Pakatan Rakyat (PR) Social Political Buzz & Bulls

Apabila Ummi Hafilda Permain Nama Allah Sewenang2 nya


Yang menghairankan Tulang Besi, tidak pernah Ummi Hafilda menyaksikan dengan mata kepala beliau Anwar berzina dengan kakak iparnya walaupun sekali. 

Namun, begitu mudah Ummi Hafilda bersumpah dengan nama Allah. 

Seolah2 hanya dengan sumpah, maka apa yang dituduh oleh beliau menjadi benar. 

Kalau Ummi ini boleh dipercayai, sudah tentu sewaktu pertama kali Anwar dituduh meliwat dulu rakyat sudah mempercayai beliau. 

Bagi Tulang Besi sekarang ini nama Allah SWT semudah-mudahnya dipermainkan. Umum sudah tidak takut lagi menjual nama Allah SWT untuk kegiatan politik murahan mereka. 

 Bayangkan si Ummi ini tidak pernah menyaksikan walau sekali pun tindakan zina Anwar Ibrahim dengan mata kepala beliau pun boleh bersumpah.

Dan bersumpah dengan nama Allah pulak tu.

Inilah agama UMNO. Agama yang menghalalkan pengunaan nama Allah SWT sewenang2 nya untuk menjual pembohongan dan fitnah.

Kalau ikut agama Islam, seseorang yang menuduh zina seperti apa yang Ummi buat ini wajib ditangkap polis dan dihadapkan di mahkamah untuk hukuman hudud.

Patutlah UMNO benci sangat2 dengan hukum hudud.

Yang paling Tulang Besi takutkan adalah bala Allah yang bakal turun kerana nama Nya digunakan sewenang2 nya untuk tujuan menyokong maksiat dan kemungkana




TULANG BESI
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Scorpene scandal: Najib looking at red notice

PETALING JAYA: There is a possibility of Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak and Defence Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi being issued an international warrant of arrest if they fail to adhere to French subpoenas to assist in the Scorpene submarine corruption inquiry.

Suaram's French lawyer Joseph Breham told a press conference in Bangkok today that the French judges hearing the inquiry have discretionary powers to ask the Interpol to issue a red notice (an international warrant of arrest) against witnesses who failed to submit to the French court.

However this would be the last resort to be undertaken to compel witnesses to testify in Paris.

Breham explained that the French court is able to take on several courses of action, in compelling the Malaysian witnesses.

He said that the judges will first issue a subpoena in writing on a witness, and once a subpoena has been issued, the witness is obliged to appear before the courts and to assist the courts in its works.

"If the witness refuses to abide by the subpoena, the court can issue a notice 'mandate d 'amener', compelling the witness to appear before it.

"If the witness fails to oblige, a warrant of arrest may be issued. The warrant of arrest is applicable within the boundaries of the French territory, and may be internationalised, if the judge deems necessary.

"Based on the judges' discretionary power, they can ask Interpol to issue a red notice i.e an international warrant of arrest," he added.

He also said that judge Roger Le Loire, one of the two Instruction Judges assigned to oversee the case, had principally accepted Suaram's list of seven proposed witnesses, including Najib, Zahid Hamidi and Abdul Razak Baginda.

"Judge Le Loire after hearing an elaborate testimony from Suaram, accepted our statement, and promised to proceed with the inquiry with no stone unturned," said Breham.

He added that on the acceptance of the seven witnesses proposed by Suaram, the French judge had asked for the full details of the persons involved, in order to begin issuing subpoenas as he saw fit.

Legal obligations

In a statement issued by Suaram after the press conference in Bangkok, the human rights NGO said that Malaysia has legal obligations under the UN Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC) to cooperate with other nation states in preventing, investigating and prosecuting offenders of corruption.

It added that state parties are bound to render specific forms of mutual legal assistance in gathering and transferring evidence for use in court and to extradite offenders.

Suaram also said that it has gained full privileged access to the 153 investigation papers from the French Public Prosecutor's office.

"This is a huge step forward, as many of the details kept confidential are now made accessible to Suaram as the civil plaintiff in the criminal case against the DCNS (French shipbuilding company)," it said.

It said that in one document – named Document 97 – was a note for the French Minister of Defense dated June 2, 1999 related to an interview with the Malaysian Defence Minister and the French-Malaysian diplomatic relationships as far as defense is concerned.

"The note states that pursuant to the major defence contracts between France and Malaysia, there is a requirement that substantial transfer of money has to be channeled to individuals and/or political organisations.

"The note specifically states that apart from individuals, the ruling party (Umno) is the biggest beneficiary. Consultants (company agents) are often used as political network agents to facilitate these monetary transfers and to receive commissions from their mandators," said Suaram's statement.

Wives' network

It further said that the note mentioned about Mohd Ibrahim Mohd Noor and Razak Baginda as points of reference for political network, while adding that Mohd Ibrahim Mohd Noor was close to the then Finance Minister Daim Zainuddin and Razak Baginda to the then Defence Minister Najib.

"The note also explains that by early 2001, Mohd Ibrahim Mohd Noor's influence began to decline following the fall from power of the Minister of Finance, Daim Zainuddin which resulted in the disappearance of Mohd Ibrahim Mohd Noor's name from Perimekar both as shareholder and director which was later replaced by people of Razak Baginda's network.

"Razak Baginda eventually becomes the main point of reference for political network to facilitate the money transfer," added Suaram.

Suaram said the note also pointed out that Razak's wife was a close friend of Najib's wife Rosmah Mansor.

Suaram also said that it was holding its press conference in Bangkok – and not in Kuala Lumpur – following the forced deportation of one of Suaram's lawyers, William Bourdon, last July when he visited Malaysia to speak about the case.

Suaram's complaint with the French courts for a judicial review of the Scorpene contract in November 2009 has resulted in the commencement of a judicial inquiry at the Tribunal De Grande Instance in Paris.

The inquiry will probe alleged corruption crimes and illegal bribes involving top officials from both Malaysia and France in the sale of two Scorpene submarines by French shipbuilding company DCNS to the Malaysian Defence Ministry, then helmed by Najib.

Also read:

Scorpene scandal: Who's Terasasi?

Najib must appear in French court or else…

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RPK ready to return to face OSA charge

PETALING JAYA:  Popular blogger Raja Petra Kamarudin today offered to return home to face trial under the Official Secrets Act if the Najib administration was willing to prosecute PKR deputy president Azmin Ali for alleged corruption.

"If the Malaysian government launches prosecution against Azmin, then I will volunteer to return to Malaysia to face trial under the Official Secrets Act. That is my offer to the Malaysian government," he told FMT today.

Raja Petra was referring to a police report lodged against him yesterday by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) over his expose of confidential documents which showed that Azmin was investigated for corruption in 1995.

According to a Berita Harian report today, the police report was lodged at the Putrajaya police station last night.

The Malay daily also quoted MACC investigation director Mustafar Ali as saying that the MACC operations evaluation panel will look into the claims made by Raja Petra about the case against Azmin, and decide if the allegation should be investigated.

Raja Petra in his posting in Malaysia Today yesterday had revealed that the then deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim had instructed the Anti-Corruption Agency (now the MACC) to stop the investigation against Azmin who was Anwar's private secretary at that time.

Raja Petra said that he had in his possession documents pertaining the ACA investigation against Azmin, adding that the documents proved that Azmin was involved in graft.

However, he claimed that the then ACA director-general Shafee Yahaya had cold-storaged the case, stamping the file as 'no further action' (NFA) on Anwar's alleged instruction.

Anwar is presently the de facto leader of PKR while Azmin is his deputy.

Launch an extradition application

Commenting on the police report lodged against him, Raja Petra today said he was willing to hand the entire file to the MACC so that they can 'un-NFA' the case.

"They can then proceed with the prosecution of Azmin for corruption like how they initially intended to do so 17 years ago before Anwar abused his authority by killing the case and burying the file," he added.

He said that the Malaysian government could not extradite him from the UK for sedition and/or criminal defamation under the 'dual criminality' rule because these two laws were abolished in the UK on Jan 1, 2010. He however pointed out that the Official Secrets Act still remains.

"The MACC has made a police report against me. Either the documents on Azmin that I released are forgeries or they are genuine.

"Either way I would have committed a crime, the first would be fraud and the second an offence under the Official Secrets Act.

"If the documents are genuine, then the Malaysian government should say so and immediately launch an extradition application to bring me back to Malaysia to face trial," he said.

However he quickly added that he was willing to return on his own to face an OSA trial if Azmin was charged for the corrupt practices.

Azmin: Who is RPK?

Azmin meanwhile was unavailable for comment despite numerous attempts made to contact him.

He however told another online portal that he would have been charged by the ACA 17 years ago if he was indeed corrupt as alleged by Raja Petra.

"Why should I explain to Raja Petra? Who is he? I've done my part, given full cooperation to the authorities 17 years ago and now you want me to repeat the same thing?" he was quoted as saying by the news portal.

He also questioned the timing of Raja Petra's article, saying that it appeared to be an attempt "to distract Pakatan Rakyat leaders from their focus on the upcoming polls".

Also read:

Files proved Azmin is corrupt, says RPK

Tibai wants MACC to probe Azmin

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Air S’gor: MB mahu dedah kroni Umno-BN

SHAH ALAM: Kerajaan negeri Selangor akan mendedahkan syarikat didakwa merupakan kroni Umno-Barisan Nasional (BN) yang lemah dalam menguruskan air di negeri itu.

Menteri Besar Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim berkata, pihaknya mempunyai maklumat termasuk pembiayaan yang dibuat oleh syarikat terlibat.

"Ada beberapa tender dan kontrak yang berbeza. Satu buat loji, terowong dan empangan. Kita sudah ada nama syarikat dan pembiayaan yang dibuat. Sebelum forum air kita akan didedahkan hal ini. Kita akan beritahu kepada semua masyarakat," kata Abdul Khalid.

Dalam satu kenyataan Isnin lalu, Setiausaha Politik beliau Faekah Husin berkata, masalah air di Selangor berpunca daripada pengurusan air yang lemah dan menyebabkan rakyat terpaksa menanggung kos tarif air tinggi.

Faekah mendakwa pembinaan Loji Rawatan Air Langat 2 (Langat 2) yang melibatkan kos RM12 bilion sebenarnya dilaksanakan atas kepentingan kroni pihak tertentu dan bukannya untuk membantu rakyat.

Penstrukturan semula air

Abdul Khalid dalam pada itu menegaskan penstrukturan semula air adalah topik utama berbanding isu Langat 2 dan pengambilan air di Pahang.

Tegasnya penstrukturan semula air penting kerana ia dapat menyelesaikan pelbagai masalah yang wujud ketika ini.

"Perbincangan utama adalah penstrukturan semula air dan bukannya tentang Langat 2 atau pengambilan air di Pahang. Semua ini tidak akan timbul jika penstrukturan semula air dibuat," katanya.

Ujarnya, sebarang pelaksanaan dan pengurusan loji mempunyai kaitan dengan kenaikan tarif air dan beliau mendapati ia mempunyai kelemahan.

"Pengalaman dari angka-angka yang diterima, pembinaan loji adalah dibina oleh Puncak Niaga. Dari segi kos pembinaan dan pembersihan loji adalah sangat tinggi. Jika kos tersebut tinggi maka rakyat turut menerima kesan melalui tarif air," katanya.

Beliau berkata daripada 33 loji pembersihan di seluruh Selangor, 29 daripadanya dimiliki oleh kerajaan negeri, manakala empat oleh pihak konsesi.

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Politicians with excessive wealth

  • In the last 48 hours, the cyberspace and the mainstream media was shocked by Raja Petra post under the heading, "MACC 'Deep Throat' comes out of the closet". I suppose I don't have to repeat what was written in detail but enough to summarized some key issues. Among others Azmin excessive wealth and Anwar role is preventing ACA (now MACC) to take action.
  • Based on the timing of the release of the information, clearly it was politically motivated and it was done intentionally. The deep throat was given clearance to release the information. It is not difficult to find out who the person is and whether he should be charged under the OSA. While BN is now using it as another election issue, we must look at it from a bigger picture.  First and foremost, my position is clear. The MACC must reopen the case for further investigation and if indeed there is evidence, then the guilty party should be charged. The one who gives the money (RPK says Vincent Tan) should also be charged.
  • While MACC reopen the case, they must also revisit other issues. The case of excessive wealth is not limited to Anwar or Azmin only. In fact it is a norm to almost all UMNO leaders in the past and at present. For example, I would like to know how wealthy are our cabinet ministers and how they accumulate their wealth. Can they justify their wealth with their present and past income? If they cant then it points to only one issue i.e. illegally amassing of wealth. Therefore they too must be charged.
  • Another equally important issue is that this revelation confirmed that that ACA was never independent. Today MACC is in the same boat. The ruling party controls them. The country top leaders control them.  Evidence release by RPK is probably the strongest evidence ever that MACC or ACA is not independent. They have no balls. They are subservient to the politician. I think this issue is far more important than Azmin/Anwar issue.
  • This brings us to another point i.e. whether BN support or is against corruption? Clearly historical evidence shows that they are in support of it as their own folds are doing it. Today, allegation is wild that Rosmah is linked with having excessive wealth, abuse of position and power and yet MACC is not taking any action. Is the eradication of corruption and total independence of MACC is part of BN next GE manifesto? I think they are silent about it. I believe PR wants to have an independent judiciary and the MACC.
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France-Malaysia defence contracts,required that substantial transfer of money to individuals and UMNO...

NONEHuman rights NGO Suaram has revealed that the name of an individual closely linked to former finance minister Daim Zainuddin is mentioned in the French prosecution papers on alleged corruption in Malaysia's RM7.3 billion purchase of two Scorpene-class submarines in 2002.


At a press conference in Bangkok today, Suaram director Cynthia Gabriel said French police had seized documents including a note for the French defence minister dated July 2, 1999.


This related to an interview with then Malaysian defence minister Najib Abdul Razak and French-Malaysian diplomacy on defence matters.


"The note mentions one Mohd Ibrahim Mohd Noor and Abdul Razak Baginda as points of reference for political network," she said.


"It further states that both have strong political connections as Mohd Ibrahim is close to Daim, and Abdul Razak to Najib."


She said the note explains that by early 2001, Mohd Ibrahim's influence had begun to decline in tandem with Daim's waning power.


Mohd Ibrahim's name then 'disappeared' from Perimekar Sdn Bhd - said to have served as intermediary in the Scorpene purchase - both as shareholder and director. He was replaced later by those in Abdul Razak's network.


Gabriel said consultants (company agents) are used as "political network" agents to facilitate monetary transfers and to receive commissions from their mandators.

abdul razak baginda pc 201108 06Abdul Razak (left) eventually became the main point of reference for political network to facilitate the money transfer, she claimed.


"The note stated that ... Abdul Razak maintained excellent ties with the defence minister and the prime minister. Furthermore, his wife is a close friend of the defence minister's wife. Therefore, Abdul Razak became the centre of the network.


In a document tagged 'Malaysia', there is a confidential report on Perimekar and Terasasi Sdn Bhd - owned by Abdul Razak and his father - as well as a report that includes a note on 'retracing the background of negotiations', said Gabriel.


The note states that, pursuant to the major defence contracts between France and Malaysia, there was a requirement that substantial transfer of money had to be channelled to individuals and political organisations like UMNO.


Lawyers R Sivarasa and Fadiah Nadwa Fikri were at the press conference - hosted by Forum-Asia executive director Yap Swee Seng - alongside Suaram's French lawyer Joseph Breham and Malaysian embassy officials.- malaysiakini

More Trouble over Subs for Najib



Sekutu Daim disebut dalam kertas pendakwaan...

Badan hak asasi manusia, Suaram, mendedahkan bahawa nama seorang individu yang didakwa rapat dengan bekas Menteri Kewangan, Tun Daim Zainuddin disebut ! dalam ke rtas pendakwaan Perancis berhubung dakwaan rasuah dalam pembelian Malaysia dua kapal selam kelas Scorpene berharga RM7.3 bilion pada tahun 2002.

NONEDalam satu sidang akhbar di Bangkok hari ini, Pengarah Suaram, Cynthia Gabriel berkata polis Perancis telah merampas dokumen termasuk nota untuk menteri pertahanan Perancis bertarikh 2 Julai 1999.

Ini berkaitan kepada satu temubual dengan menteri pertahanan Malaysia ketika itu, Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak dan diplomasi Perancis-Malaysia mengenai perkara-perkara berkaitan pertahanan.

"Nota tersebut menyebut nama Mohd Ibrahim Mohd Noor dan Abdul Razak Baginda sebagai tempat rujukan untuk rangkaian politik," katanya.

"Ia seterusnya menyatakan bahawa kedua-duanya mempunyai hubungan politik yang kuat kerana Mohd Ibrahim rapat dengan Daim, dan Abdul Razak rapat dengan Najib."

Menurut Cynthia, satu lagi nota menjelaskan bahawa menjelang awal tahun 2001, pengaruh Mohd Ibrahim telah mula menurun sejajar dengan kuasa Daim yang semakin susut.

Nama Mohd Ibrahim kemudian 'hilang' dari syarikat Perimekar Sdn Bhd - yang dikatakan menjadi perantara dalam pembelian Scorpene - sebagai pemegang saham dan pengarah. 


Beliau digantikan kemudiannya oleh mereka dalam rangkaian Abdul Razak.- malaysiakini



cheers.
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BILA-BILA PUN ORANG UMNO/APCO BARU MESTI LAGU NI

JAMAL NI BANYAK UTANG RUPONYE

Rope ropenyer... Dato Jamal ni banyak hutang.
Ambik ikan, jual murah.. tapi tak bayor pada pembekal?
Ape pasal terok sangat cara hang meniaga ni Jamal?
TQ King Jason.
 
By: Kami Boikot Sekinchan Ikan Bakar
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Budget date no effect on GE timing

PETALING JAYA: Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak's 2013 Budget date announcement has no bearing on when the 13th general election will be called, according to political observers and opposition lawmakers.

Commenting on the announcement that the budget will be presented in September, they rejected the notion that this meant Najib had decided to delay the election until late this year.

Most observers speculate that the election will be held in a month or two.

Political analyst James Chin of Monash University said the only thing holding up Najib from announcing the election date was discussion over Barisan Nasional's list of candidates.

"Basically, the Umno election machinery has been up since last year," he said. "The most important thing is the candidates list, because [potential] candidates will always interfere at the last minute," he told FMT.

DAP publicity chief Tony Pua said the budget date announcement did not make any difference to when Najib would call for elections.

"He can dissolve Parliament tomorrow and have elections by July, hold elections after the Hari Raya before the next Parliament session [in September] or call it after the Budget is announced. It makes no difference," he said.

Pua said that Najib's only concern was to make sure that "everything" was in his favour before calling for elections. This would not happen, he added, citing a poor economic outlook later this year.

He also attacked the BN's vote-fishing measures, calling them non-achievements, saying the good feelings generated by such programmes as Bantuan Rakyat 1Malaysia were "fizzling out".

Kuala Krai MP Hatta Ramli of PAS said the budget date announcement was a sign of the premier's confidence that BN would win and a manifestation of arrogance.

"If the election is done before that, he's assuming that he's going to win," Hatta said. "There's some level of arrogance there."

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Tibai wants MACC to probe Azmin

PUTRAJAYA: Tolak Individu Bernama Anwar Ibrahim (Tibai) today urged the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) to investigate Gombak MP Azmin Ali for a corruption case when he was Anwar Ibrahim's private secretary.

The group reiterated that it would hold a demonstration in front of the MACC headquarters if action was not taken in a week.

Mursyidul Am Tibai, Zahid Md Arip, said the call was made following revelation by the Malaysia Today online portal where Raja Petra Kamarudin had claimed that Anwar, who was then the deputy prime minister, had covered up investigations involving Azmin's corruption case that ran into millions of ringgit.

"There are claims made by senior Anti-Corruption Agency officers that there was a directive to stop investigations against Azmin and to close the files although there was enough evidence to detain and charge him. So we want the MACC to reopen the file," he told reporters after lodging a report at the MACC office here today.

Yesterday, Raja Petra had alleged that Anwar used his influence to stop investigations against Azmin, claiming he had received a confidential file from a senior ACA officer dated May 15, 1995, in London last month.

-Bernama

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Rude British diplomats irk newsman and TV crew

FMT LETTER: From M Krishnamoorthy, via e-mail

British diplomats were not media friendly and threatened a freelance ITV news crew on assignment at a leading hotel in KL and called security to evict them yesterday.

The event was by invitation and Tory Party leader Baroness Warsi was giving a luncheon talk organised by ASLI.

The British diplomat warned the ITV Channel 4 crew that it was a private event and that they not welcome.

I represented ITV news from London and wished to interview Tory Party co-chairman Lady Warsi on her alleged false rental claims.

It was our responsibility to get Baroness Warsi's side of the story on the allegations levelled against her.

It was the lead story of the day in London and the television network assigned me to cover the event at short notice. As a result we were seeking permission to interview her.

I was shocked at the arrogant and high handed actions by diplomats to the television crew.

I was not cowed and told them to call the security because we were not committing a crime, and as media people we were only covering a public figure in a public area.

It all started when an ASLI lady official got agitated with my colleague, a freelance ITV cameraman who had followed another cameraman to a holding room for Lady Warsi.

The ASLI official shouted at the cameraman: "Who are you? Why are you in this room. I'm the host and I did not invite you. Go out! Go out!"

I explained to her and the British High Commission officials that we only there to cover the event and had some questions for Baroness Warsi.

To threats by the British diplomats, I responded to them by saying that they should not threaten media men on Malaysian soil and behave as foreign diplomats here.

At that point he grabbed our camera and demanded that he see what we had recorded. He kept insisting and pressured us by grabbing the camera and trying to operate it.

At that point freelance ITV producer Selvanaban Mariappen took out his I-Phone and started recording the high-handed action by the British diplomat.

The diplomat turned to Selvanaban and demanded that he stop recording their actions. He directed Selva to erase what he had recorded on the I-Phone and camera. Selva refused.

I was shocked to hear a senior British diplomat say that we were on private property and he could arrange to get us removed.

When we did not yield to his threats, he called the General Manager of the hotel who told us politely to go down and have a drink in the lobby.

Security officials showed us the way to lobby and we went there and dispatched the arrival shots of Lady Warsi to ITV London from our laptops

The British officials came down 30 minutes later and negotiated. They demanded we wipe out all the scenes of their high handed action in grabbing our cameras and threatening us.

Finally, he said if we erased all our recordings, a conditional interview would be granted where Baroness Warsi would give her statement.

We waited another two hours and she finally gave her interview which was carried on ITV news and picked up even by BBC and several media internationally.

This is a story that needs to be told because even diplomats have not learned how to handle the media, and if they had, they must have forgotten all the lessons on media relations.

The writer is a freelance coordinator and reporter for ITV, CNN, BBC, German, Australian TV networks and TIME magazine. He has 26 years of experience as a journalist

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3,457 Klang voters disappeared from electoral roll...

NONEKlang MP Charles Santiago has discovered that the names of 3,457 voters in his parliamentary constituency have, without reason, disappeared from the electoral roll since the 2008 general election.

"They were registered voters in the 2008 general election but when you key in their identity card numbers in the Election Commission (EC) online database, it says 'no information'," he told Malaysiakini after calling a press conference in Klang this morning.

Under the current laws, only voters who have died, been declared bankrupt, have had their citizenship revoked or been declared insane can be removed from the electoral roll, and the reasons for removal will be stated in every quarterly supplementary roll.


However, Santiago (left) claimed that the reasons for their removal from the roll were not stated, and not all of them are elders.

"In our search on the ground, we located several of them. They are still alive and eligible to vote," he said.

Santiago and his team also found out that 2,195 voters in Klang have transferred their voting addresses to other constituencies but their addresses in the electoral roll still remain in Klang, which is not allowed under the current regulations.


Since 2002, the EC has make it compulsory that any voting address must be the same as the voter's address recorded in his or her MyKad.

If voters want to change their voting constituencies, they must first change their addresses recorded in their MyKad.

Hence, for those Klang voters to transfer their voting addresses to other const! ituencie s, they have to first change their MyKad addresses, which will be reflected in the electoral roll.- malaysiakini



Pengundi masih hidup tapi rekod JPN kata dia sudah mati...

Seorang pengundi di Dun Kuala Kubu Baharu Parlimen Hulu Selangor terkejut apabila Jabatan Pendaftaran Negara (JPN) merekodkan beliau sudah meninggal dunia.

Mohamad Diah Arjan berkata, beliau sangat hairan apabila semakan yang dibuat di laman web Suruhanjaya Pilihan Raya (SPR) menyatakan " Record not found" sedangkan namanya ada dalam sistem semakan di pejabat pos Kuala Kubu Baharu.


Selepas membuat semakan di pejabat pos, beliau yang bernombor kad pengenalan 691130 01 5063 membuat semakan di JPN Kuala Kubu Baharu dan pegawai bertugas memaklumkan bahawa ada menerima laporan berhubung kematian beliau tetapi belum disahkan lagi.

"Bagaimana perkara ini boleh berlaku? Saya bertanya bagaimana ia boleh berlaku dan pegawai bertugas memaklumkan ada kesilapan di JPN Putrajaya.

"Selepas seminggu saya datang semula ke JPN Kuala Kubu Baharu dan status telah dibetulkan, bahawa saya masih hidup dan sihat walafiat," kata beliau dalam aduan yang dihantar kepada Harakahdaily hari ini.


 [Carian di laman web SPR menggunakan nombor kad pengenalan 691130 01 5063 menunjukkan 'Record not found']

Dalam jawapan kepada aduan yang dibuat beliau sebelum ini, SPR memaklumkan semakan telah dibuat menerusi pangkalan data JPN ke atas nombor kad p! engenala n 691130 01 5063 dan didapati bahawa status rekod Mohamad Diah adalah 'telah meninggal dunia'.

Sehubungan itu, SPR meminta Mohamad Diah membuat pembetulan maklumat di JPN dan memaklumkannya kepada SPR untuk kemasukan semula rekod beliau sebagai pemilih.

Namun ujarnya, semakan yang dibuat di laman web SPR pada jam 1.40 pagi tadi tetap mendapati "record not found".

Justeru beliau menggesa SPR mengambil tindakan segera bagi mengatasi kepincangan itu supaya beliau dapat mengundi pada pilihan raya umum ke-13.

"Saya harap pihak SPR dapat mengambil tindakan segera supaya saya dapat mengundi dalam PRU 13.

"Jangan kesilapan yang dibuat oleh JPN dan SPR menyebabkan saya tidak boleh mengundi dalam PRU 13.Satu kezaliman kepada rakyat biasa seperti saya," katanya.-harakahdaily





cheers.

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Anwar to Najib: Re-table budget 2012

PETALING JAYA: Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim wants Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak to re-table Budget 2012 in view of the slower economic growth of 4.7% in the first quarter of this year.

He said this was important because the Najib administration failed to achieve its target since 2011.

"It is the second time that Najib's administration failed to achieve important economic targets which were the basis for Budget 2012.

"The first economic target missed was the economic growth for 2011, which at 5.1% was lower than the projected growth used by BN in the budget," he said in a press statement.

The economic growth forecast for 2011 was 5.0% – 5.5% and for 2012, 5% – 6%.

To re-address the problem, Anwar wanted Budget 2012 to be re-tabled during Parliament session next month.

"I reiterate my call made in Dewan Rakyat previously that the Budget be re-tabled for a debate in the June session of the Parliament because the growth assumptions were wrong," he said.

Yesterday, Najib announced that Budget 2013 would be tabled on Sept 28.

The prime minister, who also oversees the finance portfolio, said the new budget was themed "Driving Transformation Towards A Developed Nation."

Bumi equity 'hijacked'

Meanwhile, Anwar also criticised BN's mishandling of the economy in achieving the 30% equity for the bumiputera and highlighted Pakatan Rakyat's proposal to bolster the economic power of Malaysians.

"One of the most radical economic realignments proposed is to shift the policy focus from the much abused 30% equity target for the bumiputera currently pursued by BN towards an income-based economic target of RM4,000 minimum household income for each family within five years of Pakatan's administration.

"The 30% equity target has been hijacked by cronies to enrich themselves at the expense of the general public," he said.

"The disparity between the rich and poor widens significantly as a result of the abuses done in the name of achieving the 30% equity target.

"A fairer management of the country's wealth should rightly focus on ensuring every family can prosper economically under the Malaysian sun.

"Every family's income must rise in tandem with the rise in cost of living.

"Every family must earn above the poverty level so as to be able to invest in the future of their children," he added.

'Debate with me'

Anwar said the economic target set by Pakatan that the combined income of each Malaysian family should be at least RM4,000 a month was not only morally right but achievable through a combination of pro-people economic policies proposed.

He also reiterated his call for a debate with Najib on economic issues if the latter felt that the current economic policies were on the right track.

"If he is confident that Pakatan will not be able to deliver our economic promises, he must be bold enough to defend his conviction in a public debate.

"His refusal to debate with me on economic policies can only confirm the assertion that he is leading a weak government – economically, morally and intellectually," he added.

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Facebook, the most cynical tech giant ever — Kevin Kelleher

MAY 30 — For all its vaunted idealism, Silicon Valley can be just as cynical as any other area of commerce. The tech companies set up to profit from spam and search-engine trickery are too numerous to count. But Facebook's short history makes one thing clear: There has never been a tech company that built so much fortune from the exploitation of ordinary people while giving so little in return.

Yes, Microsoft was vilified — and rightly so — for crushing competitors and forcing customers into an inferior operating-system software, but its iron-fisted dominance helped shape an immature and inchoate computer-software industry into a single standard that made PCs everyday devices in offices and homes. Microsoft's brutal strong-arm tactics were directed at rivals. Its sin against its customers was that its software, for decades, just wasn't that good.

Facebook, by contrast, built the best social network of its time, so good it left rivals like MySpace in the dust. And that should have been enough to make Facebook a Silicon Valley success story. Once it came time to make money, Facebook exploited its users' personal data to a degree that no company had ever achieved before.

Over the years, Facebook has curtailed some of its more blatantly exploitative practices, but only after a string of controversies forced its hand. It reluctantly let users control their privacy settings, and then it had to simplify those settings after many found them unnecessarily complex. (Some say they're still too complex.)

Facebook also backed off changes in its terms of service that allowed it to license users' data even after they left the site. But even now, regulators are objecting to Facebook's insistence that users grant the company a "non-exclusive, transferable, sub-licensable, royalty-free, worldwide license" to any photo, video or passing thought they see fit to publish on the site. Facebook has not only redefined the social Web — it's redefining the very definition of "sharing."

Even if Facebook has lost some privacy battles, it still seems to be winning the war on private moments. It has, as one of its earliest backers wished, conditioned users to accept the creepiness of advertisers stalking their personal lives. And Facebook just keeps raising the creepiness bar.

But why must we users be used this way? It's not because we all long to be closet exhibitionists for Madison Avenue but only because it pays a handsome profit to Facebook and its early investors. We are digital sharecroppers, but it's not our work lives being exploited for the gain of others, it's our personal lives.

 One out of every five cents of revenue Facebook brings in goes to its bottom line. We have handed the fruits of our labour over to Goldman Sachs, Digital Sky, Accel Partners and Zuckerberg himself. And in return we get memories that Facebook expects to license and sub-license.

It used to be that a successful Silicon Valley startup would aspire to share its success with the customers who helped create it. Not long ago, investment gurus would counsel people to "invest in what you know" — and this would be sane advice. But in the era of Facebook, that advice is nonsense: Facebook is so cynical it doesn't even trust its own users to also be owners of the company (as some have sensibly suggested).

Zuckerberg did all he could to keep his users from being his company's owners. Three years ago, he sought — and won — a regulatory exemption that allowed his company to remain out of public ownership. Once it was inevitable that Facebook would have to go public, Zuckerberg made sure the site's users could never have voting control over the company built on the content they created.

Confronted with the mundane reality of a publicly traded company, Facebook revealed the true depths of its cynicism. The company didn't trust its users to vote on its future. Zuckerberg disdained Wall Street as if he were an Occupy protester.

He wore a hoodie to roadshows — a gesture that would carry more weight if he weren't in the upper echelons of the one per cent. Facebook snickered at would-be investors by making them wait in line for a roadshow, then making them watch a 30-minute video that could have easily been posted on YouTube.

It was all a terrific joke, except for one thing: Facebook was every bit as arrogant — if not more arrogant — than the Wall Street firms it looked down on. Zuckerberg the hacker was mocking the financial elite — but somehow he had forgotten he was now part of the financial elite. Maybe that's why he seems to have handed the details of the IPO to his underlings, and that's where he went wrong.

There is much discussion of who's to blame for epic mishaps of the Facebook IPO, but this much seems evident: A week before the stock's debut, Facebook declared its revenue in the current quarter would be slower than it expected because more users were logging in through mobile devices, where it serves fewer ads. Facebook didn't announce this on its blog — where users who wanted to invest in the IPO could see it — but on page 57 of a 208-page document, the sixth revision of its IPO prospectus.

Given the importance of this pre-IPO disclosure, it felt weirdly opaque. It used insider jargon like "DAU" and "immaterial number of sponsored stories" before referring investors to an even more obscure section of the prospectus. Luckily for underwriters, Facebook actively notified them it was lowering its growth forecasts. Underwriters would in turn inform their favored clients.

Meanwhile, most Facebook users who wanted in on the IPO were stuck with parsing legalese inserted discreetly at the 11th hour. This is taking technicalities to the extreme: Expecting a typical Facebook user to figure out a financial reality that had to be explained to a Wall Street analyst is as cynical as it gets. And even worse: Despite its lowered revenue forecast, Facebook still increased the number of shares for sale (all of them sold by insiders, Facebook itself wouldn't get a cent) and raised the offering price.

Common sense says that if revenue is weakening before an IPO, the number of shares for sale as well as their price should fall. But not with Facebook, which looked on its users and investors with such derision it believed it could get away with anything.

Mark Zuckerberg may have distanced himself from Facebook's IPO, but some strong leadership would have easily prevented this mess. Instead, as the saying goes, the fish stinks from the head: Leave your underlings to handle an IPO you dread, and they won't take it seriously either.

On the day of Facebook's IPO, Zuckerberg still claimed that Facebook's mission is not to be a public company, but to "make the world more open and connected." I get it: Facebook would love to remain private.

But even so, Facebook isn't about its users. It's about exploiting its visitors. Listen to Zuckerberg's one-minute IPO speech, where he thanks "all the people out there who use Facebook and our products" and ends on a flat note. The tepid applause that follows is all you need to know about how Facebook thinks of you as a user or investor.

That speech reminded me of the infamous Zuckerberg IM transcripts from the earliest days of Facebook, where he told a friend

    i don't know why

    they "trust me"

    dumb f****

In a 2010 profile, Zuckerberg said about that earlier exchange:

    If you're going to go on to build a service that is influential and that a lot of people rely on, then you need to be mature, right? … I think I've grown and learned a lot.

Zuckerberg was right. He has indeed grown up. Not in the sense of outgrowing cynicism, but in the sense of learning how to harness a faith in the weakness of humanity into a multibillion-dollar company. And that's what's most cynical of all. It's one thing to profit from your customers — that's simple capitalism. It's another to exploit them so shamelessly, while claiming you're helping them to live better lives. — Reuters

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insider.

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Belated sighting of Education article from BBC worth reading -- Malaysian leaders, please take note!

TIMES THEY ARE A-CHANGING,as Bob Dylan chanted as his 60s anthem. Our Malaysian leaders and IGPs should also stop yelling the cliched threat: You Communist, don't disturb our democrazee system!


8 May 2012 Last updated at 23:03 GMT

China: The world's cleverest country?

By Sean CoughlanBBC News education correspondent
Pupils in Yuexi county, Anhui province This is the most extensive insight into how China's school standards compare with other countries
China's results in international education tests - which have never been published - are "remarkable", says Andreas Schleicher, responsible for the highly-influential Pisa tests.
These tests, held every three years by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, measure pupils' skills in reading, numeracy and science.
Pisa tests - the Programme for International Student Assessment - have become the leading international benchmark.
The findings indicate that China has an education system that is overtaking many Western countries.
While there has been intense interest in China's economic and political development, this provides the most significant insight into how it is teaching the next generation.
'Incredible resilience'
The Pisa 2009 tests showed that Shanghai was top of the international education rankings.
But it was unclear whether Shanghai and another chart-topper, Hong Kong, were unrepresentative regional showcases.
Andreas Schleicher, OECDThe OECD's Andreas Schleicher: "Fairness and relevance are not the same thing"
Mr Schleicher says the unpublished results reveal that pupils in other parts of China are also performing strongly.
"Even in rural areas and in disadvantaged environments, you see a remarkable performance."
In particular, he said the test results showed the "resilience" of pupils to succeed despite tough backgrounds - and the "high levels of equity" between rich and poor pupils.
"Shanghai is an exceptional case - and the results there are close to what I expected. But what surprised me more were the results from poor provinces that came out really well. The levels of resilience are just incredible.
"In China, the idea is so deeply rooted that education is the key to mobility and success."!
Investing in the future
The results for disadvantaged pupils would be the envy of any Western country, he says.
Mr Schleicher is confident of the robustness of this outline view of China's education standards.
In an attempt to get a representative picture, tests were taken in nine provinces, including poor, middle-income and wealthier regions.
Nanjing high schoolHigh school students shout slogans such as "I must go to college" in a pre-exam event in Nanjing
The Chinese government has so far not allowed the OECD to publish the actual data.
But Mr Schleicher says the results reveal a picture of a society investing individually and collectively in education.
On a recent trip to a poor province in China, he says he saw that schools were often the most impressive buildings.
He says in the West, it is more likely to be a shopping centre.
"You get an image of a society that is investing in its future, rather than in current consumption."
There were also major cultural differences when teenagers were asked about why people succeeded at school.
"North Americans tell you typically it's all luck. 'I'm born talented in mathematics, or I'm born less talented so I'll study something else.'
"In Europe, it's all about social heritage: 'My father was a plumber so I'm going to be a plumber'.
"In China, more than nine out of 10 children tell you: 'It depends on the effort I invest and I can succeed if I study hard.'
"They take on responsibility. They can overcome obstacles and say 'I'm the owner of my own success', rather than blaming it on the system."
Education's World Cup
This year will see another round of Pisa tests - it's like World Cup year for international education. And Mr Schleicher's tips for the next fast-improving countries are Brazil, Turkey and Poland.
Continue reading the main story

GLOBAL EDUCATION RANKINGS

Pisa tests are taken by 15-year-olds in reading, maths and science. Previous leaders in these subjects:
  • 2000: Finland, Japan, South Korea
  • 2003: Finland, Hong Kong, Finland
  • 2006: South Korea, Taipei, Finland
  • 2009: Shanghai, Shanghai, Shanghai
Mr Schleicher, a German based in the OECD's Paris headquarters, has become the godfather of such global education comparisons.
Armed with a spreadsheet and an impeccably polite manner, his opinions receive close attention in the world's education departments.
The White House responded to the last Pisa results with President Barack Obama's observation that the nation which "out-educates us today will out-compete us tomorrow".
The next round of global leagu! e tables will test 500,000 pupils in more than 70 countries - with the results to be published late next year.
Education ministers will be looking nervously at the outcome.
"In the past, politicians could always say we're doing better than last year - everyone could be a success," he says, describing the tendency for national results to rise each year.
The arrival of Pisa tests sent an icy draught through these insulated corridors.
No excuses
Perhaps the biggest discomfort of all was for Germany - where "Pisa shock" described the discovery that their much vaunted education system was distinctly average.
HelsinkiFinland was the education world leader in rankings a decade ago
And the biggest change in attitude, he says, has been the United States - once with no interest in looking abroad, now enthusiastically borrowing ideas from other countries.
"Education is a field dominated by beliefs and traditions, it's inward looking. As a system you can find all kinds of excuses and explanations for not succeeding.
!
"The idea of Pisa was to take away all the excuses.
"People say you can only improve an education system over 25 years - but look at Poland and Singapore, which have improved in a very short time, we've seen dramatic changes."
The biggest lesson of the Pisa tests, he says, is showing there is nothing inevitable about how schools perform.
"Poverty is no longer destiny. You can see this at the level of economies, such as South Korea, Singapore."
Fair comparison?
A criticism of such rankings has been that it is unfair. How can an impoverished developing country be compared with the stockpiled multiple advantages of a wealthy Scandinavian nation?
Here Mr Schleicher makes a significant distinction. It might not be fair, but such comparisons are extremely relevant. "Relevance and fairness are not the same thing," he says.
South Korea Samsung launchSouth Korea is identified by the OECD as an example how education can drive economic growth
Youngsters in the poorest countries are still competing in a global economy. "It's a terrible thing to take away the global perspective."
He also attacks the idea of accepting lower expectations for poorer children - saying this was the "big trap in the 1970s".
"It was giving the disadvantaged child an excuse - you come from a poor background, so we'll lower the horizon for you, we'll make it easier.
"But that child has still got to compete in a national labour market.
"This concept of 'fairness' is deeply unfair - because by making life easier for children from difficult circumstances, we lower their life chances."
'Sorting mechanism'
So why are the rising stars in Asia proving so successful?
Mr Schleicher says it's a philosophical difference - expecting all pupils to make the grade, rather than a "sorting mechanism" to find a chosen few.
He says anyone can create an education system where a few at the top succeed, the real challenge is to push through the entire cohort.
In China, he says this means using the best teachers in the toughest school! s.
The shifting in the balance of power will be measured again with Pisa 2012, with pupils sitting tests from Stockholm to Seoul, London to Los Angeles, Ankara to Adelaide.
"I don't think of Pisa as being about ranking, it tells you what's possible. How well could we be doing?"

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Why isn’t the euro falling even further? — Peter Gumbel

MARCH 30 — If the euro really is on the verge of collapse, as many pundits are now proclaiming, how come it is still so highly valued against other currencies, including the US dollar?

That may sound like a crazy question, given the euro's much-publicized decline over the past couple of weeks. It has been dropping as the possibility grows that Greece may seek to pull out of the 17-nation currency union following parliamentary elections there in mid-June. That scenario of a "Grexit" has spooked financial markets and pushed governments and business around Europe to draw up contingency plans.

Yet looked at from a longer perspective than last week, the euro is in fact still pretty expensive. On foreign exchange markets, one euro today buys about US$ 1.25. That's more than 6 per cent above the US$ 1.17 rate in January 1999, when the euro was first introduced as an accounting currency.

Back then, it got off to a weaker start even than Facebook's IPO and quickly fell below parity to the dollar. On January 1, 2002, when euro notes and coins were introduced into general circulation, one euro bought just 90 US cents. It then dropped to a low point of 86 cents in March of that year. That's 30 per cent below where it is today. This chart from the ECB website shows the full picture since the euro's introduction:

And it's not just against the dollar that the euro remains relatively strong. The trade-weighted value of the euro against the currencies of the 20 countries that are the European Union's leading commercial partners shows the same trend. On this index, too, the euro tracks today at a level that is about its midpoint over the 12 years of its existence, far from its historic low.

So what does this mean? If you believe that markets are rational, there are three possible conclusions:

1. The euro still has a heck of a long way to fall — at least 30 per cent and probably more

2. Markets don't yet believe that the euro zone is about to collapse, or

3. Something else is supporting the currency; for example, the German economy's renewed strength.

The wonderful thing about foreign exchange markets, of course, is that they can be highly irrational. Paul De Grauwe and Pablo Rovira Kaltwasser, economists at the University of Leuven in Belgium, recently published a paper entitled "Animal Spirits in the Foreign Exchange Market," which concludes that traders form optimistic or pessimistic views about currencies that have little or nothing to do with economic fundamentals and that they readily swap for reasons that can defy logic.

Certainly, looking at the dollar's high volatility against, first, the German mark and then the euro over the past 30 years, you might think that the US and European economies have been massively diverging. The dollar started a dizzying climb in the feel-good 1980s under President Ronald Reagan, only to fall sharply in the mid-1980s, after the US Treasury persuaded Japan and Europe to declare that it was overvalued — the famous 1985 "Plaza Accord."

Yet De Grauwe makes the point that the underlying economic situation doesn't begin to warrant such big changes because, while there have been differences in GDP growth, purchasing power parity comparisons, and other indicators, they haven't been big enough to warrant such violent market shifts. "The fundamentals have moved relatively little, but the foreign exchange markets have moved a lot," he says.

How, then, to account for the euro's trajectory, and particularly its current relative strength in the face of all that political and economic turmoil in Greece, Spain and other reeling countries?

It's possible to make the case that the euro's decline following its introduction was due to uncertainty about its prospects and solidity. After all, this was a new currency union in a world that is generally sceptical about such things.

It didn't help that the Europeans had a lousy track record of economic and monetary convergence; George Soros famously made a killing in 1992 by betting that the British pound would not be able to stay in the euro's precursor, the "exchange rate mechanism" of the European Monetary System.

More puzzling is why the euro then went on to rise so sharply in the period before the 2008 financial crisis. Economic growth in the euro zone was actually quite sluggish in those years, substantially lower than in the US and many other countries. Between 2002 and 2007, the euro area economy grew at an average annual rate of just 2 per cent, compared with 2.6 per cent in the US and a buoyant 4.4 per cent for the world economy as a whole. Yet in that period, the euro appreciated strongly.

Interest rates are often used to justify currency fluctuations, and the European Central Bank's traditionally hawkish views on inflation may have helped to underpin the currency — even if the interest rate differential between Europe and the US has not been substantial.

Since the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers and the explosion of the financial crisis in 2008, the European Central Bank has also lagged behind the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England, both of which have adopted aggressive policies of "quantitative easing" — big injections of liquidity into the financial system.

But that has changed in the past six months, starting in November when the ECB started providing commercial banks with €1 trillion (RM4 trillion) worth of cheap loans, in a bid to ease euro zone tensions. So what was the impact of that decision on the foreign exchange markets at the time? Answer: barely a ripple.

De Grauwe actually thinks that the prevailing market view, namely that the euro is a bit overvalued, is about right. He considers that it's now above what he calls its "equilibrium value" and thus could go lower, to about US$ 1.15 to US$ 1.20. In other words, there's still a Greek withdrawal discount to be had. But we are still far from the worst-case scenario of the collapse of the euro itself.

The euro's recent fall might, in fact, be a case of a self-fulfilling prophecy, just as the 1985 Plaza Accord was. After all, European politicians are also now publicly discussing the worst-case scenarios, easing the nervousness of foreign exchange traders.

The irony of all this is that a massive euro devaluation would be one of the best things that could possibly happen right now for the euro zone, because it would instantly make exports far more competitive. That would help not just Greece out of its current misery but also all the struggling euro zone countries, from Spain to Italy to Ireland, and potentially trigger a German boomlet that could lift the entire continent.

Time, perhaps, for European politicians to talk up the crisis scenario even more forthrightly, in the hope that those animal spirits in the foreign exchange markets overreact with a historic selloff — and in the process actually head off the very scenario that they are betting on. — Reuters

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insider.

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PAS layak guna nama Islam dalam parti

PETALING JAYA: Pemimpin PAS Selangor, Khalid Samad mendakwa usaha untuk menggugurkan nama Islam dari PAS seolah-olah mahu memberi gambaran parti itu tidak memperjuangkan Islam.

Timbalan Pesuruhjaya 3 PAS Selangor itu  menegaskan PAS boleh menggunakan Islam kerana ia memperjuangkan Islam seperti dalam perlembagaan parti.

Beliau menambah, nama Islam bagi PAS ia bukan sekadar nama tetapi dari segi matlamat dan perlembagaan PAS, Islam ingin dilaksanakan dalam perjuangan politik.

Ahli Parlimen Shah Alam itu yakin usaha pihak tertentu mendesak Majlis Fatwa Kebangsaan mengeluarkan fatwa supaya PAS menggugurkan nama Islam pada parti itu.

"Saya difahamkan pada zaman Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad pernah ada usaha supaya menggugurkan nama Islam dari PAS tetapi Majlis Fatwa menolaknya.

"Jika kena gugur nama Islam pada PAS, kena gugur juga nama Islam.Universiti Islam Antarabangsa (UIA) kena gugur Islam kerana UIA bukan maksum," katanya.

Khalid sebaliknya mencadangkan Umno menukar namanya kepada satu nama yang mencerminkan ia mahu mengikut Islam.

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MP puzzled over ‘missing’ Klang voters

PETALING JAYA: Klang MP Charles Santiago is baffled over the status of 5,652 voters in his parliamentary constituency who have either gone missing from the electoral roll or been transferred out.

Some 3,457 of the 5,652 voters no longer have their information stored in the Election Commission's (EC) database, Santiago said.

"We'd like to know from the EC what happened to the missing 3,457 voters. The voter movement is also highly irregular," said Santiago, who is also Selangor DAP vice-president.

"I don't think 3,457 people have died in Klang since 2008 because there are no records of any epidemic outbreaks in Klang," he added.

"We wrote to the EC on May 17 for an explanation but it has not responded to our letter," said Santiago, who obtained the figures from the EC a fortnight ago.

He also revealed that of the 5,652 voters, 2,195 of them have been transferred to 184 parliamentary constituencies, including Sabah and Sarawak.

The majority were transferred to parliamentary constituencies within Selangor.

According to Santiago, the breakdown within Selangor is:

Kapar (430 voters), Kota Raja (317), Shah Alam (146), Subang (56), Kuala Langat (79), Kelana Jaya (65), Kuala Selangor (55), Hulu Selangor (51) and Hulu Langat (51).

On the 2,195 voters transferred out of Klang, Santiago said that they had neither moved out of Klang nor given their consent to be transferred out to other constituencies.

He added that the number of voters who had their constituencies changed could possibly be higher but he had no proof to substantiate it.

"The EC should clean up its roll. The system is reeking with irregularities," he said.

When asked on the next course of action, Santago said that he is considering taking legal action against the EC if those affected were willing to come forward and file a complaint.

The issue of irregularities in the voter rolls nationwide was among the reasons which led to the Bersih 3.0 mammoth rally on April 28, calling for free and fair elections.

The rally saw more than 80,000 people converging along roads leading to Dataran Merdeka in Kuala Lumpur which was the focal point of the gathering.

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Ex-estate residents camp outside PM’s office

PUTRAJAYA: About 50 residents from the former Bukit Jalil estate gathered at the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) today amidst a heavy downpour.

The residents, led by their committee treasurer K Balakrishnan, arrived at about 11am and camped at a nearby resting spot to avoid the rain.

Present by their side were Parti Sosialis Malaysia (PSM) secretary-general and treasurer S Arutchelvan and A Sivarajan.

Also present were Oppressed People's Network (Jerit) propaganda coordinator S Mathavi and Warga Aman secretary-general S Bharatidasan.

The 41 families are embroiled in a tussle with the Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) after the latter tried to evict them from their homes.

The land is slated to be turned into a Muslim burial ground. Subsequently, the residents took their case to the High Court and the Court of Appeal but lost their legal battle.

Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak, on the other hand, instructed the Federal Territories and Urban Well-Being Ministry to find an amicable solution but nothing has come forth to date.

At about 12.30pm, an officer from the Federal Territories Ministry, only known as Amir, arrived and invited some of the estate residents for a meeting at the PMO.

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Umno Pulai lapor polis terhadap Nizar

JOHOR BAHARU: Pergerakan Pemuda Umno Pulai dan beberapa pertubuhan bukan kerajaan (NGO) membuat laporan polis terhadap bekas Menteri Besar Perak Datuk Seri Mohamad Nizar Jamaluddin berhubung kenyataannya yang dianggap biadap terhadap Sultan Johor Sultan Ibrahim.

Laporan polis itu dibuat pada pukul 9.30 malam tadi oleh Setiausaha Kerja Pemuda Umno Pulai Asyik Rahmat di Balai Polis Tampoi.

"Kami sebagai rakyat Johor berasa amat marah dan tersinggung dengan kenyataan Mohamad Nizar yang memfitnah Sultan Johor bahawa baginda telah menyalahguna wang rakyat dalam pembelian nombor plat WWW 1," katanya pada sidang media malam tadi.

Turut hadir pada sidang media itu ialah wakil dari Perkasa Parlimen Pulai, Pekida Zon Kempas, KRT Skudai Kiri dan Persatuan Dewan Belia Jaya serta lebih 50 anggota mereka.

Menurut Asyik, mereka menyokong kenyataan yang dibuat Tunku Mahkota Johor Tunku Ismail Idris di dalam Twitternya bahawa pembelian nombor plat itu menggunakan duit peribadi Sultan Johor dan bukan wang rakyat.

"Sehubungan dengan itu, kami meminta Mohamad Nizar meminta maaf secara terbuka terhadap Sultan Johor," katanya sambil menambah, Sultan Johor amat pemurah terhadap rakyat menerusi pelbagai sumbangan sebagaimana yang dibuktikan menerusi program Jelajah Kembara Mahkota.

Polis, kata beliau, perlu membuat siasatan terperinci dan mendalam terhadap kenyataan yang dianggap menghasut, Mohamad Nizar itu.

Sementara itu Ketua Wanita Umno Johor Datuk Sharifah Azizah Syed Zain berkata pergerakan itu amat kesal dengan kenyataan bekas menteri besar Perak itu.

"Kenyataan Mohamad Nizar itu telah mendedahkan lagi perangai buruknya
terhadap khalayak ramai," katanya dalam satu kenyataan.

Menurut beliau, adalah lebih baik bagi Mohamad Nizar tidak membuka mulutnya dan memfitnah Sultan Johor memandangkan beliau tidak berasal dari negeri ini dan tidak mengetahui latar belakang Kesultanan Johor.

– Bernama

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