PDT

Party leaders are accused of lying in saying that they had been prompt in paying RM20,000 per month to the landlord.

(Free Malaysia Today) - New details have emerged that PKR may not have paid rental for its party headquarters in Merchant Square here for almost 30 months, owing arrears of about RM600,000 to the landlord.

The party had entered into a five-year lease with the landlord beginning July 2008 for RM20,000 per month. FMT learnt that the party paid rental only until November 2008.

"Since then, not a single payment has been made," said a party insider today.

"And the party's top leaders are lying in saying that they had been prompt in paying rents," he said.

PKR leaders revealed last week that the party faced possible eviction from their party headquarters because the landlord failed to service the bank loan.

As a result, Affin Bank has initiated an auction to be held on June 9 to recover its money.

Playing the blame-game

Laying the blame squarely on the landlord, party leaders like treasurer William Leong, vice-president Tian Chua and secretary-general Saifuddin Nasution said that the party had never failed to pay the rental to the landlord.

"It is the landlord, the banks are going after them. A lot of people have the wrong notion that we are the owners. We are just the tenant and not responsible for the loan. We have never failed to pay the monthly rental," Leong had said.

Tian, meanwhile, said he did not know why the landlord failed to service the bank loan but speculated that the landlord could be facing financial difficulties.

Saifuddin denied that the party was in a financial quandary, adding that the party has been prompt in paying rent.

"We are not in any financial problem. It is the owner who has a problem with the bank as we have been paying rent without fail," he told FMT.

Leong said that the party was now planning to buy the premises when the bank auctions it next month, failing which it would seek to rent it from the new owners. But if that does not work out, then PKR will find itself another office.

Lies, half-truths

The party insider said these leaders were "talking rubbish".

"They didn't even pay the rentals… perhaps they did not have the money to do that… and now they are talking about buying the premises at the auction," he said.

He also chided them for making statements without proper checking, especially when they even got the name of their supposed landlord wrong.

When the PKR leaders spoke to the media on the auction, they mentioned that the landlord was a company named Ainb-Tech Sdn Bhd. However, FMT learnt that the lease agreement had named another company as the landlord.

"They don't seem to have a clue on the lease details of the premises they are occupying. I don't think they know who owns the building and even how much money they have to pay for rental.

"They are jumping now after seeing the auction notice as they have been caught with their pants down… and have resorted to lies and half truths," added the insider.

READ MORE HERE

 

Kredit: www.malaysia-today.net

Malaysia Today - Your Source of Independent News

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A ‘snap poll’ in Malaysia? Political surprise, journalistic cliché

Posted: 29 May 2011 05:07 PM PDT

Election campaigns in Malaysia — from the announcement of the poll, the proroguing of Parliament, the nomination of candidates, the campaign, the vote, and the declaration of the result of the poll — can accordingly be completed, from start to finish, in about 10 days. The whole business is usually "done and dusted" within two weeks.

Clive Kessler, The Malaysian Insider

Once again there is talk of an early or imminent election in Malaysia.

No surprise, nothing unusual in that.

And once again the commentators are considering the likelihood of a "snap poll."

Again, no surprise, nothing unusual in that. Just silly.

The expression "snap poll" a cliché.

And, as ever, hasty recourse to the irresistibly available cliché is a sure sign that clear, fresh and direct thinking about the matter at hand has been avoided, short-circuited. That an "end-run" (to use a cliché!) had been made around the moment of analysis, the need for thought.

What is, or was, a snap poll? The term was coined to denote an election that is called suddenly, at an unexpected moment, to take advantage of the element of surprise.

The snap poll is to political life, to electoral politics, what Pearl Harbor was to naval warfare. Suddenly, early one morning, unannounced, out of a clear blue sky...

It is an encounter, a contest, that is pretty much over before it has begun.

It is a fight — and this is the whole point of the manoeuvre or stratagem — that is as good as over from the outset: before the back-footed adversary, here the political opposition, has a chance to get up from its chair, onto its feet, and into action.

One has only to think about that for a moment and one thing becomes clear.

That the idea, and use of the term, "snap poll" in Malaysia is quite ridiculous. Not just strange, oddly inappropriate, but altogether ludicrous.

It is absurd for two reasons.

First, all Malaysian elections are in effect snap polls.

In 1969 the national election campaign period was a long one. The Tunku wanted to give the people plenty of time to consider the issues, to weigh the choice that they faced.

Never again.

Since then, all election campaign periods have been brief.

Reform of election legislation has made this brevity, this compression or "telescoping" of the political season — a concentration of pressure and, some would say, enforcing an unreflecting rush to political judgment — possible.

Election campaigns in Malaysia — from the announcement of the poll, the proroguing of Parliament, the nomination of candidates, the campaign, the vote, and the declaration of the result of the poll — can accordingly be completed, from start to finish, in about 10 days. The whole business is usually "done and dusted" within two weeks.

That kind of concentration and rapidity of electoral procedure falls fully within the ambit of the term "snap poll."

These are not elections that run for weeks, whose date is announced months ahead or else are calendrically set by law (as in the US) for the election of candidates to a fixed term of office, say four years.

You don't need to speculate in Malaysia whether there will be a snap poll. There always is.

Every election is sudden and a "quickie", fast to come and fast to be over and gone.

The only question is when.

When will the government decide to call it? When will it exercise its discretion, avail itself of the incumbent power's prerogative, to "pull the trigger" (another cliché!) or (yet another) to get the contestants to the line and "sound the starter's gun"?

That is one reason why the term "snap poll" in Malaysia is a silly misnomer.

There is a second.

Invariably in Malaysia, once the country is about two to three years further on from its previous election, and the next is felt approaching in two to three years' time, incessant election speculation begins to develop, mount and inexorably intensify.

How does this happen?

Quite simply, there is a popular interest in the matter.

Why not? The citizen wants to know. As a stakeholder in the political community, the citizen wants to be part of, and informed about, the process of deciding the community's common fate — not just a spectator.

Always politically adept, the government caters to and assiduously "plays upon" this interest.

It does so constantly and continually, raising and lowering the intensity of its hints, feinting and parrying this way and that, as in some exotic sword-dance or wrong-footing silat routine.

In doing so (to change our metaphor, or flee into a different cliché), it "plays the rakyat" the way a maestro plays a violin.

Its objectives in doing so are several.

It wants to "whet and feed" the rakyat's "political appetite."

If elections are eventually to be held, the enthusiasm of party workers must be sustained, the political attention of voters must be activated and focused, and people need to be reminded of their political obligations (especially, as the powers of the day in every country see the matter, to acknowledge gratitude for benefits already and most recently received).

Governments, by toying with speculation about imminent elections, also seek to "test the waters" (what, another cliché!) concerning their own popularity. They raise the hypothetical possibility of a snap poll to measure their own situation and prospects, "to see how they are running."

They also use the measured and very controlled encouragement of election speculation to "fly various kites": in other words to assess likely public reaction to certain provisional policy initiatives, as well as the popular acceptability, persuasiveness and effect of possible campaign stratagems and rhetorical innovations, such as new slogans.

Not least of its purposes in toying openly with ideas of an imminent poll is to dismay, disorient and "bamboozle" the opposition: to keep its strategists preoccupied with the short-run possibility, however unlikely, of having soon to face the polls and so force it to redirect and consume large amounts of its scarce energies and time.

Election speculation, no matter how fabricated or implausible, usefully distracts the opposition. It diverts the government's opponents from pursuing necessary longer-term tasks, such as the development of defensible policies and from necessary, and necessarily time-consuming, political planning.

Talk of early elections forces the opposition to operate in "rush mode", even "panic mode", not "thoughtfulness mode." It keeps the opposition "tied in knots."

By this logic, there may be an "inverse" relation between election speculation and the likelihood of an imminent poll. The louder the talk of a "snap poll", the less likely an early election may be.

Until, of course, the last indulgence in such talk, the last tactical flirtation with the idea before the election is finally called.

But by then the clock has largely run down, time is running out, and the calling of the election usually comes as no surprise...

After years of keen anticipation and bated breath, what you hear in the end is often just a sigh of relief.

So in sum, every Malaysian election is both, in one sense, a "snap poll" and, in another, not, since no Malaysian election ever can be.

Every election comes at the end of a two-to-three year-long cycle, or barrage, of election speculation.

A snap poll, a surprise, beyond all expectations, out of a clear blue sky? Hardly!

READ MORE HERE

 

WIKILEAKS: ‘Abu Sayyaf links turned Dr M red’

Posted: 29 May 2011 04:00 PM PDT

However, his attack against the Time magazine over the article was moderate as he was not personally mentioned and wanted to keep a lid on the possible links, said US diplomats.

The Time article appeared in its April 10, 1995 issue, alleging that Southern Philippine Muslim extremist group Aby Sayyaf was receiving arms, money and training for Islamic groups in various countries, including Malaysia.

K Kabilan, Free Malaysia Today

Dr Mahathir Mohamad was unusually moderate in his attacks against two articles which appeared to criticise his government in the Time and Fortune magazines in early 1995 as he was "not personally mentioned in the stories".

Also, Mahathir was not keen to pursue his attacks against the Time magazine article in particular as it involved his government's alleged links with the Abu Sayyaf movement from the Philippines.

"Given the murky general history of Moro-Malaysian dealings, he may feel it best not to go into too many details," wrote US diplomats based in the US embassy here in their confidential cable to the US State Department in Washington. The confidential cable was dated April 13, 1995.

The cable was leaked by whistleblower site WikiLeaks and handed over to FMT today.

The US diplomats felt that Mahathir was quick with his anti-West attacks when the two articles were published, especially since the general election was imminent then. However, they noted his reaction was "moderate and apparently shortlived".

The US diplomats felt the main reason for Mahathir's muted attack on Time and Fortune was largely due to the fact that he was not personally targeted in the two articles.

The diplomats also mentioned that Mahathir could have been mindful that his recent anti-British and anti-Australian outbursts had not given him clear-cut victories.

They said that they felt that the Malaysian government did not wish to make an issue of the Time article, especially considering the historical ties between the Moro movement and Malaysia.

The Time article appeared in its April 10, 1995 issue, alleging that Southern Philippine Muslim extremist group Aby Sayyaf was receiving arms, money and training for Islamic groups in various countries, including Malaysia.

The article further claimed that Abu Sayyaf used training camps in Malaysia and was expecting arms shipments from Malaysian supporters.

Western media campaign

Mahathir's reaction to the article was to immediately label it as "part of a campaign by the western media to discredit Malaysia" to deter investment and tourism.

The Time article came just after another article in the Fortune magazine which had said that the Malaysian currency was facing risk.

READ MORE HERE

*****************************************

C O N F I D E N T I A L KUALA LUMPUR 001919
 
 
EAP/PIMBS
 
E.O.12356: DECL: OADR
TAGS:  PREL, PGOV, MY
SUBJECT:  TIME UPSETS MAHATHIR
 
1.  PRIME MINISTER MAHATHIR RESPONDED WITH ANTI-WEST RHETORIC TO AN ARTICLE IN THE APRIL 10 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE WHICH ALLEGED THAT ABU SAYYAF, A SMALL MUSLIM EXTREMIST GROUP BASED IN THE SOUTHERN PHILIPPINES, WAS RECEIVING ARMS, MONEY AND TRAINING FROM ISLAMIC GROUPS IN VARIOUS COUNTRIES INCLUDING MALAYSIA.  THE ARTICLE ALSO REPORTED THAT "THE GROUP USES TRAINING CAMPS IN MALAYSIA AND IS EXPECTING ARMS SHIPMENTS FROM SUPPORTERS THERE."  THE PRIME MINISTER DESCRIBED THE PIECE AS A "PART OF A CAMPAIGN BY THE WESTERN MEDIA TO DISCREDIT MALAYSIA" TO "DETER PEOPLE FROM INVESTING AND VISITING HERE, GENERALLY AIMED AT UNDERMINING THE NATION'S ECONOMY AND ITS DEVELOPMENT."  PEOPLE UNHAPPY WITH MALAYSIA'S "VOCIFEROUS" STAND ON INTERNATIONAL ISSUES, HE EXPLAINED, WERE BEHIND THE WESTERN MEDIA'S CONSPIRACY.  HE ALSO CONFIDENTLY CHALLENGED TIME TO "COME TO MALAYSIA AND MAKE A REPORT HERE" THAT MALAYSIA IS TRAINING TERRORISTS.  THE INFORMATION MINISTER ECHOED THE PM'S LINE.  NO ONE FROM THE GOM HAS FORMALLY OR INFORMALLY COMPLAINED ABOUT THE ARTICLE TO US.  SEVERAL OF OUR MALAYSIAN CONTACTS ARE CURIOUS ABOUT THE STORY -- THEY WANT TO KNOW IF IT'S TRUE.
 
2.  COMMENT:  MAHATHIR WAS STILL ANXIOUS ABOUT THE NEGATIVE IMPACT OF A RECENT FORTUNE ARTICLE WHICH DESCRIBED THE MALAYSIAN CURRENCY AS AT RISK POST-MEXICO, WHEN THE TIME PIECE CAME OUT.  HE ORDERED A DELAY IN THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE TIME ISSUE BUT DID NOT BAN IT.  (OBSERVERS EXPECT THE MAGAZINE WILL BE ALLOWED ON THE SHELVES IN A COUPLE OF WEEKS.)  WITH THE GENERAL ELECTION JUST AROUND THE CORNER, HIS RHETORIC WAS VERY MUCH EXPECTED SINCE CONSPIRACY THEORIES STILL HAVE A FOLLOWING HERE.  HOWEVER, AS COMPARED TO HIS PREVIOUS BOUTS WITH WESTERN MEDIA (MOST NOTABLY, DENYING CONTRACTS TO BRITISH FIRMS IN RESPONSE TO AN UNFLATTERING ARTICLE IN THE BRITISH PRESS), THE PM'S REACTION TO FORTUNE AND NOW TIME PIECES HAS BEEN MODERATE AND APPARENTLY SHORT LIVED. THERE MAY BE SEVERAL REASONS FOR THIS.  DIFFERENT FROM PREVIOUS CASES, MAHATHIR WAS NOT PERSONALLY MENTIONED IN THE STORIES.  FURTHER, THE LAST TWO ANTI-BRITISH AND ANTI-AUSTRALIAN OUTINGS HAVE NOT BEEN VIEWED AS CLEAR-CUT VICTORIES FOR THE PM.  FINALLY, GIVEN THE MURKY GENERAL HISTORY OF MORO-MALAYSIAN DEALINGS, HE MAY FEEL IT BEST NOT TO GO INTO TOO MANY DETAILS.  THE FACT THAT WE HAVE RECEIVED ALMOST NO QUERIES FROM THE PRESS IS FURTHER INDICATION THAT THE GOVERNMENT DOES NOT WISH TO MAKE AN ISSUE OF THIS AT THIS TIME.
 
CHAMBERLIN
 

Suaram starts Legal Fund to Probe Submarine Commissions in French Courts

Posted: 29 May 2011 11:17 AM PDT

SUARAM's latest application, once approved by the court, would allow it to become party to the enquiry and have official access to every element of the enquiry, including access to the evidence which allegedly links DCNS to the issuing of commissions to government officials.

By Dr Kua Kia Soong (Director of SUARAM)

SUARAM's efforts to probe suspected commissions involved in the submarines purchase in the French courts are starting to bear fruit. The Malaysian courts have failed to shed light on the grisly murder of Altantuya and the reasons for her murder. Although two former bodyguards of the Prime Minister have been charged and sentenced, their motives for the murder have not been probed by the Malaysian court.

SUARAM believes that there is more to the murder of Altantuya and that what is in question is at least RM500 million in commissions associated with the RM7 billion Scorpene submarines deal. This has grave consequences for both Malaysian and French tax payers.

SUARAM applied through its French lawyers as a civil party for a judicial review in November 2009. As Malaysia's leading human rights organization, it has always fought for human rights and "People before Profits" issues. Furthermore, SUARAM's latest publication, "Questioning Arms Spending in Malaysia: From Altantuya to Zikorsky" by its director, Dr Kua Kia Soong, gives it the locus standi for filing this petition in the French courts.

This case concerns the sale of two Scorpène submarines and an Agosta submarine to the Malaysian government, a contract worth approximately one billion euros, that was signed in 2002 with the Malaysian DCNS (former DCN, Department of Naval Construction) and Thalès.

The French Inquisitorial Judicial System

Unlike the British (and Malaysian) system, the French inquisitorial system has an examining or investigating judge. The examining judge can conduct investigations into serious crimes or complex enquiries. As members of the judiciary, they are independent of the executive branch. The judge questions witnesses, interrogates suspects, and orders searches or other investigations. The examining judge's goal is to gather facts, and as such their duty is to look for all the evidence. Both the prosecution and the defence may request the judge to act and may appeal the judge's decisions before an appellate court.

Judges in the Paris Prosecution Office have been probing a wide range of corruption charges involving similar submarine sales and the possibility of bribery and kickbacks to top officials in France, Pakistan, Taiwan and other countries, including Malaysia. Recently, Parisian prosecutors, led by investigating Judges Francoise Besset and Jean-Christophe Hullin, have been investigating allegations involving senior French political figures and the sales of submarines and other weaponry to governments all over the world.

SUARAM's latest application, once approved by the court, would allow it to become party to the enquiry and have official access to every element of the enquiry, including access to the evidence which allegedly links DCNS to the issuing of commissions to government officials. The case is still at the enquiry phase and the new application is to upgrade it to the "instruction phase" where an investigative judge would be appointed.

Malaysia's Scorpene Submarines' Scandal

This scandal involving Malaysia's purchase of two Scorpene submarines is of concern also to French tax payers because it involves France's biggest defense conglomerates, the state-owned shipbuilder DCN. DCN's subsidiary Armaris manufactures the Scorpene submarines sold to Malaysia among other countries.

It has already been brought up in the Malaysian Parliament that €114 million (RM500 million) has been paid to a Malaysia-based company called Perimekar, for "coordination and support services" for the submarines transaction. Perimekar was wholly owned by another company, KS Ombak Laut Sdn Bhd, which in turn was controlled by Najib's aide, Razak Baginda. Baginda's wife Mazlinda was the principal shareholder in this company. Perimekar was registered in 2001, a few months before the signing of the contracts for the sale and the company did not appear to have the financial resources to complete the contract. None of the directors and shareholders of Perimekar have any experience in the construction or maintenance of submarines.

Altantuya Shaariibuu, a 28-year-old Mongolian translator and Razak Baginda's jilted lover, had allegedly participated in negotiations over the purchase of the submarines. By her own admission in a letter found after her death, she was attempting to blackmail Razak Baginda for US$500,000. She was shot in October 2006 and her body was blown up with military explosives by two bodyguards attached to Najib's office after Razak Baginda went to Najib's chief of staff, Musa Safri, for help in stopping her demands.

What were Altantuya's Killers' Motives?

After being acquitted in November 2008 under questionable circumstances of participating in her murder, Razak Baginda left the country for England. The bodyguards were convicted but no motive was ever established for their actions.

The submarine deal was never brought up in court during the murder trial which saw prosecutors, defense attorneys and the judge judiciously keeping Najib's name out of the proceedings.

A private detective hired by Razak Baginda to protect him from Altantuya's advances filed a statutory declaration after the trial indicating that Najib had actually been the victim's lover and had passed her on to Razak Baginda. He later retracted this story in a second statutory declaration. The detective, P. Balasubramaniam, said later that he was forced to leave Kuala Lumpur. He eventually emerged from hiding in India to say that he had been offered RM5 million (US$1.57 million) by a businessman close to Najib's wife to leave town. He also said he had met Najib's younger brother, Nazim and was told to recant his testimony.

Contradictions in Malaysian Government's Story

From the investigations so far, there appears to be contradictions in the Malaysian government's side of the story regarding the payment of 114 euros to the Malaysian company Perimekar. The Deputy Minister of Defence had told the Malaysian Parliament that this was paid by the French. According to sources cited by the plaintiffs, it was not the company Armaris that paid 114 million euros to Perimekar, but rather the Malaysian government, "with the sole purpose of circumventing the OECD Convention."

This contract was signed in 2002 after the OECD Convention came into force in France in 2000, which punishes corruption of foreign public officials with ten years' imprisonment and a 150,000 euro fine. Following this complaint, a preliminary investigation was conducted by the prosecution: the hearings were made and searches were made at the premises of DCNS and Thalès.

As was the case for contracts won by the DCN for submarines to Pakistan and frigates to Taiwan, there are increasing suspicions of "reversed commissions" to French political parties.

After Suaram had filed an initial suit at the Paris court in 2009, the state prosecutor Jean-Claude Marin then opened a preliminary investigation. At the time, it was suspected that a bribe of 114 million euros had been paid by the company Armaris (a subsidiary of DCNI and Thalès) to Malaysian parties through the company Perimekar.

DCN Officer Confirms Commissions

In September 2008, during the course of the Karachi Case also involving DCN, the note books of Gérard-Philippe Menayas, former chief financial officer of DCN, who was indicted in the case, also confirmed the suspicions of hidden commissions. In his memorandum, Menayas mentioned the Malaysian submarine contract as follows:

"Since the entry into force of the OECD Convention regarding the fight against corruption in September 2000, only two contracts have been signed; the first with India, and the second with Malaysia in 2002. These two contracts are the result of commercial actions undertaken prior to the OECD Convention. Furthermore, they are both suspected of non-compliance with this Convention. I have evidence to support this".(http://www.rue89.com/2011/04/02/sous-marins-malaisiens-la-piste-des-retrocommissions-se-precise)

Furthermore, it appears there were three commissions instead of one paid for the sale of submarines. In addition to that of 114 million euros, there are two further instalments, one paid by DCN to the commercial networks of Thalès, for over 30 million euros, corresponding to "commercial fees relating to the negotiation and execution of the contract". This second commission was paid by Thalès to a recipient, who remains unknown, in order to convince the Malaysian government of the need to conduct additional work. The third commission was for 2.5 million euros.

According to Gerard Philippe Menayas:

"Until the OECD Convention against corruption came into force in France, no contract for the sale of defence equipment to an emerging country could take place without the payment of commissions to policy makers (euphemistically called 'commercial fees for exports')."

Finally, according to the complaint filed by the firm Bourdon, Suaram's lawyer, the company Gifen, which was established by Jean-Marie Boivin in Malta, intervened in the negotiations "so as to facilitate the money transfers in this case", and particularly finance the trips of Baginda and Altantuya.

SUARAM Appeals for Legal Funds

SUARAM hopes the French justice system will reveal more than what the Malaysian judicial system has failed to deliver so far and will bring justice and closure to the family of Altantuya, and force the French and Malaysian Governments to account to their peoples regarding the commissions on the submarines contract.

When the case goes to the French court, the prosecution can then contact an examining magistrate and the trial can start. SUARAM's case in the French courts will involve considerable legal fees. Thus far, the French lawyers have offered their services pro bono. When the case proper begins, we will need to afford the necessary legal fees. Thus we are appealing to justice-loving and socially conscious Malaysian tax payers to contribute to this submarine commissions legal fund.

 

Kredit: www.malaysia-today.net

Malaysia Today - Your Source of Independent News

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Ibrahim wields faith to ward off ‘Umno stooge’ claims

Posted: 29 May 2011 08:39 PM PDT

(The Malaysian Insider) - Datuk Ibrahim Ali declared today his willingness to swear on Allah's name that he acts of his own free will and has never been influenced by Umno.

In saying so, the fiery Perkasa president belittled Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim for refusing to do the same to prove his innocence in the sex video scandal and Sodomy II case.

"You, Anwar, were not brave enough to swear with (Mohd) Saiful (Bukhari Azlan) and Datuk Trio. Who is the real comedian here, if not yourself?" he asked.

The Pasir Mas MP was responding to Anwar's criticisms of him over the weekend where the PKR de facto leader called Ibrahim the "worst example of Malaysian politics".

Ibrahim's Perkasa has also often been accused of being an offshoot of Umno and part of the Najib administration's strategy to draw support from the hard-line Malay electorate.

But Ibrahim insisted today that by levelling such accusations against him, Anwar was merely adding to his already growing list of sins.

"O' my old friend, I am not as bad or as evil as you. I have never been anyone's stooge, or what's worse, your stooge for life," he said.

Ibrahim accused Anwar of destroying Umno as well as PAS and its spiritual advisor, Datuk Nik Aziz Nik Mat, with his support for pluralism and attempt to spread disunity among the Malays.

He further claimed Anwar was insincere, pointing to the latter's days in Abim, when he had been critical of Umno and later supported PAS, before shifting allegiances to Umno until he was sacked and entered PKR.

"Your story is long, Anwar. You are rotten to the core and you are the worst... but you are good at acting. So go ahead and act. You can cheat your family and your friends who are blind all the time but you cannot cheat me all the time," he said.

READ MORE HERE

 

Bigger landslide in the making

Posted: 29 May 2011 05:51 PM PDT

By Stephanie Sta Maria, Free Malaysia Today

KUALA LUMPUR: Double landslides occurred side by side in Bukit Antarabangsa, Hulu Kelang, Selangor, 10 days ago but escaped public attention for both struck on the same day as the Hulu Langat tragedy.

As rescue personnel and the media rushed to the Madrasah Al-Taqwa Orphanage, business owners and employees watched mounds of wet earth sliding down the slope behind their commercial centre in Taman Ukay Perdana.

Unlike Hulu Langat, however, no property damages or injuries took place in the Bukit Antarabangsa incident.

The Ampang Jaya Municipal Council (MPAJ) moved swiftly in dispatching a team from its hillslope division to begin immediate work in containing the situation and repairing the slope.

MPAJ is currently the only authority with an existing hillslope division which was formed after the 2008 Bukit Antarabangsa landslide, which claimed five lives.

When FMT visited the site last Friday a large tarpaulin sheet blanketed the landslide on the left. There had been a downpour that morning and workers swarmed the top of the slope hauling the sheet higher to better secure its position.

The other landslide, however, remained exposed. The slope face had previously been protected by a concrete structure which had gradually disintegrated over time. The rain had now rendered this raw surface slick once again.

Of greater concern was the row of small businesses fronting both landslides. None of them had been instructed or were compelled to temporarily cease operations.

Cars still filled the corner workshop and lined the affected roads. People continued patronising the outlets along the stretch. Personnel at the Ukay police station, directly across the covered landslide, were equally unperturbed.

The Public Works Department (PWD), meanwhile, has assured that the situation is under control and that there is no cause for alarm.

"This is just a small erosion and small debris flow," Professor Ashaari Mohamad, director of PWD slope engineering branch, told FMT. "Once repair work has started it will not pose any danger to the shop houses."


 

READ MORE HERE.

As panel meets, pro- and anti-Lynas groups face off

Posted: 29 May 2011 05:47 PM PDT

By Shannon Teoh, The Malaysian Insider

KUANTAN, May 30 — The situation at the Hyatt Regency here threatened to turn ugly this afternoon as both pro and anti-Lynas Corp groups gathered while the review panel began meeting stakeholders this afternoon.

Several demonstrators, including three Umno assemblymen, rushed to confront Kuantan MP Fuziah Salleh as she arrived to meet the International Atomic Energy Agency-led (IAEA) team at 3pm.

They demanded the PKR vice president, who has been leading protests against the controversial RM700 million rare earth plant, not be allowed to bring in signed petitions into her half-hour session and that those accompanying her remove their anti-Lynas T-shirts.

As police also pressed Fuziah to meet the demonstrators' demands, her team complied before entering the building where the meetings are to take place.

The demonstrators were part of a group of about 100 who arrived at 2pm, holding up banners supporting the IAEA and also Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Adnan Yaakob.

About half as many wearing "Save Malaysia, Stop Lynas" T-shirts also made their stand here until police told both groups to leave the hotel.

However, both groups refused to leave outright and loitered outside the hotel premises until 4pm.

About ten light strike force officers were also deployed until the protestors left.

Earlier, pro-Lynas demonstrators had also confronted Indera Mahkota MCA Youth chief David Choi.

Choi, who has not been supportive of the project, told reporters later that he was kicked by some of the protestors.

The three assemblymen leading the pro-Lynas group included state executive councillor Datuk Mohamad Sahfri Ab Aziz as well as Norolazali Sulaiman and Mohd Zaili Besar, Guai and Panching representatives respectively.

READ MORE HERE.

Power rates up 7pc June 1, gas prices also hiked

Posted: 29 May 2011 05:41 PM PDT

(Reuters) - PUTRAJAYA, May 30 — The Najib administration today said it will raise electricity prices by an average 7.12 per cent from June 1 in an effort to cut down on subsidies.

Officials said natural gas prices would also rise by RM3.00  per mmBtu each six months until it reached market levels.

Power prices would rise by as much as 2.3 sen per kilowatt hour.

The price charged by state oil company Petronas for power generation would rise to RM13.70 per mmBtu from RM10.70, they said.

MORE TO COME HERE

 

Perkasa defends Ibrahim Ali, calls Anwar ‘worst politician’

Posted: 29 May 2011 05:12 PM PDT

(The Malaysian Insider) -  Perkasa defended Datuk Ibrahim Ali today as a man of integrity who has earned both the trust and confidence of professionals as well as politicians.

Syed Hassan Syed Ali, the group's secretary-general, also launched a broadside against Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim for calling Ibrahim the worst example of Malaysian politics.

"Even when Ibrahim Ali was in Semangat 46... the government then could not find one fault against him because Ibrahim is well known to be a man of integrity, he would not do what is not right and he would cause trouble for those in the wrong even though they were his close friends," Syed Hassan said in a statement today.

He charged that it was Anwar who should have admitted that he was the "worst politician", pointing out that in all the years of Ibrahim's political career he had never been slapped with charges in court like Anwar.

Syed Hassan said that unlike Ibrahim, Anwar was always abandoned by his friends as soon as they "found out who he really was."

"Malay professionals are always approaching Ibrahim Ali, even in Perkasa's supreme council there is no shortage of professionals. Many people know Ibrahim Ali, and those in Perkasa and also outside Perkasa support him," he added.

READ MORE HERE

 

No takers yet for Rolls Royce: M'sian businessman

Posted: 29 May 2011 04:53 PM PDT

(The Straits Times) - BUSINESSMAN Zamil Ibrahim is still waiting for someone who can find a Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim 'lookalike' to take up the offer of a vintage Rolls Royce and RM10,000 (S$4,080).

Mr Zamil, who is the Kedah Kita chief, had made the offer on Friday in connection with the sex video implicating the PKR adviser. 'The Rolls Silver 111 6700cc is mine, and the cash offer is made by someone who wants to remain anonymous.

'Anwar has been saying he was told the man looked like him but that he (Anwar) did not have a belly,' he said. Datuk T, comprising businessman Datuk Shazryl Eskay Abdullah, former Malacca chief minister Tan Sri Abdul Rahim Thamby Chik, and former Perkasa treasurer Datuk Shuaib Lazim, had on March 21 exposed the existence of a video of a man resembling Anwar having sex with a woman believed to be a foreign prostitute.

Anwar then lodged a police report claiming that he was not the man in the video. Zamil said he had decided to make the lucrative offer 'to help ease the confusion'.

'The public are confused. I believe Anwar can finally clear his name if we can help him find a man who looks like him, walks like him, and even smiles like him,' he said. Zamil also added that he would invite Shazryl, Kita president Datuk Zaid Ibrahim and Senator Ezam Mohd Noor to sit in a panel to identify the Anwar lookalike.

'The three of them were very close to Anwar. They can tell if someone looks exactly like Anwar,' he said. Several bloggers have also promised to run naked around KLCC if a man resembling Anwar could be found.

 

HRP eyes six seats in Kedah

Posted: 29 May 2011 04:21 PM PDT

Of the six, five are state seats. The sole parliamentary seat targeted is Padang Serai, held by N Gobalakrishnan.

(Free Malaysia Today) - The Human Rights Party (HRP) plans to contest in five state seats and one parliamentary constituency in Kedah which have 20% and above Indian voters.

The party's secretary-general P Uthayakumar said the five state seats were Bukit Selambau (29.5%), Lunas (22.5%), Merbau (22%), Sidam (20%) and Gurun (18.4%).

The sole parliamentary seat was Padang Serai, currently held by former PKR strongman, N Gobalakrishnan.

"PAS is ruling by a majority of a mere two seats when compared to 14 seats held by Umno/BN and PKR having five seats, DAP one seat and one Independent in the 36-seat Kedah state assembly.

"So if HRP wins in these five state seats, they will be the real 'kingmakers' and can seriously push for change vis-a-vis the Kedah Indian poor at the highest political level," said Uthayakumar.

He added that the Indian poor have to be politically empowered to effect changes at the highest political level as both Barisan Nasional and Pakatan Rakyat have refused to address the pressing Indian problems.

READ MORE HERE

 

‘PKR failed to pay rent for 30 months’

Posted: 29 May 2011 03:54 PM PDT

Party leaders are accused of lying in saying that they had been prompt in paying RM20,000 per month to the landlord.

(Free Malaysia Today) - New details have emerged that PKR may not have paid rental for its party headquarters in Merchant Square here for almost 30 months, owing arrears of about RM600,000 to the landlord.

The party had entered into a five-year lease with the landlord beginning July 2008 for RM20,000 per month. FMT learnt that the party paid rental only until November 2008.

"Since then, not a single payment has been made," said a party insider today.

"And the party's top leaders are lying in saying that they had been prompt in paying rents," he said.

PKR leaders revealed last week that the party faced possible eviction from their party headquarters because the landlord failed to service the bank loan.

As a result, Affin Bank has initiated an auction to be held on June 9 to recover its money.

Playing the blame-game

Laying the blame squarely on the landlord, party leaders like treasurer William Leong, vice-president Tian Chua and secretary-general Saifuddin Nasution said that the party had never failed to pay the rental to the landlord.

"It is the landlord, the banks are going after them. A lot of people have the wrong notion that we are the owners. We are just the tenant and not responsible for the loan. We have never failed to pay the monthly rental," Leong had said.

Tian, meanwhile, said he did not know why the landlord failed to service the bank loan but speculated that the landlord could be facing financial difficulties.

Saifuddin denied that the party was in a financial quandary, adding that the party has been prompt in paying rent.

"We are not in any financial problem. It is the owner who has a problem with the bank as we have been paying rent without fail," he told FMT.

Leong said that the party was now planning to buy the premises when the bank auctions it next month, failing which it would seek to rent it from the new owners. But if that does not work out, then PKR will find itself another office.

Lies, half-truths

The party insider said these leaders were "talking rubbish".

"They didn't even pay the rentals… perhaps they did not have the money to do that… and now they are talking about buying the premises at the auction," he said.

He also chided them for making statements without proper checking, especially when they even got the name of their supposed landlord wrong.

When the PKR leaders spoke to the media on the auction, they mentioned that the landlord was a company named Ainb-Tech Sdn Bhd. However, FMT learnt that the lease agreement had named another company as the landlord.

"They don't seem to have a clue on the lease details of the premises they are occupying. I don't think they know who owns the building and even how much money they have to pay for rental.

"They are jumping now after seeing the auction notice as they have been caught with their pants down… and have resorted to lies and half truths," added the insider.

READ MORE HERE

 

Scholarship solution - More professional courses in local varsities for top scorers

Posted: 29 May 2011 11:35 AM PDT

By Sharanjit Singh, NST

GEORGE TOWN: A new policy will be introduced to resolve the issue of top scorers not being awarded Public Service Department (PSD) scholarships to pursue their studies abroad.

Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin said under the policy, more professional courses would be introduced in local universities so that top scorers could study in the country instead.

"It will be good to keep talented students in the country. Our universities are good enough, they are comparable to foreign universities and they can offer courses that we need, including medicine.

"This way the government will be able to award more scholarships to them to study locally," he said when commenting on the discontent in various quarters, including Barisan Nasional members MCA, MIC and Gerakan over the matter.

The PSD has come under fire from politicians and parents over the awarding of its scholarships to Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia top scorers with many claiming some deserving students had been left out.

There were also students who claimed they were awarded diploma and matriculation programmes, instead of degree programmes, for courses they did not apply. Muhyiddin, who is education minister, said sponsoring students abroad was also getting costlier, and by having more courses in local universities, more students could be persuaded to study locally.

On why this problem (of some top scorers not awarded scholarships) occurred yearly, Muhyiddin said this was not so.

"It is not a year in, year out problem. Last year there was no problem (but) this year there seems to be some misunderstanding." Muhyiddin said the matter should not be blown out of proportion as only 59 top scorers who were offered scholarships did not get to study abroad, but were offered places in local universities.

He added that the government hoped to clear the air on the matter in the next few days.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak had on Friday said although the government promised that top scorers were eligible for scholarships, not all would get to study overseas.

"This is what people sometimes don't understand," he had said.

Najib had given an assurance that the government would continue to finance students who were offered scholarships to do diploma courses at local universities until the degree level and, likewise, for those who were offered matriculation courses.

This year, a total of 4,000 scholarships were offered, including 1,500 for overseas degree programmes (PILN). A total of 8,857 of the 16,900 applicants met the minimum academic requirements needed to be eligible for PILN.

Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz, the minister in charge of PSD, who was directed to resolve the matter, will chair a meeting with the department tomorrow.

Last year, Nazri had said the 1,500 PSD scholarships for PILN would be phased out from this year. This was aimed at increasing the number of scholarships for those studying at local universities and to address complaints that there were not enough scholarships for SPM top scorers.

He also said it was impossible to increase the number of scholarships because "we don't have enough money for that whenwe also need money to focus on other areas".

 

READ MORE HERE.


Developers shy away as Lynas plant looms

Posted: 29 May 2011 11:26 AM PDT

By Shannon Teoh, The Malaysian Insider

KUALA LUMPUR, May 30 — The controversial RM700 million rare earth plant in the Gebeng industrial zone is threatening to sink the local property market in Kuantan.

Developers are holding off on new projects, fearing a collapse in prices if Australian miner Lynas Corp is given the green light to begin operations in as little as three months.

The refinery has faced mounting opposition over the past few months due to fears of radiation pollution, giving pause to both developers and buyers.

"A few developers here are holding back from starting new projects. Some who have not committed too much money have totally backed out of their current developments," said property valuer Liom Hong Sang.

Kuantan Chinese Chamber of Commerce chairman Pang Woon Ping said that some real estate companies had experienced a 50 per cent drop in sales since March.

Although developers have managed to hold out without slashing prices, Pang told The Malaysian Insider that "if the plant goes ahead, there will be a sure drop."

Homes along the Kuantan-Gebeng stretch are currently priced about 20 per cent lower than in the city of Kuantan itself, with single-storey terrace units going for about RM100,000 to RM120,000.

The government was forced to put the refinery on ice last month pending a review by international experts that will be completed at the end of June.

Despite the review, Lynas expects no delay to its plans to begin operations in September as it maintains the plant is safe.

 

READ MORE HERE.

PR leaders dismiss Najib's plea to youth

Posted: 29 May 2011 11:24 AM PDT

(Harakah Daily) - KUALA LUMPUR, May 30: Prime Minister Najib Razak's weekend call on the youth to defend Barisan Nasional from being ousted from Putrajaya drew reactions from several leaders.

In a government-organised World Youth Day gathering in Putrajaya, Najib urged young people in the country to help him defend the administrative capital from "being auctioned off", referring to an allegation often targeted at opposition parties.

Najib even drew comparison with Egypt's mass youth movement that brought down decades of Mubarak dictatorship last February.

"You see one million youths in Tahrir Square, they had gathered there to bring the government down. But here, one million youth have gathered in Putrajaya to defend the government. Will you defend Putrajaya with me?" he asked in his address to a rally organisers called '1 Million Youth Gathering' in Putrajaya.
 
"The opposition said that they want to auction off Putrajaya. Will we allow them to sell Putrajaya off? No! We won't let them sell off Putrajaya because one million youth will be here to defend Putrajaya," he added.

Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim however dismissed the call.

"No youth movement would support a decadent, corrupt, obsolete system, I am sure they (young voters) will not defend it,"  said Anwar.
 
PAS information chief Idris Ahmad described Najib's plea "a waste of time", adding that the new generation would make their own assessment based on the information at hand, unlike in the past when only BN controlled the information flow through the use of traditional media. "The younger generation is no longer the group living in a cucoon away from information. Malaysian youth are active in the new media, and are exposed to the correct information.
 
"UMNO can only get support from people who are not informed, and the younger generation is not part of this group," he said in his comments to Harakahdaily.
 
PKR's Lembah Pantai member of parliament Nurul Izzah Anwar meanwhile called on the youth to unite for a new Putrajaya by supporting reforms.

 

READ MORE HERE.

 

MyKad error

Posted: 29 May 2011 11:00 AM PDT

By P Aruna, The Star

PETALING JAYA: Your MyKad may be safe in your wallet or handbag. But is it usable?

Over a million MyKad holders reported faulty chips last year after the cards were rejected at banks and at the Immigration Department, Road Transport Department, Employees Provident Fund (EPF) and PLUS Bhd, among others.

The MyKad is used in situations that require identification and authentication of the card holder's personal details such as the fingerprints.

Newer versions of the MyKad also have ATM, MEPS cash and Touch 'n Go features.

The National Registration Department (NRD) confirmed yesterday that chip failure was the main cause of MyKad replacements.

Of the 2,158,621 applications for MyKad replacements received last year, 1,018,698 were due to faulty chip.

NRD director-general Datuk Alwi Ibrahim said he viewed the matter with deep concern, saying the NRD would introduce an improved version of the MyKad chip by July.

"The MyKad is more complex because it has many applications compared to bank cards which would be for a single purpose," he said.

Alwi said there had also been cases of holders reporting that the MyKad chip had fallen off.

The NRD offers a 12-month "warranty" for the MyKad which begins from the date the card is issued to the applicant.

If the chip is found to be damaged within the one-year period, it will be replaced at no charge.

The holder has to pay RM10 to replace the card after this period.

NRD public relations officer Jainisah Mohd Noor said records showed that more men reported MyKad with faulty chips, adding that this could be due to the cards being kept in wallets in their back pockets.

Vijay Kanna, 25, said he discovered that his MyKad was faulty when he applied for a border pass to attend a university programme in Songkhla two years ago.

Journalist Jonathan Fernandez, 25, said he found out about his faulty MyKad when he went to open a bank account.

Anwar believes Pakatan is ready even without him

Posted: 28 May 2011 11:32 PM PDT

He said Pakatan was already a solid united pact with potential young successors including Azmin who he said may be brash in his "stunts" but more than capable to lead.

(free Malaysia Today) - Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim is confident in Pakatan Rakyat's second tier of leadership and discounted the notion that the pact will collapse in his absence.

Speaking at a closed door dialogue session with young professionals here, the PKR de facto leader said the pact was armed with young and more than capable leaders that can take Pakatan forward should he be convicted and jailed for sodomy.

"Once you're prosecuted you're already damned," he said laughingly to some 150 people who attended the forum.

Anwar is currently facing trial for allegedly sodomising his former aide, a charge he claimed was engineered by Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak and wife Rosmah Mansor.

Anwar's persona, attributed to his charisma and moderate liberal politics, is seen as the binding force in the Pakatan coalition rife with infighting.

The top leadership appears to be gelling well but much of their ideological differences remain conveniently buried for now and Anwar's possible incarceration would possibly break Pakatan.

Whether or not the bloc is ready for future without Anwar remains unknown. While it is likely that Anwar has identified his successor, Azmin Ali who is now PKR deputy president who happens to be his blue-eyed boy, observers say the latter lacks the calibre to lead and hold Pakatan together.

But the opposition leader claimed Pakatan was already a solid united pact with potential young successors including Azmin who he said may be brash in his "stunts" but more than capable to lead.

"Sometimes when the (current) leadership is too strong, we tend to not see the potential of second tier leaders," he said, referring to rising political starlets like PKR strategic director Rafizi Ramli and communications director Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad who is also Seri Setia assemblyman.

He said this in reply to a youth during the forum who urged Pakatan to move away from its dependency on political icons and based their struggle more on ideologies.

Anwar added that differences and open spat in Pakatan was part and parcel of a democracy which he said the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition was bankrupt of.

"Do you see any quality MPs in Umno or BN? Sometimes when I'm in Parliament and I look at them (sighs)," he said, drawing laughter from the audience.

READ MORE HERE

 

Anwar claims Dr M threatened him before sacking

Posted: 28 May 2011 11:28 PM PDT

The supposed threat was highlighted in book by writer Ziauddin Sardar.

(Free Malaysia Today) - Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim claimed he was threatened by former premier Dr Mahathir Mohamad who told him to voluntarily step down a day before his sacking as the deputy prime minister in 1998.

The PKR de facto leader further alleged that Mahathir had offered him financial compensation. Should he reject, he would be charged, the Permatang Pauh MP added.

"Mahathir told me… you have wife, a family, its better if you resign voluntarily, if not charges will be brought against you," he told some 150 people who attended a closed-door dialogue with young professionals here.

The supposed threat was highlighted in book by writer Ziauddin Sardar. The audience during the question and answer session asked Anwar if this was true to which the opposition leader replied:

"It's true because I told him (Ziauddin). I also went against Dr Mahathir, and was wrongfully imprisoned and subsequently beaten half to death."

Despite the ordeal, Anwar told the audience that he held no grudges against his former mentor, and forgave him for what happened.

"He is old and senile. Leave him alone lah," he said jokingly in reply to a question by an audience who wanted to know what would he do to the former premier if he becomes prime minister.

Anwar was sacked in 1998 and charged with sodomy and power abuse, charges he claimed were high level conspiracy to topple him.

He was later convicted and jailed for both offences but was eventually freed  in September 2004.

READ MORE HERE

 

Umno comes up with module to treat dropped candidates

Posted: 28 May 2011 05:37 PM PDT

(Bernama) -- A module will be formulated to "treat" disappointed Umno members who are not chosen as election candidates, said Umno Vice-President Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi.

He said if left untackled, the situation could be disadvantageous to the party.

Ahmad Zahid, who has been tasked the responsibility to create the module, said in the past they (candidates not selected) spent the initial days of the election campaign period to pacify sulking supporters instead of focusing on meeting voters.

The module would be put into practice in an election dry run that Umno would be conducting soon, he said, adding that he had been appointed by Umno's Supreme Council to chair and coordinate dry runs in each of the parliamentary and state constituencies.

"I will determine the module to ensure the party machinery is set up early in each constituency and no sulking is involved," he told reporters opening Titiwangsa Umno's annual delegates meeting at the Putra World Trade Centre (PWTC), here today.

Ahmad Zahid, who is also Defence Minister, said the culture had to stop immediately as it could be regarded as sabotage when it was more important for Umno members to focus on elections.

 

Only Malays and Bumis entitled to scholarships, says Umno-linked group

Posted: 28 May 2011 04:46 PM PDT

(Malaysiakini) - Only Malays and bumiputera have the right to receive government scholarships, said Umno-linked pressure group Gagasan Anti-Penyelewengan Selangor (Gaps) today.

"Is it a fact that all Malaysians have a right to a scholarship? The federal constitution only states that the Malays and bumiputera have the right to receive a scholarship," said Gaps president Hamidzun Khairuddin (left) in a statement.

"This constitution is made by the Reid Commission, not by the Malay leaders," he added, shifting the blame from the majority community to the five-member Commonwealth panel that drafted the nation's constitution in 1956.

Hamidzun was responding to MCA president Chua Soi Lek's comments on the PSD scholarship fracas carried by a news portal yesterday, where the latter's report said, "MCA told the prime minister today top SPM students should be given scholarships to study abroad despite Putrajaya's claim that it did not make any such promise."

Referring to "some members of the ruling party and opposition who are very racist and chauvanistic", Hamidzun lashed out at Chua in particular ,saying the chief of the second largest BN component party should amend the constitution if he disagreed with the issue.

"If Soi Lek disagrees, he should amend the constitution drawn up by Lord Reid. Soi Lek should be more objective in his leadership," said the Gaps leader.

All races equal but...

"Soi Lek also needs to learn to be a leader for all Malaysians, and not just the champion of his race," added Hamidzun.

BN parties for going in circles over the issue every May to June, year in, year out, he noted that each party fought only for the rights of their own respective communities.

"Gaps believes the issue should be resolved definitively, so that it would not become an annual polemic that does not benefit the rakyat," he said, ticking off BN parties for the widening income gap and the increasingly racial politics in the country.

"Enough of Do Xiang Zhong, Perkasa and Hindraf respectively being the spokespersons of their respective races. They excel in the field," said the Gaps leader.

Oblivious to the obvious contradictions, Hamidzun concluded that "political leaders should be broad minded... and defend the rights of all races based on the constitution."

Yesterday Chua had, according to the news report, announced after meeting with the PM over the prickly JPA scholarship issue that he had told the premier a number of failed scholarship applications by top scoring non-Malays should be reviewed and given overseas scholarships. Najib had promised he would "look into the controversy".

 

A Rolls Royce for anyone who finds a man resembling Anwar

Posted: 28 May 2011 04:42 PM PDT

(The Star) - Find a man resembling Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim and you can drive home a vintage Rolls Royce and with RM10,000 cash in hand.

That is the offer made by Kedah Kita chief Zamil Ibrahim to anyone who can find a person who looks like Opposition leader Anwar.

"The Rolls Royce (Silver 111, 6700cc) is mine, and the cash offer is made by someone who wants to remain anonymous.

"We are doing this to put an end to the prolonged saga following Anwar's claim that even if people say that the man in a sex video may look like him, it is not his tummy,'' he said.

Datuk T, comprising businessman Datuk Shazryl Eskay Abdullah, former Malacca Chief Minister Tan Sri Abdul Rahim Thamby Chik, and former Perkasa treasurer-general Datuk Shuib Lazim had, on March 21, revealed the existence of a video showing a man resembling Anwar having sex with a woman.

Anwar had lodged a police report claiming that he was not the man in the video and that it was part of a political conspiracy to topple him.

Zamil believes his offer can help throw light on the matter.

"The public are confused. I believe Anwar can finally clear his good name if we can help him find a man who looks like him, walk like him, and even smile like him,'' Zamil said.

Zamil also added that he would invite Eskay, Kita president Datuk Zaid Ibrahim and senator Ezam Moh Noor to sit in a panel to identify Anwar look-a-alike.

"The three of them were very close to Anwar. They can tell who looks exactly like Anwar,'' he said.

Several bloggers had also vouched to run naked around KLCC if a man resembling Anwar could be found.

 

Where voters outnumber local population

Posted: 28 May 2011 04:40 AM PDT

(Bernama) - The Election Commission (EC) has been urged to monitor state and parliamentary constituencies where registered voters outnumber the local population, to prevent any irregularity.

Umno vice-president Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said Umno had detected a questionable pattern of voter registration in certain areas that was likely to favour the opposition.

He claimed this was happening in places like Penang where those living on the island were purposely registered as voters on the mainland.

Speaking to reporters after opening the Kota Melaka Umno divisional meeting here today, he said: "It appears that the same strategy is being used in Perak, Selangor, Negeri Sembilan and Malacca."

"Only voters from the constituency involved should be allowed to vote there, not those who are turned into phantom voters," he stressed.

He said Umno was prepared to present evidence of the opposition's scheme to the EC for further action.

 

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