Pakatan Rakyat (PR) Social Political Buzz & Bulls

Prof Zainal Kling, History is NOT about Terminologies and Semantics. True History is about FACTS and REALITY.

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Is It Really, Professor ?

by

Art Harun



Kangkung Professor
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I must admit of being astounded by the claim by Professor Datuk Dr Zainal Kling that Tanah Melayu had never been colonised by the British, save for the period when Malayan Union was introduced. For the record, this is his claim:

The good Professor rested his claim as such on the fact that the Pangkor Treaty of 1874 between Raja Abdullah and the British Governor in Singapore did not mention that Perak was to be colonised but was only to be protected as a protectorate of the British.

The Professor went on to say that the only states which were colonised by the British in Tanah Melayu were Singapore, Penang and Melaka.

The good Professor may be correct in so far as historical terminologies go.

But history is NOT about terminologies and semantics. True history is about FACTS and REALITY.

Of course, facts may be looked at from different views, angles and perspective resulting in different interpretations and conclusions. Realities may also be subjected to the same treatment giving rise to the term of administered reality.

With all due respect to the good Professor, the British entry into Tanah Melayu and their subsequent entrenchment in Tanah Melayus administration leading to at least a de facto colonisation of the whole of the Tanah Melayu peninsula and her surrounding islets CANNOT be viewed solely from and within the effect of the Pangkor Treaty alone.

That would tantamount to an attempt to define the whole cosmos just by looking at t! he moon alone and nothing else.

Lets however begin with the Pangkor Treaty 1874 (as the Professor had relied his thesis on it).

The Pangkor Treaty 1874


For the record, prior to the Pangkor Treaty, the British, through the British East India Company, were already deeply entrenched in Tanah Melayu. It colonised Penang in 1786. Penang was later confirmed to be a possession of the British in 1800 by the then Sultan of Kedah. In 1819, Stamford Raffles took it upon himself to bring Singapore into the British fold.

Later in 1824, the British and the Dutch, presumably under the mandate of some godlike creatures residing somewhere within the mountains of Scotland, decided among themselves to divide the Malay Archipelago into two, thereby giving away Melaka to the British and Indonesia (Sumatera) to the Dutch.

In each of these three little states which the British saw fit to do as it please, they had a Governor who governed for the British. In 1867, these so called settlements became the Crown Colonies and came directly under the purview of the Colonial Office in London.

Meanwhile, in Perak, upon the death of Sultan Ali in 1871, a palace power struggle was brewing. The Raja Muda of Perak was Raja Abdullah. He should have gone on to take the thrones. As events would have it, the Raja Bendahara, Raja Ismail was pronounced as Sultan.

Perak was a rich tin producer at that time. The British were itchy to get their greedy hands on Perak. They were waiting for an opportunity. That opportunity presented itself when Raja Abdullah wrote to the Governor of Singapore, Sir Andrew Clarke, spelling out his desire to place Perak under British protection, and "to have a man of sufficient abilities to show (him) a good system of government."

The British surely did not need further motivation but to lend their generous helping hands to a Malay ruler in need of course. With that, the Governor very kindly entered into the Pangkor Treaty with Raja A! bdullah on 20th January 1874. With that agreement in hand, Raja Abdullah was made Sultan of Perak (although Raja Ismail was earlier appointed Sultan by the Malay palace).

Raja Ismail (the then Sultan) of course did not attend the signing of the Pangkor Treaty as he did not recognise the agreement for obvious reason. But faced with the might of the very big and terribly friendly and generous British, Raja Ismail could not do anything other than seeing the throne being taken by Raja Abdullah. Sir W W Birch was appointed, pursuant to the agreement, Peraks 1st British Resident.

(It was with considerable irony that Raja Abdullah later Sultan Abdullah was later thrown out to the Seychelles for conspiring to murder Birch).

Professor Datuk Dr Zainal was correct to say that the Pangkor Treaty did not say Perak was a colony of the British. But surely that does not mean that Perak was not colonised by the British.

So what if the British had said Perak was only a protectorate? Does it mean anything at all?

What if the British had said that Perak was a paradise where everybody could smoke opium till they laugh and laugh and laugh and they die? Does that mean Perak was a paradise where everybody could smoke opium till they laugh and laugh and laugh and they die?

Just because the British had said so?

The British, for whatever reason, chiefly because they had wanted to classify their dominions throughout the world for economics and social purposes (and also for qualification for British citizenship) had categorised its conquests into three classes, the colonies, the protectorates and the protected states. Semantically of course there are differences between the three.

But factually, it does not take a rocket scientist, or a learned bunch of thick-spectacled history professors to know that there were not much of a difference between them.

A colony is of course a state which the British had annexed or settled in. This state was! presume d to be a jungle or a barren state where civilisation did not exist. And the very civilised British had of course discovered that state, just like Stamford Raffles did Singapore or Francis Light did Penang.

A protectorate is a state which the civilised and friendly (and generous) British had not annexed or settled in. This is a state where the British came in at the request of the helpless ruler of that state. It is a state where the British came to help or came to administer not through force but through agreements or treatise. Yes. That is a protectorate.

A protected state on the other hand, is a state which is protected by the British, again at the request of the ruler of that state. However, according to the British, in a protected state, the British did not involve themselves with its governance.

Yes. That is the difference between the three classes of the British conquests. Who said so? Well, the British said so. So, if the British said so, it must be correct right? Well, the British also said that Maggie Thatcher had balls. Remember?

Relying on semantics and these semantics were coined and used by none other than the British themselves the good Professor said according to the Pangkor Treaty, Perak was NOT colonised.

Well, is it really? Lets look at the terms of the so called treaty.

First of all, Raja Abdullah was proclaimed by the British as the Sultan of Perak in place of Raja Ismail, who was already proclaimed in accordance with the adat dan istiadat Raja-raja Melayu Perak as the Sultan.

Now, may I ask, on what authority did the British make that appointment? On the fact that they are white men with guns and ammunitions far better than the collective keris and parangs owned by the Perakians? Now, if that is not annexation of Perak, tell me what it is.

Then, why dont we (and the good Professor) loom at the salient terms of the so-called treaty.
  • Raja Abdullah was acknowledged as the legitimate Sultan to replace Sultan! Ismail who would be given a title and a pension of 1000 Mexican pesos a month.

  • The Sultan would receive a British Resident whose advice had to be sought and adhered to in all matters except those pertaining to the religion and customs of the Malays.

  • All collections and control of taxes as well as the administration of the state would be done in the name of the Sultan, but the Sultan was to govern according to the advice and consent of the Resident.

  • The Minister of Larut would continue to be in control but would no longer be recognized as a liberated leader. Instead, a British officer, who would have vast authority in administering the district, would be appointed in Larut.

  • The Sultan, and not the British government, would pay the salary of the Resident.

  • Perak ceded Dinding and Pangkor Island to the United Kingdom.
  • Is this what a protectorate is all about? Does it not sound to all of us that Perak was as good as being annexed in a war with the British? Just consider the fact that the Sultan was to govern the state in accordance with the advice and consent of the British Resident. Perak was not colonised you say, Professor? Well, last night I saw pink cows flying over the crescent. Very nice.

    Throughout the British presence in Tanah Melayu, we had three categories of states. The straits settlements, namely, Penang, Singapore and Melaka. Then we have Federated Malay States, ie, Perak, Selangor, Negeri Sembilan and Pahang. These states were all not colonised, according too the British. They were just protectorate. Yea, right.

    Then we have the Unfederated Malay States, which were Kedah, Perlis, Kelantan, Trengganu and Johor. They were also termed as protected states by the British. Again, that does not mean that they were not colonised by the British.

    Under intense pressure by the British for example, Johor accepted a treaty of protection by the United Kingdom in 1885. With that Johor accepted a British advisor.
    T he way Kedah, Perlis, Kelantan and Trengganu came under the protection and became branded as Unfederated Malay States is an insult to every Malaysians. And for the British to insist that they had never officially and technically, that is been colonised by the British is an act of colonial arrogance.

    How did Kedah, Perlis, Kelantan and Trengganu become protected states of the British? Well, just as in 1824 when the British gods decided to divide this part of the world with the Dutch, in 1909, the British did the same with Thailand in the Anglo-Siamese Treaty 1909. In this treaty, these two gods divided the northern Malay states into two.

    Under this treaty, Pattani , Narathiwat, Songkhla, Satun and Yala remained under Thai control, while Thailand relinquished its claims to sovereignty over Kedah, Kelantan, Perlis and Terengganu which integrated into the British realm in Tanah Melayu as protectorates.

    Now, who gave the authority and mandate to the British and Thais to willy nilly decide among themselves who to own what? The Pope? The British queen?

    The mere act of unilaterally dividing these collection of Malay states which even predate Melaka among themselves is incontrovertible proof that these states were under the whims and fancies of these two people, ie, the Thais and the British.

    All the terms coined and marketed about by the British were only what they are, namely, terms. Semantics. That is all. The effect is the same.
    • They came into our country either through uninvited settlements or request by some people with vested interests.

    • Under the pretext of lending their hands to assists us, they raped, plundered and stole our resources.

    • They invited and brought people from foreign lands (I have to stress that I do not have anything against them) to work here.

    • They then divided all of us and ruled us.
    Now, if that is not colonisation, I do not know what is.

    The mere fact that they could com! e back t o Malaya after the Japanese who kicked them out earlier in about 5 days surrendered and forced the Malay Rulers and everybody else to accept the Malayan Union (where they consolidated the Straits Settlements; the Federated Malay States and the Unfederated Malay States into one Federation is proof enough that they regarded Tanah Melayu regardless of their semantic classifications as their possession, as theirs to do whatever they liked.

    Isnt that a trait of every colonial Master, Datuk Dr Professor?

    If they had not controlled the whole Tanah Melayu other than the Straits Setllements, how did they manage to force every state to accept the Malayan Union.

    How did they manage to compel all our Malay Rulers to submit to their arrogance habit of dividing this territory as if we are some bunch of grapes which were to be graded and stomped on by their feet whenever they please?

    What authority did the British have to administer us?
    • To submit too their system?
    • To their sense of justice?
    • To their system of civil service?
    I am not saying that their systems are bad but under what authority did they manage to make us adopt their systems other than a systematic colonisation of our land?

    Dear Professor, perhaps you should read the British Parliament hansard when they were debating the Malayan Independence Bill.

    In the first place, if they did not colonise us, why and under what authority did they have to pass an Act of Palriament in their Parliament to give us independence?

    Sometime, people show their true colours when the speak.

    This is what the Secretary of State for the Colonies, Alan Lennox-Boyd, in a Freudian moment, said:
    Today, we are setting the seal on this work. We can, with Edmund Burke, rejoice that our ancestors have made the most extensive and the only honourable conquest not by destroying but by promoting the we! alth, th e number and the happiness of the human race. (emphasis is mine).
    Yes. That was, and still is, how they saw us.

    Their honourable conquest.

    And we were not colonised you say?

    Soalan Parlimen sesi Oktober 2011

    1. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Perdana Menteri menyatakan:
    a) perincian model landasan dan hartanah selaku cara pembiayaan projek MRT.
    b) senarai tanah-tanah yang akan diambil alih bagi kelangsungan model landasan dan hartanah ini dan jumlah yang dibelanjakan bagi maksud ini.

    2. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Menteri Wilayah Persekutuan dan Kesejahteraan Bandar menyatakan:
    a) jumlah dana yang telah digunakan oleh Menteri daripada sumber DBKL dari 2008 hingga akhir bulan Ogos 2011. Sila nyatakan mengikut organisasi penerima dan alasan penggunaan.
    b) pecahan penggunaan dana mengikut kawasan parlimen Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya dan Labuan.

    3. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Menteri Luar Negeri menyatakan tahap persediaan serta langkah-langkah persiapan yang diambil bagi setiap Kedutaan, Pejabat Suruhanjaya Tinggi, dan Konsulat Malaysia di seluruh dunia untuk memastikan semua warganegara Malaysia luar negara mendapat hak mengundi, serta proses pengendalian kertas undi bagi pengundi luar negara.

    4. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Perdana Menteri menyatakan:
    a) milik siapa pesawat Airbus A319-IIX yang digunakan semasa percutian YAB Perdana Menteri di Perth, Australia serta kekerapan penggunaan pesawat dan kos terbabit.
    b) tindakan diambil terhadap dakwaan salahlaku pembelian T91 polish tanks dan SU-30 Russian aircraft didedahkan Wikileaks.

    5. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Menteri Pertahanan menyatakan:
    a) jumlah kos projek sebenar Network Centric Operations (NCO) Angkatan Tentera Malaysia yang dianugerahkan kepada syarikat Sapura Secured Technologies Sdn Bhd dan mengapa ia dianugerahkan menerusi tender terus.
    b) kenapa roadmap dan juga Keperluan Staf Am, KESAM (general service ! requirem ent, GSR) tidak ditetapkan sebelum projek diluluskan.

    6. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Menteri Pelajaran menyatakan:
    a) rasional polisi sekolah vokasional yang membabitkan pelajar yang mempunyai keperluan khas, adakah benar ia hanya sampai ke peringkat tingkatan 3 sahaja.
    b) mengapa ia tidak diteruskan sehingga tingkatan 5.

    7. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Menteri Pengajian Tinggi menyatakan:
    a) jumlah staf akademik Universiti Malaya yang telah melepaskan jawatan di universiti tersebut dari tahun 2006-2010 mengikut jabatan. Sila nyatakan sebab mereka melepaskan jawatan.
    b) adakah UM berhadapan dengan krisis kekurangan staff akademik berikutan peletakan jawatan mereka.

    8. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Menteri Penerangan Komunikasi dan Kebudayaan menyatakan rasional Kementerian Penerangan Komunikasi dan Kebudayaan mengadakan projek pembinaan hotel sekitar Angkasapuri, kos pembinaan hotel tersebut serta adakah projek diberi secara tender terbuka ataupun tidak.

    9. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Menteri Pertanian dan Industri Asas Tani menyatakan:
    a) jumlah kes deraan haiwan peliharaan dari 2005 hingga 2010, dan langkah-langkah yang diambil Kementerian bagi memastikan kejadian deraan dapat diatasi.
    b) sama ada undang-undang sedia ada bagi mempertahankan hak haiwan peliharaan serta pemilik haiwan berkenaan adalah mencukupi.

    10. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Menteri Wilayah Persekutuan dan Kesejahteraan Bandar menyatakan dasar kerajaan untuk mengelakkan fenomena peminggiran Melayu bandar (ghettoization), terutamanya apabila dilihat skim perumahan rumah kos rendah yang sering dibina di kawasan kurang sesuai dan berkualiti rendah berbanding pembangunan di kawasan lain.

    11. Puan Nurul! Izzah B inti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Menteri Pelajaran menyatakan:
    a) rasional pemberian 50 biasiswa elit Jabatan Perkhidmatan Awam kepada mahasiswa-mahasiwi yang sedang melanjutkan pengajian di universiti-universiti terkemuka dunia.
    b) adakah pemberian 50 biasiswa ini mendiskriminasi pelajar-pelajar lepasan SPM yang tidak berkemampuan walaupun mempunyai keputusan cemerlang.

    12. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Perdana Menteri menjelaskan status kesihatan beliau dan Timbalan Perdana Menteri serta kos rawatan di dalam dan luar negera yang telah dibelanjakan untuk penjagaan kesihatan kedua-duanya sejak 2008 sehingga sekarang.

    13. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Perdana Menteri menjelaskan elaun-elaun yang diterima oleh Perdana Menteri dan isteri. Sila nyatakan mengikut alasan penggunaan dari tempoh 2008 hingga 2011.

    14. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Perdana Menteri menyatakan berapa banyak program-program rasmi dilaksanakan di kediaman rasmi Perdana Menteri, Seri Perdana dari tahun 2008 hingga 2011 dan nyatakan jumlah perbelanjaan yang ditanggung oleh kerajaan.

    15. Puan Nurul Izzah Binti Anwar [Lembah Pantai] minta Menteri Dalam Negeri menyatakan jumlah permohonan kewarganegaraan baru yang telah diluluskan mengikut kawasan parlimen dari tahun 2008 hingga sekarang.


    UMNO has taught us to be selfish and petty

    It seems to be the latest trend or rather Malayism, that politicians and the public are up in arms over petty issue that brings out the worst in everyone. It is getting worse among the Malays because of one Malay mans opinion. Are we so selfish and mean that our opinion must be the same as everyones?

    But today I want to write about how one can channel ones strength, opinion, knowledge, skill and even money (if you have any to spare) equal to what is being used over in the net, media and kopitam on this 1 mans opinion.

    For the past few years I have been putting forward my proposal to people who have the time especially those who have retired to do something for the community and country.

    Yet there is not a single response with the usual excuse - no time, busy with the cucu, golf etc but plenty of time to go shopping, fucking, gossiping and belittling people. Sometimes I believe it is God way of punishing them when they are infested with one sickness after another.

    There are many issues that hurt our living condition, why cant we do something about it. One Ah Long I spoke to recently told me quite frankly that if the Government is working for the people, they would be out of business. Instead everyday, there is one new Ah Long in the market for KL and Selangor. The money flow per day is RM3 million for KL and Selangor. Election time as much as RM60 million is being borrowed by politicians in KL and Selangor alone. Their clientele includes Royalties too which they try to avoid. Recently a son of a VVIP borrowed RM6 million to cover his loss over a deal.

    But again I am not interested in those rich and us! eless ba stards.

    The issues I am concern are:

    1) The fraud within TNB, cheating the public like you and me. There are ways to counter against TNB. If I, just a housewife knows how TNB cheat us surely those ex-professional men and women also will know how. So why not form a group and get all the evidences to proof and tell the Government this must stop. Everyone only kopi-talk but doing nothing about it.

    2) Telco has been cheating the public with all kinds of imaginary charges. Again people should form a group to counter that.

    3) Pot-holes and poor drainage. Again everybody complain and complain. The minute you ask them to sit down and discuss and put forward our idea and proposal nobody turn up.

    4) Illegal stalls again complain and complain but no group is form to protest.

    5) Dirty food outlets.blab! blab!

    6) Unreliable transport system and cheating by rapid and taxis.big silent.

    7) Illegal gambling dens, spouting here and thereblab! .big silent.

    8) There are many retirees who can help the community like single parents, hard-core, drug addicts etc..to start business. Like the one I suggested. Open a restaurant, teach them to operate the day to day sales, teach them to bake and cook, train them on service. The profit from the business can be channel into another group and another restaurant is open for another group. It goes on and on. For a group of eight eventually to a group of thousand. But NO! too much trouble. Again I am asking WHY?

    9) Those with money can act betwe! en the b ank and Government to give small loan with a low interest charge without any red tape to anyone with business to tide over bad times. Right now only a certain race gets the benefit while the rest can go fly kites.

    10) Increase of crime. If the people can get together and force the police to do their job then our lives are more secure.

    11) The 6P Program. Why is everyone silent and accepting this god damn scheme by the government to dilute us? Even the Royalties who are always arrogant and bitchy are very quiet. At the end of the day even UMNO members themselves will become nothing but little mice, while the migrates become the boss. When the time comes we will definitely be colonized by some African, Jew or Communist migrate who will treat us in similar manner as to how we treat the orang asli in Sarawak and Indians in the estate.

    I believe the group that I have been talking to have been too secure with all the desserts given by the government that they have learnt to receive and not give. Over the years I see talents and experience being wasted away. It is sad.

    Those needed to help are not doing it while those who are desperate for recognition are going round the world to help others instead our own people.

    The UMNO government is like our parents. They nurture us for 54 years to be selfish, mean and corrupt, no wonder so many excuses.


    Former CIA asset reveals how she was gagged after 9/11



    Interview with Susan Lindauer, CIA Agent Jailed for Wanting to Tell the Truth
    by Steve Beckow
    8 September 2011

    If youve wanted to know what the ordinary CIA agent who wasnt part of the 9/11 plot was doing and thinking after 9/11, Susan Lindauer, author of Extreme Prejudice, can tell you. Her handler, after 9/11, told her the CIA was not going to conduct an investigation but was really aiming simply to keep the people calm. When she began digging into the matter, she landed up in prison. Her handler, by contrast, received a $13 million payoff.

    Amazing testimony of ex-CIA Asset Susan Lindauer. Five years of legal troubles, one year in prison for daring to tell the truth. During the Bush era the top controllers of the governmental mechanism of Defense and National Security wanted to have a war with Iraq. They got their wish and anyone who got in the way was dealt with severely no matter if they violated a law or not. Not brought to trial, Lindauer was jailed under the Patriot Act which amounted to summary punishment outside a verdict in a court of law. She was jailed without a trial. This is part of her story that is just unfolding now. She has waited 10 years to tell it.


    My comment: I find Susan Lindauer's personality gratingly superficial and her delivery far too glib for someone who suffered unjust punishment for attempting to do her job. She sounds more like just another author trying to promote her new book. Nevertheless, she reveals many snippets of information worth adding to the mountain of evidence already assembled, which points to the fact that the entire episode was a 4D disaster movie scripted by 4th-Dimensional entities for the sole purpose of further disempowering human beings and reinforcing centralized government as the only way to exterminate random acts of violence.
    Some rights r! eserved Antares/Magick RiverYou may borrow and/or modify content for your own blog but please credit and backlink, thanks.

    Paloh the baby elephant finds a loving new home

    FMT LETTER

    From Nature Alert, via e-mail

    Baby elephant Paloh, who was cruelly chained up at the filthy Johor Zoo, was freed today thanks to campaigning by Londons Daily Mirror readers.

    Shocking photographs of two-year-old orphan Paloh shackled and roped up in a dirty back yard of the zoo sparked outrage.

    But now Paloh has been taken to a loving sanctuary where she can forage happily for hours daily.

    Campaigner Shiva who took the shock picture of Paloh in chains, said: Im overjoyed to hear that Paloh has found a new home. A million thanks to Daily Mirror readers for making this possible.

    Paloh, who had been left exhausted and traumatised after her horrific ordeal, was barely able to shuffle her feet.

    Zoo keepers claimed it was part of her training but readers bombarded Malaysian officials and demanded her cruel treatment be ended.

    Paloh was eventually removed from her chains and put in a bare compound with baby boy elephant Jeli, also two.

    However, readers continued to protest, forcing government officials to step in. Paloh and Jeli, who have formed a close bond, were seized from Johor Zoo by officials and taken to a sanctuary.

    But experts at her new home, the Kuala Gandah National Elephant Conservation Centre, said Palohs recovery will be slow.

    Her new keeper, Zainuddin Amad, 49, said: Right now shes too traumatised and too unpredictable for anyone to get near her, not even me.

    The only company she wants is her friend Jeli. I can see that shes going to be a very nice-natured elephant, but shes going to need a few months to calm down and bond with me.

    I hand-feed her, talk to her and bathe her every day and hopefully well be able to handle her properly within three or! four mo nths.

    Shell be very happy here. We have quite a few rescued baby elephants and theyre allowed to forage near the jungle for around five hours a day, just like they do in the wild.

    Assistant director Mohd Suhaimi, 32 said: Elephants really are like children. They love attention and become traumatised by ill-treatment just like humans.

    Sean Whyte from British-based activists, Nature Alert, which had conducted a concerted campaign against zoos in Malaysia, said: This is wonderful news.

    Thanks to Daily Mirror readers Paloh and Jeli have been saved from a life of hell and are now safe at the elephant sanctuary. We are enormously grateful to readers of the Mirror.

    He said the Johor zoo, dubbed one of the worst in the world by campaigners, has been ordered to improve its conditions for the other animals.

    The zoo has failed to follow the standard regulations and requirements set by the auhtorities to provide better and proper living conditions for the animals, he said.

    Also read:

    Paloh the baby elephant horror at Johor Zoo


    What happened to MACC probe on Taib?

    Sarawak opposition believes that Taib Mahmud must clear his name in view of the latest German investigation into his family-linked business dealings.

    The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) must release immediately details of its investigation into Chief Minister Taib Mahmuds alleged abuse of power and corruption.

    The call comes on the heels of reports that the German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) has launched investigations into Deutsche Bank on account of its business relations with Taibs family.

    Calling for an update on the MACC probe, Sarawak PKR chief Baru Bian asked: What has happened to the investigation? We want to know the status of the investigations

    This is very important in view of the latest allegation against the chief minister of money laundering.

    Following several MACC reports lodged against Taib by PKR leaders and others, the MACC announced that it was investigating all reports made against Taib.

    The announcement, made on April 3, 2011 and before the state election, was apparently aimed at appeasing voters after opposition began flogging the issue.

    But little has been heard from MACC since despite demands by the opposition.

    We are concerned with the results of the investigations. The MACC must be serious about it.

    I hope the MACC will not wait until the next general election to make another announcement. Such an announcement will smell of a political agenda of the commission, he added.

    Freeze Taibs assets

    Welcoming BaFins move, Baru also urged other countries to follow suit and pursue their investigations very aggressively and seriously.

    The countries he referred to include the US, Canada, Britain and Australia where Taib and his family have properties worth several billions of ringgit.

    The Bruno Manser Fund (BMF), which has been in the forefront against Taib and his family for abuse of power, corruption and money laundering, comfirmed the BaFin re! port and urged the German authorities to freeze Taibs assets in Germany.

    Since 2004, Deutsche Bank has processed transactions worth several hundred million of euros for the Sarawak government and is engaged in a joint venture in Malaysia with the Cahaya Mata Sarawak Company (CMS) which is controlled by the Taib family.

    CMS and Deutsche Bank are the principal shareholders of the finance company K & N Kenanga Holdings based in Kuala Lumpur with its subsidiary Kenanga Deutsche Futures, an accredited broker at the Malaysian stock exchange.

    Speed up probe

    Meanwhile, state vice-chairman See Chee How, who was also present, called on Taib to clear his name.

    If the allegations are not true, he can sue those concerned this is a serious issue. The allegations made are against the leader of the state government.

    We are all concerned we want the MACC to speed up its investigations, said See, who is the Batu Lintang state assemblyman.

    During the last sitting of the State Legislative Assembly, Taib declared that the allegations against him were not true.

    A bid by the opposition to debate Taibs denial was dismissed.


    Possible seats for MCA,MIC,PPP & Gerakan bosses to contest. and chances...

    The presidents of the four BN component parties will face a general election without being elected representatives themselves, having suffered a near wipeout from the opposition Pakatan Rakyat in the watershed March 2008 polls.

    Malaysiakini spoke to three political analysts - Ong Kian Ming, James Chin and Khoo Kay Peng - for their take on where the four presidents could possible contest and their chances in the next general election.


    Dr Chua Soi Lek

    NONEOng Kian Ming: Possible seats - Tanjung Malim (Perak), Tanjung Piai or Kulai (both Johor).

    Chua would most possibly go for Kulai, where the Chinese form around 60 percent of the electorate. Johor is also an MCA stronghold, and where Chua has his strongest support base. Kulai would kill two birds with one stone, as a win would effectively cull support for former MCA president and rival Ong Ka Ting.

    Tanjung Malim would be a viable second option, as being a semi-urban constituency with a Malay majority, it would be a safe seat, banking on Umno support. Likewise with Kulai, a win would derail support for the Ong brothers, as Ong Ka Chuan is the current MP.

    James Chin: Possible seat - Labis

    Chua had hinted at returning to Labis, but it is entirely up to the Prime Minister and BN chairperson Najib. Chua Tee Yong, won the seat on support for the father, and since the younger Chua is serving merely as a caretaker, the father would most likely want to go back to his old seat. However, a definite seat for Chua, as with the t! hree oth er party presidents, would be difficult to predict as seat allocations would depend on last-minute mass movement of voters by the Election Commission (EC) as the election date nears.

    Khoo Kay Peng: Possible seat - Labis

    Labis stands to be Chua's best chance, as there is continuity with his son sitting in his place. The younger Chua would most likely move on to try his luck in Bakri. Johor is more manageable for Chua, as he has a lot of support from Umno there.

    To try in Perak, Chua would need to gauge his own acceptance by BN members there, which should be calculated based on grassroots support. Perak may not be as accepting as Johor. Even if Chua does not contest Labis, Bakri would be a good test bed to try and wrest the seat back from DAP.

    Dr.Koh Tsu Koon

    penang lim chong eu memorial event 230111 koh tsu koonOng Kian Ming: Possible seats - Simpang Renggam (Johor), Segambut (Kuala Lumpur)

    Koh will most likely go for Simpang Renggam, since it is the only seat currently held by Gerakan. He won't be able to contest in Penang any more, as his time there has run out. Taiping (Perak) will be impossible as current MP Nga Kor Ming from DAP will eat him alive.

    Puchong (Selangor) is out of the question, as are Kuala Lumpur seats. His only option in KL/Selangor is Segambut, which is an urban area, but even then the odds are against him.

    James Chin: Possible seats - none

    Koh's problem is not so much where to stand in the next elections, but whether or not he can withstand the internal party coup now. If he survives, he is sure to get a seat.

    Khoo Kay Peng: Possible seat - Simpang Renggam

    Where Koh will contest all depends on whether he is nudged out of the party over the next couple of months. He is! now at the stage of survival, as there is a grand design in place to get rid of him. He has been getting his people to lobby for him, and Johor Gerakan has asked him to contest in Simpang Renggam. His base in Penang is over.

    G.Palanivel

    Ong KNONEian Ming: Possible seats - Kapar, Kota Raja,(all Selangor)

    Palanivel's situation is tricky. His seat will probably have to be in Selangor, given the fact that no top leader in MIC has a seat in Selangor. It won't be in Hulu Selangor, so he will have to come down to Subang, Kota Raja or Kapar.

    Kapar is a big seat which needs a lot of resources. In general, any seat that has PKR is an easier target compared to seats that have PAS. Subang is not as easy to win because it is very much urban with more skeptical voters.

    James Chin: Possible seats - none

    Palanivel is popular in MIC, but not outside. His track record in Selangor is dismal. Where he could stand depends on movement of voters on the electoral rolls.

    Khoo Kay Peng: Possible seats - Hulu Selangor (Selangor), Sungai Siput (Perak)

    Things in Selangor are good, so most likely he would go back to his old seat in Hulu Selangor, but I am not too sure if it is wise to ask the incumbent to leave. Another place that is quite symbolic is Sungai Siput, which is long associated with the MIC power base.

    However, I don't see Palanivel going beyond Selangor, which is his traditional stomping ground. BN would not want their leaders to run and hide in constituencies that are comfortable. Palanivel needs to show he is confident and take the lead.

    M.Kayveas

    ppp agm p!  c 190610  najib and kayveasOng Kian Ming: Possible seats - none

    I don't think he will be given a seat due to the turmoil in his party. In Perak, Umno will definitely take back Grik, and Gerakan may get Taiping. I don't see any pressure on Najib to include PPP in the mix. Not to say that Gerakan has a good chance, but there is even less chance for PPP.

    James Chin: Possible seats - none

    PPP keeps on borrowing seats from other parties. If they want to contest, it's a matter of finding a party that is willing to 'lend' PPP a seat.

    Khoo Kay Peng: Possible seats - none

    I don't think the administration sees any benefit to keep a seat for PPP. It will be very tough for Kayveas in that even if PPP is given a seat, it will probably go to a younger candidate. PPP is a sleeper party, and at the end of the day, the political arena has changed.

    The KPI for Najib has to be no less than two-thirds. Any less than that and he's on the way out. They have set a precedent that is very tough, and I don't see any room for Kayveas.

    Sekutu Umno tercari-cari kerusi untuk bertanding

    source:malaysiakini

    Btw. can you all trust all these goons? Win or lose, they will be in the cabinet.

    Lets vote them out....


    cheers.

    Why drag MAS into football fantasy...

    The federal opposition has criticised the use of state assets to fund an English football club owned by Tan Sri Tony Fernandes following yesterdays announcement that both the ailing Malaysia Airlines (MAS) and AirAsia were the new kit sponsors of Queens Park Rangers (QPR).

    Pakatan Rakyat (PR) lawmakers said the AirAsia tycoon, who is now also a director at flag carrier MAS after a share swap last month, had acted with impunity in a deal that they said continued a penchant for wasteful mega-branding exercises.

    This is once again public assets being used to fulfil the fantasy of one of their directors while MAS is in an ailing position, said DAP strategist Liew Chin Tong

    What an atrocious proposition a loss-making GLC now being arm-twisted with impunity as we had anticipated by their new flamboyant 20 per cent owner, added PAS research chief Dzulkefly Ahmad, referring to last months share swap which saw Fernandes Tune Group take a one-fifth stake in the national carrier.

    MAS had together with AirAsia announced the multi-million pound shirt deal with QPR where the national carrier will sponsor QPRs home jersey for the next two seasons, while AirAsias logo will be emblazoned on the teams away and third kits.


    Fernandes had taken a 66 per cent holding last month in the club that just returned to top-flight football this season. This came just a week after state asset manager Khazanah Nasional Berhad swapped 20.5 per cent of MAS stock for a 10 per cent stake in Asias biggest budget carrier on August 9.

    The swap enabled AirAsia bosses Fernandes and his partner Datuk Seri Kamaruddin Meranun(left) to sit on the MAS board and ostensibly help turn it around although Khazanah has denied that AirAsia was bailing out MAS. MAS announced in August a net loss of RM527 million for the second quarter of 2011 due to higher fuel costs despite recording a better yield and a nine per cent growth in passenger revenue from the same period last year.

    This brings total losses in the first half of the year to RM769 million even as the airline said that profit outlook for the second half of the year appears bleak.

    The flag carrier said its group total revenues increased to RM3.485 billion for the second quarter of 2011, or eight per cent more than the RM3.213 billion for the same quarter last year, while passenger revenue was RM2.086 billion for the same period this year compared to RM1.912 billion for the corresponding period in 2010.

    Three unions in MAS representing about 15,000 employees recently threatened picket action over the national carriers share swap exercise with AirAsia.
    Union representatives said they felt the deal would not benefit MAS, and that they suspected the carriers new management team was planning the creation of a new brand within the airline as part of a union-busting move.

    PKR vice-president Nurul Izzah Anwar said today she hoped that this is not a short-sighted move that will leave our already-beleaguered national airline in a sorrier state, lest we are forever known as a Third World regime with global pretensions and a penchant for wasteful mega-branding exercises that do not present the best return on taxpayers and shareholders funds.


    The Lembah Pantai MP noted that Proton had sponsored another English football club Norwich City f! rom 2003 to 2006 which did little to change the national car makers financial fortunes.


    Liew, who is Bukit Bendera MP, also noted that this was not the first time Malaysian brands had gone in for an overkill in sports marketing as Fernandes Lotus Formula One team is now going up against the Mercedes GP Petronas team.


    source:malaysiakini

    Pasukan bolasepak negara pun dok terumbang ambing, ni nak pi jaga pasukan QPR pula dengan menggunakan duit rakyat....

    cheers.

    Why must MAS being dragged into football fantasy...

    The federal opposition has criticised the use of state assets to fund an English football club owned by Tan Sri Tony Fernandes following yesterdays announcement that both the ailing Malaysia Airlines (MAS) and AirAsia were the new kit sponsors of Queens Park Rangers (QPR).

    Pakatan Rakyat (PR) lawmakers said the AirAsia tycoon, who is now also a director at flag carrier MAS after a share swap last month, had acted with impunity in a deal that they said continued a penchant for wasteful mega-branding exercises.

    This is once again public assets being used to fulfil the fantasy of one of their directors while MAS is in an ailing position, said DAP strategist Liew Chin Tong

    What an atrocious proposition a loss-making GLC now being arm-twisted with impunity as we had anticipated by their new flamboyant 20 per cent owner, added PAS research chief Dzulkefly Ahmad, referring to last months share swap which saw Fernandes Tune Group take a one-fifth stake in the national carrier.

    MAS had together with AirAsia announced the multi-million pound shirt deal with QPR where the national carrier will sponsor QPRs home jersey for the next two seasons, while AirAsias logo will be emblazoned on the teams away and third kits.


    Fernandes had taken a 66 per cent holding last month in the club that just returned to top-flight football this season. This came just a week after state asset manager Khazanah Nasional Berhad swapped 20.5 per cent of MAS stock for a 10 per cent stake in Asias biggest budget carrier on August 9.

    The swap enabled AirAsia bosses Fernandes and his partner Datuk Seri Kamaruddin Meranun(left) to sit on the MAS board and ostensibly help turn it around although Khazanah has denied that AirAsia was bailing out MAS. MAS announced in August a net loss of RM527 million for the second quarter of 2011 due to higher fuel costs despite recording a better yield and a nine per cent growth in passenger revenue from the same period last year.

    This brings total losses in the first half of the year to RM769 million even as the airline said that profit outlook for the second half of the year appears bleak.

    The flag carrier said its group total revenues increased to RM3.485 billion for the second quarter of 2011, or eight per cent more than the RM3.213 billion for the same quarter last year, while passenger revenue was RM2.086 billion for the same period this year compared to RM1.912 billion for the corresponding period in 2010.

    Three unions in MAS representing about 15,000 employees recently threatened picket action over the national carriers share swap exercise with AirAsia.
    Union representatives said they felt the deal would not benefit MAS, and that they suspected the carriers new management team was planning the creation of a new brand within the airline as part of a union-busting move.

    PKR vice-president Nurul Izzah Anwar said today she hoped that this is not a short-sighted move that will leave our already-beleaguered national airline in a sorrier state, lest we are forever known as a Third World regime with global pretensions and a penchant for wasteful mega-branding exercises that do not present the best return on taxpayers and shareholders funds.


    The Lembah Pantai MP noted that Proton had sponsored another English football club Norwich City f! rom 2003 to 2006 which did little to change the national car makers financial fortunes.


    Liew, who is Bukit Bendera MP, also noted that this was not the first time Malaysian brands had gone in for an overkill in sports marketing as Fernandes Lotus Formula One team is now going up against the Mercedes GP Petronas team.


    source:malaysiakini

    Pasukan bolasepak negara pun dok terumbang ambing, ni nak pi jaga pasukan QPR pula dengan menggunakan duit rakyat....

    cheers.

    Pakatan losing Indian support?

    FMT LETTER

    From P Dev Anand Pillai, via e-mail

    The Indians were never the kind of community in Malaysia that would go against their political masters ever since they had decided to make Malaysia their home and stayed back from returning to India.

    They were here to make a living and sad to say that is still very much the mindset till today thanks to the stereotyping and indoctrination by Ummo-BN through the education system. What we have today is an Indian society that was simply trying its luck the last time around just to see what would happen.

    Now after seeing that all their wishes have been slow in seeing its realisation, the Indians are going back to the same old barn (BN-barn) where they have been the most comfortable, no matter what kind of treatment they would get.

    The real happennings behind the scene and the understanding of the division of power between the Federal and State governments seem to be an issue which the Malays and Chinese population understand better than the Indians.

    If not for the incarceration of the Hindraf 5, Malaysian Indians would have never woken up from their long slumber and the MIC will be the proudest party in the BN stable for providing a 100% winning ability in delivering 9 Parliamentary and 19 State Legislative seats.

    How the Federal Government manipulates the federal finances and continues to undermine and disrespect the choice of the people in the States of Kedah,Penang, Perak and Selangor is of no concern to the normal Indian on the street.

    They dont understand this and neither do they want to understand it eventhough some of them may be graduates from the local universities. It is never suprising to note that many amongst them are not even bothered to know their constitutional right to vote and their obligation to exercise that right in a democracy.

    But the situation is just the opposite amongst the Chinese undergraduates, they are very knowledgable with! regard to their right to vote and a vast majority of them are registered voters. Many wait for the opportunity to register themselves as voters and will not sulk if they are asked to go to a shopping mall to get themselves registered as voters.

    The Indian undergraduates will find it difficult to even take the effort to learn about voter registration programmes and many have the view that their vote even if registered is not neccesary. Some even have the view that something bad and drastic will happen to them if they vote for any other party except Ummo, MIC, MCA,Gerakan and PPP.

    Therefore with this mindset amongst the young, the BN has a winning formula which is always proven. Keep the young Indians misled and misinformed and relying on the old indoctrinated Indians who will vote for a BN candidate even if he does not even appear in their constituency and speak about national policies and his vision for a brighter and equal standing of the Indians with other races, is the best known way the BN keeps the lid on the Indians.

    Indians have made a mistake and Pakatan should not lose much sleep over it. In the wake of the 2008 upheavel a vast group of the highly educated lot amongst them and generally amongst the other races as well have taken it upon them to vote for change.

    These people understand the shortcomings and are able to see the bigger picture that only a two party system can see a proper practice of Parliamentary democracy and a system of checks and balances in a country that believes in racial supremacy.

    Though this group may be small but the fact is it will have the last laugh at the end of the day. After the 2008 upheavel and mini revolution, the Indians saw their young graduates being appointed as Magistrates, Senior Assistant Registrars, Police personnel and Customs personnel, which is now slowly and surely being eradicated as there was no strong opposition from the Indians.

    Besides Lim Kit Siang, Karpal Singh, Kulasegaran and a few MIC in! dividual s voicing their opposition to the low number of recruits for the professional categories to the civil service, the vast majority of the MIC warriors were not too interested or bothered as they had their eyes on lucrative Ali-Baba contracts which they can make loads of money from.

    This new class of Indian professional category civil servants will now make the new group of voters for the BN and they like their forefathers before them will not vote for any other party besides the BN.

    The indoctrination and the divide and rule system has seeped into the Indian mind with lasting effect. A classic example is the sudden turn around of a group that was in the forefront with the Hindraf but now is a registered political party calling itself the Malaysian Makkal Sakti party.

    The overnight turn around shows how well the indoctrination works and this is evident in the mindset of the Indian police officers; many of whom are tasked by the Police Force to infiltrate Indian organisations and NGOs and any sort of movement or grouping that goes against the teaching of the indoctrinators.

    For the Malaysian Indian, their mindset has been tuned to a point that it is difficult for them to see beyond the racial lense which they have been accustomed to all this while. They see it as acceptable to live out of the handouts and crumbs thrown out by the Masters and the Indoctrinators.

    Anything that goes against what the Masters and the indoctrinators have spelt out for them will only invite trouble and this will continously be the mindset even though they live for the day and will not know when the local council will come knocking on their doors to serve them an eviction notice.

    For the moment, the Indian Malaysians seem to want to return to the BN but in doing so, they are bound to lose out on the bigger picture eventually. This will happen when the Indian vote becomes insignificant when the newly legalised Malaysians of Indonesian, Filipino, Bangladeshi, Nepali and Mi! ddle Eas tern dissent become sycronised with the Malaysian population.

    They stand a better chance because the majority will be Muslim with many having children here with bin or binti in their names and will be eventually able to fine a place for themselves in the definition of the term bumiputera but the Indians will eventually lose out as in terms of numbers which will then transcend to political power and representation.

    Their believe in the mindset that an Indian political party is for Indian voters will be a thing of the past as they will never be able to see themselves on par with their counterparts in Singapore who are not governed by racial and religious politics.

    Indians there gain by merit and the best are sourced out by the government to be included in the national agenda to lead the nation in various fields, looking only at their ability and not the colour of their skin, the race they belong too and the religion they profess.

    The programming of the Indian mindset by the indoctrinators is the best way the ruling elite in the BN and Ummo can ensure that they stay within the confines of the BN barn. Making them beg for participation has created a community that sees the ruling Malay class as the Masters and themselves as the faithful servants.

    The masters, seeing that the Indians are faithful servants but lack in the unity department amongst themselves make full use of this weakness to further exert control on their already stereotyped mindset. The Tamil Hindu will despice the Tamil Christian, Tamil Muslim, the Malayalee Hindu, Malayalee Christian or the Telugus.

    In the Tamil Hindu majority, the caste that they belong to, though not very significant today, but still reminded of it by the elders will further divide them. This has been well studied by the Ummo masters and they exploit them to the tilt. For the Ummo masters, all they care about is the vote and the continous, if not perpetual right, that they think they have to rule this country wit! hout que stion.

    The Indians fail to realise that their best bet for the future is through multi-racial parties and politics. A good example will be the leadership of Ambiga Sreenevasan of the recent Bersih 2.0 rally, though the Ummo-Perkasa-BN hegemonist described and called her the Hindu Woman who is anti-Islam because of her participation in Lina Joys apostasy case.

    The Malays and Chinese from the opposition, NGO movements, thinking civil society and Malaysians abroad accepted her leadership and looked forward for her brave stewardship of the entire civil task of registering a point with a very stubborn and recalcitrant Ummo-BN government.

    The Indians in MIC though were silently proud of her leadership never said a word about her bravery and courage in leading the charge to show the Ummo-BN government that the people are fed up. The opposition is slowly but surely going on the right track by putting aside the racial mind frame that we have all been stereotyped with and coming with a more Malaysian approach of looking at the bigger picture to see how we can progress as Malaysians instead of having only ethnicity in their minds.

    Therefore looking at most current political reports and opinions that the Indian vote is heading back to the BN barn, one would say let it be for they will be the eventual losers. Already being seen as the new urban underclass, the common jobs which the Indians will usually be hired for without question is now being taken over by Indonesian, Bangladeshi and Nepali migrants who have now become overnight legalised new-Malaysians.

    This phenomena cant be stopped even if Indians in Malaysia were to give MIC nine parliamentary and 19 state legislative seats because the MICs voice in the cabinet is always heard in low decibels or never heard at all. Can we blame them? We cant, as they may then lose what little they and their kin are getting as a result kow-towing to their Ummo-Masters.

    So whether Pakatan gets the Indian votes or not, i! s an iss ue which Pakatan shouldnt lose much sleep over. The thinking Malays, Chinese and Indians are ready to accept the fact that the only way forward is to be Malaysian first and racial denomination or ethnicity second. If the Indians want to go back to the BN barn, let them do so.


    Official arrogance will bring Najib down

    In 2009, when Najib Tun Razak took over the countrys affairs from Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, he promised the rakyat that his government would be all ears. But two years down the road it appears that the promise was just lip service.

    One such example of refusing to listen to the rakyat was displayed through the insensitive remark by the Federal Territories and Urban Well-Being Minister Raja Nong Chik Raja Zainal.

    In February this year, Raja Nong Chik had admonished the Bukit Jalil estate workers who turned to him for help in trying to avoid being evicted from their homes. The minister told the residents that they should be contented with the Little India project when they wanted to negotiate compensation.

    Raja Nong Chik, instead of living up to the objective of his ambitious sounding ministry, told the residents that they should be glad the Barisan Nasional (BN) government had spent a lot of money on the Little India project in Brickfields.

    Raja Nong Chik arbitrarily offered RM23,000 each to those who had worked in the rubber estate for more than 15 years and RM11,000 for the rest.

    Initially, the offer was RM11,000 for those who worked there for more than 15 years and RM6,000 for the others.

    Forty-one families had asked for three acres of a 26-acre land to build low-cost terrace houses as compensation for vacating the land they had been living on for three generations.

    Dewan Bandaraya Kuala Lumpur (DBKL) had acquired their land in 1980 and pledged that the appointed contractors would pay their wages and make EPF contributions for working on the rubber plantation.

    But the pledge was never kept and the residents demanded that DBKL pay up the outstanding wages and EPF contributions.

    The residents were equally upset that their representatives were ! not allo wed to speak at a meeting, which was attended by Raja Nong Chiks deputy M Saravanan and Human Resources Minister Dr S Subramaniam.

    Showing more disrespect

    Raja Nong Chik, it seems, only allowed the residents to voice their grievances after much objection. The residents who had been living at the Bukit Jalil estate for three generations were given a mere week to consider the offer, failing which the minister threatened to issue them with eviction notices.

    It was later revealed that the land belongs to Bukit Jalil Development Sdn Bhd, a property developer. Questions were raised as to why was the BN government negotiating on behalf of a private entity, in a typical show of abuse of power.

    The residents were told that upon acquiring the land, the government would build a cemetery on it. But to an independent observer, Shin Choong Men, he doubted as to whether a cemetery would really be built there.

    Are you trying to say that a private developer wants to build a cemetery on this valuable piece of real estate? Shin asked during a Press conference on this matter.

    In August this year, Sarawaks State Land Development Minister James Masing, labelled the Penan native customary rights landowners as thieves, accusing them of stealing oil palm fruit bunches from four major government-linked oil palm plantations.

    Earlier on, Masing accused the Penans of being good story tellers when the Penan women and girls cried rape at the hands of timber loggers.

    In the case of the oil palm fruit bunches, Masing lost his head because illegal harvesting of oil palm fruits had cost Land Custody Development Authority (LCDA) and its joint-venture partners some RM33.6 million in losses.

    As far as Masing was concerned, the thieves were none other than the Penans.

    Stealing is stealing, no matter how you (the landowners) try to justify it. You dont steal from your friend, Masing had lashed out at the Penan community.

    Masings finger-pointing out! raged th e Penan community in Kampung Ugos, Jambatan Suai, in Baru Niah, who took offence and proceeded to lodge a police report against Masing.

    Drop the arrogance

    Penan chief Ugos Sugon, who lodged the report on behalf of his people at the Batu Niah police station on Aug 12, said Masing had no right to call them thieves.

    We are not thieves we are not happy at being accused of stealing from our own land. We have been waiting for our dividends for a very long time.

    In February 2009, after waiting 13 years we received a cash cheque of RM500,000 to be divided among us.

    The 500 of us in Kampung Ugos are to share the RM500,000 after 13 years. It is not right, he said.

    Ugos and his people had, in 1999, agreed to jointly develop their NCR land with the LCDA and its band of private investors.

    However, the deal, according to the villagers, was somewhat unfair to them.

    Many claimed that they had not even seen the agreement. The villagers believe the joint-venture project involving their NCR lands has made millions for LCDA and the private investors in view of the very good oil palm price for many years.

    Early this month, Tenaganita director, Irene Fernandez, criticised director-general of labour, Sheikh Yahya Sheikh Mohamed, who was quoted in The Star, as saying that Malaysia was not desperate for Indonesian maids and could hire maids from other countries.

    His statement smacks of arrogance. What he is saying is that since we are rich, we can move anywhere to recruit maids, Fernandez said.

    She had pointed out that Indonesian maids were turning away from Malaysia as an employment destination because of the poor treatment and official arrogance on matters concerning their welfare.

    A slap to Malaysia

    She said the recent decision by the Australian High Court to block the refugee swap deal between Australia and Malaysia was a slap to Malaysias policies and should awaken us to change.

    Ma! laysia, she said, was shamelessly sliding back into exploitation and slavery as other nations move towards developed sustainability.

    The government can no longer sustain this form of modern-day slavery manifested in domestic labour.

    Employers must realise that they can no longer expect cheap labour, demand 18-hour work schedules and silence migrant workers with the support of the state.

    Two years ago, the Labour Department director-general Ismail Abdul Rahim commented that the Sexual Harassment Act could lead to a dull and rigid environment in the workplace.

    Women, Family and Community Development Ministry revealed that between 2005 and 2008, there were 3,096 cases of sexual violence and harassment cases, including rape and molestation, reported to the police. Another 27 disciplinary cases involving the public sector were reported to the Public Service Department.

    Besides, sexual harassment in whatever forms, be it physical, verbal or psychological, was a serious offence under the Penal Code, Women, Family and Community Development deputy minister Noriah Kasnon had said.

    How should the rakyat perceive a department head like Ismail, who is least disturbed by incidences of sexual harassment at the workplace? One wonders what Ismails take is on the Rabia Abdul Salam case, an athlete who committed suicide 17 years ago after she was sexually harassed by her coach.

    In December 2009, Immigration Department director-general Abdul Rahim Othman said a Malaysian transsexual fighting deportation from Britain would be punished for bringing great shame to Malaysia.

    Mohamed Fazdil Min Bahari, a pre-operative transsexual known as Fatine, married a British man in a civil ceremony but was refused permanent visa on technical grounds.

    Uncalled-for haughtiness

    Abdul Rahim had said that once deported to Malaysia, Fatine could be banned from travelling overseas for at least two years, all because she brought great shame to the country.

    In ! April th is year, Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Minister, Noh Amar, who, in his capacity as the Selangor Umno deputy chief, chided urban voters for being ungrateful for the initiatives implemented by the BN government, as seen from their refusal to vote for BN in the Sarawak state polls held on April 16 this year.

    Incidentally, on April 7 last year, Noh, infamous for his racist remarks, read out at the Selangor BN convention quotes from speeches of MIC and MCA leaders, in the 1960s, which praised Umno for giving citizenship to the non-Malays.

    This prompted 15 Kapar MCA delegates to walk out of the convention, claiming Nohs speech was an insult to the Chinese and Indians. DAP adviser Lim Kit Siang later raised this issue in the Dewan Rakyat demanding that the government apologise over Nohs remark.

    However, Minister in the Prime Ministers Department, Nazri Aziz, rejected the demand and instead asked Lim to settle the matter with Noh.

    The intention of harking back to incidences of official arrogance is to caution Najib of the arrogance festering among the government servants. Instead of serving the rakyat, the department heads show no remorse in name-calling and condemning the very people they are supposed to help, ending up making a hash of a job.

    The government servants, through their uncalled-for haughtiness, have conveniently forgotten who the stakeholders really are, that is the rakyat. The carte blanche abuse of power will exert a price, more so going by Najibs refusal to come to the defence of the rakyat and take such irresponsible department heads to task.

    It remains a mystery as to for how long Najib intends to remain silent while the people are bullied under the weight of official arrogance.

    Perhaps Najib plans to open his mouth and spew words of support just before the 13th general election. But, by then, it would have been too late to undo the damage resulting from the official arrogance.

    Jeswan Kaur is a freelance journalist and a FMT columnist.


    Prepaid tax suspension an election ploy...

    PKR director of strategy Mohd Rafizi Ramli questioned if the government's decision to have telecommunication companies put off the six percent service tax on prepaid users is just an election ploy.

    He said he was relieved that the telcos were not imposing the tax but thought it would be wise to exercise caution.


    "Does this mean the suspension of the tax is only till the 13th general election to fulfil the prime minister's wishes?" he said.


    Earlier today, Information, Communications and Culture Minister Rais Yatim announced that the government had struck an agreement with four major telcos in the country to continue absorbing the six percent tax.
    Rafizi criticised Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak's handling of the situation.

    "My opinion is that Najib's handling of the people's anger towards the tax sends the wrong signal to businesses. I'm sure many other companies that collect services taxes according to the law are worried that they would get a phone call from the Prime Minister's Office at any time to suspend their taxes."


    Semua empat pengendali utama telekomunikasi (telco) di negara ini bersetuju menangguhkan kutipan cukai perkhidmatan enam peratus ke atas pengguna talian telefon prabayar sehingga perbincangan semula dengan Suruhanjaya Komunikasi dan Multimedia Malaysia (SKMM).

    "Perbincangan melibatkan pengurusan utama Celcom, Maxis, Digi dan U Mobile berlangsung dalam ! suasana cukup baik, mereka menerima baik nasihat kementerian, pandangan kerajaan serta sentimen yang dilahirkan Perdana Menteri (Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak)," kata Menteri Penerangan, Komunikasi dan Kebudayaan, Datuk Seri Rais Yatim selepas bermesyuarat kira-kira sejam bersama wakil pengurusan tertinggi syarikat telekomunikasi itu.

    source:malaysiakini

    Ingat!!! bukan batal tapi ditangguh. Sampai bila? Lepas PRU-13 nanti...

    cheers.

    DR. M TERGELIAT LIDAH

    Ketika rakyat Malaysia menunggu dengan penuh debar reaksi UMNO/APCO terhadap kenyataan Majlis Profesor Negara (MPN) bahawa negara kita tidak pernah dijajah, tiba-tiba terpacul kata-kata dari mulut Dr. M yang menyetujuinya. Bagi kebanyakan orang, persetujuan itu merupakan satu tindakan yang amat mengejutkan. Sepanjang menjadi PM selama 22 tahun, dia tidak putus-putus menyebut negara ini dijajah British sama ada semasa menyambut tarikh 31 Ogos atau peristiwa-peristiwa lain yang berkaitan.

    Sama seperti Ghani Othman, Dr. M pun buat pusingan U. Nampak sangatlah langkah itu diambil semata-mata untuk menjernihkan air muka UMNO/APCO yang sudah hitam legam dek kerana tersalah hentam Mat Sabu. Tak ada penyakit cari penyakit. Begitulah jadinya. Kini, rakyat menunggu pula reaksi UMNO/APCO sendiri terhadap pernyataan merepek Dr. M itu.

    Di samping semua itu, jadi ke tidak sambutan kemerdekaan yang disekalikan denga Hari Malaysia tahun ini? Kalau jadi, sahlah kekangkungan MPN. Buat penyelidikan ke. Tulis buku ke. Dah tak relevan lagi. Malaysia sambut merdeka kerana pernah dijajah. Siapa jajah? British. Kes selesai. Jika Dr. M dan UMNO/APCO berkeras mengatakan negara ini tidak pernah dijajah, mereka terpaksalah menerima hakikat bahawa parti yang mereka anggotai bukan pejuang kemerdekaan.

    Siapa yang terperosok ke dalam jerangkap samar dalam isu hangat ini? UMNO/APCO. Mereka terkehel dalam isu Mat Indera. Mereka terkincit dalam isu polis British. Mereka tersembam dalam isu Malaya tak dijajah. Dan tidak semena-mena menarik gelaran Tunku sebagai Bapa Kemerdekaan. Rakyat hanya mampu tertawa melihat UMNO/APCO tertomoih kerana diri sendiri yang kurang bijak.

    Harus diingat bahawa dalam kes-kes ini wajah UMNO/APCO tidak dapat dibersihkan. Wajah mereka menjadi kusam kerana terlalu propenjajah. Jika penjajah mengaut kekayaan negara kita sehingga kering, UMNO/APCO menghisap wang rakyat dalam pelbagai bentuk - rasuah, komisyen! , penyel ewengan, ketirisan, pembaziran, dan sebagainya. Jika tidak, takkan saham Bumiputera berjumlah RM54 bilion tinggal RM2 bilion sahaja!!!

    Mahathir dan Profesor tidur terlalu lama....

    Menteri Besar Kelantan Datuk Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat menyifatkan kenyataan Ketua Kluster Sejarah Warisan dan Sosiobudaya Majlis Profesor Negara (MPN) Datuk Dr Zainal Kling sebagai "tidur terlalu lama" apabila mendakwa Tanah Melayu tidak pernah dijajah. "Tadi ditanya oleh wartawan apa pandangan saya tentang beberapa orang profesor yang mendakwa Tanah Melayu tidak pernah dijajah.

    "Saya katakan, orang ini tidur dalam gua begitu lama lalu sedar dan berkata-kata dalam keadaan mengigau, barangkali akibat berada dalam usus penjajah begitu lama," katanya kepada pemberita sejurus tiba di lapangan terbang Kota Baharu daripada Kuala Lumpur.

    Walaupun tidak menyebut secara langsung nama Zainal, kenyataan itu jelas merujuk kepada kenyataan pensyarah Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris (UPSI) itu dalam sidang media di Putrajaya Jumaat lalu. Pada 9 September lalu, Zainal (kanan) berkata, berdasarkan fakta sejarah, kecuali tiga Negeri Selat, Tanah Melayu "tidak pernah terjajah", sebaliknya, hanya dinaungi atau dilindungi oleh British.

    Kelantan Menteri Besar Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat has described sociology professor Zainal Kling as having slept for too long for claiming the Malay states were never colonised.


    A journalist asked for my view just now about the views of a number of professors who have claimed that the Malay states were never colonised.


    I answered that this person had long been sleeping i! n a cave , has just woken up, and in a state of semi-consciousness, is now babbling incoherently, perhaps as a result of being in the womb of the colonialists for so long, he told reporters in Kota Baru today.


    Although he did not mention Zainal by name, the reference was clearly in reference to the Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris lecturer who had made the remarks at a press conference in Putrajaya last Friday.


    The professor had said the historical facts were that except for the three Straits Settlement states of Penang, Malacca and Singapore, Tanah Melayu was never colonised, but was only under the protection of the then British Empire.


    source:malaysiakini

    Oleh kerana Malaya tak pernah dijajah seperti yang disahkan oleh Prof. Khoo,Prof.Zainal Keling dan Mahathir....mengapa kita perlu sambut Hari Merdeka atau Hari Malaysia?

    Bukankah lebih bermakna jika 31 Ogos itu dinamakan "Hari UMNO" saja....

    cheers.

    Comment is free but is it worth anything?

    Pak Bui

    The comments sections of blogs such as Hornbill Unleashed, and of news sites such as Sarawak Report, Malaysian Insider, Malaysiakini, Free Malaysia Today and even the Borneo Post, draw my attention almost as often as the stories themselves.

    In the best comments, I find intriguing analysis or extra information, or an insight into reading between the lines of any particular news story.

    Malaysian readers have obviously found cathartic relief in posting quasi-anonymous comments on the largest-circulation news portals, after decades of being forced to suppress their views within the confines of their own skulls.

    The somewhat less cosseted world of the internet media has overturned the old certainties of Malaysian politics. A lie told often enough used to become the truth, but the governments lies and doublespeak are now confined to the government-owned print media, radio and television, and are rarely repeated (or read) in cyberspace.

    According to a recent New York Times analysis, Malaysias (relatively) free virtual press is racking up pressure on a government that has always relied heavily on propaganda in the mainstream media, and censorship of all other forms of mass communication, to stay in power.

    Government ministers have attempted forays into the cyberworld, by facebooking, twittering and blogging. But their clumsy attempts at spin, such as PM Najib Razaks and Sarawak CM Taib Mahmuds lavish payments to FBC (a shady British public relations outfit) to polish their apples online! , have s unk their cyber-credibility too low to salvage.

    Pen is mightier than a double-edged sword

    But the freedom of commenting on news portals and blogs is, as you might expect, mightier than a double-edged sword. We see endless repetitive comments along the same stereotyped lines: stupid generalisations like Malays are lazy, Chinese are grasping, and Indians/Dayaks/Sarawakians/Sabahans are stupid for voting BN.

    There are also, inevitably, comments illustrating the writers world-weary, cynical and omniscient take on any issue, for example: Royal Commission of Inquiryhuh! Whats the point? or Of course what. I told you so! I knew this was going to happen.

    These commentators do not seem aware that debate is meant to exchange knowledge, or stimulate new ways of looking at the world. In their eyes, the comments section is just another avenue to impart their venom to the world or vent their frustrations, like someone spitting at pedestrians from a passing car.

    These comments are almost uniformly weak-minded, self-indulgent and unoriginal. A foreign observer might be led to believe most Malaysians are taught to be ignorant and xenophobic at school. This conclusion would not veer too far from the truth, since Malaysian schools appear to have given up real education, in favour of ethnic segregation and relentless political brainwashing.

    You might have hoped that putting ones ideas in writing, when sending in comments, would allow some time to consider ones words to filter out the bigoted and narrow-minded rubbish that some minds churn out. But it seems typing at a computer keyboard can as fast as talking out loud, and can produce the same inane chatting you hear among some circles in coffeeshop! s or bar bershops.

    The anonymity of the internet seems to remove some inhibitions of foul-mouthed racists (of all ethnic persuasions) who might ordinarily hesitate to spew such filth in a coffeeshop, where children are present. It ought to cross all our minds that children and young people are able to read our comments and blogs, and therefore we must exercise leadership as responsible adults, even if we use pseudonyms.

    News sites are invariably forced to moderate or delete many comments, or to post warnings that obscenity, personal attacks, racism, religious vitriole, incitement to violence and other antisocial behaviour are not allowed. Isnt this stating the obvious?

    It is a sad reflection on our society that most of us with access to the internet are among the most privileged and educated in Malaysia; yet many are uncouth, and indulge in ugly flame wars and trolling. They still spout rubbish, albeit rubbish with reasonable spelling and syntax.

    In contrast, I have spent many happy hours in the company of uneducated village folk. Their conversation may not display an urbane, globalised outlook, but they often have original ideas, and unconventional ways of seeing the world. And they are usually courteous, because there is no anonymity in any conversation in a village. Everyone must mind everyone elses feelings, because there is hardly any escaping the other villagers in daily life.

    Educated, but unwashed

    Great sections of the comments sections are dedicated to educated, or semi-educated, cybertroopers with access to the internet. Some of these pro-umno or Pro-DAP or pro-PKR cheerleaders have been paid, others feel they must take it upon themselves, to promote their party, regardless of the idiocy of their arguments.

    As an aside, I find it interesting that pro-PAS cybertroopers in the most popular news portals are few and far in between: perhaps PAS has political arguments that are difficult to summarise in 1000 characters or less.

    These cybertroopers often adopt fake identities, and may even pretend to be objective. But their limited worldview, twisted logic and frequent self-contradiction usually betray their hired gun status.

    I have read through some pro-umno, pro-PBB and pro-PAS blogs, and the cybertroopers comments tend to be even more polarised, and toxic, than in the news portals. Our age-old, polite traditions of sopan santun, Confucian gentlemens behaviour or randau ruai seem to go out the window, as soon as the hard disk boots up.

    I have also seen endless expositions and sermons on religious texts, complete with attacks on infidels on the other side of the religious divide, and threats of eternal damnation unless the other subscribes to a particular religious point of view. These are not debates or arguments aimed at improving understanding or enlightenment. They are more like chickens squawking at ducks and ducks quacking back.

    Does God need cybertroopers to protect the Holy Truth? Does it seem a little far-fetched that God speaks directly to certain chosen webmasters, who are then tasked to be virtual prophets and facebook crusaders?

    What, then, is a comment worth? I would urge all our readers and commentators to post illuminating, original thoughts. Share information and personal experience, not rhetoric. Encourage debate and put yourself in the shoes of other commentators.

    Avoid submitting (over and over again) facsimiles of one fixed idea or hobby horse, whether that is religious zealotry, Sarawakian independence, racist supremacy, or where to find the finest laksa in Sarawak.

    For an example of fiery, but informative debate, try reading some articles from th! e Guardi an or the New York Times.Of course, not all commentators there are interested in exchanging views and information, but many shine in comparison with Malaysian or Singaporean news sites.

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