Pakatan Rakyat (PR) Social Political Buzz & Bulls

"RPK: I am the new Sultan of Selangor. That's why."

Rosmah is an innocent pussy ...

Rosmah's Picture On The Night Of Altantuya's Murder

Rosmah’s Picture On The Night Of Altantuya’s Murder But Anwar Is A Real Chicken

Video Anwar Terbaru



Pisau kata " Sempat bertemu dengan Baginda anak Minda @ Norazman Abdullah,banyak cerita bohong orang tua kutuk ni"A tale of betrayal after betrayal
from rockybru
"Suddenly, everyone who was part of the conspiracy to block Najib from taking over is a strong Najib supporter from way back in time." - Raja Petra Kamarudin in Now that the shit has hit the fan
The TV3 Interview: Why RPK really did it. According to RPK in his latest article, he did the interview "so that the story of my statutory declaration can be brought back to focus and corrected".
"Somehow, the statutory declaration I signed and what I actually said in that statutory declaration has been lost. And it has been lost because the focus is on my so-called allegation rather than what I actually said in the statutory declaration. Most seem to not understand that I did not make any allegation against Rosmah ..."
That may be the truth. Or not. With RPK, you can tell by now that you can't really tell. But in my view, if RPK had wanted the shit to hit the fan, he could have used the Courts. He was being sued by some of the parties he mentioned in the SD and what better opportunity to bring on his "reliable informers" other than the Courts of law. He would have the best lawyers in the country to keep him out of jail.

But he did not. He fled the country, instead. And with him goes the opportunity to prove that he did not really allege Rosmah of supervising the murder of Altantuya, that his SD was just about him being reliably informed about this and that.


One thing RPK has made clear in his latest posting is that he's coming after Bul and John Pang and Din Merican for basically playing him out. He claimed that these dudes were working for Anwar and Ku Li and they were the ones who wanted to block Najib from becoming Prime Minister ...
"When all hell broke loose I contacted Bul and met up with him. I asked him for a copy of the confidential military intelligence report. Bul said that they no longer have it. The entire file has been shredded, Bul said.
Surely they have a back up copy, I said.

Sorry, no back up copy. The report no longer exists. In fact, the entire file no longer exists.
The whole objective of this exercise was to block Najib Tun Razak from taking over as Prime Minister. If Abdullah Ahmad Badawi can be forced to resign, and if Najib can be blocked from taking over, then Tengku Razaleigh could become the next prime minister.

Earlier, a meeting was held in Tengku Razaleigh’s office. About 30 people attended the meeting cum buka puasa. A few Umno bloggers such as Big Dog and so on were there. PKR people like Adlan Benan Omar and Rafizi Ramli also came. And many others whom you will know if I mention their names also attended (I will leave it to them whether they want to surface, but they know who I am talking about).

The purpose of this meeting was to explore how it can be engineered so that Tengku Razaleigh can take over as prime minister. Bul, of course, was the ‘main speaker’ with all the ideas on how this can be achieved.

Today, Bul declares that he is a strong Najib supporter and that he has always supported Najib from way back. Suddenly he is no longer the man who was scheming on how to block Najib from taking over so that his boss, Tengku Razaleigh, can be the new prime minister.

Bul, who promised me that he will make sure I will never go to jail and that the military intelligence report would surface the instant the police come for me, today, tells me that the report no longer exists.

The question is, did the report even exist in the first place? And Din Merican, who spoke to Anwar and who assured me that Lt Kol Azmi is very reliable and John Pang, who spoke to Tengku Razaleigh on the same matter and gave that same assurance, have washed their hands of this whole matter.

I can understand Din leaving PKR to go back to the other side. He did tell everyone he is disillusioned with the party and he is not the first or the last. John Pang, however, is now with CIMB Jakarta and we all know who owns CIMB.

Suddenly, everyone who was part of the conspiracy to block Najib from taking over is a strong Najib supporter from way back in time."
There you have it. RPK has been stabbed in the back and he knows it now. Betrayed by people who today have kept their distance from him. And like the P. Ramlee movie Enam Jahanam, RPK is going after them one by one.


At 8 tonight, on Buletin Utama TV3, in the second part of his interview with Ashraf, RPK goes after another individual who has screwed him good.

(When she was 18 years old ?)

Rosmah’s Picture On The Night Of Altantuya’s Murder

KUALA LUMPUR – In an interview with TV3 which was broadcasted last night, the owner and editor of Malaysia Today, Raja Petra Kamaruddin (RPK) said he was no longer sure that the Prime Minister’s wife, Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor was at the murder scene of a Mongolian woman, Altantuya Shaariibuu.

“I no longer accept the story. I think it’s quite impossible. The Prime Minister’s wife could not have gone to a place like that, it’s a forest. I imagined, climbing the hill, going into the forest at 12 midnight, I think it’s impossible,”

He said so in an exclusive interview with TV3 Group Editor, Datuk Ashraf Abdullah in Perth, Australia recently.

Today, Mynewshub.my received a picture showing Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor attending a formal program at the Lembaga Tabung Haji Building in Jalan Ampang on the night of the incident.

“Other than RPK, anyone will not believe Rosmah wants to go into a forest whereas on that night she was celebrating the orphans because that was on the night of Ramadan 26, close to Hari Raya celebration,” said the unknown sender.

According to reports, Altantuya was killed around 10.00p.m to 1 a.m. on October 19 2006.



Jatuhkan Taib. Jatuhkan Najib. Jatuhkan BN

Sekiranya BN terus menang dengan 2/3 besok, maka Taib Mahmud akan terus memerintah Sarawak sehingga pilihanraya seterusnya. Tiada sebab beliau berundur kerana jelas rakyat masih memberi sokongan kepada beliau dgn majoriti 2/3.

Namun, kalau BN kalah besok, ertinya Pak Taib akan tersunggkur. Maka, Sarawak akan mendapat kerajaan dan Ketua Menteri yang baru.

Ia juga bererti Sarawak bukan negeri selamat untuk BN. Ia berpotensi untuk menyebabkan Barisan Nasional itu sendiri tersunggkur menyembah bumi.

Maka, haruslah semua pengundi Sarawak keluar mengundi besok dan mengundi Pakatan Rakyat demi masa depan Malaysia dan anak cucu kita.

UNDILAH PAKATAN RAKYAT

Tulang Besi


Snap supports PKRs Baru Bian as CM...

Snap today announced that it was willing to join a cabinet headed by PKRs Baru Bian as chief minister if the opposition managed to kick out Barisan Nasional tomorrow.
The notion that Baru Bian is to be the chief minister has been agreed upon by Pakatan Rakyat Sarawak. This is because Snap is a member of Pakatan Rakyat Sarawak, said its secretary-general, Edmund Stanley Jugol in a statement issued here today.

He assured that Snap strongly subscribed to the struggle of Pakatan Rakyat Sarawak.

In the event that PKR wins very few seats, and Snap captures more seats within the opposition front, Snap will offer DAP, PAS and PKR to jointly govern Sarawak, he said.

However, he lamented that PKR was spoiling the chances of Pakatan by contesting in too many seats and causing a split in the opposition votes.
Snap only fielded candidates in 26 areas. But PKR fielded 48 candidates which reduce the chances of Pakatan Rakyat Sarawak to win in the majority of the seats they contest, he noted.

Snap had previously come under fire from opposition groups over allegations that it was insincere and would switch sides after the election.





cheers.

Final countdown in BN 'fixed deposit' state....

The last day of the campaign has started and for the past few days, it has been ratcheted up to fever pitch on both sides. Larger crowds in the towns for the opposition have coincided with extensive, almost frenzied, visits by BN cabinet ministers far and wide throughout the state.'

Make no mistake about this - the stakes are high. This is a campaign that has national implications as BN's hold on power is at stake. A loss of the two-thirds majority in Sarawak was unthinkable less than 10 days ago, and now the focus centres around this important marker. It has been made clear that Sarawakians have the power to set the political direction for the country.

Three decisive groups

The situation on the ground remains very fluid with an unprecedented undecided voters, especially among the state's largest group, the Dayak. The range of possible outcomes moves from a minimum of 10 seats for the opposition to a maximum of 32, on the heels of a change in government. The reason for this wide range lies with the high degree of unknowns and the small swing needed to change results in tight seats. The most important unknown is the impact of financial rewards, anger over land grabbing and religious freedom. The fate of Sarawak's polls lies with all the communities, but especially the Dayaks.

The Orang Ulu, Bidayuh and Iban have more political power in this contest than they had had since the days of Stephen Kalong Ningkan and Tawi Sli Tini in the 1960s. And given the number of seats that have a large share of Dayak voters, over 30, they will determine the final outcome. Ethnically, the other groups that will shape the margin of results is the Malay community, where fear and the racial! card of possible displacement have played out in this campaign. The parallel has been made to Perak, where the BN has suggested that a vote for the opposition will be a vote for a non-Malay and DAP leadership.

Yet at the same time, they are asking the Malays to vote for a minority bumiputera chief minister, who it is claimed will not be able to hold Sarawak's diverse groups together. Political displacement and instability have been touted in a not-so-subtle manner and conflicting manners as issues of corruption and livelihoods have received less priority. It would seem that these messages of fear have been successful, but there is another unknown, the impact of the messenger. The campaign has been led by Najib Razak from peninsular Malaysia, and unlike the collaboration with locals that has been the pattern in the opposition, there is more unease.

Semenanjung leaders have sat in front of state leaders at meetings, and been portrayed more favourably in the campaign posters, causing the local Malays and Melanau to lose face. Many Malay Sarawakians feel a sense of displacement from Umno and Najib's leadership, and with the call by Najib for Taib Mahmud to step down, even feel betrayed. The tensions in the media between Najib and Taib has openly revealed differences in the BN leadership, which are not likely to be resolved easily, making for considerable uncertainty. Logistically, entertaining ministers from peninsular Malaysia has caused many a headache and distraction, allowing less concerted efforts in the campaign. This BN divide is affecting the campaign.

The third group that will shape the outcome is the young. While the change in loyalty among older voters is important, especially Chinese voters who w! ere prev iously loyal to SUPP, the young will have a voice this time. In 2006 and 2008, young voters voted more for the opposition than they did at any other times. Exposure to contrasting development models, lack of local job opportunities, and discontent with the older incumbents in the BN have had led to greater opposition allegiance.

The contrast in the choice of candidates is clear - the opposition candidates are much younger. Most are professionals who bring with them new ideas. In BN, there are only a handful of candidates less than 50 years old and even the impressive effort by SUPP to transform lacks a youthful face. Younger voters have engaged with alternative media sources as well, especially Sarawak Report through blogs and Facebook. What is unknown is how many of them will vote. Many of the youth at the rallies are unregistered voters, but those who are there are experiencing a political awakening. The young will play a crucial role this time round since they are less susceptible to vote buying and intimidation.

Conflicting campaign styles and messages

From the onset, the opposition has set the campaign and the BN has followed and responded, which is very different compare to the last few by-elections. As the campaign has drawn to a close, it has become clear that Malaysia continues to embrace modern campaigning, even in Sarawak. Yet, they have done it in contrasting ways.

For the opposition, there has been the focus on alleged abuses of power, especially corruption and land grabbing. The campaign has centred around Taib Mahmud, with open calls for him to step down after 30 years in office. It has focused on ubah or change, with successful sales of tens of thousands the 'Ubah' toy bi! rd, whic h is now only available on Ebay.

Despite early challenges with the seat allocations, the cooperation among Pakatan parties has been relatively smooth, which is not a surprise after 16 by-elections. The opposition has pointed to their governance records in peninsular Malaysia, especially Penang, to win support and illustrate that change is possible.

The criticisms against Taib and SUPP have been hard-hitting and personal as the opposition worked hard to draw attention to the problems of his lengthy tenure, with parallels to Egypt and the Middle East. Sarawakian voters have been reminded that they can make a difference; and the feeling of empowerment has raised expectations. For the opposition to gain seats, they have to instill a sense of positive change and hope, not just aiming to discredit the current leadership. The positive focus in the last few days of the opposition campaign has aimed to win the middle ground, to move the bar from 10 seats to 24.

For BN, the messages have also been both negative and positive. The use of fear and ethnic cards has been tried and tested. The BN has also gone after the opposition. They were attacked for violating Sarawak political culture through its hard-hitting messages, and there had been an appeal to the perceived conservative and reserved nature of Sarawakians to reject what has been called lies and intimidation. The crowds have been linked to instability and provocation. They have argued that the opposition criticisms have lacked substantive evidence and crossed the line of civility. On some points, such as the comparison of the SUPP to orangutans, they may have a point.

Yet, there is a double standard as they themselves have engaged in campaigning that goes beyond fair play. Yesterday, there were widespread series of inaccurate SMSes on the opposition, such as the closure of the Batu Kawah service centers. These inaccuracies do not go down with the local ! communit ies and look rather foolish. The main focus of the negative attacks remains on Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim, from the sex video to RPK (blogger Raja Petra Kamarudin).

There is an obsession with discrediting the Pakatan leader. So far, it has had limited impact in Sarawak, given the disengagement with this style of Peninsular Malaysian politics. This effort misses the point - what many Sarawakians are concerned with are economic concerns and their families. Rather than sex, the moral issue that has had the most salience is the issue of religious freedom. And while Najib and Taib should be credited for their efforts to reach out to the Christians, it remains to be seen whether the discussions will address the damage that has been done.

The movement in the BN campaign has been from more positive messages of development outlined in their manifesto and through more understanding statements on religion, to negative attacks and greater use of fear. The contest for the middle ground is at stake, with the opposition focusing on the positive and the BN highlighting the negative. With the large degree of undecided voters, these strategies are indeed risky for both sides.



Integrity of the election process


Crucial however will be the actual conduct of the election. The signs of the integrity of the process being undermined are on the horizon and extremely worrying. Postal voting was extended beyond the time allocated and polling agents were asked to be over 50 metres away, unable to do their jobs properly. This violated the whole spirit of fair play. Some polling agents are apparently being refused for polling day on spurious grounds of not coming from that community, again violating pract! ices tha t suggest that the process is not professional and open.

There are concerns with the relocation of voters, with reports of up to 50,000 voters moved or potentially missing. There are questions about additional voters being found. With the blatant denial of Bersih 2.0 leaders entry into Sarawak, who are involved in assuring and protecting a fair conduct of the polls, the international reputation of Malaysia has already been dented. If the process lacks integrity, this will cause even more anger as was shown in Egypt recently and historically in neighbouring countries such as the Philippines in 1986. Any possible fixing of the fixed deposit state may have short-term benefits, but will have long-term costs.

Sarawakians have power in their hands. Whoever Sarawakians support, it is important that they come out and vote. Their voice will be heard now more than ever. Whatever the outcome in the final results, this campaign has shown that the Malaysian elections are increasingly competitive, even in the areas where they are seen to be secured. Irrespective of the final numbers, change has already come to Sarawak. How much of that is in the hands of the voters. - Bridget Welsh source:malaysiakini







cheers.

BNs concert, lucky draw no match for Pakatan rally....

Last night, with just a day left for campaigning, BN was still struggling to keep up with Pakatans crowd sizes at rallies in Kuching. BN held one of its biggest outdoor events yesterday, with a open air concert at the 101 Commercial Centre on Jalan Tun Jugah, where several hawkers centres are located and cater to hundreds of diners on any given night.

Billed as A night with the Kuching five tigers, a newspaper advertisement for the event promised lucky draw prizes, which turned out to be flat-screen TVs, and entertainment by prominent singers from Peninsular Malaysia. The five tigers are the Sarawak United Peoples Party (SUPP) candidates for Pending, Kota Sentosa, Padungan, Batu Lintang and Batu Kawah, who took turns on stage, in between several BN leaders from the peninsula.

Former PKR Youth chief Ezam Mohd Noor was a surprise first speaker at the event, and went on his usual PKR-bashing spree, thought in a much more watered-down manner because Chinese crowds are not his usual audience. Ezam called on the people present to reject his former party and its leader Anwar Ibrahim on grounds that most of PKRs founders had already left the party.

My party registeration number is 007. James Bond, said Ezam, but his joke was lost among the crowd, And I have left the party. The only one left (among the founders) is 001 Dr Wan Azizah (Wan Ismail).

When SUPP Youth chief Sih Hua Tong, the BN candidate for Batu Lintang, took the stage later, his main agenda was to lambast the DAP for sparking what Chinese dailies have referred to as the orang utan row. SUPP has taken strong offence to a DAP ceramah speakers phonetic pun on SUPPs name in Chinese, by calling it the orang utan party.

It was rather difficul! t to gau ge if the crowd shared his sentiments, even when Sih openly asked if they were offended. The reaction from the crowd was relatively lukewarm when compared with the Pakatan rallies, but it was quite clear that SUPPs candidate for Pending, cardiologist Dr Sim Kui Hian, does have a sizeable following.

A significant number of people were seen leaving the venue after the speech by Sim, who is considered one of the strongest candidates fielded by the BN and the only one seen as having a fighting chance of uprooting a DAP incumbent.

About 2km away at Taman BDC, the atmosphere was completely different, with people packed like sardines for a DAP-organised ceramah in the carpark of a small business centre. PKR de facto leader Anwar Ibrahim was the star speaker of the night who whipped the crowd into a frenzy within minutes of his speech.

Anwar told the crowd, which according to one conservative estimate numbered about 3,000, that he had been pounding the campaign trail from cities and towns to the remote reaches of Kapit and found that the tide was turning against BN. I am confident that this time, Sarawak will make history! thundered Anwar, to loud applause and hoots of agreement.

Peppering his speech with annecdotes from the rural areas, Anwar was clearly on a mission to erase any doubts among the urban crowd that the winds of change were sweeping throughout the state. He then went on to explain how the Sarawak BN and the Pakatan-governed states were at polar opposites in terms of transparency, and how differently the two coalitions dealt with corruption.

Underscoring the fact that he was born and bred in Penang, Anwar said his chief minister Lim Guan Eng had i nitiated a policy in which serving lawmakers could not apply to buy state land, an issue that is contentious in Sarawak. He said that when he told longhouse tuai rumah (headmen) this story, the response had been absolute disbelief and confusion.

When I tell longhouse people this, they dont believe Guan Eng has never taken an inch of land, said Anwar, who went on to describe Guan Eng as the best chief minister Penang ever had and the crowd appeared to agree. Even after Anwar left, the bulk of the crowd remained for a speech by DAP supremo Lim Kit Siang, who capped off the night.

Tonight, DAP and PKR will be jointly hold their final election rally at Jalan Stutong, where Karpal Singh, Nurul Izzah Anwar and Nga Kor Ming will be speaking. The five SUPP candidates will be holding their own finale at the Kenyalang Shopping Centre, backed up by speakers from the MCA central leadership.

source:malaysiakini









cheers.

A message from Baru Bian.....

Dear Fellow Sarawakians,

On Saturday, 16th April, Sarawak goes to the polls. Sarawak today stands at the brink. Our state is broken and bleeding, the people oppressed, no thanks to deep corruption and massive abuses by this BN state government led by CM Abdul Taib Mahmud.

Poverty remains deeply entrenched. Wealth inequality is very large. Taib Mahmud and his family have become the richest political family in South East Asia. BN politicians and crony businessmen have also become extremely rich and have hidden all their wealth overseas.

Meanwhile, many Malays and Native Bumiputeras live in crushing poverty. And things are getting worse. The price of petrol and essential commodities like food are rising and rising due to BN's inefficient management of the economy. The poor are going to suffer the most when Barang Naik (BN) lagi!

NCR Land belonging to the native Bumiputeras of Sarawak has been grabbed by Abdul Taib Mahmud's family and political cronies for themselves.

The development of rural infrastructure has been neglected even ignored. Abdul Taib Mahmud's politics of development has been a dismal failure. Our rural health service is broken and under-serviced while our rural schools are badly resourced. Roads and other rural infrastructure promised by the BN are not built.

This election is critical. CM Abdul Taib Mahmud refuses to step down. He needs our help. We have to make him retire. This election is critical. BN is incapable of reform or renewal. They talk about "transformation" but they do little.

After 30 years of BN government, things are worse than ever. The rot ! in our p ublic services is too deep and our state leaders must be changed if we want to save our state and its people.

As the "hottest ever" election in the state since 1987, we therefore urge all Sarawakian voters outside Sarawak to please return to your constituency in Sarawak and to vote for change and for justice. Vote for PKR!

If you are unable to return home to vote, then we urge you to phone, e-mail, tweet, and/or campaign via facebook to encourage all your family and friends living outside Sarawak to return home to vote.

As well, we urge all Sarawakians to contact and speak with their family and friends who are voting in Sarawak to urge them to be brave and to vote for PKR. Tell them not to be afraid of BN intimidation but to vote for change and for justice.

Sarawak needs you! Will you respond?

Berubahlah! Vote PKR! Vote for change and for justice. The time is NOW!

Yours sincerely,
Baru Bian






cheers.

PRN SARAWAK: UBAH... KEPADA YANG LEBIH BURUK???

(click on image for larger view)





DAPs flash overshadows SUPPs staid approach

But it is likely the strength of the anti-Taib sentiment that will tilt the votes as the candidates from both sides play out their endgame. As campaigning draws down to the final 24 hours in the Sarawak elections, political parties are scrambling to move their chess pieces to checkmate their rivals.

While the fight for the urban areas have never been this intense in Sarawaks history, some parties are sticking to their tried-and-tested strategy while some are venturing into uncharted territory. The battle in the urban areas Kuching, Miri and Sibu is predominantly a SUPP vs DAP game. Though DAP has started out as the underdog, it is clear that the tables have turned.

On the first night of campaigning itself, thousands thronged to the DAP ceramah, either out of support or curiosity to catch a glimpse of top party leaders. In Kuching, DAP secretary-general Lim Guan Eng attracted a crowd of 5,000, packed into the tiny square of an open-air hawker centre in the Premier 101 Commercial Centre.

SUPP was forced to play catch-up the partys candidates only began their circuit of public speeches a few days after that while unable to draw big crowds, many preferred to conduct house-to-house campaigns or meet voters table-to-table in coffeeshops. In Miri however, SUPP was taken aback by the crowds that just kept on increasing at each DAP ceramah.

SUPP, led by party president Dr George Chan, could only watch with dismay as the crowd swelled to as many as 15,000 in his own backyard when DAP veteran Lim Kit Siang was in town on the fourth day. Four-digit figures became the norm for DAP ceramah in this second largest town in Sarawak. Despite the saying that Chan is synonymous with Miri, it appears that the parting of ways is nigh i! f cerama h figures are to believed.

Similarly in Sibu, when Guan Eng flew into the town where DAP is contesting in four seats, he drew enormous interest. Delivering rostrum pounding speeches when he was not breaking into song notably No money, no money for you to the popular Wondergirls tune Nobody nobody but you he certainly created a buzz. But there was also the fear of peaking too early, said DAP strategist Liew Chin Tong, the party headquarters pointman in Sibu, when met several days ago. We are hoping that we can keep up with this momentum, he told Malaysiakini right before the halfway point in the gruelling 10-day campaign.



SUPPs low key approach

If DAPs style is to go in with guns blazing and a rock concert-atmosphere in their functions, SUPP could not be more different. Facing an image problem where many of them are already in their twilight years their candidates average age is 57 in contrast with DAPs 39 SUPPs modus operandi is almost the same in all parts of the state that they are contesting in.

Starting off their campaign first with quiet and low-key door-to-door visits, much of their activities also hinged on big dinners with the various Chinese associations, or whatever associations they could find. However, they soon had to change tactics after repeatedly being hit by one blow after another, when DAP capitalised on the simmering anti-Abdul Taib Mahmud sentiment among the urban Chinese voters by linking the SUPP leadership with the unpopular chief minister.

Forced on the back foot, their response was to challenge DAP to contest against Taib in his home turf of Balingian if they really had a beef with him and wanted the CM, who has been in power for three decades, gone. They later rang! out a m essage that the Chinese representation in the state cabinet would be severely weakened and greatly diminished if the party candidates were to be voted out.

Taking out a half-page advertisement in two of the best-selling Chinese daily in See Hua Daily and Sin Chew Daily, the party warned the Chinese voters that they may lose the deputy chief ministers post, as well as all of the ministers and deputy ministers positions. But they are not sitting idly by while the attendance in DAP ceramah grows from strength to strength. Like army ants, SUPP has deployed their members to go house-to-house though with very little publicity. It is understood that in these visits, the party members offered sweeteners of sorts to persuade the voters to support them.


Diverting attention

SUPP has also taken to organising grand dinners, complete with lucky draws and performances by local artists, strategically very close to where DAP is supposed to have their ceramah, in hopes that the voters attention would be diverted. It appeared to work in the smaller towns when a SUPP dinner overshadowed a DAP ceramah in the village of Tanjung Kunyit near Sibu, leaving the opposition with only a crowd of 50 hardcore supporters listening to their speeches.

While DAP is making headway in the urban areas, the party has also stepped up its efforts to woo rural Chinese in the second half of the campaign. The rural Chinese, long known to be core SUPP supporters for decades, mostly eke out simple lives as farmers.

Though their houses can be considered elemental by modern standards, some lacking running water and electricity, for them it is a case of where the wrong has become the norm. This is where the! DAP cou ld be losing the battle as much of their efforts are focused on town centres.





cheers.

Anwar tak beredar bila ditanya tentang video seks, jam Omega...

Ketua Pembangkang Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim di Kapit satu kawasan pedalaman di wilayah tengah Sarawak menghentikan ceramahnya secara tiba-tiba setelah beliau disoal tuai rumah panjang mengenai video seks dan jam tangan Omega miliknya, kata seorang saksi hari ini, lapor Bernama.

Anwar, yang bercakap selama 20 minit, ditanya Tuai Rumah Edison Bugap di Melekun, Kapit, mengenai video seks, jam tangan Omega miliknya, kes liwat membabitkannya dan menegaskan bahawa penduduk rumah panjang ingin mendengar dari mulut Anwar sendiri mengenainya.

Anwar yang jelas kurang senang dengan pertanyaan itu enggan menjawab, sebaliknya memberitahu kira-kira 120 hadirin bahawa mereka sepatutnya lebih memikirkan tentang isu pembalakan dan Tanah Hak Adat, kata seorang penduduk kepada Bernama. Ketua umum PKR itu menamatkan ceramahnya dengan mendadak dan meninggalkan majlis, tanpa terlebih dahulu meminta diri.

Isu video seks, membabitkan seorang pelacur dengan pelaku yang mirip ketua pembangkang itu, terus-menerus menghantui siri kempennya pada pilihan raya negeri Sarawak. Ahad lepas, Anwar memarahi seorang wartawan penyiaran yang mengutarakan soalan mengenai jam Omega itu. Anwar menafikan jam Omega yang didakwa ditemui dalam sebuah bilik hotel selepas adengan seks yang dirakam itu, miliknya.

Sementara itu, seorang saksi insiden itu, ketika dihubungi Malaysiakini, menafikan apa yang dilaporkan oleh agensi berita nasional itu.

Apa yang berlaku ialah Anwar menyampaikan ucapannya apabila seorang tuai rumah (penghulu rumah panjang) bertanya tentang jam tangan Omega, video seks dan perbicaraan kes liwat, katanya yang tidak mahu namanya disebut. Anwar, katanya, menjawab soalan tersebut dan diterima ol! eh hadir in dan ketua umum PKR itu beredar seperti yang dilaporkan.

Menurut saksi itu lagi, beliau melihat satu SMS mengenainya dan menganggap ianya satu pemalsuan oleh jentera BN untuk memalukan Anwar.

Apa yang berlaku ialah selepas Anwar menjawab soalan itu, beliau meneruskan ceramahnya. Orang itu yang meninggalkan rumah panjang dan bukannya Anwar, katanya. Beliau juga mempertikaikan jumlah hadirin di rumah panjang itu adalah 120 orang seperti yang dilaporkan kerana menurutnya terdapat 500 hingga 700 hadirin semasa insiden pada jam 11 pagi.

Katanya, kerusi Baleh menyaksikan pertandingan dua penjuru antara calon BN, Datuk James Masing dan Frankie Bedindang dari PKR.

source:malaysiakini

Kebangkitan rakyat bakal ubah Sarawak Anwar

Kebangkitan rakyat Sarawak melawan kezaliman regim Barisan Nasional (BN) pada pilihan raya negeri kali ini adalah sejarah yang belum pernah berlaku, kata Ketua Umum KEADILAN, Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, malam tadi.

Tidak pernah terjadi dalam sejarah Sarawak sebelum ini yang rakyat bangkit untuk membuat perubahan. Kita bukan hanya mahu gantikan kerajaan, tetapi kita mahu ubah sistem yang rosak oleh pentadbiran BN, katanya pada program Grand Finale di sini, malam tadi.

Ribuan penduduk setempat bersesak-sesak hadir bagi mengikuti ceramah Anwar di Bandar Baru Semariang, Kuching malam ini. Buat pertama kali, rakyat Sarawak menunjukkan sokongan jitu melawan regim BN yang selama ini mendominasi pemerintah negeri itu tetapi gagal menangani dan membela kebajikan rakyat walaupun Sarawak antara negeri terkaya di Malaysia.

Sebelum ini,parti pembangkang baik parti kelahiran negeri itu mahupun yang beribu pejabat di Semenanjung Malaysia sukar b! ertapak di negeri itu tetapi kini, segala-galanya berubah berdasarkan perkembangan politik semasa di Sarawak kebelakangan ini.



Ribuan rakyat pelbagai etnik berhimpun menunjukkan isyarat kebangkitan rakyat kepada regim BN Acara itu adalah program kemuncak anjuran KEADILAN yang turut menampilkan tokoh dan pimpinan Pakatan Rakyat termasuk Presiden KEADILAN, Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah; Timbalan Presiden, Mohamed Azmin Ali dan Naib Presiden PAS, Datuk Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man.

Pada program itu, Anwar turut memperkenal calon-calon Pakatan Rakyat bagi Dewan Undangan Negeri (DUN) Satok, Semariang, Tupong, Pantai Damai dan Demak Laut. Inilah pimpinan yang kita tampilkan. Kita bukan hanya cakap-cakap kosong tetapi kita sudah buktikan di negeri yang ditadbir Pakatan Rakyat, kata Anwar.

Terdahulu, Anwar turut berceramah di Borneo Development Centre (BDC) Kuching, Bazar Serian di pekan Serian, Saadon Jaya dan pekan Asajaya yang semuanya mendapat sambutan hebat dari segenap lapisan etnik di Bumi Kenyalang itu.

source:keadilandaily





cheers.

BNs cyber-attacks designed to rig the Sarawak polls

Both Sarawak Report and Malaysiakini have been experiencing unrelenting denial-of-service attacks that temporarily brought them down in the closing days of the Sarawak state election.

On April 16, around one million voters in Sarawak will choose their new state government. These alternative media sites have been dispensing vital information to help the Sarawak voters decide who they want to elect as their parliamentary representative and which party to lead them.

In order to exercise their right to vote, accurate and timely information about the candidates, political parties and election manifestos, as well as the crucial issues of the day and dirty tactics have all been reported by these sites.

When respected news portals like Malaysiakini and the independent media site, Sarawak Report were brought down, it must mean that the information these sites contained, was something that BN did not want released to the public.

Malaysiakini is a popular alternative online newspaper whilst Sarawak Report is a website which is critical of Sarawak Chief Minister Taib Mahmud.

Sarawak Report has published detailed allegations about Taib and his familys extensive business interests, disproportionate wealth, massive land grabs, his properties in over four continents and his dependence on witchcraft (using bomohs) for making critical decisions of state.

Both these sites are currently experiencing a full-scale Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS).

Selangor Mentri Besar Khalid Ibrahim has condemned the cyber-attacks: The cowardly actions of the perpetrators this close to election day reflect a deep insecurity about the upcoming results of the Sarawak elections. These attacks can only mean that parties sympathetic to BN greatly fea! r the sp read of the truth truth that will hasten the impending departure of Taib Mahmud and his corrupt government.

This is exactly the same suppression of the groundswell of a popular uprising and the use of the internet to ignite a peoples movement that was seen in the Middle East revolutions, said Khalid.

When ex-president Hosni Mubarak of Egypt was faced with the popular uprising, one of the first things he did was to shut off the Internet and mobile phones, before blocking Twitter and Facebook. He knew that these tools were used to coordinate and spread the word about the demonstrations that were scheduled for Jan 25.

Without these mass organising tools, it is highly likely that fewer people would have known about the protests, or summoned the kind of courage that was made possible by knowing youre not the only one sticking your neck out. Without them, fewer people might have shown up.

BN is afraid that by completely switching off the internet, it might hasten a revolution similar to the one in Egypt. That is why it has only attacked the sites it finds most threatening.

BN has tricked the Sarawak people of its riches. It has used Taib to divert most of the money derived from petroleum into the coffers at Putrajaya and possibly straight into Umno. Taib is allowed a free rein to do whatever he pleases with the rest of Sarawaks natural resources, like timber.

Big money attacks

Malaysiakini was attacked on April 12, incapacitating its two locally hosted servers and forcing the owners of the paid subscription site to resort to Facebook, WordPress and other free publishing platforms to get their news out.

In the wake of these attacks, Malaysiakini has received a wave of public support.

Weve been receiving numerous phone calls and emails urging us to persevere, said Malaysiakini CEO Premesh Chandran.

Readers have also been very generous in making donations to Malaysiakini and we thank them for their support, he added.

! Malaysia kini has plans to deploy more servers to cope with the increased traffic over the next few days.

We expect more than one million people to follow the Sarawak election results live on Saturday. We are preparing as much capacity as possible to support the traffic, said Premesh.

The cyber-attack which incapacitated Sarawak Report started on April 10.

Author and founder Clare Rewcastle Brown said, The attack on Sarawak Report has been unprecedented, according to one of the largest hosting companies in the world, which has been forced to drop our site in order to continue operations.

We suffered yet another distributed denial of service attack last night. It happened around 8pm UK time after a build-up over a number of hours. This was far larger than the previous attacks over the weekend, and separate to a hacking attack the day before.

Clare said the website host, a major company in the US, said this was something that went above what they know.

According to her, a senior engineer from the hosting company said it was an unprecedented denial-of-service attack against the website, which was so big that it was affecting their whole server infrastructure.

Therefore, we were kindly asked not to host our website with them again because they cannot handle such levels of attack.

We are now up in a number of capacities, including WordPress. It is noted that WordPress, which is considered the worlds rock-solid hosting site, reported that for the first time yesterday they were nearly brought down by a hacking attack.

Most organised hacker

If what the hosting companies say is true, then big money is behind all these cyber-attacks.

If WordPress, one the worlds biggest hosting sites was nearly brought down, then the people behind these attacks are afraid, and desperate.

With much to lose, BN and the people affiliated to it are prepared to silence Sarawak Report and Malaysiakini, so that the people of Sarawak are prevented! from se eking, receiving and sharing vital information that can help them decide on their representatives and government.

How amusing that APCO, which must be orchestrating these attacks, has become one of the largest and most well organised hacker in the world.

Mariam Mokhtar, a petroleum chemist and an environmental pollution-control scientist, is a columnist with FMT


The rural seats targeted by Pakatan...

Moving into the final 24 hours of the most competitive election campaign in Sarawaks history, BN is bracing itself for further setback in a state which its leaders have declared their fixed deposit.

At the onset, the opposition Pakatan Rakyat coalition is facing an uphill battle against BN component parties that are operating primarily on their home ground.

But it is especially a David versus Goliath scenario in the battle for bumiputera-majority seats in the rural areas, in particular the strongholds of Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmuds Parti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu (PBB).

While analysts predict the incumbent coalition is likely retain its two-thirds majority, even its most confident proponents know that Taibs 30-year rule has led to enough discontent on the ground to inject a level of uncertainty on whether BN can stop Pakatan from claiming the magic number of 24 seats.

But to deny BN its much coveted two-thirdss majority, Pakatan cannot rely on winning urban seats alone as more than 70 percent of the 71 seats up for grabs are in the rural areas. It will need to win more than a few rural constituencies and Pakatan has its best chances in the following seats:

BaKelalan: PKR confident of bagging 60 percent of votes

BaKelalan is the focus of BNs machinery because it is contested by Sarawak PKR chief Baru Bian. While PKR is confident of winning the seat, it is nevertheless worried about the switch in polling stations amo! ng many voters in this remote constituency. Its machinery is busy checking the electoral rolls to provide early warning to those affected.

Paul Bian, campaign manager of Baru, told Malaysiakini that they found more than half of the voters had been transferred to different polling stations. According to him, this is a move to confuse the voters. Leaflets claiming that Baru a lawyer well-known for representing natives in NCR land legal cases against the government had made huge profit from these cases, were found making their rounds in the constituency, lamented Paul.

He also claimed that vote-buying in BaKelalan has increased to unprecedented levels, where each family is being offered between RM1,000 and RM2,000, the highest in the state. Not surprisingly, the hilly rural constituency has drawn BN heavyweights including Defense Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein, Rural and Regional Development Minister Shafie Apdal and Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak, who is scheduled to visit today.

However, Paul is confident that Baru, who is making his third attempt for the seat, will emerge victorious this Saturday. This time I dont think money politics will have much effect. We started very early to educate the voters. I think we can win over 60 percent of support, said Paul.

Belaga: BN pays compensation at eleventh hour

According to local activist and blogger Wing Miku, PRS president James Masing was scheduled to present a cheque and land titles to the tuai rumah of longhouses in Sungai Asap this morning as compensation for relocation. Located in the rural constituncy of Belaga, Sungai Asap is the resettlement area for natives affected by the construction of Bakun dam.

However, he told Malaysiakini that the compensation is only half of the promised amount and the land titles will only be for 60 years, far short of what the natives had demanded. It is not clear whether this last-mi! nute mov e will impact Pakatans chances in claiming the seat.

Beting Maro: PAS hope for a breakthrough

PAS, which has never won any seat in Sarawak, is contesting in five seats. Of these five, it is Beting Maro where BNs winning margin is lowest 895 votes. However, money politics remained the main concern of PAS in this Malay/Melanau-majority rural seat.

There is an area where every family was given RM200. They also ask PAS for money in exchange for their support but I refused because this is corruption, said Jamaludin Ishak, a PAS campaigner there. I told them that today they give you RM200, tomorrow they will take land that is worth RM2 million. Do you want RM200 or defend your land?

Jamaludin claimed that PAS is confident of securing the majority of the eight percent Iban voters, but the rest of the 90-percent Malay/Melanau voters are still being wooed by both PAS and PBB.

Saribas: PKR sends SOS to Anwar

In Saribas, a Malay/Melanau-majority rural seat where PKR was defeated by BN with a wafer-thin of 94 votes in the last polls, PKR campaigners accused BN of dishing out cash and pigs to the Iban longhouses over the past few days.

We hope to launch a counter-attack by inviting (PKR de facto leader) Anwar Ibrahim to give a speech on the last night. No need to be long, 30 minutes is enough (to swing votes), said Saribas PKR campaign director Abang Kassim Abang Bujang.

He told Malaysiakini that BN will be sending heavyweights Malacca Chief Minister Mohd Ali Rustam and Agriculture Minister Noh Omar to campaign in Saribas in the final round of campaigning. Abang Kassim claimed that PKR is still leading in the race with 51 percent of support.

NCR la! nd and A l Kitab issues key in Bidayuh belt

PKR is eyeing six Bidayuh-majority areas of Kedup, Tarat, Bengoh, Tebedu, Opar and Tasik Biru.

According to PKR Youth leader Lee Khai Loon, who has been camping out in Kedup, Tarat and Bengoh, the reception has been overwhelming compared to 2006 when the response was cold.

We dont need to say anything. They come to us and tell us, We are aware now, we want change, he said, flagging native customary rights land, the Al Kitab and Allah issues as the hot-button topics which have raised political awareness within the community.

In more urban Tasik Biru and Opar, the Chinese minority there harboured strong anti-Taib sentiments, while the better educated Bidayuh are learning to accept the many goodies handed out by BN without feeling compelled to mark the dacing. All the same, the next 24 hours will be crucial as talk of vote buying pervades the more rural sections of the Bidayuh community. BN, however, has vehemently denied it was involved in vote-buying.

Pelagus, Telang Usan remain black for BN

According to local Chinese daily See Hua Daily, PRS president James Masing claimed that the four dangerous seats for PRS, which was announced by him earlier, has now reduced to only one Pelagus. He accused Sarawak tycoon Sng Chee Hua, the father of partyless former Pelagus assemblyperson Larry Sng (right in photo), who has been dropped in this election, of assisting the opposition candidate in Pelagus.

Earlier, Masing was reported as saying that PRS did not need the Sngs to retain Pelagus, but he later changed his tune and requested Larry to campaign for BN. Larry has however snubbed his former president. It is learnt PRS candidate Stanley Unja will face sabotage from supporters of Larry, who is a popular leader in Pelagus. Meanwhile, Telang Usan is another BN black seat due to the proposed construction of Baram dam, which would flood more than half of the longhouses alo! ng the B aram river.

source:malaysiakini






cheers.

Bukan Setakat RPK Sahaja yang Tuduh, Akhbar LIBERATIONS Pun Tuduh Sama


Tuduhan penglibatan Najib dan Rosmah di dalam pembunuhan Altantunya bukan terhad datangnya dari RPK sahaja, ia juga dibuat oleh Akhbar LIBERATION yang berpengkalan di Paris.

Artikel tersebut bertajuk "The Altantuya Shaaribuus Case : How and why she was killed?". Ianya pertama kali diterbitkan di sebuah akhbar Perancis bernama The Liberation pada 5 March 2009.

Artikel tersebut ditulis oleh seorang wartawan bernama Arnaud Dubus yang berpengkalan di Thailand. Di dalam menulis artikel tersebut beliau telah pergi ke Kuala Lumpur, Ulan Batoor serta Paris.

Beliau juga menemuramah beberapa orang di tempat yang beliau pergi termasuk kawan baik Altantunya serta ahli keluarga Altantuya.

Terdapat banyak tuduhan dan pendedahan yang dimuatkan dalam artikel tersebut.

Soalnya sekarang adalah:

1.0 Wartawan tersebut membuat tuduhan yang agak sama dengan tuduhan Raja Petra tetapi beliau melakukan kajian dan siasatan beliau sendiri

2.0 Sehingga hari ini Kerajaan Malaysia tidak berani menyaman Akhbar Liberation kerana menerbitkan artikel tersebut.

3.0 Penulis artikel masih lagi bertanggungjawab terhadap kandungan artikel tersebut.

Maka, bukan Raja Petra seorang yang menuduh akan keterlibatan Najib dan Rosmah di dalam pembunuhan Altantunya.

Kenapa masih teragak-agak untuk menubuhkan Suruhanjaya Diraja menyiasat pembunuhan Altantuya?

Tulang Besi



Rise in Malay votes in sight for PKR....

sarawak election pkr ceramah sibu 120411 nangka candidate norisham mohamed aliFirst-time candidate for Nangka, Norisham Mohamed Ali, 29 (right), must have been feeling the pressure when he gave his ceramah in Sibu two nights ago. Not only were there 500 pairs of judging eyes watching the baby-faced oil and gas engineer's every move, sitting on a plastic chair right behind him was his big boss, PKR de facto leader Anwar Ibrahim.

Sitting with his legs and arms crossed and his chin resting on his hand, Anwar must have thought long and hard about the party's chances in Nangka, a constituency with 48 percent Malay-Melanau voters.

While much of the more densely-populated parts of the constituency envelope a part of the Sibu town centre, driving out of the town for maybe less than five minutes, one might encounter a twilight zone of a different civilization and culture.

Along Jalan Kampung Datu, just a stone's throw away from the edge of Sibu city, one will find rows and rows of kampung houses built on stilts (though with practical purposes - it floods in the area regularly).

Gone is the shaky SUPP territory that may just fall in the clutches of DAP come polling day - we are in the Parti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu (PBB) heartland now. Nangka has never fallen to the opposition in recent years.

Considered to be the stronghold of Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud's own party, former deputy speaker Awang Bemee Awang Ali Basah had held the seat for three terms until he was unceremoniously dropped from candidacy. Some say that he has gotten too big for his britches. I never see him around unless it's time to be re-elected, said a chatty 75-year-old man when met on the street.

Though happy to spill the gossip on Awang Bemee and which villages had received l! and titl es almost immediately after the Sibu by-election last year that DAP's Wong Ho Leng won, the suntanned elderly Malay man suddenly clammed up when asked about Taib. I think he's okay. I don't know. I think there's a 50-50 chance in Nangka, he said before bidding farewell.

Undercurrent of dissent

Other Malays in the area polled had almost similar sentiments. A shy goreng pisang seller just down the road also only gave a muted response when asked about Taib. Smiling nervously, she said she wasn't sure when asked if he was still popular.

While life is not exceptionally hard for them, save for the occasional flooding and rising cost of goods, the Malay Nangka folk were not terribly in want as compared to their Iban counterparts living just an hour's drive away without running water or electricity. But they have a lot of problems. There is a lot of poverty, unemployment and the floods that come in two or three times a year, said Norisham when met on his walkabout yesterday.

Though the people met at Kampung Datu did not seem to have anything bad to say about the ruling coalition, they were not as ecstatic as, say, the mood right before the 2004 general election which delivered BN the best results ever since 1956. Norisham, who squares off with fellow political novice and cardiologist from PBB, Dr Annuar Rapa'ee, meanwhile acknowledged that it would be a tough fight for him and for PKR.

The party still appears to be a foreign concept to the people of Nangka, without much party flags and banners around. Things appear to be the same as well in other areas of Sarawak down south, such as Asajaya and Sadong Jaya (contested by PAS), about 60km away from Kuching.

There may be some unhappiness but all in all life seems pretty decent around here, with BN flags fluttering about in the wind. There is no real sense of brewing dissatisfaction as there is i! n Chines e areas in Kuching or even Bidayuh areas.

However, PKR is quick to bank in on the lack of basic infrastructure that has been hounding the area, with spray-painted banners demanding the state government to repair rickety bridges and to issue land titles.

Standing nearby was a small wooden shack selling petrol and recycled cooking oil in Coke bottles. The nearest petrol station is 30km away, hence fuel here retails at RM3 per litre. I don't know. We write in to complain all the time, but I guess the chief minister does not bother, said a Malay woman in her early 40s manning the shop.

NONE

Rising political awareness

Though Taib's alleged vast amounts of ill-gotten wealth may still seem far-fetched for the simple folk of rural Sarawak, it is the small cases with their own local village authority that has gotten some of them enraged.

In Demak Laut, about 40km away from Kuching with 91 percent Malay voters, the fishing villagers of Kampung Seberang Bako have never been this angry. Living in dilapidated wooden houses on the water, the main industry is belacan and cincalok-making, with many of them under government programmes by Federal Agricultural Marketing Authority (Fama).

A man transfixed to TV3's Buletin Utama when met in his house revealed that it is not the government that they are angry with, but the local leaders, some of whom are linked to PBB. He said that the local village authority (JKKK) had pocketed the allocation meant to fix their fields and halls meant for cottage industries. People are so angry with him that someone splashed paint onto his house recently, he said with a chuckle.

While he had nothing but nice things to say about deputy PBB president A! bang Jo hari Openg (He even came to visit the sick), two flags are hung on a tree in front of his house - PBB and PKR. If I could, I'll hang all sorts of flags. It doesn't matter which flag I hang because we vote with our hearts, and not just by looking at flags, he said, while claiming that half of the village support PKR and the other half PBB.

The house sits on land for which he only received Temporary Occupational Licence (TOL) for four years ago after decades of applying. In the past few days, Abang Johari was in the kampung and the neighbouring one to give out more TOLs. The man, who is in his sixties and lives with his four sons and their families, said many still don't have leases and fear having their land taken over like some people they know in nearby Senari where compensation is still owing.

In January the Kuching High Court found in favour of plaintiffs in a 10-year drawn-out battle for about 1,500 acres of native customary land in the Malay coastal village of Loba Rambungan near Kuching. This is a landmark case as other NCR claims had involved Dayak land, and is likely to open the floodgates with many Malays living on heritage land which the Fama man said has been passed down from their grandparents' grandparents. This is an issue capitalised on by PKR in many of the Malay-majority seats, to some effect.

Suddenly, a snippet of the Anwar sex video came on in Buletin Utama. Laughing at the piece, he said, Everyone knows that this is a lie. We are not just recently exposed to politics, we've been around for quite a while.

Speaking of the young local PKR candidate Ali Hossen Abang who is facing off against PBB's Hazland Abg Hipni, the Fama man later said, It's good that PKR is contesting, so the government can finally hear what we want. When it's election time, there's all kinds of projects.

NONE

Blood ties and religion

One mooted is in downtown Malay-majority seat Satok where PKR newbie Ahmad Nazib Johari, 35, is taking on political heavyweight and possibly the most accomplished Malay leader in Sarawak BN - Abang Johari - who is contesting there for the eighth time.

Here, the government moots a tourism hub not unlike Venice, which could provide higher income for the local youth, many of whom Syariah lawyer Ahmad Nazib claims are either unemployed or earning as low as RM400.

Blood ties are, however, important among the community, with many met claiming support for Abang Johari because they have some sort of distant relationship to him and are keen for him to take over as chief minister.

NONE

Whether this will happen remains to be seen, with sources close to PBB claiming that Abang Johari's allocation for Satok, let alone other Malay areas, is limited by the state such that he is forced to turn to the federal government for funds. It's part of Taib's plan to keep Abang Johari weak especially after a falling out before, but (Abang Johari) seems to be in his good books now, said the source who spoke under condition of anonymity.

For middle-aged Fatimah Suyong, who has lived in Satok all her life, even blood ties will not make her cross the 'dacing' come polling day on April 16.

Abang Johari is a good man but what good is it if he cannot speak up to Taib? Taib is a malaun (cursed man), stealing everything. When we are buried we are judged by God so we have to beribadat and not support graft, she said enthusiastically. I go to my neighbours and family and tell them this, but some dah be rkarat (are rusty), they can't change their mindset.

Official statistics combine Malay and Melanau communities at 27.5 percent of the electorate, making up 26 Malay-Melanau majority seats. It is estimated that six of these are Melanau-majority.

PAS is contesting in five Malay-majority seats while PKR is standing in the rest. Most are also contested by PBB.

source:malaysiakini






cheers.

Change - it's now or never, Anwar tells S'wakians...


Kuching About 10 minutes' drive away from the SUPP event, some 3,000 are gathered at Taman BDC commercial centre for a DAP ceramah. The main attraction is Anwar Ibrahim.

Anwar tells the crowd that he has toured the rural areas throughout Sarawak, from Kapit to Sadong Jaya on his campaign trail and expresses confidence in Pakatan's chances.

"I am confident that this time Sarawak will make history," he thundered.

Anwar has seven speaking engagements this evening.

Cars are parked for a stretch of road at least two kilometres leading up to the field where Anwar Ibrahim is speaking.

Listening are about 3,000 people, with more filing in. Cars are also still driving about in search of parking.

The BDC field is the second last venue in the opposition leader's five-stop ceramah tour tonight.

At the rally in Batu Kawah, Anwar tells the crowd that he is confident Sarawak can make history on April 16.

"I am confident, this time Sarawak can make history. Enough is enough," he says before leading the crowd to chant "Change" a few times.

He urges the voters not to miss the chance for change, and vote for Pakatan this Saturday.

"Now is the time. It's now or never, you have to do it."

He then leads the crowd of 3,000 to chant "Reformasi" before ending his speech to loud applause.

He is now heading to Malay-majority Samariang.

The crowd then applauds DAP senator P Ramasamy when he announces that he is the Penang deputy chief minister.

People are packed like sardines. Many are seen listening to the speeches from on top of their cars or pickup trucks.


Miri- It is raining but around 8,000 people still stay on at DAP's ceramah.

Some have umbrellas while others don't, while some listen from the shelter of the fronts of shophouses.

The crowds' response at DAP's ceramah is noticeably stronger than the PM's meet the people session just 300 metres away.

The star speaker is DAP national chairperson Karpal Singh. Other speakers include national woman chief Chong Eng and Penang exco Phee Boon Poh.

Karpal urges the people to made the right choice on polling day and vote out Sarawak chief minister Taib Mahmud.

"I am also pek moh, but not like Taib Mahmud, he is a bad Pek Moh."

"Let us have a tsunami on Apr 16," said Karpal.

Sibu - At the DAP ceramah near Paramount Hotel, Taiping MP Nga Kor Ming leads a brief prayer for "the wisdom of the people of Sibu to vote the right way".

Many others in the crowd also bow their heads.

He then lightens the mood poking fun at the SUPP rally close by.

"They know that they are on their way out. So they invited Michael Wong to give them a farewell concert," he said.

Dressed in a black Superman T-shirt, Nga says that his "intel" revealed that PKR could win 21 seats.

"If that is so, and DAP wins 15 seats, we can then form the next government!" he said.

Kuching - In Kota Sentosa, someone in the crowd yells "Yes we can!" when Lim Kit Siang tells them that they need 37 seats to change the government in Sarawak.

Later a middle-aged couple shakes their heads when Lim Kit Siang tells them that the helicopter that tipped over in Sibu a few days ago, fatally injuring the pilot, had flown from Bintangor to Sibu.

"I was in Bintangor and people asked me why the DPM should take a helicopt! er from Bintangor to Sibu when it's only 30 minutes' drive away?" Lim said.

source:malaysiakini






cheers.

Longing For A Free Mind (Part 6 of 14)

Longing For A Free Mind (Part 6 of 14)

[Presented at the Fifth Annual Alif Ba Ta Conference at Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, NJ, organized by UMNO Club of New York-New Jersey, January 29, 2011.]

Beyond Flipping Over The Coconut Shell

Once we are dissatisfied with our enclosed world, the second step of actually flipping over our shell is by contrast relatively easy. The challenge here is to ensure that no one gets hurt or much damage done in the process. That being said, the fear of either should not preclude us from undertaking the mission. I am not being radical rather to emphasize that the rewards of not living under a coconut shell are so great that it is worth paying any price to flip it over.

Merely wildly thrashing around out of frustration could sometime inadvertently topple our shell. Of course if we could do it elegantly and avoid injuries or damage, that would be a plus. Our success might even inspire others, as the Tunisians and Egyptians have done.

Once we have toppled our shell, or it be flipped over inadvertently by cataclysmic external events, the challenge would then be to make the necessary adjustments to this new world so we could be productive participants. Equipping ourselves with the necessary skills is one such important preparation. Neglect this and we risk making the new world not only unwelcoming but also frightening, tempting us to retreat.

Many saw those riveting pictures of the Chilean miners being rescued. When they emerged they all wore dark sunglasses. Their eyes, long used to the dim light underground, would be blinded by the bright daylight. We too must equip ourselves with our metaphorical sunglasses lest we be blinded once we emerge from under our shell. Just like those miners, we must equip ourselves before we emerge.

The other component to the preparation is acknowledging that this new open world is no utopia. We have ! to separ ate the opportunities from the dangers. There are real dangers in this new world. For example, the Internet indeed makes it more difficult for authoritarian governments to hide their hideous activities. Consider the Tiananmen Square massacre, broadcasted live worldwide. Perversely however, the Internet can also be one of the most effective tools for governments (and not just authoritarian ones) to keep track of their citizens. The biggest challenge facing privacy advocates in America is precisely this.

Once we are out and have adjusted well in our new open world, there are still restraints that prevent us from hearing the braying of the donkey. In part this is biological, with our brain programmed to recognize pre-set patterns like believing the mullah and those patterns hinder us from recognizing new ones.

Milgrams experiments at Yale in the 1960s demonstrated that even bright students were only too willing to follow orders from their superiors to the extent of inflicting lethal electric shocks on their fellow students. They willingly listened to the commands of their mullahs despite the death braying of their donkey victims.

A decade later at Stanford, Philip Zimbardo conducted his famous prison experiment where he had students take on the role of guards and prisoners. It did not take long for those guards to take their role with gusto, inflicting gratuitous punishments on their prisoners. The experiment had to be terminated prematurely as those guards bordered on being sadistic.

Milgrams experiments illuminated the horrible human dynamics of the holocaust three decades earlier; Zimbardos enlightened us on the cruel obscenities of Abu Ghairab three decades later.

It is worth reminding that some of Milgrams subjects resisted peer pressures, as did the brave soldiers who exposed Abu Ghairab. Bless them! They had the courage to act on their convictions. They believed the braying of the donkey over the s! oothing words of their powerful mullahs!

More problematic are the tricks our brains play on us that we are not even aware of. Consider the Muller-Lyer optical illusion of the two lines of equal length seen as otherwise because of the shape of the arrows at their ends. Or the picture of the vase, or is that two faces facing each other? Then there is the image that could be construed as either that of a pretty young lady or a grouchy old woman. Imagine yourself engaged in those mail-order brides and given that picture!

These optical illusions are the result of our brains tendency to form patterns, and those patterns in turn are based on our experiences. Cross cultural studies on these Muller-Lyer illusions indicate that the Kalahari nomads would see those lines as being equal in length.

Similarly, studies on children who are blind at birth and later given sight-restoring surgery indicate that, at least initially, they do not see the world as we do. They do not see a Holstein cow munching leisurely in the meadow underneath the blue sky. Those are the images our brain has created for us through our experiences. Instead what those previously blind children see are globs of white and black on a sea of green under a blue cover.

The pixels of images transmitted by the eye of that previously blind child are no different from what my eyes transmit to my brain. The reality is the same, yet our perceptions are vastly different; I see a meaningful pattern while that child sees only patches of colors. That previously blind child will not see what I see until he too learns to interpret those images, just like I went through during my infancy.

Another factor to our brains interpretations of these images is its biological propensity to respond to boundaries or the periphery, as well as motion. Perhaps this is of survival value in our evolution; those without this capacity had been effectively weeded out by predators lurking in the! periphe ry. Thus our how an image is framed would alter our brains perception of it; hence those Gestalt figures.

This framing takes on even greater import with complex images of real life. A senators impassioned speech seen on C-SPAN would lose its impact if there were to be a simultaneous panoramic view of the empty senate chamber. Similarly, the sting of those ugly anti-American demonstrations by maniacal Iranians would fizzle out if we were also shown the empty streets of Tehran.

Those intent on manipulating reality will use these well-rehearsed framing techniques to influence our perception. Television cameras in the hands of the sinister minded can be devastatingly effective in this trick. Skilled photographers maximize the impact of their subjects by appropriately framing them. While a picture is worth a thousand words, how it is framed determines what those words will be.

Filmmakers introduce another sensory element sound to help frame the scene. Sound effects, background colors, peripheral boundaries, and relative positions of objects; all these influence our perception. President Reagans handlers were particularly skillful in these image enhancements and manipulations.

Two additional elements come into play in our perception of complex social images. One is Timur Kurans preference falsification, and the other, confirmation bias, alluded to earlier. To recap, confirmation bias is our tendency to favor information that supports our preconceptions regardless of its veracity.

Preference falsification is our disposition to say or act in public what we do not believe privately. Preference falsification is the greatest obstacle to formulating sound public policy as we would put forth ideas and strategies that we do not believe privately. Publicly we expound on the importance of Malay language but privately we send our children to international schools or even abroad where the language of instruction is othe! r than M alay. There are other egregious expressions of preference falsification in our public life. You do not have to look far.

If those social and psychological factors were not enough, our brain is also captive to our chemistry. We are familiar with steroid rage, the outbreak of unprovoked violence by those on long term steroids. If you are still skeptical on the role of chemistry, watch a monkey in heat. We are not too far away biologically, as with the saying, When the durian comes down, the sarong goes up. Here it is not hormones that play havoc on us rather those exotic amines in the king of fruit. One chemical widely consumed that has a predictable impact on our mind is of course alcohol.

Our brain is affected by these chemicals, in particular the neurotransmitters; in fact that is how nerve cells communicate with each other. Slight variations in their concentrations exert profound impact on our emotions, and thus our perceptions of reality. Incidentally, the understanding of these neurotransmitters paved the way for the pharmacological treatment of mental maladies like depression.

Whether a free mind can be understood at, related to, or ultimately controlled at the neurochemical level remains to be seen. These experiments in psychology and neuroscience do however illuminate one salient point: the immensely complex working of the human brain and thinking process. That should caution us from being simplistic.

Our leaders never tire of exhorting us to think critically and to have a free mind. Flip over the coconut shell, they urge us with nauseating frequency. Yet when some did exactly that and did not like what they saw and voted for the opposition, the refrain quickly changed to, You are being ungrateful and disloyal!

If you truly have an open mind, then you will just love us; that seems to be the arrogant delusion of these leaders. It reminds me of the thinking of Henry Ford; he would give his custom! ers the freedom to choose the color of their cars, as long as it was black!

Our leaders may grow hoarse in urging us to have a free mind, but that would be the only thing they would achieve, a hoarse voice. There is no magic wand; unfortunately this reality has not yet dawn on our leaders.

Have a free mind, they commanded, and it shall be done. Unfortunately the world of the mind is much more complex than their simple minds could comprehend.

Related to the issue of a free mind is the matter of mindset, which as defined earlier, is ones attitude to or philosophy of life. The Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck describes the two basic types: the fixed versus the growth mindset. Those with a fixed mindset view their talent and ability as fixed, tied to their innate ability, something they are born with or gifted by nature. With their Readers Digest understanding of genetics, they view themselves as being governed by their genes. They are in effect trapped by their biologic pre-determinism, which can be just as crippling as the more familiar religious pre-determinism.

Those with a growth mindset on the other hand believe that their fate depends on their ability to adapt and learn from new challenges and environments. They are not trapped or limited by whatever nature had endowed upon them.

Leaders with a fixed mindset are the likes of Mahathir and Lee Kuan Yew, firm believers in their innate abilities. Presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan best exemplified leaders with a growth mindset. Nixon was a staunch conservative and a firm supporter of Taiwan, but that did not stop him from opening up to China. Reagan, like Nixon, was also staunchly conservative but had no difficulty working with the Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

The signal difference between those with fixed mindset versus those with growth mindset is their attitude towards failure. Those with fixed mindset consider any failure as a r! eflectio n of their being, an affirmation of their inadequacies or lack of natural ability. That failure not only reflects their individual shortcomings but also that of their race. Their typical response to failure would be to retreat and never to emerge or challenge the situation again.

Those with a growth mindset consider failure as part and parcel of the learning and adapting process. They bounce right back. In Silicon Valley, a failed entrepreneur wears his failure as a warrior would his battle scars, and then moves on. Nixon and Reagan were both defeated on their first try at the presidency, but both went on to win with substantial majorities on subsequent attempts.

Hamka encapsulates best the attitude of those with a fixed mindset with his saying, Takut gagal adalah gagal sejati. The fear of failure is the real failure.

Thus, to recap, the twin qualities needed to cope and indeed thrive in the open diverse world outside the coconut shell are a free mind and a growth mindset.

Next: Avoiding Being Entrapped Mentally


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