Pakatan Rakyat (PR) Social Political Buzz & Bulls

People's Welfare in Mind

from Malaysia Flip Flop


When Najib opens his mouth, we experience flood and hardship. That is our fate for having a weak and bad person who is born with a silver spoon and with only knowledge and no moral.

For the past few weeks I tried very hard to look at the good side of Najib but found that his bad is more than his good.

So how can I be blame for being upset, frustrated and having a feeling of being cheated and misled by a leader that 27 million including me did not choose or want? Najib was given the premiership because Rosmah bribed Pak Lah with a RM200 million carrot. And with that those few thousand PARIAHS in UMNO are proud of.

UMNO has no pure Malays but CAP PA LUNG from India, Thailand and Indonesia. They have the cheek to call us names, belittle us and use Abusive language freely on us.

Abusive language is like a hoe, which is an object for digging into and cutting down. It is an instrument of destruction for ruffians who speak foul language. It only arises in the mouths of fools whoever praises those who deserve to be condemned or condemns those who deserve to be praised.

I am offended when Najib said “that the plight of the rakyat was uppermost in the Government’s mind when it decided not to increase the price of RON 95 petrol, diesel and liquefied petroleum gas causing a heavier financial burden and does not constitute good governance. It may be a bit difficult for the people to understand this but for those who know ELEMENTARY Economics, they will understand.”

Excuse me! Najib thinks that those with degree in Economic only understand what he is bullshitting. There are millions like me balancing the household expenditure without a certificate. We learnt from experience by not repeating our mistake. UMNO Government cannot do that because they keep on repeating their mistakes. Take the example of APs. Why is the Government giving FREE money to RICH cronies, generation after generation? The Gold Reserve that were transferred out by Mahathir, Daim, Yaakob, Pak Lah, Khairy, Zeti, Vincent Tan and Rosmah into their private vault. Bring that back. The logging and Petronas money, where did they go? Profit from Rice and Sugar into which Sendiri Pockets. EPF and Zakat duit pergi mana? You want me to continue? Until Najib is bury six feet underground pun tak habis, habis. That is how long we were cheated and con by UMNO. Today we can still collect back RM200 billion from these Rich Cronies. It is just a matter of WANT or DON’T WANT. So stop giving excuses about subsidies.

UMNO Government must and is obliged to take care of the Rakyat. That is call good governance. Looking after a handful of gold diggers is immoral.

When Najib and family went to China, the media highlighted that trip like there is no tomorrow. Now after many moons there is not a single sound. Meaning there is no business or money being invested in Malaysia. Now the trips overseas to Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, USA, UK and Japan to seek investors to Malaysia because we are BROKE. I do not foresee any big money coming in. With the like of Malay this and that, 30% free share to cronies or 15% commission into private account before the actual deal which Lynas, Aeon, Carrefour, Shell, Exxon etc………………..all forced to. Then we have Perkasa and other mini ruffians who are using religion and race to frighten investors away. Plus HEADLESS Judges, Police, Immigration, AG and MACC who are abusive and corrupted. So many ingredients to spoil the cake.

UMNO, a one race party with many holes is judging others like DAP which has many races as members, should consider themselves lucky that they are still around.

I believe many Malaysians will not bow to money but will bow to the cause of righteousness when the 13th General Election is call.

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

Malaysian Authorities are immoral


Beside caning, we have the mighty police abusing their position.

Local Seduction

from Malaysia Flip Flop

The sex video and sodomy this and that is not going to end until Anwar is buried in a white cloth.

So I just have to tell folks a hidden happening that took place when I was still very naïve.

Three Malay men got into a discussion how to get Hussein Onn to step down as Premier because he was too straight as a leader plus they feel they could do a better job than him.

The topic of sex, sodomy and bribe were discussed. Knowing Hussein Onn has a high moral standing, bribe was their first choice and sex as second. The planning took several months because big sum of money was needed plus if there was a leaked they would have landed behind bars. Another factor was Tengku Razaleigh, whom they consider Royalty should not have a place in politic. So they have to make absolutely sure that Tengku Razaleigh will not have a chance to take over from Hussein Onn if he resigns willingly or force to resign. Certain people from Bank Bumiputra, business, money lender, driver and a gigolo were recruited. If I am correct the sum of RM2 million was secured and many IOU projects were sealed with two mamak lawyers.

While the whole charade is being planned and ready to roll, Hishamuddin wanted to come home for his vacation. But Hussein Onn was broke and refused offer from the three Malay men for Hishamuddin’s flight home or to use Rakyat’s money for it. So Hishamuddin was forced to forget about coming home for his holiday. That was the period Hishamuddin was sodomized and got involved with boys.

Meanwhile RM1 million in a suitcase was planted in Hussein Onn’s house and he was forced to step down. Had Hussein Onn stood his ground and fought against the three men, I believe he would have got the same treatment as Anwar.

The three men, who forced Hussein Onn to step down, are the very same people who created Sodomy 1 for Anwar.

So you now understand why, one of them landed in IJN and the other two shivering in fear at their palaces in fear of Wikileak Cables.

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Truth buried in the printed pages

Not so long ago dont believe all that you read in the newspaper was said in jest. Now, unfortunately there is a ring of truth to this statement.

Ask just about anyone what they think about the mainstream media and chances are you will get a look of disgust. The mainstream media is owned by political parties and their glossed-over news coverage has given rise to the alternative media.

The Barisan Nasional (BN) has a stake in all the countrys premier newspapers such as New Straits Times (NST), The Star, Utusan Malaysia, Tamil Nesan and Sin Chiew Jit Poh through its investment companies

The Utusan Melayu Group is owned by Umno and publishes three Malay language dailies.

The major English newspapers, The Star and New Straits Times, are also owned by the political parties. The Star is owned by the MCA while NST is owned by Umno. Besides The Star, MCA also controls four other dailies Sin Chew Jit Poh, Nanyang Siang Pau, China Press and Guang Ming Daily.

Private interests aligned with the MIC control Tamil newspapers such as Makkal Osai and Tamil Nesan.

Under such tight leash, the mainstream media are left with no space to engage in a fair and free reporting. They end up parroting all that the government of the day says.

Take, for example, the incident in 1995 where an investigative team from The Sun newspaper investigated the circumstances leading to the deaths of 59 detainees, mostly Bangladeshis, in an illegal immigration detention camp. These detainees died of beri-beri, a symptom of malnutrition and typhoid, which is easily preventable.

The teams report stating that it was a case of criminal neglect on the part of the police who ran the camp was spiked hours before it went to print.

Bias reporting continues

Mo! re recen tly, the lopsided reporting by the mainstream media was evident during Sarawaks April 16 state election. The NST had nothing but only nice things to report about BN, including why the people should dismiss the opposition alliance of Pakatan Rakyat.

But what the NST did is nothing new. Be it the by-elections or general election, these mainstream newspapers do a good job of serving their political masters and betraying the trust of their readers.

The NST is not the only culprit. The government-owned Radio Televisyen Malaysia (RTM) channels have long forgotten the importance of reporting without fear or favour.

RTM1s Berita Wilayah aired at 5pm daily is a classic example of how reporting is manipulated by the powers that be. The one-hour news has all things good to say about the BN governments remarkable job in serving the people when the truth really is otherwise.

Likewise, the television stations including those owned by Media Prima do not have the guts to report the truth. At best, they do a fantastic job of glossing over BN and condemning the opposition parties.

Media Prima Bhd, by the way, is a subsidiary media corporation that controls several television networks, newspapers, and radio stations and is linked to Umno.

Media Prima also controls English newspapers such as NST and Malay Mail, as well as Malay papers like Berita Harian.

Just as bad is the national news agency, Bernama, which has trespassed all sense of accountability it has to the public by manipulating the truth. Because of this, the government propaganda organ has to work very hard to earn its long-lost respect from the public.

The business of restoring public trust has been taken over by the online media which has gone on to reveal all the dirt previously swept under the carpet by the mainstream media.

Mainstream media vs credibility

The biggest culprit that keeps harming racial unity among Malaysians is none other than Utusan Malaysia.

On Ma! y 7, the newspaper published a front-page report alleging that Christianity was moving in to replace Islam as the official religion. The article which relied solely on postings by bloggers is akin to adding salt to injury, causing great unrest among the people with its false reporting.

Clearly, the Utusan management has taken the tabloid approach, sensationalising issues for the sake of selling its no-longer saleable newspaper.

Prior to this, Utusan Malaysia made a call for 1Melayu, 1Bumi which caused a furore among the non-Malays. When pressured on the matter, Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak feigned ignorance on the gravity of the issue, saying the article was the personal opinion of the writer.

On April 20, Utusan Malaysia assistant editor-in-chief Zaini Hassan wrote in his column Cuit that the Malay community and the non-governmental organisations can only unite if they come together under the 1Melayu, 1Bumi banner.

Zainis writing bases its logic on DAPs success in uniting the Chinese when the party won 12 out of 15 seats it contested in the Sarawak state election on April 16.

However, the 1Melayu, 1Bumi concept Zaini writes of will further wear out the spirit of muhibbah between Malaysians of different races. Does Zaini know something the rest of the Malaysians do not, where unity is concerned?

What then about Najibs 1Malaysia propaganda? Does Utusan Malaysia have no faith in it? Or does Najib care less if Utusan keeps spinning the racism wheel.

Respect readers feelings

If Utusan Malaysia finds it advantageous to play the racial game, the NST, on the other hand, places little discretion on the headings used to describe a story. Its recent report dated April 18 stated Besut boot camp for 66 sissies.

Could the report not have relied on the term effeminate instead of sissies knowing fully well the deep-rooted prejudice society has against these people?

By using the term sissies, the newspaper concerned has only made matters! worse, affirming public perception that such boys need help.

Is this newspaper not guilty of perpetuating the stigma and prejudice faced by the marginalised communities when its choice of word only serves to discriminate instead of create awareness?

The scenario seems to be that the mainstream media is devoid of compassion when touching on issues concerning marginalised communities. No thought is given to the choice of words used so long as it catches the readers attention.

Instead of educating the readers, the mainstream media has for a long time been denying them their right to know the truth. In fact, they have abdicated their responsibilty to tell the truth.


Hooray...!!!!!! Power tariff up...thanks Najib...

The National Economic Council (NEC) has today approved an increase in the electricity tariff but details will only be announced on Monday. The NEC convened today in Putrajaya at a meeting involving several cabinet ministers chaired by Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak. Energy, Green Technology and Water Minister Peter Chin is expected to hold a press conference on Monday to deliver a formal announcement.

In recent weeks, cabinet ministers have been repeatedly telling the public to brace for an electricity tariff rise as the government embarks on a subsidy-slashing exercise. On Wednesday, the cabinet deferred plans to hike up fuel prices, which critics argue cannot be justified unless the federal government first embarks on an austerity drive.



Over the past 18 months, the government has pushed up sugar prices by 58 percent and allowed RON97 grade petrol to hit a record high of RM2.90 per litre. Coupled with the '5-in-1 hike' on July 15 involving RON95, RON97, diesel, liquified petroleum gas and sugar prices, inflationary pressure is mounting.

According to the plan, electricity tariffs will be raised by 2.4 sen/kWh initially, followed by 1.6 sen/kWh hike every six months spread over the next five years until July 2014. Currently, the average electricity tariff stands at 31.3 sen/kWh.

Tenaga Nasional Bhd has frozen its base tariff rate since 2009 and complains that currently the tariff covers only coal cost of up to US$85 against the prevailing coal price estimated at US$117 per tonne, reported StarBizWeek.



Meanwhile, International Trade and Industry Minister Mustapa Mohamed said that Malaysia's industries must be prepared to face the electricity tariff hikes but stressed that it would be done gradually.

"The government needs to be financially strong. Therefore, the increase is necessary and some industries are expected to feel the pinch once it (tariff) goes up.

"The surge in power costs would, however, be done in stages. This is to enable industry players to be prepared," Mustapa told reporters in Shah Alam, reported Star Online.

source:malaysiakini

K'jaan luluskan kenaikan tarif elektrik

Inilah rasional Najib kenapa perlu:

1. Naikkan harga gula - Supaya rakyat tak ramai dapat kencing manis,lantas kurangkan kematian dan rakyat boleh undi BN lagi.

2. Naikkan harga minyak - Supaya mengurangkan Mat Rempit di jalanraya dan akan selamatkan banyak nyawa rakyat, agar mereka ini boleh undi BN lagi.

3. Naikkan tarif letrik - Supaya rakyat boleh jimat pembaziran letrik, masuk tidur awal untuk menambahkan populasi, supaya generasi baru yang lahir nanti akan undi BN lagi.


cheers.

Arab Spring

27 May, 2011 By John Ling

Arabs Demanding Power For The PeopleWhen Muhammad Bouazizi set himself on fire, he wasnt looking to inspire a revolution. He was twenty-six, had never graduated from high school and barely eked out a living by selling fruits and vegetables in his local market. Like most of his generation, he craved social mobility - A chance to move up the ladder and attain a better life. Like most of his generation, his efforts were sabotaged by a flatline economy, government indifference and widespread corruption.Muhammads struggle came to a head when police officers swooped down on him, demanding hefty bribes. Since he couldnt pay, they seized his wheelbarrow and produce. Distraught from the cruelty of his plight, he took a can of gasoline, doused himself in front of the local governors office, struck a match and allowed himself to burn.In a region known for submission rather than reaction, Muhammad Bouazizis actions struck an emotional chord. He became a shahid - A martyr for the cause of social justice. The consequences of his tragedy triggered a sudden upsurge ofpeople power across the Arab Society. The citizens challenged their governments, undeterred by snipers and tanks, demanding change. As a result, the institutions of power suffered a seismic shock. Eventually, a domino effect unfolded with astonishing speed: first in Tunisia, then Egypt, then Libya, and then elsewhere. Change did happen.It was a watershed event, but one group found itself left out in the cold: Al Qaeda. For years, its leader, Osama bin Laden, had cultivated a singular narrative for disaffected Middle Easterners, If you strike at America, the far enemy, you will stand a better chance of destroying the near enemy, the corrupt governments that have oppressed you. You must take up jihad, and I will show you how.For the past decade the situation had revolve! d around Bin Ladens narrative. As a result, Washingtons long-time supportfor repressive Arab regimes and tin-pot dictators had evolved into a more aggressive stance under the Bush administration, with 9/11 spawning twin wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. While Americas image floundered in the quagmire, Bin Ladens reputation blossomed. He had brilliantly baited a superpower, eluded being captured and orchestrated a poisonous environment necessary for terrorism and insurgency.However, Bin Laden had overlooked the situation in the Arab world. Muhammad Bouazizis death had sparked a surge for people power, Arab society had embraced this and the Obama administration had supported this movement. Indeed, inclusive democracy, which secures an equal distribution of political power among all citizens, is preferable to exclusive jihad.Bin Laden, for all of his strategic brilliance, had well and truly miscalculated the desires and aspirations of the Arab world, and it cost him his life as he found himself pushed further out into the fringe.John Ling is a Malaysian writer based in New Zealand. You can find out more about him at www.johnling.net

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Tags: al Qaeda, Arab, Jihad, john ling, Muhammad Bouazizi, Osama bin Laden, People Power, shahid

This entry was posted on 27 May, 2011 at 4:00 pm and is filed under Let's Get Together. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.


Pelaku video seks sudah disiasat dan kenalpasti...

Polis semalam mengesahkan pihaknya menyiasat pelaku di dalam rakaman video seks yang didakwa membabitkan seorang lelaki mirip seorang pemimpin pembangkang dengan seorang pelacur di sebuah apartmen di ibu negara yang didedahkan kepada sekumpulan wartawan pada 21 Mac lalu.

Timbalan Ketua Polis Negara, Datuk Seri Khalid Abu Bakar bagaimanapun enggan mengulas lanjut mengenai skop siasatan pelaku dalam video seks tersebut termasuk identiti pelakunya itu.

"Memang kita siasat (pelaku) sebab kita sudah kenal pasti dia," kata beliau pada sidang akhbar di Bukit Aman di sini semalam.

Menurut beliau, kertas siasatan yang lengkap berhubung kes rakaman video seks telah diserahkan kepada pihak Peguam Negara pada minggu lalu dan menunggu maklum balas daripada jabatan itu untuk tindakan selanjutnya.

Difahamkan, kertas siasatan di bawah Seksyen 292 Kanun Keseksaan iaitu memiliki dan mengedar bahan lucah itu sebelum ini pernah dipulangkan semula oleh Peguam Negara sebanyak dua kali kepada polis untuk siasatan semula.

Pada 1 April lalu, Ketua Polis Negara, Tan Sri Ismail Omar mengesahkan rakaman video seks berdurasi selama 22 minit bermula pukul 10.23 malam, 21 Februari lalu adalah rakaman tulen selepas disahkan oleh pakar. Baca di sini.

source:Kosmo Online

Apakah orang yang dipanggil itu ! sdr. Anw ar?

Semalam sdr. Anwar berada di mana - rumah atau balai polis?

Jika sdr. Anwar tidak dipanggil ianya menjelaskan kepada kita bahawa selama ini UMNO dan pandikutty2nya telah melakukan fitnah demi untuk memusnahkan kredibiliti Anwar Ibrahim.

Sama2 kita tunggu laporan polis seterusnya.....


cheers.

People's Welfare in Mind


When Najib opens his mouth, we experience flood and hardship. That is our fate to having a weak and bad person who is born with a silver spoon and with only knowledge and no moral.

For the past few weeks I tried very hard to look at the good side of Najib but found that his bad is more than his good.

So how can I be blame for being upset, frustrated and having a feeling of being cheated and misled by a leader that 27 million including me did not choose or want? Najib was given the premiership because Rosmah bribed Pak Lah with a RM200 million carrot. And with that those few thousand PARIAHS in UMNO are proud of.

UMNO has no pure Malays but CAP PA LUNG from India, Thailand and Indonesia. They have the cheek to call us names, belittle us and use Abusive language freely on us.

Abusive language is like a hoe, which is an object for digging into and cutting down. It is an instrument of destruction for ruffians who speak foul language. It only arises in the mouths of fools whoever praises those who deserve to be condemned or condemns those who deserve to be praised.

I am offended when Najib said that the plight of the rakyat was uppermost in the Governments mind when it decided not to increase the price of RON 95 petrol, diesel and liquefied petroleum gas causing a heavier fina! ncial bu rden and does not constitute good governance. It may be a bit difficult for the people to understand this but for those who know ELEMENTARY Economics, they will understand.

Excuse me! Najib thinks that those with degree in Economic only understand what he is bullshitting. There are millions like me balancing the household expenditure without a certificate. We learnt from experience by not repeating our mistake. UMNO Government cannot do that because they keep on repeating their mistakes. Take the example of APs. Why is the Government giving FREE money to RICH cronies, generation after generation? The Gold Reserve that were transferred out by Mahathir, Daim, Yaakob, Pak Lah, Khairy, Zeti, Vincent Tan and Rosmah into their private vault. Bring that back. The logging and Petronas money, where did they go? Profit from Rice and Sugar into which Sendiri Pockets. EPF and Zakat duit pergi mana? You want me to continue? Until Najib is bury six feet underground pun tak habis, habis. That is how long we were cheated and con by UMNO. Today we can still collect back RM200 billion from these Rich Cronies. It is just a matter of WANT or DONT WANT. So stop giving excuses about subsidies.

UMNO Government must and is obliged to take care of the Rakyat. That is call good governance. Looking after a handful of gold diggers is immoral.

When Najib and family went to China, the media highlighted that trip like there is no tomorrow. Now after many moons there is not a single sound. Meaning there is no business or money being invested in Malaysia. Now the trips overseas to Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, USA, UK and Japan to seek investors to Malaysia because we are BROKE. I do not foresee any big money coming in. W! ith the like of Malay this and that, 30% free share to cronies or 15% commission into private account before the actual deal which Lynas, Aeon, Carrefour, Shell, Exxon etc..all forced to. Then we have Perkasa and other mini ruffians who are using religion and race to frighten investors away. Plus HEADLESS Judges, Police, Immigration, AG and MACC who are abusive and corrupted. So many ingredients to spoil the cake.

UMNO, a one race party with many holes is judging others like DAP which has many races as members, should consider themselves lucky that they are still around.

I believe many Malaysians will not bow to money but will bow to the cause of righteousness when the 13th General Election is call.

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



PKR gears up for snap polls...

While a July date for snap polls remains speculative, PKR is not taking any chances as it began getting battle ready should the 13th general election actually take place in the next few weeks.

The opposition party held a two-day retreat in Port Dickson for its top leadership and political bureau members with special attention focused on its nationwide polls campaign.

Vice-president Tian Chua said the retreat - which ended yesterday - is the start of the party's push to complete their polls preparations before July.

The retreat centred on policy issues such as our (campaign) machinery, training of election volunteers, our website and mobilisation, he said when contacted.

Tian Chua was sparse on details surrounding the two-day retreat, though he did not disagree when asked if the top leadership will now embark on a state to state tour to get their party machinery up to speed.

Definitely, part of our preparation is to consolidate (the party machinery) in every state, the Batu MP said, without revealing much else.

Fellow vice-president Fuziah Salleh was equally tight-lipped on the retreat, playing down its significance by describing it as a regular political bureau meeting.

This was not the first time we discussed the general election at our meetings. This was just an extended meeting of our regular political bureau meetings.

We went through and updated our checklist, basically making our final checks so that we are prepared, considering that snap polls could be called as early as July, she said.

Anwar's non-stop schedule

Inside information, however, indicates that the retreat was a culmination of months of effort aimed at getting the party's machinery at both t! he natio nal and state levels geared up for snap polls.

A source close to the party's top echelon revealed that there was more than one reason behind PKR de facto chief Anwar Ibrahim's nationwide anti-slander campaign, which followed the expose of a sex video allegedly involving a man resembling the charismatic leader.

Though stopping short of confirming Anwar's tour doubled as training for the party's machinery in each state he visited, the source admitted that it was more than just prepping the ceramah circuit for their leader.

His (Anwar's) schedule has been non-stop over the past few months, and everywhere he went the state machinery would be mobilised... you gauge for yourself, the source said.

It is also understood that PKR leaders from Sabah and Sarawak attended the two-day retreat, fuelling speculation that seat negotiations were raised. This appears to go hand in hand with claims that the main Pakatan Rakyat partners - PKR, DAP and PAS - have already started negotiating about seats in case the general election is called this year.

Anwar himself fanned such speculations when he told Malaysiakini in an exclusive interview that he expects snap polls to be called as early as August this year.

However, if the general election is to be called this year, Pakatan-led Selangor and Penang have vowed not to dissolve their assemblies as their governments have only been in power for a little over three years.

This will allow Pakatan to focus on the parliamentary election instead of having to defend these two key states as well.

source:malaysiakini

cheers.

Truth buried in the printed pages

Not so long ago dont believe all that you read in the newspaper was said in jest. Now, unfortunately there is a ring of truth to this statement.

Ask just about anyone what they think about the mainstream media and chances are you will get a look of disgust. The mainstream media is owned by political parties and their glossed-over news coverage has given rise to the alternative media.

The Barisan Nasional (BN) has a stake in all the countrys premier newspapers such as New Straits Times (NST), The Star, Utusan Malaysia, Tamil Nesan and Sin Chiew Jit Poh through its investment companies

The Utusan Melayu Group is owned by Umno and publishes three Malay language dailies.

The major English newspapers, The Star and New Straits Times, are also owned by the political parties. The Star is owned by the MCA while NST is owned by Umno. Besides The Star, MCA also controls four other dailies Sin Chew Jit Poh, Nanyang Siang Pau, China Press and Guang Ming Daily.

Private interests aligned with the MIC control Tamil newspapers such as Makkal Osai and Tamil Nesan.

Under such tight leash, the mainstream media are left with no space to engage in a fair and free reporting. They end up parroting all that the government of the day says.

Take, for example, the incident in 1995 where an investigative team from The Sun newspaper investigated the circumstances leading to the deaths of 59 detainees, mostly Bangladeshis, in an illegal immigration detention camp. These detainees died of beri-beri, a symptom of malnutrition and typhoid, which is easily preventable.

The teams report stating that it was a case of criminal neglect on the part of the police who ran the camp was spiked hours before it went to print.

Bias reporting continues

Mo! re recen tly, the lopsided reporting by the mainstream media was evident during Sarawaks April 16 state election. The NST had nothing but only nice things to report about BN, including why the people should dismiss the opposition alliance of Pakatan Rakyat.

But what the NST did is nothing new. Be it the by-elections or general election, these mainstream newspapers do a good job of serving their political masters and betraying the trust of their readers.

The NST is not the only culprit. The government-owned Radio Televisyen Malaysia (RTM) channels have long forgotten the importance of reporting without fear or favour.

RTM1s Berita Wilayah aired at 5pm daily is a classic example of how reporting is manipulated by the powers that be. The one-hour news has all things good to say about the BN governments remarkable job in serving the people when the truth really is otherwise.

Likewise, the television stations including those owned by Media Prima do not have the guts to report the truth. At best, they do a fantastic job of glossing over BN and condemning the opposition parties.

Media Prima Bhd, by the way, is a subsidiary media corporation that controls several television networks, newspapers, and radio stations and is linked to Umno.

Media Prima also controls English newspapers such as NST and Malay Mail, as well as Malay papers like Berita Harian.

Just as bad is the national news agency, Bernama, which has trespassed all sense of accountability it has to the public by manipulating the truth. Because of this, the government propaganda organ has to work very hard to earn its long-lost respect from the public.

The business of restoring public trust has been taken over by the online media which has gone on to reveal all the dirt previously swept under the carpet by the mainstream media.

Mainstream media vs credibility

The biggest culprit that keeps harming racial unity among Malaysians is none other than Utusan Malaysia.

On Ma! y 7, the newspaper published a front-page report alleging that Christianity was moving in to replace Islam as the official religion. The article which relied solely on postings by bloggers is akin to adding salt to injury, causing great unrest among the people with its false reporting.

Clearly, the Utusan management has taken the tabloid approach, sensationalising issues for the sake of selling its no-longer saleable newspaper.

Prior to this, Utusan Malaysia made a call for 1Melayu, 1Bumi which caused a furore among the non-Malays. When pressured on the matter, Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak feigned ignorance on the gravity of the issue, saying the article was the personal opinion of the writer.

On April 20, Utusan Malaysia assistant editor-in-chief Zaini Hassan wrote in his column Cuit that the Malay community and the non-governmental organisations can only unite if they come together under the 1Melayu, 1Bumi banner.

Zainis writing bases its logic on DAPs success in uniting the Chinese when the party won 12 out of 15 seats it contested in the Sarawak state election on April 16.

However, the 1Melayu, 1Bumi concept Zaini writes of will further wear out the spirit of muhibbah between Malaysians of different races. Does Zaini know something the rest of the Malaysians do not, where unity is concerned?

What then about Najibs 1Malaysia propaganda? Does Utusan Malaysia have no faith in it? Or does Najib care less if Utusan keeps spinning the racism wheel.

Respect readers feelings

If Utusan Malaysia finds it advantageous to play the racial game, the NST, on the other hand, places little discretion on the headings used to describe a story. Its recent report dated April 18 stated Besut boot camp for 66 sissies.

Could the report not have relied on the term effeminate instead of sissies knowing fully well the deep-rooted prejudice society has against these people?

By using the term sissies, the newspaper concerned has only made matters! worse, affirming public perception that such boys need help.

Is this newspaper not guilty of perpetuating the stigma and prejudice faced by the marginalised communities when its choice of word only serves to discriminate instead of create awareness?

The scenario seems to be that the mainstream media is devoid of compassion when touching on issues concerning marginalised communities. No thought is given to the choice of words used so long as it catches the readers attention.

Instead of educating the readers, the mainstream media has for a long time been denying them their right to know the truth. In fact, they have abdicated their responsibilty to tell the truth.


Malaysian Authorities are immoral

Finnish has the best education system, while Malaysia still doing porn movie


The task is as hard as weeding out the brightest youngsters for places on Oxford and Cambridge Universities' most popular courses. There are 16 candidates for every vacancy and somehow the 2,000 applicants have to be whittled down to 120 by the time the course starts. We are not talking about law and medicine at Britain's most prestigious universities, though. This is Finland and the applicants are desperate for a job in what is the most sought-after profession in their country: teaching.

Finland is the country that has topped the international league table of the developed world's education systems for almost all of the past decade. And England's Education Secretary, Michael Gove, has been taking a close look at its policies to see if there is anything he can glean from them to improve standards over here. Finland's top-level ranking is based on its performance in the PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment) tests of 15-year-olds around the globe in reading, maths and science. It is published by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

Professor Jari Lavonen, the head of the Department of Teacher Education at the University of Helsinki, is the man with the enviable task, in some eyes, of whittling down the pack. He is in no doubt as to how Finland has got to this position. "We decided all teachers should have a master's degree putting teaching on an equal footing with law and medicine," he says. "Teacher education is therefore very attractive." Figures showed that the ! highest- flying youngsters then started flocking to the profession because of its new-found prestige.

The applicants are all given a book to read before being grilled on their understanding of it. Then the 300 top performers are interviewed before the remaining 120 are offered places. "We want to find out how suitable a person is for teaching," he says. "Last year, it was more difficult to come on to a primary-education programme than to go to medical school. The competition was more heavy."

Mr Gove has already said he would like to go down the Finnish path. A common theme among three of the top-performing nations Singapore, South Korea and Finland is that they all attract the best talent into the profession by setting high standards for recruitment. Mr Gove's answer to this is to limit entrance to the profession to those who have better than a third-class degree. He has come in for a fair amount of criticism here, with teachers' leaders arguing that it would prohibit people such as the Conservatives' own maths guru, Carol Vorderman, from entering the profession. The brightest people in their subject area may not always be the best communicators in the classroom, so the argument goes.

Professor Lavonen is wary of the idea that foreign governments can "cherry pick" parts of the Finnish education system and ignore the rest. There is, he argues, a second part of the equation: the introduction of a free compulsory education system for all, which goes hand in glove with the recruitment process to create a successful education system. It is illegal to charge fees in the Finnish education system, so even those schools that are run privately take their funding from the state. Its schools are comprehensive in that there is no selection of pupils.

They are less formal and more relaxed than schools in the UK. The man in jeans and an open-necked shirt who greets us at the Taivallahti comprehensive school in Helsinki (an all-in school for seven to 16-year-olds) turns out to be the principal, Hannu Ko! sonen. H is pupils in common with those in the rest of Finland do not wear a uniform. Discipline appears good. No one is photographing the teacher to put her picture on YouTube.

The teachers are not beset by targets, in fear of inspections or how well their schools do in league tables. There are simply no league tables or inspections. "They are academics and well trained, so we trust them," says Professor Lavonen. "This is an important feeling: they don't need any inspection. Also, we don't have a system of national testing. The teachers are trusted to assess their own pupils." This is presumably because there is no pressure to tweak the results to do well in league tables.

Class sizes are smaller than in the UK. Mr Kosonen limits them to 20 in the first two years of schooling and the sixth and seventh year (12 and 13-year-olds). They are also mixed ability, with educators believing the teachers are well-enough trained to cope with a wider range of ability in their classes. If pupils fall behind, a second teacher can be sent in to help them to catch up.

Of course, it may help that Finland as a country does not have the vast gap in household incomes of the UK, and so social mobility is not such an issue over there. The gap is just beginning to widen, though, so it may be something it has to look out for.

Mr Kosonen also points to another feature of Finnish life for producing the country's brilliant reading results: the Government's decision to ban the dubbing of all foreign films and television shows. This means youngsters can watch shows such as Dalziel and Pascoe and Anne Robinson's The Weakest Link in all their English glory in their homes of an evening and get to grips better with the language.

A visit to last month's teachers' union conferences in the UK showed a flurry of concerns about headteachers "dropping in" to classrooms to check on their teachers' standards. Mr Kosonen does this, too, and has asked each member of his staff to come up with an idea for developing their te! aching. He does not see himself as an inquisitor, though.

Nina Koskinen, a primary-class teacher at the school, says: "Teachers do like to get feedback on what they do, but it is totally different over here to the UK. One of the things here is that principals should be like coaches." She says of the English system of testing and inspection: "What would be the advantage of that? It really seems to be something that gives you pressure in terms of paperwork and all that."

The differences between Finland and the English system do not stop with compulsory schooling, though. After the age of 16, youngsters decide whether they opt for an academic or vocational schooling. There is also still a divide at university level between the academic universities and the polytechnics (as the government calls them) or the universities of applied science, as they style themselves. Oh, and there is the little matter that university tuition is still free for home and EU students. A UK youngster would not have to spend a penny on tuition fees in Finland. The country is experimenting with charges for overseas students but only a handful of universities are taking part in this pilot.

Thomas Wilhelmsson, the rector of Helsinki University, ranked in the world's top 100 universities, says: "The most that has been discussed is whether we should charge fees for overseas students. Free education is seen as a very central part of the Finnish welfare-state system. The British example is a scary example. If you take tuition fees [from students], you will withdraw some amount of basic funding for the system."

This is a very different system to England's, and it would be fair to point out Finland has to deal with a school population of just under 600,000, compared with the seven million in England and Wales. But Finland's schools and universities have been besieged by Germans, Chinese, Thais, Spaniards and Austrians desperate to find out the system's recipe for success. It remains to be seen how much of the Finnish educatio! n system we will seek to ape (teachers over here would love Mr Gove to adopt the whole package).

A passing thought occurs, though, as a documentary about how Finland coped with last winter's snow flashes on to the television screen. At one stage it was 80 centimetres deep, but the under-floor heated sidewalks and streets soon had it cleared. Ice-breakers made sure the runway at the airport was cleared after 30 minutes. Maybe we should send someone over to study that as well.

KEY FEATURES OF THE FINNISH EDUCATION SYSTEM

All teachers must have a master's degree before they start teaching.

Compulsory schooling starts at seven with voluntary play-based kindergarten for younger children.

No national testing, inspections or school league tables. The government looks at an 8 to 10 per cent sample of pupils' work to check on performance.

Pupils transfer to either an academic or a vocational school at the age of 16 after nine years of compulsory schooling.

No university fees for home or EU students. Pilot of fees for overseas students from outside the EU.

RICHARD GARNER

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

While Malaysia is wasting time and money going back and fro English to Bahasa, Bahasa to English, English to Bahasa...............on and on.......................

Then we have teachers wearing baju kurung and high heels teaching students how to play netballs, hockey, badminton and whatever...................

Then we have teachers sending sms and having conversations on the handphone while supposingly teaching in class.

Then we have teachers asking to share a smoke with students in the toilet.

Then we have teachers asking for sex from the students.

Then we have owner of private school touching the breast of female students.

What does the Education Ministry do?

They go round the world with their mistresses for se! x studie s.

To the person in charge of TALENT CORP

A QUOTE

"PEOPLE WHO HAVE REAL KNOWLEDGE ARE HARD TO FIND.

PEOPLE WHO KNOW A LOT ARE EASY TO FIND.

THERE ARE MANY PEOPLE IN THIS AGE WHO KNOW A LOT.

BUT THEY DO NOT REALLY KNOW ANYTHING."

Stop wasting our money.



Selangor water bond takeover another BN/UMNO 'bailout'....

The federal government has denied that its attempt to take over Selangor's water bonds was a move to bail out industry players, said Energy, Green Technology and Water Minister Peter Chin.

Chin said that the bid for the bonds was a mitigation attempt to stabilise Selangor's water services industry and avoid negatively affecting the capital market.

I wish to stress that there is no 'bailout' element as alleged by the opposition in the attempt to take over the bonds, he said.

Yesterday, StarBiz reported that federal government unit Pengurusan Aset Air Bhd (PAAB) had set up Acqua SPV Bhd to make an offer for the water bonds, based on the relevant purchase yield to maturity. Bondholders have until 5pm on May 31 to agree to the terms set by Acqua SPV.

Chin explained that Acqua SPV Bhd will negotiate with bondholders directly on the quantum and thus the takeover of the bonds would be done through the open market and not by the federal government.

I wish to stress that the takeover does not mean Selangor water companies who issued the bonds are released from their obligations to pay back their liabilities prior to the takeover by Acqua SPV.

Thus if the Acqua SPV's bid is successful, the takeover should be looked at as a change in investors from current bondholders to only Acqua SPV, he said.

Chin: Move might stabilise water tariffs

Chin said that once this move was completed it would stabilise the water services industry and allow the federal government to concentrate on its negotiations with the Selangor government on the water restructuring exercise. Meanwhile, by reviewing the structure and terms of the bonds, there is a possibility that this would ensure the stability of water tariff! s in the future, he said.

The Najib Abdul Razak administration has been under pressure by bondholders, which includes major banks, to buy up the bonds which has been heavily downgraded by the rating agencies. According to StarBiz yesterday, an offer of RM6.5 billion will be announced by the federal government, against the issued value of RM9.02 billion.

Water bondholders are caught in a bind because Selangor's four water players - Syarikat Bekalan Air Selangor Sdn Bhd (Syabas), Puncak Niaga Sdn Bhd (PNSB), Syarikat Pengeluaran Air Sungai Selangor Sdn Bhd (Splash) and Konsortium ABASS - are unable to pay bondholders.

Syabas is blaming the state government for refusing its contractual demand for a 37 percent increase in water tariff, on the grounds that the company had not fulfilled its contractual obligations to reduce non-revenue water and other leakages.

'Feds forced to act'

However, there is a political element to this deadlock. The federal government is bent on nationalising all water assets, a move which Pakatan-ruled Selangor argues would inadvertedly cause a massive hike in water tariff. Selangor is instead insistent that Syabas - which is heavily linked with Umno - accepts the state's acquisition offer in order for the concession agreement to be restructured before the federal government is allowed to come in.

Meanwhile, Chin said that the federal government welcomes Selangor's willingness to return to the negotiation table to resolve the deadlock. However, negotiations are expected to be prolonged should Selangor refuse to consider other models.

As long as there are no proposals that are more practical by Selangor to resolve this issue, the federal government is forced to take the necessary measures to resolve problems that crop up, said Chin in reference to the water bonds.

Tax payers made to pay yet again

In an immediate reaction, Charles Santiago, a member of Selangor governm! ent pane l to negotiate on the water industry restructuring with the federal government, insisted that the buy up of the bonds was a clear bail out. He said that when a government privatises a utility, it is always done with the expectations that a private company has the funds, expertise and competency to rune it effectively.

Now we have a case where there are companies which have failed in their obligations to pay the bondholders and the cost is being passed to the tax payers, said Santiago, while describing such companies as irresponsible.

He said that the only viable solution now is for the federal government to convince the four companies involved to take up the state government's acquisition offer. This would allow the state to restructure the companies, a move which Santiago explained was heavily opposed by the federal government for their own interest.

We have presented numerous proposals, but the federal government is bent on maintaining the status quo, said Csantiago, who is also the MP for Klang.

source:malaysiakini

Takeover and bailout bagi geng2 'pandikutty' sama maksudnya. Acqua SPV ini milik siapa?

cheers.

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