Jumaat, 23 November 2012

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Malaysia Today - Your Source of Independent News


MB says poverty behind Muslim apostasy in Selangor

Posted: 23 Nov 2012 12:27 AM PST

(Bernama) - Mentri Besar Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim said the issue of apostasy among Muslims in Selangor is caused by poverty and efforts are being taken to address it.

Khalid who is also the state executive councillor for Islamic affairs said he would combine aid by Islamic Trust Fund and Selangor Zakat Board to better care for the welfare of Muslims.

He said this in reply to a question from Datuk Dr Hasan Mohamed Ali (Independent-Gombak Setia), who asked about efforts to convert Muslims in Selangor in the state assembly here today.

Khalid said Islamic law enforcement agencies need to monitor how other religious missionaries draw Muslims and look into ways to save the faith of Muslims.

To a supplementary question from Ng Suee Lim (DAP-Sekinchan) who asked how many Muslims had been apostatised since Pakatan Rakyat ruled, Khalid said he did not have the data as apostasy was an issue for individuals and families did not publicise it.

However, there were still 10 cases relating to apostasy undergoing the court process in Selangor, he added.

 

 

Fernandez's remarks can strain ties between politicians, civil servants

Posted: 23 Nov 2012 12:19 AM PST

(Bernama) - The Administrative and Diplomatic Officers Alumni Association said the remark by Petaling Jaya City Council member Derek Fernandez can strain the harmonious working relationship between politicians and civil servants.

Its president Tan Sri Sallehudin Mohamad urged Fernandez who likened civil servants as 'monkeys' while commenting on the transfer of the mayor to withdraw his remark in order to protect the harmonious relationship. 

"The civil service is the pillar in the administration of any country. The responsibility entrusted is indeed noble and heavy a burden.

"The civil service expects sincere cooperation and positive support from all parties in the government, including political leaders appointed by supporters," he said in a statement here today. 

Fernandez was quoted as saying in an English newspaper: "Let's see who the candidates are. If they are going to nominate some monkeys, we will reject."

 

The Administrative and Diplomatic Officers Alumni Association said the remark by Petaling Jaya City Council member Derek Fernandez can strain the harmonious working relationship between politicians and civil servants.

Its president Tan Sri Sallehudin Mohamad urged Fernandez who likened civil servants as 'monkeys' while commenting on the tranfer of the mayor to withdraw his remark in order to protect the harmonious relationship.  

 "The civil service is the pillar in the administration of any country. The responsibility entrusted is indeed noble and heavy a burden. 

 "The civil service expects sincere cooperation and positive support from allparties in the government, including political leaders appointed by supporters," he said in a statement here today.  

 Fernandez was quoted as saying in an English newspaper: "Let's see who the candidates are. If they are going to nominate some monkeys, we will reject." 



Read more: Fernandez's remarks can strain ties between politicians, civil servants - Latest - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/latest/fernandez-s-remarks-can-strain-ties-between-politicians-civil-servants-1.175861?localLinksEnabled=false#ixzz2D3zVL56z

The Administrative and Diplomatic Officers Alumni Association said the remark by Petaling Jaya City Council member Derek Fernandez can strain the harmonious working relationship between politicians and civil servants.

Its president Tan Sri Sallehudin Mohamad urged Fernandez who likened civil servants as 'monkeys' while commenting on the tranfer of the mayor to withdraw his remark in order to protect the harmonious relationship.  

 "The civil service is the pillar in the administration of any country. The responsibility entrusted is indeed noble and heavy a burden. 

 "The civil service expects sincere cooperation and positive support from allparties in the government, including political leaders appointed by supporters," he said in a statement here today.  

 Fernandez was quoted as saying in an English newspaper: "Let's see who the candidates are. If they are going to nominate some monkeys, we will reject." 



Read more: Fernandez's remarks can strain ties between politicians, civil servants - Latest - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/latest/fernandez-s-remarks-can-strain-ties-between-politicians-civil-servants-1.175861?localLinksEnabled=false#ixzz2D3zVL56z

ICAC wants ‘transactional’ info for new probe, says Rafizi

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 09:04 PM PST

Zurairi AR, The Malaysian Insider

Hong Kong graftbusters may renew their probe into the murky RM40 million "political donation" to Sabah Umno if provided with evidence to show the funds were transacted on the island, PKR's Rafizi Ramli said today.

"I'm very confident that the case will be re-opened. From our discussion with ICAC, they have given an easy evidence test," the PKR strategy director said in a press conference here, referring to the Independent Commission Against Corruption.

"And we do have evidence, documents. That's why we need to return in two weeks," said Rafizi, who led a team of PKR lawmakers to Hong Kong on Wednesday in a bid to get authorities there to renew their investigations into the matter.

Rafizi and his team were reluctant, however, to divulge details on the evidence, other than to say it met the ICAC's requirment, for fear of jeopardising their sources and the investigation.

"There are like three or four files," Rafizi said, refusing to elaborate further.

Yesterday, the PKR team furnished fresh evidence to the ICAC on Datuk Musa Aman's RM40 million graft case and were invited to return with more proof on the Sabah chief minister's alleged money-laundering link with businessman Michael Chia.

According to Rafizi today, the team had met with the Acting Chief Investigator of ICAC Martin Chan Chi-wah, after an immediate appointment was requested by senior Hong Kong legislative councillor James To Kun-sun.

The PKR lawmakers also met with their Hong Kong counterparts To, Leung Kwok-hung and Raymond Wong, who are part of the legislative council's Security Panel, to which the ICAC answers.

In PKR's report, three reasons were listed to encourage the world-renowned ICAC to reopen the RM40 million graft probe against Musa and Chia — separate claims from two Sabah MPs that the money was not a political donation to Umno as claimed; and the receipt of a luxury vehicle from Chia by Umno minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Aziz, possibly for corrupt reasons.

"They did give us a reference number and I think that by practice here, all cases are opened once a report is lodged," Rafizi said yesterday in a phone call to The Malaysian Insider.

The fact-finding mission, which had just touched down from Hong Kong, also included PKR MPs William Leong and Lee Hoy Sian, and Perak assemblyman Chang Lih Kang.

Chang and Leong also revealed that HK representatives whom they met were greatly concerned that the island's image as a financial capital will be tarnished by allegations of graft and money-laundering.

"They hope we can bring justice in Hong Kong and Malaysia," Leong said.

"It is the responsibility of anyone to help ICAC in investigating money laundering cases ... so that Hong Kong will not be made into a 'paradise of money-laundering'," Chang added.

Chia's alleged link with Musa first exploded in the media following an April article by whistleblower site Sarawak Report, which had claimed that former was caught trying to leave the Hong Kong International Airport with the RM40 million in Singapore currency.

READ MORE HERE

 

MCA leaders all riled up again, this time over a haircut

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 08:56 PM PST

MCA has been at loggerheads with Islamic values since it launched an intense campaign to stop PAS's appeal among non-Muslim voters

(Harakah Daily) - Chinese-only party MCA has continued its current campaign to woo back non-Muslim support, and today it urged DAP to forget about Pakatan Rakyat - all because the Kota Bharu Municipal Council enforced a long-existing rule which disallows unisex services at hair saloons.

The rule, which has been welcomed by many including non-Muslim women and housewives who fear the rampant misuse of unisex hair saloons as prostitution dens, is stated under Section 107(2) of the Local Council Act.

MCA's central committee member and its publicity bureau's deputy chairman Loh Seng Kok, in making his conclusion, attempted to link this with everything from "non-Muslim rights" to hudud, and even declared that the ruling proved that PAS "had ambitions to be prime minister [sic]".

"Although [DAP secretary-general] Lim Guan Eng and PAS claim that PAS' hardline policies will not pose a threat to the cultural practices of non-Muslims, if DAP does not want to pawn away the rights of the Chinese and non-Muslim communities, DAP should withdraw from the Pakatan coalition and declare firmly that they do not support PAS hudud enactments in order to quell the concerns of the Chinese and non-Muslim communities about the effects of PAS hudud enactments will have on them," Loh said, though he did not explain whether having females to groom men's was part of non-Muslims' "cultural practice".

Loh went a step further in linking his disagreement over the local council rule to the calls by some delegates at the recent PAS Muktamar for PAS president Tuan Guru Abdul Hadi Awang to be appointed as prime minister of a PR Federal government.

"I challenge the DAP to openly declare that the candidate for the Prime Minister's post must only be a Muslim. Otherwise, its open support for PAS is none other than to fish for votes," he added.

In a separate statement, chairman of Penang MCA's Wanita wing Tan Cheng Liang also joined in the fray, describing MPKB's hair saloons rule as causing "economic hardship" and "talent loss".

Tan even hinted that a municipal law should discriminate between Muslims and non-Muslims, and cited PAS's assurance that it would not enforce Islamic criminal law on non-Muslims despite pressure from UMNO leaders to do so.

"In claiming that non-Muslims are not subject to PAS hudud enactments nor would they affect non-Muslims, PAS is lying absolutely through their teeth. This deception is designed to appear moderate and win non-Muslim ballots. The hair dressers' case in Kota Bharu is just another example as to how PAS policies causes unjust income loss on non-Muslim entrepreneurs trying to earn an honest living," Tan said.

 

Ex-minister Radzi a boss in ‘rogue’ 6P firm

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 08:52 PM PST

However, he denies involvement in human trafficking.

Teoh El Sen, FMT

Former home minister Mohd Radzi Sheikh Ahmad is a director in a company that is under police investigation over several offences related to human trafficking.

The company, SNT Universal Corporation Sdn Bhd, is a government-appointed agent in the 6P amnesty programme. Police suspect it has exploited hundreds of foreign workers, mainly Bangladeshis.

Investigators are focusing on the possibility that SNT has committed several offences, including falsely claiming that it is able to register foreigners under the 6P programme and getting work permits for them, setting up dozens of bogus employment agencies, and assaulting job-seeking foreigners. The last allegation is based on CCTV recordings.

According to the Companies Commission of Malaysia (CCM), Radzi became a director of SNT on May 17, 2011.

Radzi expressed surprise when an FMT reporter informed him of the CCM record. He said "some friends" roped him into being an SNT director and denied knowledge of its activities.

"I'm not involved in human trafficking," he said. "People ask me to become director in all sorts of things. I have no connection with the company."

Radzi was the Minister of Home Affairs between 2006 and 2008.

Under the 6P programme, illegal foreign workers will either be legalised or deported without punishment. The six Ps represent the Malay words for registration, legalisation, amnesty, monitoring, enforcement and deportation. The government has appointed more than 300 companies to handle registration.

Early this month, the Selangor Council Against Human Trafficking (Mapmas) released CCTV recordings showing the violence that SNT employees had allegedly perpetrated against the job-seekers.

Mapmas said it got hold of the recordings with the help of a whistleblower and that the victims of the recorded assault represented only a fraction of some 200 claiming to have been cheated by SNT. The videos are now on YouTube.

Police said this week that they had arrested three foreigners in the case and were on the hunt for another suspect.

The evidence regarding bogus employment agencies resulted from investigations carried out by FMT and Mapmas official Abdul Aziz Ismail. It was found that these companies had no business infrastructure and were apparently set up for the sole purpose of obtaining fraudulent work permits to be used in the 6P programme.

One of the recurring names in these companies is Md. Shahidul Islam, said to be a Bangladeshi man whose nickname is Babul.

Babul's name also appears in a police report against SNT that accuses it of cheating and assault.

Authorities have yet to explain how he is able to run a 6P management company when the Home Ministry prohibits foreigners from doing so.

'They made use of my name'

Mampas' Abdul Aziz, a veteran labour activist, today condemned Radzi for accepting a director's position in SNT.

"During his time as the Home Minister, the government brought in some 500,000 Bangladeshis and they were abandoned at the airport and sold to a third party," Abdul Aziz said.

"So, if you talk about Mohd Radzi, he failed during his tenure. And now he is getting himself involved in something like this. It is totally unethical and immoral."

In his interview with FMT, Radzi recalled that he was asked to be a director of SNT around the time the government announced the 6P programme.

"I don't even know where this company is," he said. "Maybe I have been there once, when it was about to be formed. It checked out with the Home Ministry. Now it has gone a bit funny, huh?"

He said it was the first company he joined after leaving his cabinet post.

"I looked at the company and thought they were just doing some registration for these workers, allowing them to go home or something like that. They asked if I wanted to be part of it. So okay-lah."

He said that a few months ago, when he found out that the 6P programme was not doing well, he told the company he wanted to quit it.

Asked if he knew the other SNT directors, he said: "I may be able to recall this Babul something. I think that's him."

He said he felt betrayed. "They made use of my name. Now it appears that I should have checked what sort of company this was. I'm disappointed."

READ MORE HERE

 

Pairin: Jeffrey doesn’t love me anymore

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 06:10 PM PST

It is now an open secret that the KadazanDusuns in Keningau and even Tambunan are clamouring for change, but Joseph Pairin Kitingan refuses to acknowledge the shift. 

Calvin Kabaron, FMT

Embattled Parti Bersatu Sabah (PBS) president Joseph Pairin Kitingan has increased his attacks on his brother Jeffrey. He sees Jeffrey as the man who will send him into retirement.

Speaking to reporters at the end of recently-concluded PBS congress here, Pairin accused the younger Kitingan of not loving him and of breaking the unity within the KadazanDusunMurut communities.

He also said Jeffrey was uncooperative and hurled half a dozen more accusations against his younger brother.

For the record, as of yesterday, Pairin, 72, seemed to still want to be renominated as Barisan Nasional candidate in both the Keningau parliamentary and Tambunan state seats.

It is now an open secret that the Kadazandusuns in Keningau and even Tambunan are clamouring for change.

But Pairin, being the longest (and uninterrupted) serving state assemblyman in the country, refuses to acknowledge the shifting ground. In fact he loathed to entertain the idea of people wanting change.

"I am ready to contest both seats," said Pairin who is also a deputy chief minister and Sabah's minister of infrastructure development.

On possibility in the election, he quipped: "Are the people ready to chuck me off?"

He said that while it was up to the people in Keningau and Tambunan to decide, it must be noted that he has "done a lot more in terms of fighting for the people" via PBS.

"I would say that I have a lot going and I have done a lot more in terms of fighting for the people in the context of our (PBS) struggles all this while. And that is something which needs to be considered…," said Pairin, obviously already on the defensive about his chances in the coming general election.

Stubborn Pairin

But he quickly qualified that he however would be guided by the requests from the constituents and the party.

Asked about rumours and reports that he would only contest one seat this time, the seasoned politician retorted: "Did I say that? No, I did not. I have always been open for these two (seats) and of course I am also guided by requests from the ground, my division and the party.

Which means to say, it is still very much an option. He may go fo both, or may go for only one.

Many local observers from Tambunan claimed that it is Pairin's trademark to be seen as open for any option, and that like other wise politicians, he could be saying one thing and doing another thing later.

"I won't be surprised at all that Pairin would eventually contest in Tambunan only. I am not even surprised if he does not contest at all at the coming general election. Once the truth set in him, he would be guided by it," one seasoned observer who wished to be known only as Mark.

Pairin, meanwhile, said he had taken note of Jeffrey's signal "to send him into retirement by contesting against him".

"Well that is Jeffrey's wish all the time, right from the time he has been against me, that has been his wish. He wants me to retire and now he doesn't care anymore.

"He doesn't love his brother, he doesn't have any feeling, any consideration, he just wants a place to go to because he is now the leader in STAR (State Reform Party), an imported party from Sarawak. Now he is happy leading a party," Pairin said.

Jeffrey has on numerous times and in his speeches before this told the people that he had nothing against Pairin as a brother and that he loved him like any brother does to his own brother.

"It is not that I love Pairin less, but it is because I love the people and Sabah more…," Jeffrey had said everytime such accusations were hurled at him by Pairin or PBS leaders.

But Pairin did not let up on Jeffrey yesterday. He spewed: "That is why Jeffrey has been changing parties all the time because he is not wanted in all these parties and he cannot work with anyone."

Jeffrey was always popular

But the facts however tell a different story.

When in the AKAR party, Jeffrey was very popular. He was in fact appointed as the "President's Representative" by its late president Mark Koding when the latter left for a theology study in Australia.

That appointment was challenged by another deputy president of AKAR at that time, Pandikan Amin Mulia, who saw himself as more senior. This threw the party into turmoil, and eventually Pandikar dissolved the party for Umno.

In Parti Bersatu Rakyat Sabah (PBRS), Jeffrey got the highest number of nomination for the presidency, leaving out incumbent Joseph Kurup with only two nominations from the party divisions.

READ MORE HERE

 

Why does the Muslim world suffer from deficits of freedom, development and knowledge?

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 05:15 PM PST

Chaney shows the democratic deficit, as reflected in the prevalence of autocracies in the Muslim-Arab world, is real. But it is a product of the long-run influence of control structures developed in the centuries following the Arab conquests. In the ninth century rulers across this region began to use slave armies as opposed to the native population to staff their armies.

Riaz Hassan, Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of Singapore, CPI 

In his seminal book Muslim Society, Ernest Gellner boldly asserts: "By various obvious criteria – universalism, scripturalism, spiritual egalitarianism, the extension of full participation in the sacred community, not to one, or some, but to all, and the rational systemization of social life – Islam is, of the three great Western monotheisms, the one closest to modernity" (Gellner, 1983: 7). He goes on to say that had the Arabs won at Poitiers and gone on to conquer and Islamize Europe, we should all be admiring Ibn Weber's The Kharejite Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism that would conclusively demonstrate how the modern rational spirit and its expression in business and bureaucracy could only have arisen in consequence of neo-Kharejite puritanism in northern Europe and not if Europe had stayed Christian "given the inveterate proclivity of that faith to a baroque, manipulative, patron-ridden, quasi animistic and disorderly vision of the world" (Gellner, 1983: 7).

But that's not how it turned out. Today, any observer would have little difficulty assembling volumes of data from the United Nations and World Bank Development Reports to demonstrate the acute development and freedom deficits in the Muslim world. This has given rise to a contentious debate about the causes of these deficits. The culprits identified by social scientists include Islamic theology and culture, oil, Arab-specific culture and institutions, Palestinian-Israel conflict, "desert terrain and institutions", weak civil society and the subservient status of women.

Development Deficit

Perhaps the most contested debates on the causes of economic backwardness and democratic deficit in the Muslim world center on whether Islam is the main cause of these twin deficits. In regard to economic backwardness the evidence shows that before the balance of power had shifted after the European expansion in the 17th century, the Middle East was economically just as dynamic as Europe. Muslim merchants were just as successful in carrying their commerce and faith to far corners of the world as their European counterparts. According to economic historian Angus Maddison, in the year 1000 AD the Middle East's share of the world's Gross Domestic Product was larger than Europe's – 10 percent compared with 9 percent. By 1700 the Middle East's share had fallen to just 2 percent and Europe's had risen to 22 percent. Among Western scholars, the standard explanations for this decline are that Islam is hostile to commerce and bans usury. But these are unsatisfactory because Islamic scripture is more pro-business than Christian texts, and as for usury the Torah and Bible say the same. The Prophet Muhammad and his first wife Khadija were both successful merchants. Many Muslims, however, blame their economic backwardness on Western imperialism. But then why did a once mighty civilization succumb to the West?

Turkish-American economist Timur Kuran (2011) persuasively discards these and related explanations. He marshals impressive empirical evidence to show that what slowed the economic development in the Middle East was not colonialism or geography or incompatibility between Islam and capitalism but laws covering business partnerships and inheritance practices. These institutions had benefited the Middle Eastern economy in the early centuries of Islam but starting around the tenth century they began to act as a drag on economic development by slowing or blocking the emergence of central features of modern economic life – private capital accumulation, corporations, large-scale production and impersonal exchange.

Islamic partnership, the main organizational vehicle for businesses of the Muslim merchant classes, could be ended by one party at will and even successful ventures were terminated on the death of a partner. As a result most businesses remained small and short-lived. Most durable and successful business partnerships in the Muslim world were operated by local non-Muslims. Inheritance customs hindered business consolidation because, when a Muslim merchant died, his estate was split among surviving family members which prevented capital accumulation and stymied long-lasting capital-intensive companies. According to Kuran, then, the resulting organizational stagnation prevented the Muslim mercantile community from remaining competitive with its Western counterparts.

Democratic Deficit

Research by the Harvard economist Eric Chaney (2011) debunks the theories that its root cause is Islam or Arab cultural patterns, oil, Arab-Israeli conflict or desert ecology. Chaney shows the democratic deficit, as reflected in the prevalence of autocracies in the Muslim-Arab world, is real. But it is a product of the long-run influence of control structures developed in the centuries following the Arab conquests. In the ninth century rulers across this region began to use slave armies as opposed to the native population to staff their armies. These slave armies allowed rulers to achieve independence from local military and civilian groups and helped remove constraints on the sovereign in pre-modern Islamic societies. In this autocratic environment, religious leaders emerged as the only check on the power of the rulers. This historical institutional configuration which divided the power between the sovereign backed by his slave army and religious elites was not conducive to producing democratic institutions. Instead, religious and military elites worked together to develop and perpetuate what Chaney calls "classical" institutional equilibrium – which is often referred to as Islamic law – designed to promote and protect their interests.

Ostensibly, religious leaders devised "equilibrium institutions" to protect the interests of the general public but in effect this institutional configuration cast an autocratic shadow across centuries. Rulers came to rely on slave armies, freeing themselves from dependence on civil institutions. Religious leaders cooperated with the army to design a system that proved hostile to alternative centers of power. This concentration of power and weak civil societies are the enduring legacy of this historical institutional framework in regions conquered by Arab armies and which remained under Islamic rule from 1100 AD onwards.

However, regions incorporated into the Islamic world after they were conquered by non-Arab Muslim armies, such as India and the Balkans and where Islam spread by conversion (e.g. Indonesia, Malaysia, and sub-Saharan Africa), did not adopt this classical framework. Their institutions continued to be shaped by local elites which preserved their political and cultural continuity. Consequently, the democratic deficit has remained an enduring legacy in the Arab world and in lands conquered by the Arab armies that remained under Islamic rule from 1100 AD onwards. But in the Islamic countries incorporated into the Islamic world by non-Arab Muslim armies or by conversions, democratic developments have followed a more progressive trajectory.

Knowledge Deficit

In the recent 2012 Times Higher Education world rankings of universities, not a single university from 49 Muslim majority countries with a population of 1.2 billion or 17 per cent of world's population found a place in the top 200 universities in the world. This has been a recurrent pattern over many years and signifies a serious academic and intellectual crisis. By comparison the United States, with less than 5% of the world population, had 75 universities in the top 200.

Several factors can account for this crisis, the most important being the meager resources allocated by Muslim countries to research and development. The science budgets of the Organization of Muslim Countries (OIC) are near the bottom of the world league. According to a recent estimate, based on the UNESCO and the World Bank data, between 1996 and 2003 the average annual research and development for OIC countries spending was 0.34% of GDP, much lower than the global average of 2.36% over the same period. Many OIC countries, particularly the richest, spend more on armaments than on science or health. Six of the world's top ten military spenders as a share of public spending are OIC countries: Kuwait, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Syria and Oman spent over 7% of their GDP on arms. While the science spending is among the lowest, spending on education is more variable. Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Morocco, Tunisia and Iran were among the top 25 spenders on education in 2002 (Butler, 2006).

READ MORE HERE

 

'Usah tumbuk rempah dulu'

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 05:05 PM PST

Kepada audien Melayu, yang membaca Utusan Malaysia dan menonton TV3, PAS digambarkan parti paling corot dalam Pakatan, hanya mengikut telunjuk KeADILan dan diperkudakan DAP. PAS juga ditohmah sudah menyimpang daripada landasan asal perjuangan.

Ahmad Lutfi Othman, Harakah Daily

Dalam pertemuan sidang editorial  Harakah dengan AJK PAS Pusat, Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad, membincangkan isu-isu kritikal Selangor, baru-baru ini,  Ahli Parlimen Kuala Selangor itu seperti mengulangi penekanan yang kerap saya catatkan dalam kolum ini: "Pihak yang bakal menang dalam PRU13 nanti adalah mereka yang paling sedikit melakukan kesilapan, dan bukannya parti yang mengemukakan banyak gagasan atau idea yang hebat."

Ingatan dalam nada serupa juga ditekankan oleh ramai pemerhati politik, dengan mengambil kira kesalahan yang kelihatan kecil boleh menyumbang impak yang agak besar dalam pilihan raya umum nanti. Lagipun, dijangkakan tiada perbedaan undi yang menyerlah di antara pemenang dengan pihak yang tewas.  

Ya, bayangkan, jika dilihat mampu dieksploit demi kepentingan politik, misalnya hanya berbekal telefon bimbit model lama, rakaman boleh dibuat terhadap kenyataan atau aksi pemimpin Pakatan Rakyat, walaupun berkaitan program dalaman parti, dan kemudiannya secepat kilat disiarkan melalui siaran televisyen ke seluruh negara.  

Esoknya akan disambut tanpa tangguh lagi oleh akhbar-akhbar harian, untuk meneruskan propaganda murahan secara bercetak, bagi membentuk persepsi tertentu, dengan satu tujuan: Melanjutkan kuasa BN dan mempertahankan Putrajaya.

Kesilapan kecil oposisi akan diperbesarkan, hatta ucapan bernada seloroh atau jenaka turut boleh dipaparkan sebagai komitmen serius, jika impaknya dirasakan dapat memburukkan penampilan Pakatan. Apatah lagi sekiranya, tanpa sedar,  disogok peluang terbentang luas kepada strategis media Umno-BN untuk menghalakan serangan bertubi-tubi, membelasah seteru politiknya.

Saya tidak pula sampai menyimpulkan segala kontroversi terkini, misalnya berkaitan ucapan Nurul Izzah Anwar tentang kebebasan beragama, doa kehancuran Umno di Kota Bharu dan cadangan Tuan Guru Abdul Hadi Awang sebagai Perdana Menteri jika Pakatan menang PRU13 sebagai kesilapan yang membawa padah.

Cuma sekadar mahu menunjukkan bahawa,  selepas program Jelajah Janji Ditepati Najib Razak tidak dipedulikan rakyat, tawaran Bajet 2013 kurang membekas, pelbagai insentif one-off mudah dilupakan, kini Umno-BN bertarung seperti parti pembangkang, dengan cuba menyelongkar  apa juga yang dilihat sebagai "keburukan atau sisi negatif", termasuk menyiarkan kembali ucapan Anwar Ibrahim, semasa dalam kerajaan dahulu, yang mengecam PAS dan DAP.

(Ustaz Hadi ketika menggulung perbahasan muktamar ke 58 baru-baru ini. Ramai menyifatkan ia terbaik dari beliau)

Semasa menunggu pesawat di LCCT, Sepang, tengahari 14 November lalu, untuk sama-sama ke Kota Bharu mengikuti Muktamar Tahunan PAS Ke-58, saya cuba berkongsi rasa dengan Mahfuz Omar,  tentang laporan meluas media mengenai kenyataan Nurul Izzah dan usaha terancang menimbulkan keraguan pengundi terhadap kewibawaan Pakatan sebagai parti yang dapat mempertahankan kepentingan Melayu dan Islam.

Naib Presiden PAS itu tenang saja dan menganggapnya ia siri serangan media bagi menjauhkan orang Melayu daripada Pakatan. "Ini bukan kali pertama, mereka telah mencubanya banyak kali sebelum ini, dan terbukti ia tidak berkesan," tambahnya. "Apa pun," pintas saya, "kita tidak boleh memandang remeh gerak kerja mereka."

Selepas dua tahun berturut-turut tidak menghadiri muktamar, saya -- seperti juga para pemerhati dari seluruh pelosok tanahair -- mengharapkan, daripada perhimpunan terbesar yang sepatutnya diadakan Jun lalu, PAS dapat membuat lonjakan besar, terutama untuk meraih sokongan dan kepercayaan pengundi Melayu.

Keyakinan awal terserlah melalui pesanan Setiausaha Agung PAS, Mustafa Ali, disiarkan Harakah, yang dipasarkan  sehari sebelum perasmian muktamar. Tokoh berpengalaman itu mahu muktamirin bukan saja tidak terpengaruh dengan usikan nakal media, yang mahu memesongkan tumpuan, malah memanfaatkan perbahasan untuk "mengisi kemenangan" membebaskan Putrajaya.

Meskipun agak penat untuk mendengar Ucapan Dasar Presiden, Tuan Guru Abdul Hadi Awang, namun saya terasa puas, lega dan beruntung. Teks setebal 27 halaman, 107 perenggan itu, begitu kejap, menyeluruh dan menyentuh hampir semua isu-persoalan penting dan kritikal. Saya kira ia pidato rasmi terbaik yang pernah dihasilkannya sejak 10 tahun lalu. Ia cukup bertenaga, memberikan pengarahan yang jelas dan mampu mempengaruhi.

Difahamkan, Setiausaha Agung KeADILan, Saifuddin Nasution Ismail, yang turut mendengar ucapan berkenaan, menyifatkan banyak penekanan Ustaz Abdul Hadi seperti ditujukan kepada semua parti dalam Pakatan Rakyat sendiri.

Huraian yang memperincikan konsep Negara Berkebajikan cukup jelas dan menarik. Begitu juga singgungannya terhadap persoalan ekonomi, sistem pendidikan dan komitmen PAs untuk kesejahteraan rakyat, yang merangkumi pelbagai golongan termasuk petani, wanita, peneroka bandar, bekas tentera, selain bersikap serius menangani kes FGV, AES, Pengerang dan projek mega yang lain.

Saya lebih teruja dengan penekanan terhadap kesediaan rakyat untuk berubah. "Kepada rakyat seluruhnya, jangan takut untuk berubah kepada yang lebih baik (dalam PRU13). Maka sekiranya kita gagal melaksanakan amanah itu, rakyat boleh menghukum kami dalam pilihan raya seterusnya," tegas Presiden PAS itu, sambil memberi jaminan pegawai kerajaan di setiap peringkat tidak akan dizalimi atau dibalas dendam.

Keuzuran menghalang saya daripada menekuni setiap isi perbahasan para perwakilan. Sepanjang di dalam dewan Putik, secara umumnya saya dapati setiap mereka  yang berucap menunjukkan kesungguhan. Bagaimanapun ada pemerhati yang membisik kepada saya: "Sayang sekali, Ucapan Dasar Presiden yang cukup bermutu dan selari dengan mood menjelang PRU13, tidak disusuli dengan perbahasan bernas yang mengungkapkan isu-isu kritikal yang digariskan Tok Guru Haji Hadi."

Beliau merujuk kepada lima bentuk tindakan yang ditekankan Presiden bagi menghadapi PRU13, iaitu persediaan menjaga benteng masing-masing (Parlimen atau Dun), menangani kompleksiti pengundi Melayu khususnya anak muda, cabaran memenangi sebanyak mungkin kerusi, meningkatkan jentera penerangan, termasuk Harakah dan Harakahdaily serta merancakkan persiapan menjuarai perang siber.  

"Macam ada kempen tersirat menjelang pemilihan parti tahun depan, aja?" ujar seorang pemerhati, dari Kedah, yang duduk di sebelah saya, berdekatan ruang media. Beliau kemudiannya ketawa kecil tanda hanya bergurau dengan usikannya itu.

Apabila ada perwakilan menimbulkan cadangan Presiden PAS patut dicalonkan sebagai Perdana Menteri sekiranya Pakatan menang dalam PRU13 nanti, saya sudah menjangkakan ia akan disensasikan oleh media, terutama TV3 dan Utusan Malaysia.

Sememangnya jentera kempen tidak rasmi Umno-BN itu sentiasa menunggu kesempatan untuk memecah-belahkan persefahaman di kalangan pemimpin dan penyokong Pakatan. Umum mengetahui sebaik saja keputusan PRU12 diketahui, Mac 2008, perang saraf adu-domba untuk memisahkan PAS dengan DAP sudah bermula, tidak terkecuali juga usaha menyuntik kecurigaan di antara PAS dan KeADILan.

"Kalau Najib yakin parti-parti Pakatan berselisih faham hingga memungkinkan mereka bertanding sesama sendiri, pasti Parlimen akan dicadang dibubarkan serta-merta," kata seorang pensyarah politik.  "BN sudah tidak ada kekuatan sendiri lagi, mereka begitu harapkan persefahaman Pakatan pecah dan terburai," tambahnya.

Tidak sedikit rakan-rakan yang menelefon dan menghantar SMS, melahirkan kebimbangan isu cadangan ustaz Hadi ke jawatan PM akan menyebabkan BN mendapat keuntungan. "Paling tidak pun, kita akan membuang masa yang cukup berharga ini, bagi melayan karenah dan menjawab persoalan yang bukan pun satu isu buat Pakatan," kata seorang daripadanya.

"Biarkanlah ... setiap perwakilan berhak menyuarakan pandangan dan pendapat. Muktamar adalah medan untuk meluahkannya, inikan demokrasi, dan tanda PAS terbuka untuk ahlinya bercakap," saya menjawab mudah. Saya pasti rakan saya itu tidak berpuas hati apabila dia mencelah: "Jangan sampai masyarakat luar, orang awam yang memerhati muktamar dengan penuh minat, merasakan sesama Pakatan pun tidak sepakat, masing-masing ghairah merebut jawatan besar."

Awal pagi Ahad, pada hari terakhir muktamar, kenalan saya, seorang profesor turut menegur, melalui SMS: "Kajian kami menunjukkan pengundi amat prihatin dengan percanggahan yang berlaku dalam Pakatan Rakyat. Polemik tentang siapa Perdana Menteri tidak menguntungkan, termasuk kepada PAS. Sebagai parti yeng melewati 60 tahun usianya, PAS harus  sedar di mana kekuatan dan kelemahan parti."

Saya kira rakan saya itu memberi reaksi mungkin selepas membaca muka depan  The Sunday Star, yang melaporkan perbahasan di muktamar PAS, dengan tajuk "Ulama for Hadi". Hiasan  foto  Presiden PAS begitu menonjol.

Akhbar yang dimiliki MCA itu sememangnya dikenali menjalankan usaha terancang untuk menakutkan pengundi Cina terhadap Pakatan, dengan mendakwa PAS akan menjadi parti paling dominan jika BN dapat ditumbangkan.

Beberapa kali, Presidennya, Dr Chua Soi Lek bersungguh-sungguh memberikan gambaran bahawa sekiranya Pakatan menguasai Putrajaya, PAS akan menerajui kerajaan baru nanti. Sebagai ahli Parti Islam, saya tentulah gembira dengan pujian itu. Ya, tiada keindahan melebihi kesyukuran melihat Islam didaulatkan dalam sistem pemerintahan negara. Namun, kita tidaklah terlalu naif untuk membaca perangkap musuh.

Kepada audien Melayu, yang membaca Utusan Malaysia dan menonton TV3, PAS digambarkan parti paling corot dalam Pakatan, hanya mengikut telunjuk KeADILan dan diperkudakan DAP. PAS juga ditohmah sudah menyimpang daripada landasan asal perjuangan.

Manakala berdepan masyarakat bukan Melayu, khususnya Cina, seperti sering dilaporkan dalam The Star, PAS tiba-tiba disuntik dengan seribu satu kekuatan. Tujuannya agar pengundi Tionghua teragak-agak untuk menyokong Pakatan; sedangkan realitinya PAS kini didekati  komuniti pelbagai kaum dan agama. Dalam muktamar lalu, beberapa  aktivis Dewan Himpunan Penyokong (DHPP) berucap mempertahankan prinsip-prinsip Islam yang diperjuangkan PAS.

Selama ini saya beranggapan The Star, walaupun turut menjadi mesin propaganda BN, tetapi masih menjaga profesionalisme pemberitaannya, tidak seperti Utusan Malaysia. Saya terkejut melihat tajuk depan edisi Isnin, 19 November, "Hadi ready to be PM", dengan gambar menarik Ustaz Hadi mengenggam tangannya ke atas. The Star juga sudah hilang kewarasan!

"Dua hari berturut-turut muka depan The Star mengalahkan Harakah, dengan hiasan gambar Presiden PAS yang memikat," saya bercanda dengan rakan-rakan grafik di pejabat. "Tapi, beritanya tidak betul, dah sama macam Utusan."

Walhal sebenarnya, cukup dengan menonton YouTube, anda segera mengesan bahawa apabila Ustaz Hadi  mengatakan "syok juga sepintas lalu (dengan cadangan nak lantik jadi PM)", nadanya berseloroh dan wajah ceria tersenyum.

Apatah lagi selepas beliau menyambung: "Tetapi saya kata di sini, saya minta Tuhan jadikan cita-cita saya ini biar menangkan Islam, kemudian kalau nak mati, matilah."

Ustaz Hadi seterusnya memberi satu perumpamaan yang cukup menarik untuk difikirkan: "Saya tak mahu macam cerita saya dengan Ustaz Azizan. Ustaz Azizan tahu saya minat memancing. Saya pergi Kedah, dia ajak saya memancing di laut Yan.

"Sebelum pergi, dia berpaling ke anak buah dia, dia kata, tumbuk rempah siap-siap. Nak masak ikan tenggiri, ikan jenahak. Saya pun pergilah, dia pun pergi juga ke laut. Bila balik, boleh ikan belukang sebesar kelinking je. Saya tak mahu jadi macam itu. Belum apa-apa dah tumbuk rempah."

 

Anwar sodomise case on Feb 15

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 05:01 PM PST

(Bernama) - The Court of Appeal has fixed Feb 15 for case management of the prosecution's appeal against Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim's acquittal on a charge of sodomising his former aide, Mohd Saiful Bukhari Azlan.

Court of Appeal deputy registrar N. Kanageswari set the date for another case management after the matter came up before her for case management in chambers today.

Deputy Public Prosecutor Najib Zakaria appeared for the prosecution while Anwar was represented by Ram Karpal Singh. Ram Karpal told reporters that both the prosecution and defence needed more time to go through and verify the notes of evidence which were in compact discs (CDs). He said, there were about 22 volumes of CDs which were "very bulky and technical".

Ram Karpal said, both sides had not finished verifying the notes of evidence, so the court gave them time to sort them out, adding that the process was time-consuming.

On Jan 9, this year, the Kuala Lumpur High Court acquitted and discharged Anwar of sodomising Mohd Saiful, 26, at a Desa Damansara condominium unit in Bukit Damansara here, between 3.10pm and 4.30pm on June 26, 2008.

Anwar, 65, was charged under Section 377B of the Penal Code, which carries a jail sentence of up to 20 years and whipping, upon conviction.The prosecution subsequently, filed on Jan 20, this year, a notice of appeal against the opposition leader's acquittal from the sodomy charge.

On July 9, this year, the prosecution filed its petition of appeal which contained nine grounds. The 80-page written judgment by High Court judge Datuk Mohamad Zabidin Mohd Diah revealed, there was penile penetration but it was uncorroborated by other evidence.

He said the court could not be 100 per cent certain on the integrity ofsamples taken for DNA testing from Mohd Saiful as the samples could have been compromised before they reached the chemistry department for analysis.

 

 

Beaufort MP to defend seat on PKR ticket

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 04:47 PM PST

(The Sun Daily) - Beaufort MP Datuk Seri Lajim Ukin yesterday confirmed that he will defend his seat in the 13th general election on a PKR ticket.

"I have discussed with Pakatan Rakyat (leaders) … I will contest under PKR but I am not a party member. I have a new party (in Sabah) but it has not been (officially) registered," Lajim told theSun when met in Parliament yesterday.

The former Umno Supreme Council member had left the party in July to be a PR-friendly independent MP and was later stripped of his position as deputy housing and local government minister.

Lajim's departure, along with Tuaran MP Datuk Seri Wilfred Bumburing and several other local Barisan Nasional leaders, has been touted as a signal for an impending wave of support for PR in Sabah.

The duo had then respectively announced the formation of PR-aligned movements – Sabah Coalition for Change (PPS) and Sabah Force for Change (APS).

On Wednesday, Deputy Prime Minister Tan Seri Muhyiddin Yassin, during a walkabout in Kota Kinabalu, reportedly described Lajim as a "traitor" and declared that BN would go all out to reclaim the Beaufort seat.

"Lajim has let the people down, and he was stupid to have left Barisan but we need to look forward and ensure this district continues to be developed," he said.

In response, Lajim said: "It is OK … The mission for BN is to get more seats and strengthen its government, but in Sabah, people have already said they want change."

Asked for comment on his decision to set up a new party instead of joining existing peninsula-based PR component parties, Lajim said it is a "normal" move for politicians in Sabah.

"Most important is the policy of the party … It must benefit the people. The party must be able to provide development in Sabah," he stressed.

Lajim said the winning party must also be able to resolve issues surrounding an influx of illegal immigrants in the state, a long-term concern which he claimed BN had failed to address.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Abdul Razak had on Aug 11 announced the establishment of a five-member Royal Commission of Inquiry, headed by former Sabah chief judge Tan Sri Steve Shim, to probe the state's long-standing immigration problem.

 

Two ex-DAP grassroot leaders hit out at Selangor councillors Kok and Liu

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 04:35 PM PST

(The Star) - Two former DAP grassroot leaders have hit out at Selangor executive councillors Teresa Kok and Ronnie Liu, claiming that they were experts at "cover ups".

Sacked Serdang DAP member Yap Kon Min said he had three letters of complaint to Mentri Besar Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim, and each time, the matter was delegated to Kok and Liu.

"I received replies for each of my three letters, all dated May 23, from the Mentri Besar's office saying that Kok and Liu will look into the matter.

"But it has been six months and there were no developments," he told reporters Friday.

Yap had lodged complaints against Kajang councillor Lee Kee Hiong, Segambut MP Lim Lip Eng, Petaling Jaya councillor Tiew Way Keng and Serdang MP Teo Nie Ching on three separate issues.

Yap said Lee and Lim had filed separate legal suits against him, which would be heard next month.

"I've been sued, and I will fight it out in court. People say that I've taken money from MCA (to expose DAP leaders), but I swear that I have not taken a sen," he said.

He said Kok and Liu, who are also top leaders in Selangor DAP, have shown disrespect to the Mentri Besar by disregarding his directives.

"Before 2008, DAP always criticised the Barisan Nasional state government. But what has happened now? DAP leaders are worse and they are only good at sweeping everything under the carpet," he said.

Former Pantai Sepang Putra DAP branch chairman R. Vellasamy, who was sacked from the party in April, said DAP's top leadership were only interested in seeking publicity.

"When the Batu Caves issue came up, Lim Kit Siang and Kok went. But last year, the Sri Mahamariamman temple in Sepang was under threat of being demolished but none of them came.

"Why? Because they did not go to Batu Caves to help the temple, but to get publicity," he said.

The Batu Caves temple management had threatened to sue the state government unless construction of a 29-storey condominium project next to the Unesco heritage side is shelved.

The planned project was temporarily halted following orders from the state government to conduct soil testing.

 

Will PR become the proverbial rabbit?

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 04:21 PM PST

Based on this, I think it is possible for Pakatan Rakyat to win the next general election in Malaysia, given that majority of the Chinese will vote for the opposition. What is needed is to make certain that the majority of Indian votes go to PR. Most of the Malay votes (my estimate is over 60 per cent) — the Malays form the biggest ethnic group in the country — will be for BN.

Dr Hsu Dar Ren, The Malaysian Insider

As the end of the year approaches, there is still no sign of any election being called. Now it looks like the general election (GE) will only be held after  the automatic dissolution of our Parliament in late April 2013. Another possible date is perhaps March 2013.

Malaysia's political landscape cannot be more different from that of the United States. Yet the recent presidential election there reinforces one important fact. That even if a person or a party cannot win the majority of the biggest ethnic group, the person or the party can still win the election by winning an overwhelming majority of the minorities.

President Barack Obama won because of the votes of the minorities. He carried almost 93 per cent of the African-American votes, over 70 per cent of the Asian and Hispanic votes, but got only 39 per cent of the votes of the White majority. In contrast, his opponent won the majority of the white votes at around 59 per cent but still lost the election.

Based on this, I think it is possible for Pakatan Rakyat to win the next general election in Malaysia, given that majority of the Chinese will vote for the opposition. What is needed is to make certain that the majority of Indian votes go to PR. Most of the Malay votes (my estimate is over 60 per cent) — the Malays form the biggest ethnic group in the country — will be for BN.

Bearing this in mind, I think it is politically unwise for PAS members to publicly suggest that should PR win their party president should be made the prime minister.

The support among the Chinese and Indian Malaysians for PR should not be taken for granted. One of the reasons for the level of support shown is that many of these people believe that even if PR comes into power with little government experience, it has at least a very experienced leader in Anwar Ibrahim and he can be accepted by all the ethnic groups.

While many Chinese had no qualms about voting for PAS candidates in the last election, it was because they supported a coalition in which PAS is only an equal partner and not the dominant one that would head the group. If the PAS president is to be the next PM, PAS would be perceived to be the dominant force inside the coalition, a prospect which may not be unlike that of BN having Umno as the dominant force. If that is the case, expect fewer of these people to support PAS in the next election, thus weakening the prospect of PR forming the next government. 

PKR, on the other hand, is seen to be more moderate and multiracial. As such, its leader Anwar would have much more appeal and would be better accepted by all groups.

Those PAS members reminded me of the Taiping Rebellion of China in which a rebellious group which started as a reform group against the Qing Dynasty degenerated into a group of leaders fighting more for the spoils of war rather than the cause, when that war was not even half won.

I suggest that PAS members put more effort into winning the votes rather than harping on about who should be the PM. By doing so, they are actually doing a favour for BN; a situation akin to shooting one's own foot.

I think generally PR should not be too complacent at this stage. By all indications, they have a chance to win, but the prospect is still an uphill battle, even though the uphill slope now is not as steep as before.

Remember the story of the tortoise and the rabbit. The rabbit, while on the way to victory, became too complacent and thus lost the race to the humble tortoise.

This is a lesson which PAS members as well as their president should take to their hearts if they do not want PR to become the proverbial rabbit.

 

Traffic enforcement must not be privatised, says ex-IGP

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 04:15 PM PST

Nomy Nozwir, The Malaysian Insider

Putrajaya should not privatise law enforcement as it will create the impression the government is only interested in making money, former Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Musa Hassan said, after Parliament approved the roll-out of an outsourced automated system to catch and penalise speeding motorists.

The retired police officer is the latest to weigh in on the controversial Automated Enforcement System (AES), which has drawn ire from the public and opposition lawmakers alarmed at the profit motive built into the concession agreement awarded to two private companies to install and manage the speed trap cameras over the next five years.

"To me, enforcement cannot be privatised," Musa told The Malaysian Insider.

"This will only create the perception that the government only wants to make profit on the people [sic]," he added in a telephone interview..

The 60-year-old agreed with critics who have pointed out that the AES has many flaws that have yet to be addressed, including a 17 per cent minimum profit margin to the two concession holders — ATES Sdn Bhd and Beta Tegap — which would need to issue a whopping 2.72 million speeding tickets each over the next five years just to recoup their reported RM700 million investments.

He noted that there may be difficulties with enforcing fines issued by the private companies should the public challenge the summonses they receive in court.

He said there are two types of summonses, the first being fines that cannot be compounded and the second fines that can be compounded.

Musa said the latter type of summonses should rightfully be handled by government enforcement agencies such as the police and the Road Transport Department (RTD).

The AES is handled only by the RTD, not the police who have their own speed trap cameras.

"The public will have two ways, first pay at RTD counters and second, stand trial in court and let the court decide," he said.

READ MORE HERE

 

Nurul Izzah sues Utusan for defamation over apostasy row

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 04:12 PM PST

Zurairi AR, The Malaysian Insider

PKR's Nurul Izzah Anwar filed today a defamation suit against Umno-owned Utusan Malaysia, claiming the newspaper had twisted her remarks at a recent forum to endorse apostasy among Malays — a highly sensitive issue in mainly Muslim Malaysia.

In the suit filed at the High Court here, the opposition rising star named the Malay daily's editor, Datuk Aziz Ishak, and Utusan Melayu (Malaysia) Berhad as the defendants.

The Lembah Pantai MP is demanding the paper publish an apology on its front page over the reports she said have elements of "fitnah aqidah" or faith defamation.

Nurul Izzah is also asking for a permanent injunction against the daily to bar it from publishing further similar articles.

She did not specify an amount for compensation.

The first-term lawmaker is represented by lawyers Mohd Hanipa Maidin and Datuk Sulaiman Abdullah.

Hanipa, who is also PAS legal adviser, told reporters he hoped the court will expedite the case.

The PKR vice-president has been under attack from several religious hawks and Umno politicians following her remarks at a public forum on "Islamic State: Which version, whose responsibility?" in Subang Jaya on November 3.

The conservatives alleged that her remarks meant she supported Muslims renouncing Islam and turning "murtad" or apostate.

But she has reportedly denied that she is supporting apostasy among the country's Malay-Muslim community, who make up some 60 per cent of the 28 million total population and whose vote is crucial to form the next government at the 13th general election due soon.

Umno, the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition's mainstay, has some three million members but the Malay-Muslim vote is split three ways with the opposition Pakatan Rakyat (PR) pact's Islamist party PAS and its urban-based reform ally PKR drawing increasingly greater support.

Race and religious issues are inseparable in Malaysia, where the Malays are constitutionally defined to also be Muslims.

The country's supreme law states that Islam is the religion of the federation but also provides for other religions to be practised freely.

 

MCA lashes out at PAS’ gender laws

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 04:07 PM PST

The summonses issued to non-Muslim hair salon owners in Kelantan by the PAS-led government has earned MCA's ire.

Patrick Lee, FMT

MCA has come down hard on the PAS-led Kelantan state government for targeting non-Muslims in their enforcement of the state's conservative moral code.

Wanita MCA secretary-general, Chew Lee Giok, highlighted a recent case where hair salon operators in Kota Baru were fined after their female workers cut the hair of male customers.

"The summonses by the Kota Baru Municipal Council against a Chinese female hairdresser for styling a man's hair puts paid to claims that PAS' hudud enactments will not affect non-Muslims," she said.

She said that though these cases were few in number, it was nevertheless a sign of encroaching Muslim moral authority.

The Star today reported that hair salon operator Ong Lee Ting had been slapped with 11 summonses for flouting gender segregation by-laws since she opened her shop in 2010.

She also told the daily that her business licence was going to be revoked because of the large number of summonses issued.

The report added that Ong was fined under Section 107 (2) of the Local Council Act by-law, which "prohibited a woman from cutting a man's hair and vice-versa regardless of religion".

With this, Chew ridiculed PAS' claims that hudud enactments would not affect non-Muslims.

Quit Pakatan, DAP told

Hudud refers to provisions in Islamic law that provides for penalties that are considered harsh, including removal of limbs for theft, and the stoning to death for fornication.

Many PAS leaders have pushed for hudud to be implemented in Malaysia, despite both Muslim and non-Muslim concerns.

Meanwhile, MCA central committee member Loh Seng Kok challenged the DAP to leave Pakatan Rakyat if it aims to remain true to Malaysia's Chinese and non-Muslim communities.

READ MORE HERE

 

Bersih happy with EC’s efforts

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 04:05 PM PST

With the setting up of a special unit to rid the rolls of dubious voters, Bersih hopes that the EC will ensure free and fair elections for all. 

Alyaa Azhar, FMT

Polls watchdog Bersih today expressed its appreciation to the Election Commission (EC) for its initiatives to discuss with members of parliament the existing inconsistencies in the electoral roll.

It also registered its gratitude at the commission's move to set up a special unit to rid the voter roll of dubious entries.

It further hoped that the special unit would be set up after the EC consults various stakeholders and took into consideration the feedback from various electoral reforms groups.

Bersih also urged the EC to publish frequent updates on the progress of this unit to ensure that the public is thoroughly informed, ahead of the elections.

With regard to the new regulations concerning overseas voters, Bersih expressed its view that the EC should resolve the issue before the end of the current parliamentary session next Friday.

The coalition of NGOs for fair and free elections, however, reiterated its objection to the condition set by the EC for overseas voters to return to Malaysia at least once every five years.

EC deputy chairman Wan Ahmad Wan Omar had reportedly said that the condition was so that the voters must show their loyalty to the country and for them to be well-informed about the country's political course.

But Bersih objected to this "condition" stating that it "is unfair".

"Such a ruling cannot be forced on voters merely based on the EC's assumption that a Malaysian who lives abroad does not keep abreast with national politics," Bersih said in its statement.

Bersih was also of the opinion that the EC is going in the right direction.

"We view the latest moves by the EC as a step in the right direction, but only if the commission carries out these actions with the clear aim of ensuring free and fair elections for all Malaysians," it said.

 

‘Anwar is an attention seeker’

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 03:58 PM PST

Several BN leaders are appalled at Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim's attempt to get Australia to observe Malaysia's general election.

G Vinod, FMT

An MIC leader today chided Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim for seeking attention, especially with his call to Australia to observe the coming general election.

MIC vice-president SK Devamany was referring to Anwar's move to request the Australian government recently to observe the polls, claiming there were a lot of irregularities in the electoral roll.

However, Australia's Foreign Minister Bob Carr had rejected the former deputy prime minister's request, saying they cannot and would not influence how Malaysia runs its election.

"It's very hard for Australia to do anything about how they're run, as hard as it would be for Malaysia or another government to have a say in how Australian elections are run.

"We're not the election authority for Malaysia," Carr was reported as saying.

Election Commission (EC) chairman Abdul Aziz Yusof also criticised Anwar, saying the electoral body had instituted several measures to improve the nation's election process.

Taking Anwar to task, Devamany said that times have changed and the world community is watching each other's conduct in the information age.

"No point trying to seek attention from other people. They are watching us all the time," he said.

As for Anwar's accusation, the deputy minister said that the Barisan Nasional government is transparent and the former could always voice his grouses to the EC.

"He can always use his position as the opposition leader to get things done. But being the attention seeker he is, Anwar will devise new tactics to keep himself relevant.

"No wonder some Pakatan Rakyat leaders are seeking PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang to become prime minister if the opposition bloc wins the federal polls," said Devamany.

Risk of being colonised again

Echoing Devamany's sentiments, People's Progressive Party (PPP) president M Kayveas said that it was dangerous to get foreign powers to be involved in Malaysia's election.

He also said that with foreign powers' aid, the party benefiting from them would be indebted to the former and thus, put Malaysia at risk of being "colonised" again.

READ MORE HERE

 

PKR confident of winning more in Penang

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 03:54 PM PST

Penang PKR has brushed aside suggestion by critics that it 'could be a casualty' in the next election.

Athi Shankar, FMT

GEORGE TOWN: Penang PKR is confident of adding to its current nine seat tally in the State Legislative Assembly in the next general election.

State party information head Johari Kassim said their election machinery was well-oiled and all ready to rumble with Barisan Nasional in the next election.

"We have equal fighting chances in all seats that PKR will contest in the next polls," he told FMT.

He suggested the absence of former prime minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi in Umno-BN candidature and election campaign this time would help PKR and Pakatan Rakyat's chances to win some Umno-held seats in Kepala Batas and Tasek Gelugor federal constituencies.

He said internal infighting among Umno local warlords in both areas could also prove to be the tonic to boost PKR chances.

With an effective strategy, credible candidate and a little luck with a vote-swing, he predicted PKR would have a fighting chance to capture state seats of Bertam and Pinang Tunggal under Kepala Batas, and Teluk Air Tawar in Tasek Gelugor.

The three seats were among seven in the state that PKR lost to Umno in Penang in 2008 general election.

The other state seats it lost were Seberang Jaya (Permatang Pauh federal constituency), Sungai Acheh (Nibong Tebal), Teluk Bahang and Pulau Betong (Balik Pulau).

Johari also believed PKR could capture these seats too.

In the last election, PKR contested four federal and 16 state seats. It won all its parliamentary duels in Permatang Pauh and Nibong Tebal in mainland, and Balik Pulau and Bayan Baru in the island.

'PKR is not a weak link'

It won state seats of Penanti (Permatang Pauh), Machang Bubok (Bukit Mertajam), Sungai Bakap (Nibong Tebal), Bukit Tengah and Bukit Tambun (Batu Kawan); all in mainland and, Batu Uban, Batu Maung and Pantai Jerejak (Bayan Baru) and Kebun Bunga (Bukit Bendera).

In recent months, PAS, which contested two federal and five state seats in the last election, had been loudly staking a claim to contest in Sungai Acheh.

It's also learnt that the DAP would want to contest in Bayan Baru.

However, although he declined to comment on it, Johari said Pakatan would likely retain the status quo on the coalition seat formula.

READ MORE HERE

 

Umno’s Alwi blames ulama for Malay disunity

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 03:49 PM PST

It's unfair to call Umno evil, says the Kelantan opposition leader.

Hawkeye, FMT

KOTA BARU: Kelantan opposition leader Alwi Che Md Ahmad has singled out religious scholars and preachers as being the main culprits causing disunity among the Malays.

He said some ulama, particularly those affiliated with PAS, had been using Islam since the 1990s to split the community, and the situation had become so bad that rival groups of Malays could not even stand the sight of each other.

He was commenting on last Friday's controversial prayer to damn Umno, which was recited by Kelantan Menteri Besar Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat and his younger brother Nik Abdul Radzi at the Stadium Sultan Muhammed IV in Kota Baru. The occasion was a political rally that was part of Pakatan Rakyat's campaign for support in the coming general election.

Alwi acknowledged that PAS supporters in Kelantan saw Umno as evil because it had withheld royalties from Petronas' exploitation of the state's oil and gas resources.

However, he said, the perception was unfair considering the amount of good Umno had done for Malaysians, including Kelantanese. He cited the construction of key infrastructure in the state as well as welfare programmes for the poor.

If Umno was indeed evil, he added, the party would have barred public hospitals from treating Nik Abdul Aziz when he suffered a heart attack in 2004.

Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak even visited Nik Abdul Aziz in hospital, he pointed out.

Alwi said Nik Abdul Aziz had become a portrait of contradictions.

"Here is an 82-year-old man who is ailing, yet chooses to remain in power by holding on to political posts for some 20 years," he said.

"Why can't he retire from politics to concentrate on offering sermons and religious instruction to his followers? The answer is simple. He is a politician first and an ulama second.

"The whole of Kelantan knows that Nik Abdul Aziz is ailing. Yet he refuses to draw up a succession plan and allows the state to be administered by auto-pilot."

READ MORE HERE

 

Where’s the billions in forest royalties?

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 03:40 PM PST

Despite the billions derived from logging, oil and gas royalties, Sarawakian natives have remained poor with minimal infrastructure.

Joseph Tawie, FMT

KUCHING: Where has the RM14.4 billion in forest royalties derived from logging Sarawak's rainforest since 1980 gone?

Posing this question in the current sitting of the Sarawak State Legislative Assembly, assemblyman See Chee How said the revenue seemed not to have filtered down to the masses, as the state was still grappling with poverty.

"What has happened to all the forest royalties that the state received from all the trees chopped down since 1980?

"The state government likes to claim that logging [and now oil palm] has brought development to the rural people. But, if so, why is there still so much poverty and deprivation in Sarawak?

"Why is there so much growing inequality? Where did it all go?" asked See, the Batu Lintang assemblyman.

See said the official statistics indicated that between 1981 and 2009, the Sarawak state government collected RM14.4 billion in forest royalties (for the years 1981-2003, and 2009).

"This cumulative figure, which does not include the 2004 to 2008 figures, constitutes revenue from forest royalty alone and does not include cumulative income from other revenue streams like forest premium, hill timber premium, timber premium, and various other timber and timber industry tariffs.

"If these figures are included, it is likely that the cumulative revenues from timber would amount to over RM15 billion.

"However, in May 2011, a consultant with the United Nations, Philip Khoo, estimated that forest royalties alone collected in Sarawak from 1980-2006 amounted to about RM19 billion.

"If this is the case, why is Sarawak still lacking in basic infrastructure? Why is there still so much poverty and growing inequality in Sarawak even as the forests have disappeared before our very eyes?" asked See, who is also Sarawak PKR vice-chairman.

Poor infrastructure

See said that much of rural Sarawak still subsists on dangerous logging roads, and has little telephone coverage. Electricity connectivity from the state grid is poor and fresh piped water remains a pipe dream for thousands.

He said schools are provided by the federal government, and although there is a fairly generous number of rural primary schools, secondary schools remain a different story altogether with 12-year-old kids having to go to towns as boarders to be in secondary schools.

Hospitals are also provided by the federal government, but in the interior of Sarawak — Ba'Kelalan, Batu Danau, Telang Usan, Kemena, Kakus, Belaga — there are no hospitals, despite promises made 15 years ago.

"And we have not even begun talking about the need for improved hospitals in Sri Aman and other parts of the state."

"So, where have all the forest royalties gone to? Does not the continued existence of poverty [estimated at between 5% and 30% by experts) and inequality in large swathes of the rural and Bumiputera population of Sarawak point towards huge leakages of state funds that have only enriched certain quarters?

READ MORE HERE

 

My Thanksgiving reflection

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 03:33 PM PST

Man, has become his worse enemy; that Technologized Man, that creation of Dr. Frankenstein whose spirit has become the Machine. What then must we do?

A REPUBLIC OF VIRTUE

Dr Azly Rahman

True sense of Humanity comes from an emanation of understanding of what it means to be human and to the love fellow human beings, Nature, and Living Things, beyond what Ignorance and the Illusion of Knowledge has doctored and dictated our consciousness.

"The child is the father of Man," a sage once said, such that two children will play together well with joys and laughter accompanying even if they are of a different color, race, creed or even born into different religions or cultural philosophies. The only hatred they have would be to asked to go home when the time is up.

Man evolves into racist beings, colonialist, and imperialist beings out of the education first and foremost; education in the broadest sense of the word through the formal, informal, and hidden curriculum, and through socialization from the cradle to the grave.

There is a fundamental and deep-rooted sense of failure in how modern education has evolved especially in war-torn nations and war-loving nations and still, a clear and present danger in the ugliness of the excesses of the concept of "nationalism". Rather than conceived as a powerful force to create awareness of the freedom and independence for "a people", This sense of " natio-ness" or being a "common people" has been abused by one to destroy the freedom and dignity of other peoples less powerful and less in possession of technologies of dominance and control. This is evident especially in the ideology of Zionism and in the evolvingly dangerous sense of false superiority of "Ketuanan Melayu" trumpeted as a bankrupt illegitimate child of Malay nationalism.

"Whoever controls the means of production controls, "laments Karl Marx and in today's world it is no longer raw power or display of sophisticated brute force ala' technologies of the James Bond and Star Wars movies that will determine who shall control; it is hegemony and the "illusion of common sense" structured via propaganda into the minds and hearts and even soul, and spirits, and jiva and raga, sukma and atma and all that will color the nature of "bio-spiritual- power" the Colonizing Man needs as the "truth-force" of control.
 
What is happening to the nomadic Penans of Sarawak and how they are being systematically criminalized by the State and how their dignity robbed is an example of how the ill-possessed consciousness of the ruling regime has used its control of the State machinery and its ideological apparatuses to crush the powerless. And in the case of the ongoing pro-Lynas stand of the ruling regime, this is clearly a show of arrogance of who is control and who decides how the next generation of children of Pahang shall be fed with toxic waste.

Man, has become his worse enemy; that Technologized Man, that creation of Dr. Frankenstein whose spirit has become the Machine. What then must we do?
 

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

DR AZLY RAHMAN, who was born in Singapore and grew up in Johor Baru, holds a Columbia University (New York) doctorate in International Education Development and Master's degrees in the fields of Education, International Affairs, Peace Studies and Communication. He has taught more than 40 courses in six different departments and has written more than 300 analyses on Malaysia. His teaching experience spans Malaysia and the United States, over a wide range of subjects from elementary to graduate education. He currently resides in the United States.

https://www.facebook.com/#!/azly.rahman

http://azlyrahman-illuminations.blogspot.com/

 

Internal rifts may cost PKR Indian votes

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 03:28 PM PST

Indian leaders may jump ship if they are not picked as candidates in the coming general election, says a source.

B Nantha Kumar, FMT

Infighting, backbiting and sabotaging among Indian leaders in PKR could result in the party losing Indian support at the upcoming 13th general election.

The internal rift among these leaders could also play a role in thwarting Pakatan Rakyat's ambition of taking over the federal government after the polls. The opposition pact is made of PKR, DAP and PAS.

Speaking to FMT, a PKR source admitted that there would be "major party hopping" among Indians in PKR before and after the general election.

Declining to be named, the source said many Indians in the party were waiting for PKR to officially announce its list of Indian candidates to contest under the PKR banner in the coming general election.

"If their names are overlooked as a candidate, then they would jump ship to the Barisan Nasional or quit PKR without joining anyone… they have already made plans to this effect."

"Unlike PAS and DAP which have a long tradition and faithful members, PKR is a new set-up. Most of its members are from BN component parties. They ran from there to PKR. They ran because they were sidelined in their respective BN component parties. So when the same thing happens here, they would run again," said the source.

He said the problem among Indian leaders in PKR is "everyone wants a seat to contest".

"Of course, both Malays and Chinese in PKR also face the same scenario but Indians are the worst," said the source, who is very close to the party leadership.

He said PKR Indian leaders in their eagerness to win brownie points have also resorted to "attacking" each other in the mainstream media.

Tip of the iceberg

"Some are sending their supporters to Parliament to lobby for seats. For example, I was told that more than 60 candidate profiles have been submitted for the Bukit Melawati state seat in Selangor despite the incumbent M Mutiah declaring interest in defending the seat.

"This is just the tip of the iceberg. The factions in the party are heading for a showdown," the source said.

He claimed that PKR de facto leader Anwar Ibrahim had often met party Indian leaders to get feedback on ways to boost Indian support for Pakatan, but not much was done on the ground to put the plans into action.

"But, this is not enough to woo Indian votes. The Indian leaders in the party are not united. If they are, then they can put up a strong front and lobby for votes of the community. There are several camps within the party and each camp is pressuring Anwar for seats.

READ MORE HERE

 

Malaysian regulators find ‘issues’ in AirAsia audit

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 03:25 PM PST

The low-cost carrier had failed to meet regulatory standards, according to local news report.

(AFP) - Top budget airline AirAsia has had its right-to-fly extended by six months rather than the standard two years after an audit by Malaysian regulators found "some issues", an official said today.

The government official said the Department of Civil Aviation had decided to extend the low-cost carrier's air operator's certificate until March 31 next year, at which point it will need to reapply.

The certificates, which allow carriers to use aircraft for commercial purposes, are usually granted for two years.

"The department already audited AirAsia, and they only approved six months for AirAsia," the official told AFP.

"AirAsia needs to apply again for renewal… next year," he added.

The official said the carrier, Asia's largest low-cost carrier by fleet size, faced "some issues… that have been found" but did not elaborate further.

Local daily SunBiz reported today, quoting sources, that AirAsia had failed to meet regulatory standards.

The daily said an audit showed "shortcomings in AirAsia's flight operations procedures and practices, including flawed communications between flight operations and pilots, an outdated manual and flight operations not in keeping with the manual".

SunBiz also reported that AirAsia's head of flight operations had been removed from their post and replaced.

AirAsia did not immediately return requests for comment.

"The fact that they have not grounded AirAsia aircraft shows that it's not a serious safety issue, but this action still serves as a warning," a source told SunBiz.

Rapidly expanding AirAsia has become one of the airline industry's biggest success stories, rivaling national carrier Malaysia Airlines, which has been struggling to get out of the red.

Group CEO Tony Fernandes acquired the then-failing airline a decade ago. He has set up subsidiary budget carriers in Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand and Japan.

 

Dong Zong shrugs off MPM outrage

Posted: 22 Nov 2012 03:20 PM PST

It doesn't expect trouble at Sunday's rally.

Leven Woon, FMT

Dong Zong (United Chinese Schools Committees Association) has chosen to disregard expressions of outrage over its plan to hold a rally this Sunday, saying it sees no reason to beef up security for the event.

"Every organisation has the right to adopt its views on certain issues," said Dong Zong's deputy president, Chow Siew Hon, in response to yesterday's statement from the Malay Consultative Council (MPM), which denounced the upcoming rally as an "irresponsible act".

"We believe the Malays are generally a peace loving group," Chow added. "They might have emotions over certain issues, but we don't expect anything drastic."

MPM, which claims to be an umbrella group for Malay NGOs, is planning an education convention as a counter measure to the Dong Zong protest against the National Education Blueprint.

A spokesman for the Malay group, Kamaruddin Kachar, said yesterday that Dong Zong's demands went against the Razak Education Report of 1956 as well as the Education Act.

He said his group would invite the Prime Minister to its planned convention.

Dong Zong opposes the National Education Blueprint as being unfavourable to Chinese education.

Chow said PAS, PKR, DAP and the Sabah Progressive Party had agreed to send representatives to Sunday's rally.

"We expect at least the vice chairmen to turn up," he said.

 

Kredit: www.malaysia-today.net
 

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