Pakatan Rakyat (PR) Social Political Buzz & Bulls

MAHATHIR tolak HUDUD??


FMT Prime Minister Najib Tun Razaks aspiration to turn

FMT

Prime Minister Najib Tun Razaks aspiration to turn Malaysia into a high-income generating nation may very well be facing its stiffest test in Sabah and Sarawak where soaring prices of basic necessities and low salaries are leaving citizens and NGOs angry and worried.

Who is fixing these prices dont they know what is happening here? asked a frustrated housewife here.

Groaning under the weight of increased prices of fuel, kerosene, sugar, flour, rice, oil and now onions, she told FMT that it was becoming difficult to juggle her housekeeping budget.

The government says the increase is small but in Sarawak it is different. We are paying so much more for cooking items I dont know how to manage anymore, she said, citing the price of onions which has soared to RM16 a kilogram here.

Yesterday, the Sarawak Teachers Union (STU) became the first NGO to slam the governments inability to contain the spiralling price of onions.

Urging the government to immediately include onions as a controlled item, STU president Willian Ghani said: Onions are an essential item in every household.

The current price of RM16 per kilogram is too high. The hike is a huge burden not only to teachers but also those in the lower income bracket in particular.

Those in the lower income group are already struggling to make ends meet, and the hike will compound their woes.

The government must subsidis! e this e ssential item. The price is way too high, Ghani said.

He also said that the increasing prices of goods and services were not in tandem with the income of the people at large.

Salaries are not in tandem with the rising costs it will burn a hole in their pockets, he said.

Logistical costs

Sibu Petty Traders Association chairman Kong Hua Kuang admitted that price of essentials had indeed shot up in Sarawak.

Citing onions, he said the unusually high price was partly due to insufficient supply and increasing cost of transport.

Demand has increased because of the festive periods but we are not getting enough supply, he said.

Following the governments latest round of increases fuel and kerosene FMTs ground teams in Sabah and Sarawak reported on the adverse effect the small increase had in the lives of rural folk in both these states.

In rural Sarawak, a 10-sen increase for kerosene had catapulted the cost of this everyday essential to RM4.50 or more a litre because of logistics.

The bulk of Sarawaks 6,000 longhouses have no water or electricity and they are dependent on kerosene for light and cooking.

In neighbouring oil-rich Sabah, which incidentally is the countrys poorest state, the federal governments pullback on susbidies and increased cost of fuel had resulted in rural families having only two meals a day and children being deprived of school.


Filed under: corruption, Human rights Tagged: Anak Sarawak Bangsa Malaysia, corruption, Human rights, Sarawak, Save Sarawak

Selangor nak pinda perlembagaan kembali kuasa Sultan,UMNO mahu sokongkah...

Kerajaan negeri Selangor mengesyorkan pindaan perlembagaan negeri bukan sahaja untuk menyelesaikan kemelut pelantikan Setiausaha Kerajaan Negeri tetapi juga mahu membetulkan kesilapan awal 1990-an, kata Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim malam ini.

Sehubungan itu Menteri Besar Selangor berkata, adalah tidak wajar kuasa Sultan Selangor diambil alih oleh Umno demi memperkukuhkan kuasa persekutuan ketika krisis Perlembagaan Persekutuan 1993.

Umno yang mengambil alih kuasa . . . tetapi apabila dimaklumkan bahawa Sultan tiada kuasa (pelantikan), kami dikatakan jangan bertindak menderhaka, kata beliau pada perhimpunan di Stadium Malawati di sini.

Majlis malam ini dimulakan dengan solat hajat. Mursyidul Am PAS Datuk Nik Aziz Nik Mat, Presiden PAS Datuk Abdul Hadi Awang dan Ketua Umum Pakatan Rakyat Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim juga hadir sama.

Siapa yang menderhaka? Pada 1993, mereka (Umno) sudah pun melakukan derhaka, kata beliau lagi.

Khalid juga menekankan bahawa kerajaan Selangor akan membuat beberapa usul akhir bulan ini untuk memastikan kuasa pelantikan tiga pegawai kanan perkhidmatan awam negeri Setiausaha Kerajaan Negeri, Penasihat Undang-Undang dan Pegawai Kewangan Negeri kembali ke tangan Sultan dan kerajaan Selangor.

Malah beliau juga mencabar Umno menentang pindaan perlembagaan yang bakal dibawa kerajaan negeri Pakatan Rakyat.

Kita akan lihat belang mereka yang sebenar, jik! a benar mereka mendukung Sultan (mereka wajar sokong), kata beliau disambut tepukan gemuruh. Khalid berkata drama (semasa) akan berterusan sehingga kuasa untuk melantik pegawai-pegawai kanan terbabit kembali kepada negeri.

Semalam, Khalid juga mencabar Umno menyokong pindaan perlembagaan jika ia benar-benar ikhlas dalam menjunjung institusi diraja, yang dialung-laungkannya selama ini.

Umno (mengatakan bahawa) ia memandang tinggi (kedudukan) Sultan. Mereka (mengatakan) mereka yang mempertahankan raja, kata beliau sambil menggesa Umno menunjukkan keikhlasan jika benar parti teras Barisan Nasional itu mempertahankan institusi diraja.

Menteri Besar merancang untuk mengadakan sidang Dewan Undangan Negeri khas hujung bulan ini bagi menyelesaikan kemelut ekoran pelantikan Datuk Mohd Khusrin Munawi sebagai setiausaha kerajaan negeri yang baru. Sidang itu akan membincangkan pindaan perlembagaan negeri.

Pakatan Rakyat mempunyai 35 anggota di Dewan Undangan Negeri yang memperuntukkan 56 kerusi. Pindaan perlembagaan memerlukan sokongan dua pertiga untuk diluluskan.

Read,'Umno committed treason in 1993, says Khalid' here.

source:malaysian insider

Baca 'Rakyat Selangor mahu kembalikan kuasa Raja - UMNO setuju tak?' di sini.

cheers.

.Sarawak Report Why should the marriage of a Head of State be

.Sarawak Report

Why should the marriage of a Head of State be treated as a whispered secret? We can nowconfirm that at last there will be an official recognition of the factthe Abdul Taib Mahmud has taken a new wife with an event in KuchingonSaturday 15th of this month.

Presumably, it will be on this occasion that the Chief Minister will finally announce the name, true age and identity of the lucky lady?Meanwhile, Sarawak Report feels obliged to issue previously unseen pictures that can prove to a bewildered public that theactual weddinghas indeedalready taken place and that Taib is indeed a married man once more.

Not the grandad but the groom

The couple, seen here in our exclusive picture, are both dressed in white, having just been married. We can confirm that the gentleman, who is somewhat dwarfed by his much younger new wife, is the groom and not an elderly relative.

It may seem ridiculous that the proven marital status of Sarawaks Chief Minister has still failed to be formally announced.However perhaps the couple were in a hurry? Indeed, Taibs failureso far to officiallypresent and acknowledge his wife in the normal fashion has made itinevitablethat people have beenleft speculating over the speed and secrecy of this event. Is a fifth potential heir to arrive for the lucky family sooner rather than later? Or was the lightning marriage designed to quash unhealthy rumours (or wo! rse, evi dence) of an existing relationship?

Poor PR?

Indeed, there have been numerous maritalscandals associated with the Mahmud family, which Taib has fought hard to quashand there would be no desire to add to any ofthem on the brink of the election. So why such agravemishandling of PR by Taib and BNby thisdisplaying of all the hallmarks of an emergency wedding?

Worse, it has been followed by a lengthy period of silence with no official confirmation of the situation, giving the appearance thatthe actors in the affair have beenworking behind the sceneson how to bestpresent the matter.A wedding shouldbe treated asa publiccelebration and nota secret scandal, so why has the Chief Minister not managed the affair more skillfully to avoid such an unfortunate style ofpresentation?

In a country with a free press Taib would not have had a restful New Years break, after such a slack managementof his PR. Yet, in fact it is understood that he and his young newwife were able to flyoff on their holidays and enjoy another marriage ceremony nearer her home, in Syria in the Middle East.

Wouldnt it be nice to know who her family are and how the couple met? Public figures have to accept a certain amount of scrutiny in such matters it comes with the job.



Filed under: corruption Tagged: Anak Sarawak Bangsa Malaysia, corruption, Save Sarawak, Taib Mahmud

Anwar urges Selangor PR to go on offensive


January 10, 2011

Anwar called the Selangor state secretary impasse a ‘small issue’. — Picture by Choo Choy May
SHAH ALAM, Jan 10 — Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim called on Pakatan Rakyat (PR) last night to “attack” Barisan Nasional (BN) in Selangor, saying the time for defensive action was over.

The opposition leader called the Selangor state secretary impasse — which has occupied the attention of Selangor PR leaders for more than two weeks now — a “small issue” that could be overcome as PR had a “mandate” in the state.

The PKR de facto leader said PR could hit back at BN and ensure that Selangor remains in the hands of the federal opposition by focusing on welfare work and exemplary administration.

“Let’s not pay heed (to Umno’s attacks). We will attack and we will step up our service,” he told a rally of more than 8,000 PAS supporters at Stadium Malawati here last night.

“Selangor must be strong... When we are strong the battlefield will no longer (just) be Selangor. The battlefield will stretch to Negri Sembilan and Malacca, the borders of Johor, to Tenang, the Federal Territory... and Selangor must lead (the fight).”

Anwar told supporters that it was wrong to think Umno was strong as it had “run out of capital” and was now resorting to what he claimed were desperate tactics to keep power.

He also claimed Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s meeting with BN MPs last week was a sign that Umno was now in the midst of a “catastrophe”.

“This is the first time the prime minister has had to meet with MPs for 15 minutes each,” he said.

The country’s richest state has been in turmoil for the past week since the Chief Secretary to the Government named Datuk Mohd Khusrin Munawi to the post to replace outgoing State Secretary Datuk Ramli Mahmud.

The PR state government has rejected Khusrin’s appointment and insists it has the right to name its own person for the job.

The row over Khusrin’s appointment has escalated to the point where the PKR-led state government is now seeking to amend the state constitution to allow it to regain the pre-1993 authority to appoint the state secretary and other senior civil servants.

Selangor Mentri Besar Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim also said that there would be no oath-taking ceremony between newly-appointed Khusrin and himself, adding that the latter will not be allowed to attend any executive council or state economic council meetings.

Umno has seized on the turmoil in the state by attacking the Selangor PR administration for allegedly going against the Sultan’s wishes.

The attacks from Umno appeared to be focused on winning over support from conservative Malays.

Sungai Siput MP raises the ante


PSM’s Dr D Jeyakumar follows up court challenge with a police report on opaque allocations of constituency funds in Sungai Siput.


Sungai Siput MP Dr Jeyakumar Devaraj took his quest for annual government allocations for constituencies - presently denied opposition legislators - a step further by lodging a police report today on the matter in Ipoh.

penang psm dinner 181210 jeyakumar devarajThe report follows hard upon the leave application Jeyakumar filed in the Kuala Lumpur High Court last month for a judicial review of the government's decision to reject the MP's request for aid to welfare projects in Sungai Siput.

Last week the High Court said it would rule on the leave application on Feb 7.

The case is being closely watched for it raises a number of constitutional questions, chief among them equal protection of citizens under the law.

Jeyakumar holds that the annual allocations, given to BN MPs but withheld from oppositionists, are a constitutional right of all elected legislators and that present methods of their disbursement in opposition wards cannot withstand public scrutiny.

The latter point was the subject of the MP's report lodged at the main police station in Ipoh today.

In a letter to a query raised by Jeyakumar, dated Oct 12, 2010 and signed by Zainal Abidin Omar, a Perak state development officer, the MP was informed that as of July 2010, a total sum of RM1.72 million was disbursed to 56 projects in the Sungai Siput.

Among these were three projects that Jeyakumar had petitioned the state development office for aid.

The three were an Islamic orphanage and two schools, Methodist Secondary and Men Sing Chung.

Figures don't add up

Jeyakumar checked with the three supposed recipients and discovered that Anak Yatim Nurul Ihsan did not receive a single cent in aid while RM3,500 was given to Methodist Secondary and RM2,000 to Men Sing Chung School.

“The sums don't add up,” said Jeyakumar, the only socialist MP elected to Parliament since the 1978 general election.

“Besides sums not adding up, the whole matter of the distribution of the RM1.72 million is opaque,” he commented.

“The projects that were aided are referred to in the letter as 'tajuk', which is vague. This opacity needs to be cleared up because this allocation comes from the annual Budget's allocation of funds to the PM's Department,” he expatiated.

“Opposition MPs are elected by the people and are entitled to directly disburse, under public scrutiny of course, the annual allocation for their wards, just as government MPs are allowed that prerogative,” he added.

“To channel funds meant for opposition wards through unelected officers in state development offices is a process that cannot withstand public scrutiny and accountability,” he asserted.

Jeyakumar's police report places the issues in sharper relief in advance of judicial adjudication.

SS crisis attempt to cause rift between Khalid, Sultan


Perkasa chief Ibrahim Ali says the noticeable silence on the part of Anwar Ibrahim and Azmin Ali doesn't mean they have a role in it.


The controversy over the appointment of Mohd Khusrin Munawi as the new Selangor state secretary is an attempt to cause a rift between Selangor Menteri Besar Ibrahim and the Selangor palace, said Pasir Mas member of parliament Ibrahim Ali.

The independent MP, who is is the president of right wing movement Perkasa, said obviously Khalid did not want to have a "headache" in his relations with the palace but there were "forces at play" in the matter.

He said the noticeable silence on the part of PKR advisor and PKR Anwar Ibrahim and PKR deputy president Mohd Azmin Ali did not mean they did not have a role in it.

"But what can the MB (Khalid) do? He has to do the bidding of his puppet-master. He will be the biggest loser in this whole thing," he told Bernama.

The controversy erupted when Khalid claimed that he was not consulted in regard to Mohamad Khusrin's appointment.

However, Mohd Khusrin has since taken his oath of loyalty before the sultan but the menteri besar intends to hold a special state assembly sitting to revert powers to the MB and sultan in the matter of appointment of the top three civil servants in the the state, namely the SUK, financial officer and legal advisor.

At present the decision to appoint these three senior officers is made by the chief secretary to the government.

Meanwhile, some 300 residents of Kampung Jalan Kebun in Klang staged a peaceful demonstration in the village today to protest certain remarks made by Seri Muda assemblyman Muda Shuhaimi Shafei on the same issue which they alleged were disrespectful to the Sultan of Selangor.

- Bernama


Belgium

Ah Boy: "Mamak wanna to join DAP ..."

Apology to Penang CM not related to criticisms

The Penang Malaysian Malay Contractors Association today clarified that the apology was made to forge a greater understanding with each other.


The Penang Malaysian Malay Contractors Association today clarified that the apology the association made at a meeting with the Penang chief minister recently was not related to criticisms it had made against the state government previously.

Its president Muhamad Fadzill Hassan said the apology was made to forge greater understanding and towards forgiving each other.

"My apology was because I might havteoh beng hock group meets lim guan eng 080111 lim guan enge used inappropriate language when making criticisms against the state government, that's all. It does not mean the apology was related to the earlier criticisms made,"
he told reporters in Penang.

He was making the clarification in response to news reports yesterday which stated that Fadzill apologised to Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng over the criticisms made by the association against the state government which concerned the awarding of contracts to bumiputera contractors.

Fadzill added that the meeting was on the invitation of Lim and concerned 46 Malay contractors in Penang who were alleged to be Umno cronies, which he (Fadzill) explained was not the case.

- Bernama

Sivilizing Huck Finn

Nazir Razak and his EPF thief


How much power and money does Nazir Razak really want?

He has been actively selling himself the past few years and pushing his way around town based on the fact that he is the PM's brother.

Yes sure he talks about merit and all that but truth is he is a typical Umno elite type who is depending on his big brother for handouts.

The latest thing he is lobbying abang Najib for is for Tan Sri Azlan Zainol to be retained as EPF CEO.

His retirement date is a few months away but Tan Sri Azlan Zainol has been lobbying like crazy to get a two year extension.

Guess who is trying to make it happen?

Nazir of course lah.

The banker has been Azlan's chief lobbyist.
There is a very good reason for this - good for Nazir that is.

During Azlan's time in charge at the EPF, he abdicated the pension fund to Nazir.
Yes it is really Nazir who calls the shots on the EPF investment panel.
What is happening is that all CIMB's clients which need EPF investment get a fress pass.
It has been like this for a few years.
Nazir is Najib's brother so does anyone dare to question any deal?
Does anyone even dare to ask the abang what the adik is doing?

A categorical imperative for all governments including our PM


By J. D. Lovrenciear
All governmnts whether they are of developed or developing nation status, have a categorical imperative towards protecting their citizens' interest first. And that means at the price of 'at all costs' -- even if it means that the government must throw the towel in and walk away like a gentlemen when it is deemed a failure at the ballot box. That is true democracy. That is the corner stone for building civil liberties to new heights. Any other versions cannot be sanctioned in tomorrow's fascinating world of globalization including the Tun Doctor's much propogated 'managed democracy'. All said, the government of Malaysia is no exception to this universal fundamental of the 21st century. Just look at how China has changed for that matter. Hence if the PM wants the BN govenment to stay in power in the coming polls for all the 'right' reasons that he or his team have been stressing, then here are a select few issues he may want to ponder, seek enlightenment and deal with in the spirit of what Dr Martin Luther King Jr said: "Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter."
  1. How did C4 get to be used in the grisly and brutal murder of the Mongolian citizen?
  2. How did the immigration records of the same Mongoian citizen dissappear from the files / system?
  3. Why do we see big time defence spendings going into the hands of small time Sdn Bhds? Shouldn't the deals be made by the ex-servicemen's associations or the ministry itself to reap the economies of scale?
  4. Why is the PM's wife attracting so much of negative media publicity? Is she breaking away from the Malaysian tradition of what and how a leader's spouse ought to be and instead is already well on a super-fast lane? Look, people are asking questions like why is she meeting Heads of States when your Deputy PM should have done the job when you were sick, remember?
  5. Why is DSAI's 'sodomy' trial trailing like an unending film reel?
  6. Whatever is happening to PETRONAS' black gold earnings? Do the citizens and 'opposition' party leaders not have a right to know how your team is spending all the money meant to give Malaysia a huge insurance for the future?
  7. Why is it taking a never ending saga to get all ministers to declare their assets and gain bonus points for BN's credibility from the rakyat?Â
  8. Whatever happened to all the past mammoth court cases involving the nation's reputation health? Why is it so difficult to convince the majority of the population that the 'correct, correct, correct' case is correct after all, for example? Or the PERWAJA case? Or the PKFTZ case? Or the late little 'Maharaja' Palace in Klang?
Oh there are many more. Perhaps readers and citizens can help enrich the database as part of your contribution to the government in their earnest aspiration to clean up and come clean as well. If the present government can do so we do not need to fight so many battles. We need not have to spend millions more on the coming run-up to General Elections. We can in fact use all the money to keep the subsidies and pay to service the nation's borrowings for all the spanking mega-projects. And the crowning glory is BN can win hands down. Why not? Otherwise just like what the PM himself warned, we are going to brutally hurt the nation, and why not?

Is This Khalid's Waterloo?


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By Zainul Arifin


The controversy over the appointment of the Selangor state secretary serves to highlight potential complications when different parties, especially opposing ones, are controlling the state and Federal Governments.

The other is that when everything is seen through politically tinted glasses, the result can be more politics than the average citizen can take.

Menteri Besar Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim alleges that Datuk Mohd Khusrin Munawi was unconstitutionally forced onto the state and that, as the state's head of government, he has the right to have his input on who should be the new state secretary.

There are many opinions on this, depending on whom one were to ask and which side of the political divide he may be. It is a situation defined by politics; there is no way a resolution, no matter what it may be, can be accepted by all. But I suppose I am too ahead in the argument, or too bleak in musing.

It has been suggested by Khalid and members of the coalition government that it was an Umno and Barisan Nasional attempt to impose their will on the state. There was also a suggestion that it was a nefarious plan by them to use Khusrin to take over the state.

Things, however, get complicated when the palace is dragged into the drama. Khalid said it was his right to recommend and the sultan to agree. Chief Secretary to the Government Tan Sri Mohd Sidek Hassan cannot force his candidate on the state and give the sultan and him no choice but to accept. It is a constitutional crisis in the making, many say.

To this, Khalid is suggesting a special sitting of the assembly to amend the state constitution.

Nevertheless, his attempt to politicise the appointment is not getting much traction, since the dreaded enemies, Umno and Barisan Nasional, including the prime minister and his deputy, declined to bite.

It has now become Khalid and his government against the sultan, and of course the nation's civil service.

I believe it would have been an easier political battle for him if Umno or Barisan were active, but getting all tangled with the royal house and sultan can be complicated as Khalid is finding out.

In Perak a couple of years ago, there were attempts to question the royal house. Now comes Selangor.

How this may play out is too early to tell but if Malays are as attached to royals, as some would suggest, then it could be a problematic proposition for the Pakatan Rakyat grouping among Malays, especially in Selangor, and nationwide.

The extent of Malay loyalty can be debated, but there are risks to suggest that the royal house be used as political grist.

To suggest that the royal house was involved in political complicity is doubly sticky, if not politically troubling. Also, to suggest they are not aware of the rules and regulations is disrespectful.

Khalid also seems to be fumbling along, first suggesting that the sultan was in sync with him and then suggesting that someone was putting words in the sultan's mouth, an allegation bordering on disrespect that was dismissed by the palace.

He is now, however, making politically correct noises, such as the amendment would put the sultan's power where it should be and that a constitutional review is for the people.

Incidentally, and surprisingly, the Selangor state secretary imbroglio is seemingly Khalid's cross to bear alone. In this instance, Parti Keadlian Rakyat party chiefs, including Pa-katan supremo Datuk Seri Anwar Ib-rahim and other coalition leaders, have not said much, apart from the expected grunts and noises.

Some suggest that his own party (PKR) is leaving him twisting in the wind, especially with obvious intra-party politicking for control of Selangor.

Khalid also came up with strange statements, such as saying that while he attended the swearing in, he could not accept the appointment of Khusrin. But by attending it, he was a witness to the swearing in, regardless of whether he was a willing participant.

If he had not agreed, he should not have attended. By being present, he is a party to the event.

By seeking an amendment to the state constitution, Khalid is clearly trying to make a political issue of the situation. He is three short of a two-thirds majority needed in the 56-seat assembly to get his amendment passed.

It would perhaps be when kucing bertanduk or for cats to grow horns before he would get Barisan Nasional assemblyman crossing over to support the proposed amendment.

And given the power tussle in the state Pakatan structure, he could be missing home support.

So why does he pursue the amendment when he knows it will be defeated? Perhaps it is to make enough noise and political hay to fuel politics until the next general election. Perhaps to position Pakatan again as the underdog against the big bad Federal Government, civil servants and BN.

But wouldn't that be Machiavellian in putting the state at risk of inertia just to gain the political upper hand?

Should he not try to work with Khusrin first before deciding that the latter was an evil implant?

If one were to be a conspiracy theorist, one may also ask if this is an engineered constitutional crisis.

This is only if one were to believe statements by Sidek and former state secretary Datuk Ramli Mahmud that the state and Khalid were informed of the vacancy and candidate, as well as the palace agreement to the appointment earlier.

Khalid denied this, and suggested that he was surprised by the appointment during the last week of last year.

But surely he had known that Ramli was retiring months in advance, and had he checked his facts, he would have known that the chief secretary would appoint a replacement. In fact, he was at a farewell function given to the retiring state secretary and there was no suggestion that a crisis was in the making.

To suggest righteousness and indignation this late in the day could also suggest incompetence.

Khalid is also suggesting that the civil service is not able to act professionally. He may be proven right, but how can he dismiss a person just because Khusrin is not his candidate?

To suggest the person is unqualified is unfair. It is just as unfair to suggest that Khalid is unqualified to become the state's chief executive since he had never worked in any state administration before or that he had failed in his first attempt as a politician previously, or that his appointment is because he is a compromise candidate among the coalition parties.

Surely, Khalid would not take kindly to those suggestions.

In fact, someone in Selangor Pakatan had suggested that he should accept the appointment or challenge it in court. He should not try to drag the royal house into his political battle, with or without his party.

Yet, he seems to be digging himself deeper. Is he being badly advised or being given rope by not only opponents, but even friends and allies, to get himself into knots?

Could this be Khalid's Waterloo that could be used to effect a change in the leadership of the Selangor government ahead of the general election?

I'm sure Khalid and his supporters will not be happy with such a characterisation of the situation.

Nevertheless, there are thousands of constitutional experts who freely give their opinion, some without even reading the constitution.

The danger with this instant wisdom is that at the end of the day, and when mixed with political partisanship, not many care what is really in the constitution. - New Straits Times

Soaring anger over rising prices


SIBU: Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak’s aspiration to turn Malaysia into a high-income generating nation may very well be facing its stiffest test in Sabah and Sarawak where soaring prices of basic necessities and low salaries are leaving citizens and NGOs angry and worried.

“Who is fixing these prices… don’t they know what is happening here?” asked a frustrated housewife here.

Groaning under the weight of increased prices of fuel, kerosene, sugar, flour, rice, oil and now onions, she told FMT that it was becoming difficult to juggle her housekeeping budget.

“The government says the increase is small but in Sarawak it is different. We are paying so much more for cooking items… I don’t know how to manage anymore,” she said, citing the price of onions which has soared to RM16 a kilogram here.

Yesterday, the Sarawak Teachers Union (STU) became the first NGO to slam the government’s inability to contain the spiralling price of onions.

Urging the government to immediately include onions as a controlled item, STU president Willian Ghani said: “Onions are an essential item in every household.

“The current price of RM16 per kilogram is too high. The hike is a huge burden not only to teachers but also those in the lower income bracket in particular.

“Those in the lower income group are already struggling to make ends meet, and the hike will compound their woes.

“The government must subsidise this essential item. The price is way too high,” Ghani said.

He also said that the increasing prices of goods and services were not in tandem with the income of the people at large.

“Salaries are not in tandem with the rising costs… it will burn a hole in their pockets, he said.

Logistical costs

Sibu Petty Traders Association chairman Kong Hua Kuang admitted that price of essentials had indeed shot up in Sarawak.

Citing onions, he said the “unusually” high price was partly due to insufficient supply and increasing cost of transport.

“Demand has increased because of the festive periods but we are not getting enough supply,” he said.

Following the government’s latest round of increases – fuel and kerosene – FMT’s ground teams in Sabah and Sarawak reported on the adverse effect the “small” increase had in the lives of rural folk in both these states.

In rural Sarawak, a 10-sen increase for kerosene had catapulted the cost of this everyday essential to RM4.50 or more a litre because of logistics.

The bulk of Sarawak’s 6,000 longhouses have no water or electricity and they are dependent on kerosene for light and cooking.

In neighbouring oil-rich Sabah, which incidentally is the country’s poorest state, the federal government’s pullback on susbidies and increased cost of fuel had resulted in rural families having only two meals a day and children being deprived of school.

Malaysia in the Era of Globalization #48

Chapter Six: Malaysia: Assets and Liabilities

The Far and Pervasive Reach of the Malaysian Government

In Malaysia, the governments powerful reach is extensive and pervasive, affecting everything and everybody all the time. This was dramatically demonstrated to me recently. A bright Malay student on her own effort was accepted for graduate work at Cambridge University. She applied to a local university for funding under its academic training program, and was accepted. But to get that scholarship she had to be interviewed by the Public Service Department (PSD). Fair enough. Then she was told that because her TOEFL (a standardized English test) score was outdated she would not qualify, she would have to re-sit the test.

Here she was, accepted by Cambridge and deemed qualified by the dean of a local university, but the bureaucrat at PSD had veto power over her. Never mind that she had graduated from a top American university (which was why she was accepted to Cambridge in the first place) and had aced the TOEFL years ago, but those facts did not persuade the esteemed civil servant. Fortunately she was tenacious enough to fight such inanities; but it took the personal intervention of the deputy prime minister no less to resolve the issue in her favor. Why should the deputy prime minister have to decide a simple matter like this? Is he not busy enough?

After the intervention of no less than the second top honcho in government, one would think that the problem would be solved and not recur. Far from it! Later, two of her colleagues were accepted to Bostons MIT. Unfortunately they, being good, dutiful Malays, meekly accepted the PSD ! decision and agreed to re-sit their TOEFL to be held later in the year. Fortunately for them, MIT was kind enough to grant them a deferment.

There was however an unfortunate sad twist to their story. As a result of the 9-11 attacks, America is now restricting visas to Muslim countries. So there is no certainty they will be able to go to MIT when the PSD will finally approve their scholarship. So now we have two young bright Malays who are denied their full potential because of the pigheadedness of an obscure civil servant.

Ungku Aziz, the distinguished former Vice Chancellor of the University of Malaya, recounted his experience with a senior civil servant on expanding the campus library. The officer insisted that the university not waste money on acquiring new books until the lecturers had read all the existing books in the library. Imagine such mentality!

The late Tun Razak was so hamstrung by the rigidity and lack of imagination of civil servants that he started the various state corporations like Pernas and Petronas to bypass the hidebound bureaucracy. It was a brilliant strategy, but as these corporations expanded and retired civil servants were appointed to run them, they began acquiring all the characteristics of the civil service. Petronas, the national petroleum company, is widely regarded as the exception. While it has done many things right and performed better than many state owned companies including those owned by the various State Economic Development Corporations (SEDC), it is difficult to ascertain Petronass true status or actual performance. Only recently Petronas was embroiled in a controversy in buying (some say bailing out) a failing shipping company owned by the son of Prime Minister Mahathir. Only time will prove whether that particular acquisition was a sound business decision. To put matters in perspective, Exxon and Royal Dutch Oil both have reserves, assets, and revenues considerably greater than Petronas, but you would not know that by the size and lavishness of Petronas headquarters.

Nothing gets done in many Third World countries precisely because their massive and intrusive governments get in the way of the people. With big governments come complicated rules and cumbersome regulations. Then you would need the assistance of specialists to help navigate the myriad and complicated ways. In the West, their services are called lobbying; in the Third World, corruption. Either way they are a drag on efficiency and productivity.

The impact of corruption on investment is equivalent to the drag imposed by higher taxes. Thanks to globalization and the consequent free flow of information, corrupt practices in Malaysia are often first revealed abroad. The corruption of telecommunication contract was first revealed in Japan when the authorities were investigating their own companies. Likewise the old Lockheed scandal involving the purchase of military jets was exposed through congressional hearings in Washington, DC. Earlier I alluded to the Bank Negaras foreign exchange debacle that prompted the Federal Reserves public rebuke.

The perception (as well as the reality) of corruption in Malaysia is worsening, despite official protestations to the contrary. Malaysians are only too aware of the ubiquity of petty corruptions at lower levels and influence peddling among the upper ranks. The countrys ranking in the Transparency International Perception Index has declined substantially in the last few years.

Governments are by nature inefficient. Suppose a government entity decides to allocate a million dollars to clean up the beaches. First th! ere will be a series of meetings to select the head of the department and determine his or her status within the civil service hierarchy. Then there will be endless meetings to prepare the appropriate job description and mission statement, and on deciding whether the directorship will be superscale or timescale position, and the appropriate office space and parking slot! And of course the matter of the directors living quarters. Then there will be detailed specifications of the trucks and tender bids. Perhaps a year later and after spending nearly half the budget on such administrative trivia would the first garbage be picked up! If the project had been given to a private contractor right away, he would be out there the very next day with his own pickup truck to clean up the beaches.

The drag that the public sector imposes on the economy is also seen in America. As a surgeon in private practice I treat many patients under government-sponsored programs. Every month I would receive stacks of new regulations to comply. The regulatory requirements became so burdensome that I decided to opt out. Recently I was negotiating with a government agency for rental of a building I owned. It dragged on for nearly a year with endless meetings with the directors of various departments (finance, real estate, environment, etc.). Businessmen experienced in dealing with the government factor in these added costs. It is not surprising that government agencies pay outrageously high prices.

To take a dramatic if not hilarious example, the 9-11 terrorists attacks revealed the dangerous gaps in American intelligence. At an oversight congressional hearing, it was revealed that the intelligence agencies knew the suspects beforehand through various intercepts. Unfortunately the agencies did not have any Arab-! or Afgh an-speaking employees to translate the messages. This led Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House of Representatives and a vigorous advocate of small government, to testify that the FBI and CIA directors could have just hailed a taxi outside their offices and the first driver to arrive could probably translate for them!

America can afford such inefficiencies because one, its government is not large relative to the economy, and two, the private sector is vigorous and thus could readily accommodate such governmental inefficiencies without damaging the overall economy. In Third World countries where the private sector is poorly developed, a large and inefficient government would devastate the economy.

The best government is not that which governs least, as the conservatives would have it, rather one that restricts its activities to those that are properly under its purview. Some of these include the nations defense, maintenance of law and order, and general public health. A government that dabbles in business, as Ibn Khaldun so wisely observed centuries ago, is doing a disservice both to itself as well to the nation and its citizens. A government big enough to give you everything, former President Gerald Ford once noted, is a government big enough to take from you everything you have. He meant by this is that government will end up taxing its citizens to death in order to provide all the services demanded by them. And this is the bane of socialist governments.

To me however, the taking away in the form of taxes from the citizens is the least dangerous aspects of big government. More pernicious is that such a government would end up taking away the citizens initiatives. That is the more devastating consequence. That worries me most about the ever-increasing generosities of special privileges afforded to B! umiputra s. This danger is further compounded by the fact that the costs of those bounties are disproportionately borne by non-Bumiputras. As Bumiputras do not bear the full costs and burden, they are more likely to demand more and more until they become the full ward of the state. Then all initiative would be gone.

Ultimately the best form of government, as the German philosopher von Goethe noted, is that which teaches us to govern ourselves.

Examine the present Malaysian government. It is clearly involved in a multitude of unnecessary activities. Does the government do a better job in attracting tourists to justify a Ministry of Tourism? Similarly, I fail to see the justification for a ministry of information or one for sports, information and culture. Get rid of them. The most laughable ministry is that for entrepreneurial development. Do those makan gaji (salary man) bureaucrats really think that they could groom entrepreneurs? If they could they would have left government service a long time ago and started their own business!

When government controls the means of production, we have socialism and communism. Less well known but just as destructive as this structural socialism, is the more subtle form of functional socialism, where the state exerts control over industry via various laws and regulations. With inappropriate government policy, even sand could be made scarce in Saudi Arabia, as the economist Milton Friedman noted! And in the name of social equity, even capitalist governments have undertaken massive redistribution of wealth from producers to takers. This institutionalization of the Robin Hood mentality, though well intentioned, generally results in the leveling down of wealth. The government is so consumed with redistributing wealth t! hat it n eglects the more important function of creating it in the first place. This is the blight of mature Western democracies.

A critical reappraisal on the proper role of government is badly needed in Malaysia. While many are quick to point to the failures of market, the more devastating shortcomings and oppressiveness of big government are not well appreciated. I trust my fate more to the invisible hand of the free market than the strong arm of the government.

Next: Malaysias Digital Divide


Mkini: Nizar A Hit At Book Launch On BN's Perak Takeover [w/VIDEO] (12 Dec 2010, 2245)

10 January, 2011 By Lord Bobo

Hazlan Zakaria of Malaysiakini was one of the fortunate few who got in the hall to witness the launch of PASOC by LoyarBaca (LoyarBuroks publishing arm). He reports. (By the way, he is accurate in his report.)

By Hazlan Zakaria

Former Perak Menteri Besar Nizar Jamaluddin today launched the book published by popular (LB: emphasis ours) website Loyarburok.com detailing the events of the notorious BN ouster that saw him and Pakatan Rakyat removed from office.

The book, Perak: A State of Crisis is a compilation of articles written by lawyers and activists on the blog, mainly in support of the crusade mounted by Nizar (centre in photo, in black) to restore the Pakatan-led state government after the coup.

It also includes four specially commissioned analyses from experts such as former justice NH Chan and constitutional law expert Shad Saleem Faruki on the constitutional crisis that ensued.

Called the rakyats Menteri Besar by the organisers, Nizar did not disappoint as he arrived at the venue at Annexe Gallery, Kuala Lumpur, to a rock star-like welcome from the crowd of Loyarburok.com supporters, who call themselves Loyarburokkers, along with fellow politicians and activists.

Amongst those who showed up in support were former Bar Council president and Bersih 2.0 chairperson Ambiga Sreenevasan, Perak DAP chairperson Ngeh Koo Ham (left, in photo) along with the Loyarburok.com crew of legal professionals and the contributors to the book.

Nizar d! elivered a half-hour long speech on the loss of the Pakatan-led Perak government that he blamed on the machinations of the BN, who "kidnapped" three Pakatan representatives and then illegally declared that they thus had the majority that allowed them to form the state government.

Nizar also called into question the Sultan of Perak whom he said knew the laws regarding the issue, lamenting that the monarch had acted contrary to a book on constitutional monarchy that he himself had stipulated, and had presented to Nizar when he first came into office.

His speech received thunderous applause and kept the crowd rapt in attention.

The PAS politicians rock star magnetism even derailed a forum that was next on the programme, as visitors flocked around the former MB to get his autograph on freshly purchased copies of the book.

The event included readings by Loyarburok.com supporters and contributors of excepts from the book, interspersed with lighthearted entertainment including two songs by a lawyer and a five-minute performance art piece by local artist Chi Too.

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Tags: @loyarburok, Ambiga Sreenevasan, Bar Council, BERSIH 2.0, Chi Too, Hazlan Zakaria, LoyarBaca, Malaysiakini, NH Chan, Nizar Jamaluddin, PASOC, Perak: A State Of Crisis, Shad Saleem Faruqi

This entry was posted on 10 January, 2011 at 1:13 am and is filed under Selected Exhortations. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

One Response to Mkini: Nizar A Hit At Book Launch On BN's Perak Takeover [w/VIDEO] (12 Dec 2010, 2245)

  • The LoyarBurok Book Review: Perak: A State Of Crisis Re-invoking Our Sentiments [w/VIDEO] | LoyarBurok on 10 January, 2011 at 1:51 am
    [...] PASOC is now available at ! most MPH , Borders and Times bookstores through LoyarBacas distributors, GerakBudaya. Get yours at those bookstores or here. The book is into its first reprint (second impression) after having all 1000 copies distributed in 5 days after its mega1212 launch. [...]

  • SNAP joins forces with Jeffrey


    KUCHING: Sarawak National Party (SNAP) has thrown its support behind Jeffrey Kitingan’s United Borneo Front (UBF).

    Confirming the party’s commitment to the UBF agenda, SNAP president Edwin Dundang said : “Their (UBF) demands are in line with the Malaysia Agreement.

    “As far as I understand, one of the things Jeffrey wants to do is establish a conformity agreement with us to ensure that what was agreed to when Malaysia was formed must be followed.”

    Admitting to having met Jeffrey, a former PKR vice-president, in Miri recently, Dundang said SNAP was “party to the Malaysia Agreement” in 1963 and it will now “be a boon for Pakatan Rakyat and the two-party system in Malaysia.”

    “SNAP was a party to the Malaysia Agreement and I can say proudly that without SNAP there can never be Malaysia at that time.

    “SNAP’s peaceful rise will be a boon for Pakatan and the two-party system in Malaysia,” he added.

    Dundang was speaking to the press after chairing the first meeting of the party’s central working committee (CWC) this year.

    He said the CWC had decided on several new appointments aimed at “injecting new blood” into the party.

    He announced the appointments of professionals to hold key posts in the party as part of a move to rebrand SNAP.

    Among the new officials are a former treasurer-general of the defunct Parti Bansa Dayak Sarawak (PBDS), Anthony Liman.

    Liman, a lawyer, has been appointed SNAP vice-president who is also responsible for communications.

    Another lawyer, Augustine Liom, was also appointed vice-president. He will also head the party’s policy bureau which includes land issues.

    Former executive secretary of PBDS, Paul Kadang, has been appointed as deputy secretary-general of SNAP. He is also director of operations.

    SNAP rebrands itself

    Former Parti Pesaka Bumiputra Bersatu (PBB) member, Patrick Saging, has been appointed a CWC member. Saging, who was a member of PBB for 18 years, will now hold the post of director of strategy in SNAP.

    “We have decided to make new appointments by injecting new blood and appointing experienced people to help strengthen the party’s machinery.

    “We urge our members throughout the state to cooperate with our new appointees to strengthen SNAP. It will also mean unity for our people.

    “And equally important, it will also mean that Sarawak’s multi-ethnic voice could be heard not only at the local level but at the national one as well,” Dundang said.

    He hoped that 2011 will see the rise of the party after being in political wilderness for the past eight years.

    Stessing that “SNAP is for all”, Dundang said the party was open to all who shared in its struggle.

    He added that SNAP would be holding roadshows and symposiums in the next few weeks to sell the “new” SNAP to the people, especially the Dayaks who are not members of any of the Pakatan component parties.

    “Our target is the more than 100,000 hardcore members of the defunct PBDS who have remained partyless after the party was de-registered on Oct 24, 2004. SNAP itself now has more than 100,000 members,” he siad.

    Meanwhile, Liman said that the party would be visiting branches and meeting members to get them to support SNAP candidates in the coming state election and support Pakatan candidates in other constituencies.

    “We urge our members in the state to make themselves available to meet the party’s leaders when they visit their respective areas.

    “It is important that our members be made aware of the latest political developments in the state,” he said.

    Explain your role in Sabah seafood venture, BN rep told


    PENAMPANG: A Barisan Nasional assemblyman allegedly involved in a multi-million ringgit business venture in Sabah has been asked to explain his role which is in conflict with his government position.

    Sabah DAP chief Jimmy Wong has identified the assemblyman as Samsudin Yahya, from Sekong.

    Wong said that Samsudin was also the chairman of Ko-Nelayan, a state-owned fisheries agency established in 1978. The agency’s chief aim is to develop the state’s fisheries and aquaculture industries.

    Wong urged the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) to conduct a thorough investigation on Samsudin’s position as a director of a Lahad Datu-based private aquaculture firm, Borneo Aqua Harvest Bhd.

    Speaking to the press yesterday, Wong said that Samsudin’s position in the company gave rise to a conflict of interest.

    “I am sure the success of this (Borneo Aqua Harvest) company can be attributed to the contribution of resources or skills from Ko-Nelayan to the company on the instruction of Samsudin.

    “This is definitely a case of conflict of interest. The government must explain this and the MACC must investigate for any abuse of power and corrupt practices,” he said.

    To substantiate his charge, he distributed copies of computer printout of the company’s corporate information which indicates that Samsudin is an independent non-executive director of the company.

    He said that Samsudin should immediately resign from Ko-Nelayan since he is a director in the private company.

    Wong also questioned the composition of Ko-Nelayan’s board of directors which, he said, comprised those from one particular community and did not reflect the 1Malaysia concept advocated by the government.

    “BN is talking about 1Malaysia but not practising what it preaches,” he said.

    End the farce

    On his revoked “native” status, Wong, the Sri Tanjung Assemblyman, said he was still waiting for the letter of revocation of his native certificate for him to take the matter to court.

    He urged the government to end the farce and immediately lift the freeze on the issuance of such certificates and restore the rights of those born of mixed parentage.

    “Thirty years is a very long time. Many Sino-natives have been deprived of their rights and privileges. They have lost out in terms of acquiring land, property and investment meant for the natives,” he said of the freeze that came into effect in the early 1980s.

    “Their children have also lost out in terms of scholarships and financial assistance. Their children may not be able to inherit their properties such as land. Their grandchildren will continue to lose out if they do not get recognition as natives,” he sid.

    Wong called on the government to put in place a “good system” to prevent abuse of the certificates.

    On the native courts, he proposed that such courts be placed on par with the civil and syariah courts.

    “They must be independent of the executive or the legislative (branches of the government),” he said, adding that the role of the government and legislature was to set the rules and policies and for the native courts to interpret them.

    Wong also urged the government to inform the National Registration Department to register children of mixed marriages according to their races such as Sino-Kadazan, Sino-Dusun, Sino-Murut, Sino-Ringus and not as Sino-Native in their MyKads.

    “Sino-Native is not a race, it is just a grouping,” he said.

    Incidentally, Samsudin was one of Wong’s chief “prosecutors” in the latter’s battle to retain his native status as a Sino-Kadazan.

    A Catholic view on Islam and Muslims in Malaysia

    Selena Tay,Harakah Daily

    I have always wanted to know more about Islam because I have heard that Islam is the Final Revelation. The phrase Final Revelation is mysterious, intriguing and powerful. All along I have been hesitant because until recently I have met only two types of Muslims:
    1. those who say that my religion is wrong; and
    2. those who keep urging me to convert to Islam.

    Call it Divine Providence (or what we Catholics like to describes as Gods mysterious ways), during a DAP Budget Forum in October 2009, I met someone from PAS whose calm and gentle demeanor encouraged me to find out more about Islam from him.

    Strangely though, he has never talked about Islam to me and that is what makes me want to know more about Islam.

    Now this persons motto is never fear to engage and never engage out of fear. At last, I found someone with whom some sensible and intellectual discussion can be held.

    What I learnt from him and his wife (a very nice lady whom I also got to know) is written here below, not as a theological treatise, but as solely my perspective on Islam.

    First and foremost is that Islam is more than just fasting, giving of alms or zakat, praying five times a day and going on a pilgrimage to Mecca. Islam is all in all. It is a way of life and therefore it permeates a Muslims thinking and behaviour 24/7.

    Weekend Muslims

    One is not only a Muslim on Fridays. Those are called Friday Muslims. In Cath! olicism, we also have Catholics who are not really practitioners of the faith but attend Church on Sundays. We call them Sunday Catholics.

    Islam being a complete way of life is more than just a belief system packaged with certain rites and rituals of worship. Islam governs life individually in a family unit and collectively as a nation. It is more than just a personal belief between the individual and his Creator.

    It must encompass the believers life in his home, office and society at large. Islam must exist in the Muslims soul, spirit and manner: in how he interacts with his family members, relatives, friends, office colleagueas, authorities, and so on.

    In all things, the Muslim must be true to the practice of his faith and must not go against the teachings of the Holy Quran and the Hadith (the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him).

    For example, it is forbidden for a Muslim to accept bribes. If a Muslim accepts a bribe, then he is going against the teachings of the Quran. Simply put, this means he is not a good Muslim. Even if he prays 50 times a day, it still does not wash off the fact that he has broken the commandment of God. Likewise, a Catholic who goes to Church on Sundays but bullies the maid on Mondays is not practising the faith at all. He is only engaging in a Sunday ritual.

    I have noticed that the members of the largest party in the ruling coalition who happen to be Muslims are not exemplary Muslims. They have a knack of telling lies and indulging in falsehood and this extends to the media controlled by them.

    In Islam, it is forbidden to spread lies and slander. Therefore it is truly baffling how members of this ruling party can go on telling lies with impunity and step into the mosque on Fridays. I can only conclude that they have no fear of God at all.

    The Muslim leaders of this country have continuously i! mplement ed policies that burden the rakyat and strangle the poor and the oppressed. Hence the soon-to-be implemented GST, also stands for Go Strangulate Them (them refers to the rakyat), besides being the Goods and Services Tax. They are not practising Islamic principles of governance as exemplified by Caliph Umar Abdul Aziz.

    Islamic governance and administration is fair and just to all and it cares most for those who are downtrodden but its a pity that the Muslim leaders of this country have succumbed to the evils of capitalism.

    Non-Muslims must not look to the Muslim leaders of the ruling coalition as exemplary Muslims. The values that they practice are not Islamic values. Instead they practice capitalistic values which is survival of the fittest, the dog-eat-dog law of the jungle.

    Islam is a religion of compassion and benevolence. I long for the day that a good and upright Muslim leader who truly practices Islamic values to govern this nation in a just and equitable manner according to the precepts of Islam. That can only come about if the Muslim population of this country truly adheres to the teachings of Islam and vote in such a God-fearing leader.


    Filed under: Alternatives, religion Tagged: Anak Sarawak Bangsa Malaysia, Save Sarawak
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