Pakatan Rakyat (PR) Social Political Buzz & Bulls

Murdochs in the dock: Most humble day of my life

Its the most humble day of my life

RUPERT MURDOCH
proprietor
News of the World (failed)
News International (desperate not to fail)

Rupert Murdoch and his son James are facing an inquiry in the House of Commons on the phone hacking scandal, which has already cost one life, that of a News of the World whistleblower who was found dead yesterday. In a formal statement before forensic questioning began, James Murdoch makes an apology to the victims of the phone-hacking: This is a matter of great regret, these actions do not live up to our standards, will make sure this does not happen again. His father Rupert had said earlier: This is the most humble day of my life.

Al Jazeera photo

Live reporting on the House of Commons inquiry

The Guardians live blog
Live video from Channel 4

Channel 4 live blog
Al Jazeera live blog


Filed under: Journalism

CANDLE LIGHT VIGIL FOR THE "PSM 6" - UMNO'S LAW OF INJUSTICE



DATE: 20 JULY 2011 (WEDNESDAY)
TIME: 7.45 PM
VENUE: BAR COUNCIL BUILDING
@ JALAN LEBOH PASAR KUALA LUMPUR


followed by a FORUM at the BAR COUNCIL AUDITORIUM


organised by: SUARAM, GERAKAN MANSUHKAN ISA (GMI) and the BAR COUNCIL


contact: Naini - 019 3758912 or Stephanie - 016 3435202




Another Great Bersih 2.0 Video


Najib- sana kuning sini kuning....


Di London,Najib disambut oleh warna kuning


Jumpa Queen yang berbaju kuning






Jumpa Pope pula dalam pejabat berlangsir kuning



Entah2 bila balik nanti disambut oleh orang kuning




Serta diiringi dengan dendangan......








cheers.

Bantahan kepada Anugerah Ibrahim Ali

Hatri Asmawi
Saya sebagai seorang bekas pelajar UiTM, saya diberitahu ada anugerah Ibrahim Ali yang akan diberikan kepada pelajar cemerlang yang menikut kriteria yang diberikan oleh beliau. Sejumlah peruntukan disediakan untuk diberikan kepada pemegang anugerah ini.

Sebagai seorang alumni UiTM yang prihatin, saya amat tidak bersetuju jika anugerah ini diteruskan memandangkan latar belakang dan perjuangan Ibrahim Ali yang terlalu ekstrim, mementingkan bangsa tanpa memperdulikan sensitiviti kaum lain.

Ini tidak melambangkan visi dan misi UiTM sebagai sebuah institusi yang mengeluarkan pelajar-pelajar yang berbilang bangsa dan agama yang mementingkan muhibah sesama kaum dan sesama rakyat Malaysia.

Anugerah ini juga akan menyebabkan institusi UiTM akan dipandang serong oleh industri-industri domestik yang selama ini memandang tinggi graduan UiTM yang serba boleh dan berprestij tinggi. Sekiranya anugerah ini diberitakan, graduan UiTM lain akan menjadi mangsa kepada diskriminasi akibat dari Anugerah dari seorang rasis.

Oleh yang demikian, saya sebagai seorang alumni UiTM, sekali lagi ingin menegaskan satu usaha untuk menghalang anugerah ini dari diteruskan harus dilakukan. Saya berharap usaha yang keras perlu dilakukan untuk menghalang anugerah ini dari diteruskan.

Sekian, terima kasih.


Return of the Black Marker Brigade!

[Read the rest here.]

'Economist' report on Bersih rally 'censored'
Hazlan Zakaria & Wong Teck Chi
Jul 19, 11
1:02pm
10 friends can read this story for free
Opposition parliamentarians have claimed that the July 16 edition ofThe Economisthas been defaced by the Home Ministry in an apparent attempt to censor a report on the Bersih 2.0 rally for electoral reform.

NONEThe EconomistJuly16 issue has been censored/black inked on Bersih story by Home Ministry, reads a tweet by Ipoh Barat MP M Kulasegaran.

In photos distributed via micro-blog site Twitter, the report headlines 'Political affray in Malaysia: Taken to the cleaners' shows lines blacked out by what seems to be a permanent marker pen.

Malaysiakinicould not immediately verify the claim, but a comparison with theonline versionreveals that the lines struck out refer to allegations of police and government misconduct:

- 'and one man died of a heart attack', in the first paragraph.

- 'The march itself was then banned, although the authorities offer! ed Bersi h a stadium to meet in - and then withdrew the offer', in the second paragraph

- 'The heavy-handed police tactics have provoked a lot of anger; the government has conceded an official investigation into claims of police brutality. In one instance (caught on film), police seemed to fire tear gas and water cannon into a hospital where protesters were sheltering from a baton charge', in the fourth paragraph.

NONEWhen contacted, Kulasegaran criticised the action as uncalled for.

In this day and age only a police run state would do this. They are trying to hide writing which could be true, because (they are afraid) it will be read by the public and they will believe it. The government is still (suffering from) denial syndrome.

The DAP leader however, dismissed the attempt as ineffectual as the full article is available online anyway.

PKR vice-president Tian Chua also tweeted on the matter and posted photos of the censored pages: I'm sure @TheEconomist readers are intelligent enough to know how to get the full article, but the censorship reflects the stupidity & insecurity of an autocratic regime.


A few rare souls seem to have been born with black marker pens in their untiring little hands.


Sad but true, the Black M! arker Br igade exists. It's a quiet, diligent, anonymous league of Backroom Types whose mission on Earth - or, at least, in Malaysia - is to protect us from accidental or intentional exposure to titillation of the salacious variety. Their thankless task, in effect, is to ensure that you never have to be confronted with (and, presumably, affronted by) an image of the Female Nipple. Whenever and wherever it may appear: in imported literature, cinema posters, and comics, for instance. And so what if you've just forked out $18.75 for a reputable photography journal or glossy art magazine? How can it claim to be reputable if it's got naked pink titties in it?
Hah! In the name of Art too many atrocities haved been committed. Too Much Flesh Exposed. It's time people stopped taking off their pants just so that some artist-pervert can paint them. One practiced stroke of the felt-tipped pen and... voila! Goya'sNaked Majais naked no more! A deft rub here and a quick daub there and... Hullo! Michelangelo'sDavidis ready to meet the Malaysian public! Anytime now the Black Marker Brigade may be commissioned to bring decency and modesty back to the medical textbooks. You can bet the floors of all our book warehouses will be slippery with drool.
Do members of the Black Marker Brigade go to work in sinister Ku Klux Klan-style hoods? What do they do to nude black women - do they switch to Tipp-Ex? What are the long-term consequences of membership in the Brigade? Does one go through life seeing dark spots and splotches on women's chests that can't be removed with even the most devout rubbing? What do they write in their passports under Occupation?
Well, it's a dirty job - but somebody has to do it. The Stout-of-Heart and Incorruptible who attain the rank of Veteran in the Black Marker Brigade have the awful onus of ritually purifying 8 X 10 glossies and wall-sized posters of the ! most not orious and lascivious-looking of foreign film-stars. (God, we had a horrible experience with that disgusting Member of the Italian Parliament... what was her name? Ah yes... Cicciolina... none of us got any sleep for a week. we had no choice - it was a Standing Order from the Minister of Home Affairs.)
One shudders to think of the things some people have to do to earn a living. Still, there are obviously a few rare souls who seem to have been born with black marker pens in their untiring little hands. You can easily identify them in a crowd, they're a breed apart: look for the dark ink stains on their lips and fingertips.Our hands are filthy but our minds are clean!This is the solemn credo of the Black Marker Brigade.



Some rights reserved Antares/Magick RiverYou may borrow and/or modify content for your own blog but please credit and backlink, thanks.

1Malaysia Boleh Censor : KDN blacks out the Economist


Why Blackout, if they are wrong or misreporting take them to court or Is the government afraid of the truth being told.


The Economists article at the web site: Embolden italic paragraphs censored by KDN.

Political affray in Malaysia
Taken to the cleaners
An overzealous government response to an opposition rally
Jul 14th 2011 | SINGAPORE | from the print edition

MALAYSIA is one of South-East Asias stabler nations; but a rally in Kuala Lumpur on July 9th in demand of electoral reform turned surprisingly nasty, leading to the arrest of more than 1,600 people. The police fired tear gas and water cannon into the crowd, and one man died of a heart attack. All those arrested were released fairly quickly, but Amnesty International, a London-based human-rights group, called it the worst campaign of repression in the country for years. The governments reaction showed a lot of nervousness about how much opposition it can tolerate.

In fact the crackdown started a few weeks ago after Bersih 2.0 announced that it was going to stage the rally. Bersih, also known as The Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections, is a loose alliance of NGOs and activists (bersih means clean). It argues that all candidates should be given access to the mainstream media and that indelibl! e ink sh ould be used to stop people voting more than once. It all sounds uncontroversial, but not to the government. Bersih was declared illegal on July 1st and about 200 activists were rounded up. The march itself was then banned, although the authorities offered Bersih a stadium to meet inand then withdrew the offer.

Perhaps the government was looking back nervously to the first Bersih march, in 2007. On that occasion, too, thousands protested against the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition government and demanded reform. Subsequently, in the 2008 general election, the BN lost its largest share of votes since 1957 when it started ruling the country after the British left. The current prime minister, Najib Razak, deputy prime minister in 2007 before taking over the top job in an internal party coup, must have feared that the second Bersih rally might be a similar portent. He has to hold an election before 2013, but wants to do so earlier to win his own mandate. Opposition politicians were quick to join Bersih. The pre-eminent leader of the opposition, Anwar Ibrahim, was shoved to the ground and injured in the affray.

None of this bodes well for Malaysia. The heavy-handed police tactics have provoked a lot of anger; the government has conceded an official investigation into claims of police brutality. In one instance (caught on film), police seemed to fire tear gas and water cannon into a hospital where protesters were sheltering from a baton charge. Few old laws were left untouched in the attempt to round up suspects before the march. It was reported that 30 people arrested in Penang were investigated under Section 122 of the Penal Code for the charge of waging war against the king. Dragging in the constitutional monarch, Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin, seemed particularly desperate, reminiscent of the abuse of the monarchys position in neighbouring Thailand. On the eve of the rally, the king came out with a statement reminding everyone that street demonstrations bring more bad than good, al! though t he original intention is good.

Mr Najib defended the police and accused the marchers of sowing chaos. Dismissing the motives of Bersih, he cast it as a desperate attempt by Mr Anwar to grab power. The immediate upshot is that Mr Najib may choose to delay calling for an election for some time, to let things settle down. He presumably hopes that if he waits long enough, people will have forgotten about this ugly incident. But the longer-term effects are hard to judge. It might also help to unite a fractious opposition against what they portray as an assault on democracy.

from the print edition | Asia
Taken to the cleaners

'Economist' report on Bersih rally 'censored'....

Opposition parliamentarians have claimed that the July 16 edition of The Economist has been defaced by the Home Ministry in an apparent attempt to censor a report on the Bersih 2.0 rally for electoral reform.

The Economist July16 issue has been censored/black inked on Bersih story by Home Ministry, reads a tweet by Ipoh Barat MP M Kulasegaran.

In photos distributed via micro-blog site Twitter, the report headlines 'Political affray in Malaysia: Taken to the cleaners' shows lines blacked out by what seems to be a permanent marker pen.

Malaysiakini could not immediately verify the claim, but a comparison with the online version reveals that the lines struck out refer to allegations of police and government misconduct:

- 'and one man died of a heart attack', in the first paragraph.

- 'The march itself was then banned, although the authorities offered Bersih a stadium to meet in - and then withdrew the offer', in the second paragraph

- 'The heavy-handed police tactics have provoked a lot of anger; the government has conceded an official investigation into claims of police brutality. In one instance (caught on film), police seemed to fire tear gas and water cannon into a hospital where protesters were sheltering from a baton charge', in the fourth paragraph.


When contacted, Kulasegaran criticised the action as uncalled f! or.

In this day and age only a police run state would do this. They are trying to hide writing which could be true, because (they are afraid) it will be read by the public and they will believe it. The government is still (suffering from) denial syndrome.

The DAP leader however, dismissed the attempt as ineffectual as the full article is available online anyway.

PKR vice-president Tian Chua also tweeted on the matter and posted photos of the censored pages: I'm sure @TheEconomist readers are intelligent enough to know how to get the full article, but the censorship reflects the stupidity & insecurity of an autocratic regime.

He observed that the portrayal of the Jews as bogeyman (by Umno owned-daily) Utusan (Malaysia) & @TheEconomist censorship signify an insecure regime.

Read the full article here.

source:malaysiakini

BERSIH: 'KDN tapis majalah Economist'

Censored: KDN blacks out the Economist

Home Ministry censors Bersih article in The Economist

Come onlah...orang yang baca 'the Economist' juga boleh layari websitenya di internet, kecualilah kalau yang baca tu mereka mai dari kampung atau estet, kenapa buta perut sangat....

cheers.

Tung Shin doctors, live not in fear

Willing Shaking-Spear


Shall we fear when Truth becomes inconvenient?
Or shall we fear to speak when untruth surrounds us?
Shall we fear the law which is to protect all?
Or shall we fear to act and let lawlessness rule?

Shall we fear to change for it is uncomfortable?
Or shall we not join the forces that make change possible?
Today, fear bridles your love for peace.
Your yearning for freedom is but a dream.

You fear to walk, less your life be snatched.
The street you once loved is now your fear.
You fear to complain for it puts you in a spot.
You fear to stop wrongs for it shows you weak.

You fear the law for it protects not all.
Your fear the halls of justice and the shadows behind the wall.
Eventually, the fear you fear consumes you all. Leaves your body empty of spirit and soul.
You become nothing but a falling leaf,

To be swept away into darkness like a rotting heap
Of broken men without hope or love,
Grovelling for crumbs from the master's table.
You fear other voices,

Because it tells the truth.
You fear the truth for it foretells your lies.
You fear to speak without a spin.
Your tolerance for truth has just gone thin.

Power you use to suppress the truth.
The cells of history have many good men.
Who one day will appear to unlock the secrets,
That you so tenderly keep from the streets.

Doctors fear not when you are right.
Speak the truth and bring on the light.
Fear not the fear, where darkness hides.
You heal sometimes but never shall harm.

To comfort always those in need.
What gives you the strength is that you are right.
Join hands together for the fight.
For better care and patient's rights.

This poem is dedicated to the 11 doctors at Tung Shin Hospital who have come forward to speak the truth about the July 9 incident.


Polis nak video Bersih tapi video lucah buat dont know saja....

Datuk Seri Rais Yatim today offered for Radio Televisyen Malaysia (RTM) to broadcast police recordings of unruly crowd behaviour captured during the July 9 Bersih rally.

The information minister urged the police to hasten the showing of any such material to combat allegations of police brutality during their attempts to disperse the crowds attending the rally for electoral reforms.

Earlier today, Deputy Inspector-General of Police Datuk Khalid Abu Bakar said six teams will be set up to probe alleged incidents of brutality and violence by the authorities during the Bersih rally.

He also appealed to the public to submit video footage captured during the march as evidence that police used excessive force in dispersing protesters.

Datuk Khalid Abu Bakar said such cooperation would enable the police to determine the actual events during the rally as several quarters claimed the police used violence to handle protesters.

We will investigate this matter thoroughly and the police will not hide any fact,

source:malaysiakini

Tak payah susah2lah latok, lu buka itu Youtube, lu boleh dapat semua video yang latok mau!!

Tapi gua mau ingat kawan2 semua, tak payah bagilah you all punya video, mana tau nanti semua video yang you all kasi itu sama ada diedit bagi menunjukkan tak berlakunya keganasan atau mungkin dimusnahkan bagi memadamkan segala bukti yang ada.

Macam itu cerita DNA, depa ambil calit sana dan calit sini sikit dan tuduh orang yang tak berdosa melakukan sodomy.

Inilah yang gua pelek,video ini depa mau sangat2, tapi video lucah depa buat2 pejam mata.

Nah, gua kasi satu video link dan latok tengok sendiri betapa sopan santunnya anak2 buah latok....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XI6EBPV53is



cheers.

PRS withdraws election petition against Lagong

Joseph Tawie

Many PRS members are upset over the move because they feel there is sufficient evidence to show the Pelagus seat was won through money politics.

Defeated Parti Rakyat Sarawak (PRS) candidate Stanley Nyitar last Friday applied to the Sibu High Court to withdraw his application to nullify the election of an independent candidate George Lagong (photo) in the Pelagus seat.On May 20, he had applied to the court to declare Lagongs election null and void as his victory was allegedly influenced by money politics.

Meanwhile, Lagong had also applied to strike out the petition. High Court Judge Rahman Sebli has fixed Aug 12 to hear both applications.

Lagong defeated Nyitar by a 2,837-vote majority when he secured 5,740 votes to Nyitars 2,903. But PRS president James Masing had alleged that Lagongs victory was due to the influence of money politics.

It is believed that the petition is to be withdrawn on the advice of the top Barisan Nasional (BN) leadership in the interest of the state BN.

When contacted, Masing refused to comment on this, but partys secretary-general Wilfred Nissom has more or less confirmed it.

It seems that Masing was asked to do so by the BN leadership and he in turn asked Nyitar to withdraw the petition, Nissom said.

But many unhappy PRS members and supporters feel the party should proceed with the petition if there is sufficient evidence that money was allegedly used by Lagong to defeat Nyitar.

They feel that the withdrawal gave the impression that the party is at the mercy of the BN.

However, it is believed that one of the reasons for withdrawing the petition is that the party is uncertain of winning even though it may have sufficient proof.

There are others who suggest that the move has something to do with the September s! tate Cab inet reshuffle where Masing is tipped to be appointed as one of the deputy chief ministers.

The vacant post arose following the defeat of former deputy chief minister Dr George Chan of Sarawak United Peoples Party (SUPP) together with 11 others in the last election.

Some PRS members also said that it is best for the party and Masing not to displease Chief Minister Taib Mahmud, especially with regard to Lagong and Larry Sng, who is Taibs blue-eyed boy. Lagong is Larrys uncle.

The withdrawal is also seen as a sign of a peace-making effort between the party and the family of Sng.


Censored: KDN blacks out the Economist

ENEMIES OF PRESS FREEDOM
  • Umno-Barisan Nasional
  • Ministry of Home Affairs (KDN)
  • KDN Publications and Quranic Text Control Unit
  • The Malaysian police farce
  • The Malaysian civil service

  • Tear gas man dies
    Police brutality
    Stadium swindle
    Tung Shin tear gas

    The heavy black marker ink of KDN (Home Ministry) censorship has appeared again on the pages of foreign news magazines, this time on this weeks issue of the Economist. The weekly newspapers July 14 report on the Bersih rally was blacked out in three places.

    Readers were not permitted to read that:

    • One man died of a heart attack after tear gas
    • The march was banned, but a stadium was offered then withdrawn
    • Police were heavy-handed, provoking anger
    • An inquiry into police brutality was conceded by the government
    • Video showed tear gas and water cannon at Tung Shin maternity hospital

    The full article is available intact at the Economists web site. (The KDNs arm doesnt reach that far.)

    KDNs censorship was of publicly-available facts, backed up by other published accounts and eye-witness reports available online. It is difficult to understand the kind of thinking that will not allow the sophisticated reader of the Economist which presents itself as the newspaper of people at the top to read what they already know or have read elsewhere.

    But the small minds of policemen and censors are more concerned with looking good than with being good.

    The black marker ink of censorship often appeared on foreign magazines such as the Far Eastern Economic Review, Time, Newsweek and Life most frequently during the 1980s and 1990s especially on photographs of scantily-dressed women broad brush strokes of marker ink was splashed across the breasts, waists or hips. Even re! producti ons of classical nude paintings were censored this way.

    The Economists article:

    Political affray in Malaysia
    Taken to the cleaners
    An overzealous government response to an opposition rally
    Jul 14th 2011 | SINGAPORE | from the print edition

    MALAYSIA is one of South-East Asias stabler nations; but a rally in Kuala Lumpur on July 9th in demand of electoral reform turned surprisingly nasty, leading to the arrest of more than 1,600 people. The police fired tear gas and water cannon into the crowd, and one man died of a heart attack.. All those arrested were released fairly quickly, but Amnesty International, a London-based human-rights group, called it the worst campaign of repression in the country for years. The governments reaction showed a lot of nervousness about how much opposition it can tolerate.

    In fact the crackdown started a few weeks ago after Bersih 2.0 announced that it was going to stage the rally. Bersih, also known as The Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections, is a loose alliance of NGOs and activists (bersih means clean). It argues that all candidates should be given access to the mainstream media and that indelible ink should be used to stop people voting more than once. It all sounds uncontroversial, but not to the government. Bersih was declared illegal on July 1st and about 200 activists were rounded up. The march itself was then banned, although the authorities offered Bersih a stadium to meet inand then withdrew the offer.

    Perhaps the government was looking back nervously to the first Bersih march, in 2007. On that occasion, too, thousands protested against the Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition government and demanded reform. Subsequently, in the 2008 general election, the BN lost its largest share of votes since 1957 when it started ruling the country after the British left. The current prime minister, Najib Razak, deputy prime minister in 2007 before taking over the top job in an internal party coup, mus! t have f eared that the second Bersih rally might be a similar portent. He has to hold an election before 2013, but wants to do so earlier to win his own mandate. Opposition politicians were quick to join Bersih. The pre-eminent leader of the opposition, Anwar Ibrahim, was shoved to the ground and injured in the affray.

    None of this bodes well for Malaysia. The heavy-handed police tactics have provoked a lot of anger; the government has conceded an official investigation into claims of police brutality. In one instance (caught on film), police seemed to fire tear gas and water cannon into a hospital where protesters were sheltering from a baton charge. Few old laws were left untouched in the attempt to round up suspects before the march. It was reported that 30 people arrested in Penang were investigated under Section 122 of the Penal Code for the charge of waging war against the king. Dragging in the constitutional monarch, Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin, seemed particularly desperate, reminiscent of the abuse of the monarchys position in neighbouring Thailand. On the eve of the rally, the king came out with a statement reminding everyone that street demonstrations bring more bad than good, although the original intention is good.

    Mr Najib defended the police and accused the marchers of sowing chaos. Dismissing the motives of Bersih, he cast it as a desperate attempt by Mr Anwar to grab power. The immediate upshot is that Mr Najib may choose to delay calling for an election for some time, to let things settle down. He presumably hopes that if he waits long enough, people will have forgotten about this ugly incident. But the longer-term effects are hard to judge. It might also help to unite a fractious opposition against what they portray as an assault on democracy.

    from the print edition | Asia
    Taken to the cleaners


    Filed under: Journalism, Politics

    JOHOR HEBAT!

    circulating thru email..


    With ungrateful thanks from the Malaysian taxpayers.

    With a base price of RM 5.2 million (USD 1.7 million), I dont even want to guess how much this particular one cost. Said to be the first Bugatti Veyron to ever land in this country, this special blue-white version of the car is owned by the Sultan of Johor, Sultan Ibrahim Ismail .
    Powered by an 8-litre W16 quad-turbocharged engine that produces around 1001 horsepower, the Bugatti Veyron is able to reach from 0 to 100km/h in just 2.46 seconds and a top speed of more than 400 km/h which made it one of the fastest production cars in the world. Dont even ask about its fuel consumption.

    JOHOR HEBAT!

    Lynas cloaked in secrecy and lacks transparency

    Lim Chee Wee
    The Malaysian Bar continues to view with grave concern the developments with respect to the controversial construction of the Lynas Advanced Materials Plant (LAMP) at Gebeng Industrial Estate, Kuantan, Pahang.

    We note that the project is still very much shrouded in secrecy and characterised by a serious lack of transparency. This is outrageous, given that the plant's by-product of radioactive wastes would have a major adverse impact, directly or indirectly, on human health and the environment.

    The level of engagement and consultation with people who will be most affected by the project has been extremely limited and woefully inadequate. It is highly arrogant and irresponsible that neither Nick Curtis, chairman of Lynas Corporation, nor any senior representative of the company, has been on the ground and continuously engaging with the community.

    A series of 10 discussion sessions had been planned, but Lynas Corporation never directly attended the consultations, which were cancelled after only two sessions.

    We are informed that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report had a very narrow scope. It did not make any assessment of LAMP's impact, particularly on the environment, the employees and the community.

    The report is thus of extremely limited utility, does not address the concerns of the community and offers no assurance to the community on critical issues implicating the safety of the project.

    At about the same time that the IAEA report was published, it was reported in the New York Times on June 29 that there are serious construction and engineering flaws in the storage facilities for the radioactive waste products resulting from the processing of the rare earth at LAMP.

    According to the report, the engineers felt a professional duty to voice their safety concerns... the problems they detail include structural cracks, air pockets and leaks in many of the concrete shells for 70 containment tanks, some of which are larger than ! double-d ecker buses.

    Futhermore, these issues have the potential to cause the plant's critical failure in operation . . . more critically the toxic, corrosive and radioactive nature of the materials being leached in these tanks, should they leak, will most definitely create a contamination issue. These shortcomings constitute a recipe for disaster.

    There has also been no transparency or disclosure as to the plan for management and disposal of thorium, the radioactive waste generated by the production of rare earth.

    The radioactive waste management plan must be made public and subject to public scrutiny and consultation. Lynas Corporation must ultimately provide for the removal and transportation of all the radioactive products back to Australia.

    Moreover, thorium has an inconceivably long half-life of over 14 billion years, ie half the atoms in any sample of thorium will decay in that amount of time.

    Will Lynas Corporation be in existence for as long, to be responsible for the impact of thorium? In this regard, Lynas Corporation, at the very minimum, should provide an environmental bond and obtain insurance coverage for the protection of the community.

    Save for the creation of merely 300 high-risk jobs, the setting up of LAMP ostensibly generates no visible or tangible benefits to the community or the country. Yet, the company has reportedly been granted 12 years of tax exemption for its operations.

    We have already witnessed how radioactive wastes have adversely affected the community in and around Bukit Merah, Perak. We have now been left with one of Asia's largest radioactive clean-up sites there. It is plain that we do not want to experience the recurrence of such a tragedy in our nation ever again.

    The Malaysian Bar strongly urges the government to take all necessary steps to halt LAMP, and to protect its people and environment.


    PAKAILAH KEMEJA T BERTANDA B2

    Polis yang ternyata tidak konsisten dalam tindakan mereka telah mengizinkan rakyat memakai baju kuning dengan bersyarat. Syaratnya tidak boleh ada simbol BERSIH 2.0 pada kemeja T itu. Maknanya bolehlah simbol itu diganti dengan B2.

    Perlu diingat bahawa semangat BERSIH 2.0 yang telah bersemarak itu perlu dilestarikan demi mengingatkan pihak yang berwewenang bahawa kita semua serius dengan lapan tuntutan yang sama-sama disepakati.

    Sekali gus kita bersedia melihat perubahan yang dibuat oleh Suruhanjaya Pilihan Raya (SPR). Badan ini telah mendakwa pembangkang hanya pandai buat bising. Tidak pernah ada bantahan rasmi yang mereka terima setakat ini. Sekretariat BERSIH 2.0 ataupun Pakatan Rakyat perlu menyahut cabaran ini dengan kadar yang segera. Jangan beri peluang kepada SPR untuk memperlekehkan BERSIH 2.0 atau pembangkang di Dewan Rakyat Malaysia.

    DAP nak tinggalkan PR, UMNO tersenyum,Utusan melompat sakan....

    DAP keluar Pakatan Rakyat (PR)? Itulah yang diharapkan oleh Umno/BN.

    Isu terbaru yang melibatkan enakmen hiburan sekali lagi menggegarkan hubungan PAS dan DAP di Kedah. Isu ini bukan sahaja melibatkan PR Kedah.

    Setiausaha Publisiti DAP kebangsaan Tony Pua mencadangkan partinya keluar Pakatan Rakyat ekoran isu penguatkuasaan penuh Enakmen Hiburan dan Tempat-tempat Hiburan 1997 melarang operasi pusat-pusat hiburan di Kedah sepanjang bulan Ramadan.

    Apa pula nasihat Tuan Guru Nik Aziz....

    Saya mengikuti perkembangan yang berlaku di Kedah iaitu yang melibatkan isu arahan penutupan pusat-pusat hiburan sepanjang bulan Ramadhan. Seperti biasa, media massa yang dimiliki oleh UMNO terus menerus menghentam PAS dan melaga-lagakan di antara pimpinan Pakatan Rakyat dalam isu ini. Utusan Malaysia yang menjadi lidah rasmi UMNO pula mengambil kesempatan untuk membina keyakinan palsu di benak pembaca dengan tajuknya PAS Tunduk Kepada DAP.

    Saya kira UMNO sudah lupa bahawa mereka sendiri yang meluluskan Enekmen Hiburan Dan Tempat-tempat Hiburan 1997 yang mana di dalam dalam Jadual C, muka surat 150 dinyatakan dengan jelas syarat am no.8 seperti berikut: Jenis-hiburan yang tersebut di atas tidak boleh diadakan pada bulan Ramadhan atau pada hari Jumaat (iaitu, antara jam 6 petang hari Khamis dan jam 2.30 petang hari Jumaat) kecuali izin bertulis daripada Pihak Berkuasa Negeri diperolehi. UMNO sudah lupa bahawa pada tahun 1997, mereka masih lagi menjadi kerajaan di Kedah dan sehingga tahun 2011 ia baru dikuatkuasakan di bawah pentadbiran Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Azizan Abdul Razak.

    Layakkah UMNO bertempik sorak pada hari ini kononnya PAS tunduk kepada DAP? Jika demikian, selama ini UMNO tunduk kepa! da siapa ? Simpati sungguh saya kepada kaedah permainan politik kampung yang dimainkan oleh UMNO pada hari ini. Barangkali mereka masih terbawa-bawa dengan politik zaman purbakala yang mengharapkan rakyat dibutatulikan pancaindera mereka dengan hanya menerima maklumat sehala sahaja.

    Berkali-kali saya nyatakan, PAS sangat berbeza dengan UMNO dalam hal bertahaluf dengan non muslim. Di antara PAS dengan DAP misalnya, PAS sentiasa melontarkan dasar-dasar yang selari dengan prinsip Islam. Berbeza dengan UMNO yang bertempik sakan mahu memelihara Islam, alih-alih bukan sahaja tidak mahu menutup pusat hiburan, bahkan melanjutkan masanya dari jam 2.00 pagi kepada jam 3.00 pagi! Ini telah diputuskan di Melaka melalui mesyuarat Exco Kerajaan Negeri Melaka pada 7 Julai 2011. Saya menurunkan kata-kata Ketua Menteri Melaka, Datuk Seri Mohd. Ali Rustam ketika mengumumkan perkara ini, Keputusan ini diambil sebagai memenuhi permohonan pengusaha terbabit kerana mereka mendapat permintaan pelanggan yang sebahagian besarnya datang bercuti dan mahu berhibur hingga lewat pagi (Lihat Utusan Malaysia, 8 Julai 2011).

    Di Kedah, sewaktu Datuk Seri Azizan mengumumkan bahawa operasi rumah hiburan sepanjang Ramadhan 100% untuk bukan Islam, dan penarikan lessen serta merta akan dilakukan jika terdapat pengunjung muslim, Utusan Malaysia melompat tinggi melatah seolah-olah langit sudah runtuh. PAS dikatakan tunduk kepada DAP sedangkan apa yang dilakukan oleh kerajaan negeri Kedah ialah memberikan hak kepada bukan Islam dan juga memastikan umat Islam terhindar daripada perkara-perkara yang menjejaskan ibadah sepanjang bulan itu. Namun apabila kerajaan negeri Melaka mengumumkan untuk melanjutkan tempoh operasi pusat hiburan, di mana Utusan Malaysia? Di mana NGO-NGO yang hebat membela Islam? Sudah hilangkah darah segala pendekar Melayu yang siap mengatur pencak membela kesucian agama mereka?

    Hakikatnya, UMNO tidak pernah meletakkan akhirat menjadi agenda dalam perjuangan. Di mana-mana saha! ja tempa t UMNO berkuasa dan menjadi majoriti, tidak pernah agenda Islam menjadi keutamaan. Berbeza dengan PAS yang ditohmah menjadi alat DAP, PAS mengambil ruang dan peluang yang ada untuk sentiasa melontarkan dasar yang selari dengan Islam. Di Melaka, siapakah yang menjadi majoriti jika bukan UMNO? Jika PAS dikatakan menjadi alat DAP, UMNO alat siapa? Alat nafsu? Sayangnya, UMNO menjadi majoriti langsung tidak menguntungkan Islam. Barangkali itulah sebabnya tangan mereka sentiasa menggapai PAS. Saya katakan, turun sahajalah UMNO dari takhta kuasa, bertenggek di situpun tiada apa yang boleh ditumpang bakti.

    Apapun, saya ucapkan syabas dan tahniah kepada kerajaan negeri Kedah. Usah dipeduli nista dan cerca pihak yang berkokok berderai-derai dengan ekor yang memalukan.

    Nik Abdul Aziz bin Nik Mat,
    Menteri Besar Kelantan Darul Naim.


    No talk of Pakatan split during retreat

    cheers.

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