Wednesday, April 30, 2008

The monkeys strike back

The monkeys strike back
30 April, 2008

These are signs that Umno’s factionalism will deepen and intensify as contending forces align and realign themselves for the party election, now scheduled for December.

Khoo Boo Teik, ALIRAN

Khoo Boo Teik looks back at how the people came together to collectively crack the BN’s supposedly shatter-proof hegemony. Analysing the transformed political landscape, he discusses some of the fresh challenges that lie ahead.

If you’ve read or heard the tales from the Chinese classic, Xi You Ji (Journey to the West), you’d recall that the amazing cudgel-wielding 72-morph Sun Wukong, a.k.a. ‘Monkey’, first became famous for ‘creating havoc in Heaven’.

Long loved as an icon of recalcitrance, Monkey swung as he pleased, shaking the established order and shaming the hirelings sent to suppress him.

In the 12th General Election of 8 March 2008, 49 per cent of the voters morphed, as it were, into one gigantic electoral Monkey and cracked the Barisan Nasional’s supposedly shatter-proof hegemony.

No more two thirds


Long-suffering voters spurned the ruling politicians and stunned their hacks and flunkeys by handing 82 seats to the alliance of Parti Keadilan Rakyat, Democratic Action Party and Parti Islam SeMalaysia, thus breaking the BN’s two-thirds stranglehold on Parliament.

Collectively, Pas, PKR and DAP took control of five states – Kedah, Kelantan, Penang, Perak, and Selangor – besides winning ten out of eleven parliamentary seats in the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur.

Overnight, PKR stopped being the one-seat party that the United Malays National Organisation had threatened to send into oblivion. Instead, PKR added 30 more to the sole parliamentary seat held by Datin Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail in 2004.

Nor was Pas beleaguered any longer with a precarious one-seat majority in Kelantan. It won 38 out of 45 state seats in Kelantan and now governed Kedah, too.

For the first time ever, DAP took power in Penang by completely defeating both Gerakan Raykat Malaysia and the Malaysian Chinese Association.

In Perak and Selangor, the three parties formed coalition governments, however untidy their power-sharing process was (and however much they still need to formalise it to avoid being the playthings of non-electoral forces).

Caution v. confidence


The opposition’s unprecedented advance brought on a euphoric daze after virtually all the expert pre-election assessments were proven wrong, no less with the big picture than with the local scenes.

Take the magnificent Malaysia-kini. Its offer of ten-day free access caused countless surfers to jam its site on the evening of 8 March. Yet, even the redoubtable Steven Gan had cautioned that 40 seats would be a realistic advance for the combined opposition, a figure, Gan later said, that was ‘not even close’.

Or take Anwar Ibrahim, seemingly the most foolhardy of the opposition leaders for urging BN’s replacement while others only targeted its two-thirds majority. Anwar thought that PKR would do well to win 25 seats. In fact, PKR became the largest opposition party with 31 seats.

In Penang, an ill-concealed intra-party dispute over who should succeed Koh Tsu Koon as Chief Minister showed that Gerakan expected to retain power. But the four named and un-named pretenders to that position needn’t have troubled themselves. The DAP deleted Gerakan from Penang’s political terrain (and Tsu Koon became the third of all three chief ministers, after Tan Sri Wong Pow Nee in 1969 and Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu in 1990, to depart office in defeat).

Whose fear?

Beyond seats and states, there was a popular disdain for scare-mongering.

The mainstream media issued its usual anti-opposition warnings of instability, erosion of investor confidence, Islamic state, and ‘May 13’. Some editors must have so believed their own propaganda that they were paralysed by the Chinese swing, the Hindraf factor, and the late Malay swing. Why else, for instance, did The Star Online, late on 8 March, show no result except BN’s ’10 out of 10’ parliamentary victories?

Outgoing Selangor Mentri Besar Khir Toyo threatened ‘zero opposition’ only to be ejected from power. Melaka’s Mohd Ali Rustam intimidatingly boasted that Umno could rule on its own – forever. Now he and his ilk must rue Umno’s insecure dependence on the goodwill of the unlikely power-brokers of Sabah and Sarawak.

The arrogance of power

When the Malay voters revolted in 1999, in response to Anwar Ibrahim’s persecution, many non-Malay voters rejected the Barisan Alternatif’s call for Reformasi. Instead, they helped to save Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad and Umno and continued to support Abdullah Badawi in 2004. Abdullah also recovered the support of Malay voters who badly wanted a closure of the Anwar affair.

But four ‘work with me’ years under Abdullah did not reward Malay and non-Malay voters with promised reforms, but with an ‘arrogance of power’, as Tsu Koon, after some soul-searching, has belatedly admitted.

Of course, it was Umno’s power, and, of course, it was arrogant.

In ethnic terms, Umno soon reasserted its power. Ketuanan Melayu was not to be questioned; the New Economic Policy’s restructuring would be extended; the so-called Malay Agenda was timeless.

Hishamuddin Hussein, with his keris-kissing antics, warned even Umno’s non-Malay partners, ‘Do not challenge us!’ Khairy Jamaluddin flashed his ‘My bangsa, right or wrong’ rhetoric and Umno Youth organised a protest of convenience against a pliant Gerakan in Penang.

In class terms, the power was flaunted by displays of the increasingly unaccountable corruption of the Umno-related oligarchs and the greed of new corporate groups with strong political cables. On the other hand, mass protesters against fuel price increases and rising inflation were met by tear gas, water cannons and Red Helmets.

In cultural terms, the regime’s claim to moderation, via Islam Hadhari, rang hollow. It seemed indifferent to religious disputes that blurred the jurisdictional boundaries between the civil and the Syariah courts, to the invasive body-snatching actions of religious bureaucrats, and to the insensitivity of Umno-dominated local governments towards incidents of temple demolition.

Reformasi's retribution

Within that context, the election result was retribution with a flavour of Reformasi, albeit appearing late and not quite following the Barisan Alternatif’s 1999 script.

Once, many non-Malay voters could be persuaded that ‘A vote for DAP is a vote for PAS’.

This time, many, many more decided that ‘A vote against MCA and Gerakan and MIC is a vote against Umno’.

In short, the non-Malay voters snapped the BN chain at its weaker links. They showed their contempt for the timidity of MCA, Gerakan and MIC, gagged and impotent Chinese-based and Indian-based component parties.

It was unlikely that Malay voters significantly swung to parties such as DAP or even PKR. But in certain ethnically mixed constituencies, a late Malay swing or an appreciable Malay absenteeism at the polls compounded BN’s losses. In Malay-majority constituencies, the old Umno-Pas division was still evident, leaving the non-Malay swing to exert its impact.

The PKR’s present position is an ironic, almost un-Malaysian, outcome of the ethnic voting patterns. A party some had written off emerged as a symbol of multi-ethnic politics. Whatever its future, PKR’s leadership of a balanced Malay-non-Malay opposition has dragged Parliament from its old self of being dominated by BN and opposed by an entirely Malay Pas and an entirely non-Malay DAP.

New landscape

Many observers have likened this transformation of the political landscape to a tsunami, a perfect storm, or a surge of Makkal Sakthi (People Power) that outdid the Bersih and Hindraf rallies of late 2007.

The metaphors may be excessive. A true tsunami, say, would have swept BN out of office. A perfect storm would not have bypassed Sabah and Sarawak.

Yet, obviously, the transformation raises some urgent questions for an opposition that has begun to contemplate national power.

Breaking the two-thirds barrier was both a symbolic and real achievement. For some time now, the ability to amend the Constitution was not the crux of the two-thirds issue. Power was, and especially Umno’s unassailable power within BN.

Without the buffer of a two-thirds majority, however, BN’s ethnic power-sharing formula may be in jeopardy. If Umno insists on taking so many seats, to be able to rule on its own, it won’t be able to satisfy the demands of its 13 non-Malay adjuncts.

Actually, MCA and Gerakan had paid for Umno’s arrogance of power before, in 1986 and 1990. As they lick their wounds, MCA, Gerakan and MIC might stumble upon a simple truth: Stop playing ‘Kapitan China’ and ‘Kapitan Keling’ (no insult intended) to Umno’s ‘Tuan Melayu’, or be irrelevant – as Gerakan, shorn of its Penang base, seems already to be so.

Watch out for old politics

Partly for that reason, Umno will strive to impose its old ethnic politics upon the PKR-DAP-Pas experiments in new multi-ethnic politics. We have already seen the knee-jerk attacks on DAP for allegedly marginalising the Malays in Penang, on the Perak government for not having enough Malays in its Exco, and so on.

We’ve seen before these unscrupulous tactics of ethnic assaults from quarters that claim to be the champions of national unity.

When Parti Bersatu Sabah, the original, not the current ersatz one, ruled Sabah, Umno sanctimoniously questioned if the Muslims there could be properly accommodated under ‘Christian rule’. When Pas ruled Kelantan and Terengganu, MCA, Gerakan and MIC would ask if the non-Muslims would be denied their rights.

Hence, a host of newly formed ‘Malay action fronts’, sore and vengeful losers, will waste little time organising demonstrations, orchestrating media disinforma-tion and fomenting ‘Malay anxieties’. This manner of interpreting policies and practices in chauvinistic terms can only be defeated by a united opposition that can come to the rescue of all five opposition state governments.

The worst scenario, if the alliance fails, is for Pas to join Umno in condemning the DAP-led government in Penang, and for DAP to join MCA, Gerakan and MIC in criticising the PAS-led governments of Kedah and Kelantan. In Perak and Selangor, the coalition governments can only escape such externally created problems by commitment to cooperation and collective responsibility.

Parliament and responsibility

Some encouragement may be derived from the sentiments of the opposition’s supporters. It’s one thing to vote ethnic in an ethnicised political system. It’s another thing altogether to regard all things in the stark light of inter-ethnic competition.

At least in the alternative cyberspace, voters, bloggers and commentators have admirably urged PKR, DAP and Pas to keep their differences to themselves, but, above all, to keep their alliance intact. Not to do so, the voters know, just as the leaders of these parties must know, would hand back to BN what was painfully gained at the election.

The presence of the largest ever opposition in Parliament has amplified popular hopes of reforming the political system. To this end, the opposition representatives must set out to raise the quality of law-making, monitor the Executive and discipline state institutions. To do so, they must themselves be competent in diverse areas, capable of informed debate and committed to representing their constituents’ (and not merely their parties’) interests.

The opposition representatives, no less than the backbenchers, should realise that the public sickens at name-calling, trading of insults and histrionics that debase parliamentary proceeding. They should learn, from Lim Kit Siang at his best, and the outstanding opposition figures of the 1960s, that dedicated parliamentary work requires a mix of investigative research, thoughtful arguments and courageous demands.

Economic management

The new opposition state governments should appreciate that they’ve taken power at a difficult juncture. They don’t know yet how the deepening troubles of the United States economy will affect each state’s economy. They should know that their scope for economic management will be limited by national policies and global market forces.

Even so, the opposition alliance must plan for employment creation, reasonable rates of growth, the alleviation of economic difficulties, and so on. Never mind, for example, that short-term, limited-impact measures are dismissed as ‘petty populism’ by the New Straits Times editors. That’s only the response of hacks who have fawningly publicised all of BN’s petty handouts.

For the medium-term, however, honest administration, competent planning and effective implementation must be the order of the day for PKR, DAP and Pas, just as it was for the original Gerakan when it captured Penang in 1969.

Renegotiating federalism

It’s well known that PBS in Sabah, and Pas in Kelantan and Terengganu had previously had to weather Umno’s wrath and the Federal government’s might.

Today, however, only the insane would risk impoverishing the national economy by strangling five opposition states and Kuala Lumpur which include the rice bowl, the manufacturing centres, and the seat of administration of the nation. Even they would not thereby alienate the influential chambers of commerce and industry and sensitive foreign investors.

The most hostile might conspire to inflict on the five states the wang ehsan punishment that Pas-ruled Terengganu endured. But it’s politically infeasible to re-enact what has been discredited and what people despise, especially in urban centres that aren’t so dependent on direct federal expenditures.

Foes though they are, the Federal government and the state governments are compelled to talk to each other. High on the agenda of such talks should be a review of federalism itself, not by any means an unwelcome prospect.

Planning and action


On their part, the new and inexperienced state governments must realise this much. While resources are necessary, resourcefulness is indispensable. It’s reasonable to ask for learning time; it’s imperative to learn fast. It was fair politics to promise alternatives but it’d be suicidal politics not to act quickly, symbolically and meaningfully.

There is enthusiastic talk about engagement with civil society, participatory democracy and the restoration of local government elections. All this may help to distinguish the old administrations from the new, and, where necessary, expose past malpractices in order to cleanse the administrative machinery.

Above all, PKR and DAP, whose grassroots structures are underdeveloped, must find ways to root themselves in society, as Pas managed to in Kelantan during its years of isolation.

The new governments should consult a spectrum of social and economic interests. Yet, they should not yield to vested interests that reinvent themselves as the spokespeople of ‘civil society’ now that their links to BN have been severed. For that matter, there are NGOs and NGOs, and the new governments should not pander to the ‘upper middle class’ character of many visible NGOs.

Unifying ethos


The true measure of good government will be its attitudes towards the ‘little folks’ of our society, including the lower working classes, the poor and the disadvantaged, small retailers, hawkers, petty traders, the smallest of the SMEs, and so on.

In Penang, for example, there’s no reason to keep beautifying the charming Western Road-Macalister Road-Residential Road areas. It’d be better economics and urban management to clean up the inner city, rehabilitate decrepit former rent-controlled houses, and attend to the special needs of deprived neighbourhoods, whether these are Malay, Chinese, Indian or ‘Other’.

No one expects PKR, DAP and Pas to resolve overnight the differences in their visions of a better society. From where, then, might come common ideological planks that they can use to build a workable raft of shared policies?

In principle, the broad answer has to be a non-sectarian social democracy. That can creatively fuse Anwar’s concept of a caring civil society, the Parti Rakyat Malaysia’s plebian concerns, the DAP’s old socialist claims, and Pas’s Islamic welfarism.

Guided by such social democracy – rather than, say, a neoliberal meritocracy – PKR, DAP and Pas can formulate and implement policies that would most benefit the non-rich. After all these have been the staunchest opposition supporters and these would be constantly targeted by BN’s petty blandishments.

Turmoil in Umno

There is nothing destabilising about any of these. Potentially destabilising, though, is the turmoil that defeat has visited upon Umno.

The Umno leadership’s new spin is that BN hasn’t lost the election despite Abdullah’s initial response, ‘We’ve lost, we’ve lost.’ To Abdullah and his allies, BN holds a ‘strong majority only eight seats short of a two-thirds majority’. That is in fact so.

Nonetheless, the loss of the two-thirds majority; the fall in BN’s popular vote to 51 per cent; the failure to capture Kelantan; the defeat in four more states and Kuala Lumpur; the departure of several ministers; and the painful dependence on Sabah and Sarawak have intensified Umno’s chronic factionalism.

Much of that factionalism is tied to the loss of resources, projects and patronage, a grievous loss since Umno’s unreformed structures habitually mixed business with politics.

Another implosion

For now Umno’s turmoil can move in uncoordinated ways.

Political forces once pushed aside have re-surfaced to challenge Abdullah whose position is weaker than in 2006, the year of his big spat with Mahathir.

Mahathir has called for Abdullah’s resignation. As if trying to be his father’s son, Mukhriz Mahathir has sent a letter to Abdullah in a farcical replay of Mahathir’s 1969 letter to Tunku Abdul Rahman.

Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, who had twice failed to secure the leadership of Umno, has offered to challenge Abdullah for the party presidency.

The Malay Rulers have intervened in the appointment of Menteris Besar in Perlis and Terengganu. It will certainly be regarded as a defeat for Abdullah that both his nominees for Perlis and Terengganu were rejected and replaced by others more acceptable to the respective rulers.

The formation of the new Cabinet was fraught with disgruntlement. The ambitious Khairy Jama-luddin simply had to be excluded. But the excluded Mohd Radzi Sheikh Ahmad resigned as Umno Secretary-General while Rafidah Aziz’s departure led to public disagreement with Azalina Othman Said.

These are signs that Umno’s factionalism will deepen and intensify as contending forces align and realign themselves for the party election, now scheduled for December.

If the past is a good indication, however, Umno could be heading towards implosion for a third time – after the 1987 battle between Team A and Team B fight, and the 1998 Anwar affair. If that happens, it’d be the sort of political disorder that arises just as one system’s dying while another is struggling to be born.

Whatever happens, those who helped to create this situation – necessary but insufficient for lasting transformation – were the wise and brave voters. No more risk averse, they decided that change was better than stasis.

Like it or not, love us or hate us, we’re all monkeys now. (Aliran Monthly)

Tee Keat probes ERL deal

Tee Keat probes ERL deal
30 April, 2008

Terence Fernandez, The Sun

PETALING JAYA (April 29, 2008): The new administration of the Transport Ministry is probing the events leading to the contract which requires airline passengers from KL International Airport to subsidise the operations of the Express Rail Link (ERL).

Its minister Datuk Ong Tee Keat has requested information from Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd (MAHB) on monies remitted from airport tax to Express Rail Link Sdn Bhd (ERLSB) which operates the service, following an expose by theSun last week.

The front-page report quoted sources as saying that airport tax of RM45 (international) and RM6 (domestic) at the KLIA and RM35 (international) and RM6 (domestic) at the Low Cost Carrier Terminal (LCCT) in Sepang could be cheaper but for a deal between ERLSB and the government.

Under the concession agreement signed in 1997, a portion of airport tax, RM2 from domestic travellers and RM6 from international travellers, goes towards financing the ERL’s construction and operations.

The service began operations in 2002, and air travellers have been unwittingly subsiding the ERL irrespective of whether they used the service or not.

“I am taking a special interest on this issue and I want to get to the bottom of this agreement,” Ong told theSun. “I have asked my officers to get me the documents.”

He said he has asked MAHB to furnish him with details, while ERLSB has also submitted a brief report on the deal.

“As Transport Minister, I am duty-bound to ensure that all agreements which concern public transport are in the best interest of the public,” he said, when told of ERLSB’s refusal to reveal details of the agreement and how much it has received from the taxing of airline passengers over the last six years.

Conservative figures put it at RM80 million a year, a figure which ERLSB has refuted. It has declined to reveal what the real numbers are, saying it’s a private company.

Ong said it was too early to reveal what he had learnt so far but assured the public that he will do so once his investigations were complete.

“I need time to pore over the documents and the fine print. I will get legal and expert opinions on the agreement before taking the matter up to the cabinet,” he said.

ERLSB operates under a 30-year concession, including the option to extend for another 30 years to own and operate the ERL.

YTL Corporation holds a 50% stake in ERLSB, while Tabung Haji Technologies Sdn Bhd owns 40% and the balance held by NadiCorp Holdings Sdn Bhd.

Crossovers causing anxiety

Crossovers causing anxiety
30 April, 2008

Regina Lee, NST

DAP, PKR and Pas have agreed on many issues, including forming Pakatan Rakyat, but political crossovers are still very much a bone of contention among them.

While PKR big guns have been boasting of a hijrah or exodus of elected representatives from Barisan Nasional to Pakatan, DAP has been less receptive about the entire notion.

DAP chairman Karpal Singh has gone on record as saying that he was dead set against it, even asserting that he would break ranks with the opposition coalition and side with BN a motion for an anti-hopping law.

DAP has traditionally been against what it calls "political kangaroos".

Back in 1978, party adviser Lim Kit Siang delivered a stirring speech when moving a motion to introduce a private member's Bill for the prevention of defection.

But this is no surprise considering that this party had been battered by office bearers who quit the DAP for either MCA or Gerakan over the years.

Yap Pian Hon (now Datuk) was among the most prominent DAP stalwarts who crossed to the MCA.

In 1969, he won a seat in Parliament on a DAP ticket, but moved to the MCA five years later and he retained the seat continuously until the last election when he was dropped -- an extremely long wait for DAP to see "justice".

It was particularly painful for DAP to bear, since Yap quickly rose up the MCA ranks to become arguably one of the most popular chiefs of the Youth wing for championing the communal cause and moved on to the vice presidency.

Another former stalwart, the late Datuk Richard Ho, defected in 1972 and had a meteoric rise in MCA rising to become deputy president and a federal minister a few short years later.

From then on, various DAP leaders have deserted the party throughout the decades.

The more recent high profile crossovers included that of Lee Yuen Fong (more popularly known as Tiger Lee), and state vice-chairman Lim Fui Ming last year which triggered a media war between himself and DAP leaders.

But with PKR's de facto leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim buoyant about having at least 30 Barisan MPs in the bag ready to cross over, most likely to PKR, to form the federal government, will DAP be squeezed into a minor role?

Political analyst Khoo Kay Peng believes so and that DAP's main concern is of being marginalised if PKR does end up being the giant in the tripartite grouping.

"Their fear is that they may turn into the next Gerakan, a party which had no clout within BN, with governing power only in Penang," he said.

With Anwar setting his sights on Bumiputera MPs in Sabah and Sarawak including current Umno leaders, Khoo said it may decrease DAP's ability to reach out to the non-Chinese.

"In that worst-case scenario, with PKR becoming another Umno, exerting its power and dominance over other parties, DAP could possibly leave the coalition and strike out on its own as an opposition," said Khoo.

While DAP leaders have not gone to the extent of voicing this possibility, the party seems to be in a split between idealism and politics.

Karpal did not mince his words when he said he would be sticking to his guns on the issue, even if Pakatan Rakyat did form the federal government.

"In fact, I do not want any part in this Pakatan Rakyat Government this way.

"Parties who form Government through crossovers will be looked upon negatively. The party would be full of traitors."

This view is also shared by several other young party leaders, perhaps being idealists who don't want the DAP to be "corrupted" by party-hoppers who want to bet on a winning horse.

However, party supremo Lim Kit Siang has been curiously coy over the issue.

When contacted, he refused to comment, and asked that the views of other party leaders be sought instead.

Is the DAP head honcho, the anti-hopping firebrand that he was 30 years ago, finally having a change of heart?

A well-versed party insider, who declined to be named, said he just might sing a different tune, what with the possibility of the DAP having a part in forming the Government within its grasp.

Change in Malay political psyche

Change in Malay political psyche
30 April, 2008

By : Zainul Arifin, NST

MUCH has been said about the recent transformation in Malaysian politics, namely the rejection of race-based politics, and the adoption, presumably, of one that is based on ideology and ideals.

This came about following the strong showing of the Opposition, which is made up, at least constitutionally, of multiracial political parties, namely PKR, DAP and Pas.

It may just be a case of exuberance, but many who heralded this new age in Malaysian politics may have forgotten that BN is a multiracial party, too, made up of a coalition of mainly race-based parties.

Perhaps when people talk about non-race based politics, or racist politics, they were just referring to BN components. That would be rather naïve, of course, since non-BN parties can be as racist, too.

I believe a summary of the past election is that it was a contest of two groups claiming to represent multi-racial Malaysia, and both won. The BN won the majority, with the PKR-DAP-Pas coalition winning an unprecedented number of seats.
But I would hasten to add that having two winners in a head-to-head battle, which is an impossibility outside the realms of politics, is not even the most interesting outcome of the elections. To me, at least, it is the evolution of the Malay political psyche. That some Malays could vote for DAP candidates suggest that some of them have managed to heave their prejudices aside to support the cause of non-race-based politics.

Pas is an almost entirely Malay party driven by its religious agenda, while DAP is a multi-racial party that is essentially non-Malay. PKR, on the other hand, has fashioned itself as a multi-racial party, made up mainly of former Umno members and others not too keen on race-based or religious-based parties.

While support for Pas in the last elections transcended racial groups, the Malays’ support for DAP is unique since the party has made it clear that it is seeking to dismantle some of the privileges, enshrined or otherwise, accorded to the Malays. (This may be slightly different from non-Malays voting for Pas since it is almost impossible constitutionally for an Islamic state to be set up in Malaysia.)

The election results also indicated that Malays are comfortable with Parti Keadilan Rakyat, which is rather iffy as far as their special privileges and rights are concerned.

Another interesting feature of the election is that the shift in some Malay support, from Umno-led BN to the belatedly-formed Pakatan Rakyat (PR), came from the very Malays who benefited from the special privileges accorded to them.

Can we assume that these Malays have indeed lived up to the basic principle of affirmative action, which is that once he has been given a leg up and is able to ride on his own, he should then refuse any more aid?
Have the Malays disavowed their narrow political agenda and agreed to look into diminishing their special privileges? Have the Malays surrendered the will of their majority to that of the minority?

If this is so, then the Malay majority is taking its second leap of faith. The first, of course, was when they sacrificed their majority by agreeing to accord citizenship for other races ahead of Merdeka.

I believe that there must be a substantial number of Malays who are now fairly comfortable with their position in society to lend support to DAP and its Malaysian Malaysia ideal. There are, after all, some Malays who continue to be apologetic about the fact that they are beneficiaries of policies that favour them.

To them, I suppose, DAP or Pas or PKR or BN are political parties to be judged purely on their promises, and not much else, and certainly not by their Malay agenda.

But I also tend to believe that there were many Malays who might have acted out of anger at the incumbent — marahkan nyamuk kelambu dibakar or throwing the baby with the bath water — and punished those whose raison d’etre is to champion their cause.

Many Malays it seems are also now comfortable with the idea of diminishing of the Ketuanan Melayu or Malay dominance concept. The PR is promoting Ketuanan Rakyat or the people’s dominance. In fact, one PR leader even lodged a police report against the Crown Prince of Kelantan, alleging that the latter’s remark on Malay dominance was seditious.

Such an act, which would have had the Malays up in arms, drew only muted response. Enter the new age republican Malays?

Thus the evolution of the Malay political psyche, or is it just a passing fancy, a convenience embraced in the rough and tumble of Malaysian politics? Is the heralding of non-race-based politics 50 years too late, or too early for comfort?

GIC may invest in more banks

GIC may invest in more banks
Wed, Apr 30, 2008
Reuters


THE Government of Singapore Investment Corp may invest in more banks in Europe and the United States if it gets the chance, adding to its stakes in beleaguered bank UBS and Citigroup, its chairman told Bloomberg TV.

'If there are other banks of the quality of the two that we bought into, with the promise and the capabilities and inherent capabilities to recover, we have got the liquidity to meet it, to make such an investment,' GIC Chairman Lee Kuan Yew told Bloomberg TV in an interview broadcast on Wednesday.

'We are buying something that we intend to keep for the next two to three decades and grow with them,' he said, adding that GIC was a long-term investor.

GIC, one of the world's largest sovereign funds, invested about US$11 billion (S$15 billion) in UBS and Citigroup after they wrote off billions of dollars in the wake of the credit crisis in the United States.

Its sister fund, Temasek Holdings, which is run by Mr Lee's daughter-in-law, pumped US$5 billion into Merrill Lynch. The two Singapore funds have since seen the value of their investments shrink with UBS shares falling about 35 per cent since GIC first announced its plan to inject funds into the Swiss bank by buying mandatory convertible notes.

Mr Lee, 84, defended the investments saying Singapore had bought very good franchises and brand names that would recover in time.

GIC measured its performance over five to 10 years, he said.

'Will there be another Swiss bank like UBS for wealth management? I doubt it, we doubt it, that is why we invested in it.'

Citigroup, he added, had 'an enormous spread worldwide as a retail bank'.

GIC says on its website http://www.gic.com.sg that it manages well above US$100 billion but many analysts estimate the figure is closer to US$300 billion.

Morgan Stanley said in February that GIC was the world's third-largest state fund with US$330 billion in assets under management, behind the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority with US$875 billion and Norway's Government Pension Fund with US$380 billion.

Temasek manages US$159 billion and is the world's seventh-largest sovereign fund, according to Morgan Stanley. -- REUTERS

(Singapore) Malay middle class, not the poor, must buck up

Malay middle class, not the poor, must buck up
30 April, 2008
YAYASAN Mendaki, the self-help group for the Malay/Muslim community, recently conducted a seminar on ways to curb the growing income gap between the Malays and the other races.

According to news reports, the participants lamented over how the Malays are not taking advantage of retraining and upgrading programmes by Mendaki and other bodies which target mostly the lower income groups and the lesser-skilled.

But is the growing income gap between races explained by the lower income group - The statistics question current wisdom.

The income gap between races is widening at a much faster rate for average income than for median income whether by households or by individuals.

The latest Population Census of 2000 data confirms this.

The proportion of Malay households earning less than S$1,000 per month has declined by 4.7 percentage points from 1990 to 2000. This is greater than the national drop of 3.4 percentage points.

But the rise in proportion of Malay households in the higher income brackets, that is, those earning S$4,000 or more monthly, lags behind the national rise (16.6 percentage points versus 21.7). This disparity in upward mobility across races gets even wider as one goes up the income ladder.

The implication is clear: Poor Malays are closing the gap but the middle- and the upper-income Malays are not competitive and mobile enough to close the gap with the other races.

This, of course, does not mean we should now provide financial subsidies for the middle- and upper-class to get richer.

What it does mean, however, is that while we should still be helping the poor, the Malay community should stop identifying poor Malays as the source of the ethnic income gap and blaming them for not upgrading themselves.

Middle-class guilt and comfort have convinced the more educated Malays that the poor Malays should be the target group.

In fact, what is contributing to the income gap among the races is the lack of upward mobility among the comfortable and complacent Malay middle-class.

Future discussions should highlight this fact.

The middle-class should explore ways to help lift themselves and the community. For example, although more Malays are receiving a university education, disproportionately fewer are in growth areas of the economy such as life sciences research and finance.

For a start, we should motivate the Malay middle-class to upgrade themselves and explore new and exciting growth areas.

Farhan Ali

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

It's All a State of The Mind

written by Nice n Simple, April 30, 2008 | 00:53:53

It's All a State of The Mind; a top-of-mind Recall, a Posititioning, a Brand. And it all depends on where and how you were brought up.

When you say: JIHAD
Globalians say: BIN LADEN
Malaysians say: HISHAMMUDDIN

When you say: MUSLIM
Globalians say: TERRORIST
Malaysians say: MELAYU

When you say: ISLAM
Globalians say: TERRORISTS' EDUCATION SYSTEM
Malaysians say: PAS

When you say: BUDDHIST
Globalians say: FREE TIBET
Malaysians say: CINA

When you say: HINDU
Globalians say: OLDEST RELIGION
Malaysians say: HINDRAF

When you say: CHRISTIAN
Globalians say: THE POPE
Malaysians say: DONT USE ALLAH

When you say: ECONOMY
Globalians say: THE BUBBLE IS GOING TO BURST
Malaysians say: MAKAN DUIT LAGI

When you say: SCIENCE
Globalians say: DISCOVERY CHANNEL
Malaysians say: HE'S CHEF ISMAIL'S 'GOOD FRIEND'

When you say: MONEY
Globalians say: WORLD BANK
Malaysians say: YOU PAY FIRST, MY SALARY NOT OUT YET LAH..

When you say: EDUCATION
Globalians say: UNICEF
Malaysians say: MUST SEND MY CHILDREN OVERSEAS

When you say: HEALTHCARE
Globalians say: WORLD HEALH ORGANIZATION
Malaysians say: TIGER CHUA

When you say: DISASTER (OR TSUNAMI)
Globalians say: RED CROSS
Malaysians say: UMNO

When you say: USA
Globalians say: GEORGE BUSH
Malaysians say: ER.. JESSICA ALBA?

When you say: ENGLAND
Globalians say: THE QUEEN
Malaysians say: MAN U

When you say: CHINA
Globalians say: SLEEPING DRAGON, OLYMPICS, TIBET
Malaysians say: BALIK LAH NEGERI CINA

When you say: MALAYSIA
Globalians say: WHO??
Malaysians say: BOLEH!

My reply to Datuk Tengku Sariffuddin Tengku Ahmad

My reply to Datuk Tengku Sariffuddin Tengku Ahmad
30 April, 2008

One very respected retired Chief Justice, who is known as an extremely straight and no-nonsense chap, remarked, if he had to be tried in court, he would not like it to be in a Malaysian court. He further remarked that the windscreens of the cars of judges are blacked-out not for security reasons but because the judges are ashamed to be seen by the public.

THE CORRIDORS OF POWER

Raja Petra Kamarudin

Dear Datuk Tengku Sariffuddin Tengku Ahmad,

First of all, thank you for writing to Malaysia Today. (Read Letter below). As promised, I have published your letter in toto without any amendments, additions, deletions, or ‘touch up’, though I felt some improvement to the language may have been necessary. Nevertheless, I was very careful in not ‘doctoring’ any parts of your letter lest I open myself to accusations of any sort.

I must admit I am pleased and honoured that the Press Secretary of the Deputy Prime Minister and likely future Prime Minister would take the trouble to write to Malaysia Today. As I have said so many times in the past, the only way to deal with the independent media is to engage it, not ignore it, for you ignore it at your own peril. And note that I have used the term ‘independent’ media and not ‘alternative’ media or ‘opposition’ media -- because that is exactly what we are. In fact, what you call the ‘mainstream’ media, today, could actually be called the alternative media.

Now, on the points in your letter. A ‘trial’ by court of public opinion has been what we, the Rakyat, have had to rely on since 1998. Some say that the judiciary has in fact been compromised since 1988 after the sacking of Tan Salleh Abbas and his fellow judges. The fact that these half a dozen or so judges were recently honoured in a dinner graced by the Prime Minister where Abdullah Ahmad Badawi announced that the government will spend millions of the taxpayers’ money to pay these judges their 20 years back-pay confirms that the Abdullah government, in which Dato Sri Mohd Najib Tun Razak is part of, agrees with the court of public opinion’s view of events that happened 20 years ago.

This opinion is of course strengthened by your very own de facto Law Minister’s statement, barely a few days after taking office, that the government should apologise to Tun Salleh and his fellow judges. This was of course shot down by the Cabinet, and instead of an apology, they are being paid millions of Ringgit, which Najib said should not be interpreted as an apology. Maybe Najib is right when he says that if the government pays out millions of Ringgit of the taxpayers’ money this should be only taken as 20 years back-pay and not be taken as an apology. Nevertheless, this still tantamount to an admission that the judges had been wrongfully dismissed, apology or no apology.

We must also not forget the statement by Justice Kamil when he delivered his judgement in the Likas election petition case. Yang Arif admitted that he always receives instructions from the top before he delivers his judgement on important or crucial cases. Justice Kamli also said that he is not the only judge to receive such instructions but that many other judges are also subjected to interference and instructions from the top and that they are told how they should rule. When asked who this person from the top is, he replied that we should know whom it is he means and he left it at that. No one had any misgivings as to whom Justice Kamil meant.

One very respected retired Chief Justice, who is known as an extremely straight and no-nonsense chap, remarked, if he had to be tried in court, he would not like it to be in a Malaysian court. He further remarked that the windscreens of the cars of judges are blacked-out not for security reasons but because the judges are ashamed to be seen by the public. This is coming from someone who is placed above normal men and when someone of that calibre makes such statements how can the public not feel that the Malaysian judiciary can no longer be trusted? As they say, let you be judged by your peers, and the judiciary’s peers have made their ruling.

Dear Datuk Tengku Sariffuddin Tengku Ahmad,

To argue that we should leave this matter to the courts to decide is just not on. It can never be on until we see genuine and real reforms in the judiciary. And when the talk amongst legal circles is that, in September, the President of the Court of Appeal will take over as the new Chief Justice, this just erodes our confidence in the judiciary even further. Putting Umno’s lawyer in charge of the judiciary is like putting the fox in charge of the henhouse or, as the Malays would say, putting the kambing in charge of the sireh. And you want us to leave it to the courts to decide? When you have highly-respected judges and retired Chief Justices openly condemning the Malaysian judiciary what do you expect the lesser-learned Rakyat like us to do?

Of course, you will say that one is innocent until proven guilty. That is a beautiful concept. However, if you believe such a thing is possible in Malaysia, then you probably believe in the Tooth Fairy and Santa Claus as well. Do you remember Anwar Ibrahim’s trial ten years ago? Anwar was tried in a court of public opinion when they paraded that mattress in court every day. What happened to that mattress? It was never part of the evidence and eventually just quietly disappeared out of sight. Was that not grandstanding for the media and TV cameras?

In Anwar’s case, he was not innocent until proven guilty. Though the Malaysian judicial system, which follows the British and not the French system, stipulates that a man is innocent until proven guilty, Anwar was assumed guilty and he was made to prove his innocence. The onus should be on the court to prove guilt but in Anwar’s case he was considered guilty and he had to prove his innocence. And the judge sent Anwar to jail because, according to the judge, Anwar had failed to prove his innocence.

We are therefore using the same ‘burden of proof’ on the present Deputy Prime Minister just like what the previous Deputy Prime Minister was subjected to. If this system of ‘prove you are innocent or else we have to assume you are guilty’ was good enough for Anwar then it is certainly good enough for Najib. Why should there be different standards between one Deputy Prime Minister and another? Should there not be one standard for all?

Note that Malaysia has a law called the Internal Security Act. When you are detained under this law, you are assumed guilty until you can prove you are innocent. And if you fail to prove your innocence then you are detained without trial indefinitely. Some Malaysians have spent more than 20 years under detention because the hapless person was not able to prove his innocence. Ahmad Boestaman, the famous Malay nationalist and independence fighter, was detained for 14 years or so. You may remember him. His son, Rustam Sani, died recently.

Dear Datuk Tengku Sariffuddin Tengku Ahmad,

I must remind you that I too was arrested on Hari Raya Haji Day in 2001 after I walked into the police station to be with my wife who had earlier been arrested. Her ‘crime’ was for trying to help an old woman who had a knee injury and who was struggling to walk up a hill. The police arrested both my wife and the poor old woman and her daughter.

When I walked into the police station, Bakri Zinin, the current CID Director, assaulted me when I attempted to step outside to make a phone call. I was trying to step outside because a policeman shouted at me that I am not allowed to make a phone call inside the police station. But when I tried to step outside as instructed, Bakri assaulted me. He then instructed his officers to arrest me.

When I asked what my crime was and as to the reason I was being arrested, they told me they will think of something later. In the meantime they will arrest me first. I then insisted I be allowed to make a police report against Bakri but they refused to take my report. When I refused to accept no for an answer, they reluctantly took my report but nothing further was done after that. That police report made on Hari Haji Day of 2001 is probably no longer in the file.

Dear Datuk Tengku Sariffuddin Tengku Ahmad,

I am glad you talk about respect for the law. I just wish you and Najib had said the same thing when they beat me up, handcuffed me, and threw me into the lockup without a charge back in 2001. Will I be accorded justice as well just like how you and Najib want to see justice done? Will Bakri Zinin be taken to task for beating me and for arresting me without any charge? Thus far, the only action taken against him is that he has been promoted from OCPD Dang Wangi to Director CID. Let us talk about justice when I see justice done to me as well. Until then we shall rule by law of public opinion, as that appears to be the only ‘system’ available to us.

I understand the concept of subjudice when commenting on an ongoing trial. So allow me to comment only on what the mainstream newspapers have already covered. The mainstream newspapers reported about a green Suzuki Vitara. The registration plate of the car was also mentioned in that newspaper report. Malaysia Today traced the owner of this car to an address in Ijok. On further checking with the SPR registration, it was confirmed that this person exists and his name, address and IC number tally with that in the JPP registration.

The house exists and the neighbours confirm that the person concerned does live there and that the green Suzuki Vitara has been seen in front of the house. This, according to the newspapers, is the car that took Altantuya away after she was arrested in front of Razak Baginda’s house and taken to Bukit Aman.

Has this man been picked up? And, if not, then why since Altantuya was last seen alive driving off with him? Malaysia Today has revealed his name, address and IC number. And this man’s neighbours in Ijok confirm his existence and that of the car. Note that this was raised in the trial and was reported by the mainstream newspapers. So this is not mere insinuations and innuendoes.

In an interview in 2002 or 2003, Razak Baginda confirmed that his company brokered the submarine deal. He even mentioned the commission he had earned. This matter was confirmed by Razak himself and is documented in that interview. So this is also no insinuation or innuendo. And have we forgotten Razak’s wife’s outburst when she said that her husband is innocent and that it is not he who wants to become the next Prime Minister? Was Razak’s wife talking about Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, Anwar Ibrahim or Khairy Jamaluddin? And was not Razak’s wife once a magistrate who would therefore know the law and know what constitutes subjudice?

Dear Datuk Tengku Sariffuddin Tengku Ahmad,

I can go on but let the above suffice for the meantime. The issue of the changing of the judge after the filing of the Affidavit during the bail hearing (which was raised by Karpal Singh), the defence lawyers resigning because of threats from certain people (which Zulkifli Nordin confirmed), the changing of the entire prosecuting team the morning of the trial (which the prosecutor admitted when he asked for a one-month postponement), and much more are all documented and are on public record. Let the court of public opinion decide whether Malaysia Today is merely raising what is already well-documented or whether Malaysia Today is dabbling in insinuations and innuendoes.

Again, I thank you for your letter and really appreciate you taking the time to write to us. Let us together, in the spirit of Islam, the religion we profess, seek the truth and oppose transgressions -- as made mandatory by Islam under the concept of amar maaruf, nahi munkar. From God we come and to God we shall return. And we shall be made accountable for all that we have done on this earth. And, in the eyes of God, those defending kemunkaran will be as guilty as those committing it. Let us not fear man for man proposes but God disposes. And nothing will befall us that God has not planned will befall us. Subjudice and contempt of court are creations of man that will not carry any weight in God’s court. So fear God because man even as powerful as Prime Ministers and Deputy Prime Ministers will be powerless to help you in God’s court where we shall all ultimately be judged.

Yours truly,

Raja Petra Bin Raja Kamarudin

*************************************************************************************
Press Statement from Deputy Prime Minister Dato Sri Mohd Najib Tun Razak
30 April, 2008

I would like to refer to an article posted on your website under the heading “Let’s Send the Altantuya Murderers to Hell ” on April 25. For the benefits for your readers, I would to like to put the record straight since there were insinuations and unjustified comments made against the Deputy Prime Minister Dato Sri Mohd Najib Tun Razak and his wife Datin Sri Rosmah Mansor in respect of the murder case.

2. The article alleged that the DPM and his wife were implicated in the murder of the Mongolian girl, the Deputy Prime Minister supported her visas application, her immigration record had been erased and there were pictures taken with her. These are hearsays which you have deemed alright to published as reflected by your position “we too have conducted our own trial by court of public opinion and we have already arrived at our verdict”.

3. The article also gave the impression that police investigation was flawed and the legal proceeding was being compromise (show trial in the kangaroo court) and designed to hide the real perpetrators. While it is up to the judiciary and police to deal with these allegations, Dato Sri Mohd Najib reserved the right in this “public opinion” court to reiterate his earlier comments that he did not know and has never met the deceased. As such all these allegations are unfounded and designed to tarnish his standing within the Malaysian public.

4. A witness claimed that Altantuya had dinner with Razak and Najib was never collaborated. No picture was produced in court except that of PKR Information Chief Tian Chua who posted a concocted ‘picture’ on the web. Strangely, no legal attempt had been made to produce this picture as evidence in court to date by PKR as it appears it is only admissible in the public opinion court.

5. The case is a private matter involving Encik Razak Baginda and how the policemen were involved will come out in the open during the court proceedings. I would like to also point out that the claims that Altantuya murder was linked to the country’s purchase of the submarine as baseless and unfounded, it was done to make a good and believable story in the public opinion court.

6. Dato Sri Mohd Najib has been very restrained and guarded in making any public statement on the matter since people known to him have been implicated and have been charged in court. It could be misinterpreted or seen interfering in the case since the court proceedings is on going. In fact, a former Deputy Prime Minister was convicted for abuse of power when trying to suppress a sexual misconduct investigations against him.

7. As pointed out in the article there is an issue of subjudice or contempt of court and Dato Sri Mohd Najib, Malaysians and foreigners here must respect the laws and system that all of us are subject too. As such it is unfair that unfounded and wild allegations in such a serious matter had been made which will tarnish the Deputy Prime Minister’s standing in public.

8. As stated in your article “But this is not about politics and should not be dealt as such”, the DPM also shared this sentiment that this case should seek out the truth and justice should be served. However, it is clear that there are those who are not interested in finding justice for Altantuya. It is the politics of Altantuya they are concerned with and it is my sincere hope that your readers will be able to differentiate between truth, half-truth, falsehood and lies since politicians are judge in the public opinion court.

9. Since the allegations are serious and damaging in nature, the DPM will not hesitate to seek legal redress on the matter.

Thank you.

Datuk Tengku Sariffuddin Tengku Ahmad
Press Secretary to the Deputy Prime Minister

Equitable Distribution of Wealth - The Challenge

Equitable Distribution of Wealth - The Challenge
30 April, 2008

So will the end of the NEP lead to radical changes towards a people-led economy? Not necessarily, warns political scientist John Hilley, author of the book 'Mahathirism, Hegemony and the New Opposition'.

By Anil Netto, IPS

With Malaysia's opposition pact in the ascendancy after stunning gains in a general election last month, some are wondering how different their economic policies are likely to be if they do wrest power, as many expect them to do, eventually.

The Pakatan Rakyat (People's Alliance or PR), made up of the multi-ethnic People's Justice Party (PKR), the Islamic Party (Pas), and Democratic Action Party, now has 82 seats in the 222-seat Parliament. It is now promoting a new needs-based Malaysian Economic Agenda to replace race-based affirmative action principles inherited from the New Economic Policy.

The alliance has control of five states in the peninsula which account for about 56 per cent of the country's Gross Domestic Product. They include three of the most industrialised states in the country -- Selangor, Penang and Perak -- and two among the poorest, Kelantan and Kedah.

The ruling coalition, meanwhile, is mired in factionalism and internal rivalry with the most attention focused on its dominant party, the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO).

In the months before the general election Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi had announced a string of regional economic growth corridors to be spurred by multi-billion dollar infrastructure and other projects. Critics say it is a top-down model designed with little public consultation, its prime beneficiaries likely to be major well-connected corporations.

The government has traditionally worked on the premise of affirmative action principles outlined in the NEP, which favours the ethnic Malays and other indigenous groups. The NEP initially lifted broad segments of the majority ethnic Malays into the middle-class after it was first introduced in 1971. But critics say its race-based policies were later abused by ruling coalition politicians to award contracts and licences and allocate corporate equity to cronies and well-connected firms.

This, along with neo-liberal policies that cut taxes for the rich and slashed subsidies for essential services, contributed to a widening of income inequalities -- one of the highest disparities in Asia.

There's now a broad recognition that the NEP has run its course. "The NEP is good but its benefits are only enjoyed by some, as many Malays in the country, including those in Penang, are still poor," said Lim Guan Eng, the chief minister of the DAP-led Penang state government. "The implementation of NEP has only made the rich richer and the poor poorer due to malpractices."

The MEA, advocated by opposition icon Anwar Ibrahim, is aimed at replacing the NEP with a policy that provides assistance to poor and marginalised Malaysians of any ethnic group who are in need. "We always stress that under out leadership, the interests of the Malays will be maintained, and we are always committed to building a new system that is fairer, more just and we will ensure that no one will be left behind without regard to their race or religion." said Anwar in his blog.

But to assure Malays, he added that there are plans to introduce new mechanisms to channel economic aid to large groups of small traders within the Malay community and to ensure that educational opportunities, micro-credit schemes, social and welfare services and other forms of economic aid are available to the community. Civil society activist and economist Charles Santiago, just elected to Parliament on a DAP ticket, says Anwar's PKR -- and the DAP to a lesser extent -- is committed to reducing the cost of living especially for the poor in the five states. Pas, for its part, is downplaying its Islamist agenda and is instead promoting the concept of a welfare state.

In PKR-led Selangor, for instance, the state government announced it would provide free water for the first 20 cubic metres to all residents in the state. The state's chief minister also said he would be looking to raise the job skills among the youth.

''Transparency in contracts and open tenders are a big change (compared to previously),'' Santiago told IPS. Another key goal is a fairer distribution of wealth. Others are hoping for a constructive dialogue on how to bring together progressive forms of 'secular' and Islamic community economics. They would like to see the political and intellectual resources of the opposition alliance harnessed and shared rather than used in an adversarial manner.

Santiago said he would like to see more public-public partnerships among the five PR-controlled states. There has been a start in this direction with the Selangor government hoping to learn from the experience of the publicly owned Penang Water Authority, regarded as one of the most efficient in the region in terms of low tariffs and low non-revenue water or leakages. Both states are also exploring how they can get their state agencies to cooperate and complement each other in human resources, education, physical development, and manufacturing.

Santiago will also propose that the five states under PR rule raise their food production. State governments, he said, could play a big role in investing in food production to mitigate the rising cost of living. The state governments could work on increasing yields, providing more subsidies to farmers, and strengthening farms managed by smallholders, including family-run farms, he told IPS.

So will the end of the NEP lead to radical changes towards a people-led economy? Not necessarily, warns political scientist John Hilley, author of the book 'Mahathirism, Hegemony and the New Opposition'.

For one thing, the international private sector would view the removal of the racially-divisive NEP as another 'necessary step' on the road to a more open free-market, deregulated economy, he said. ''And this begs the bigger question, and problem, for the opposition (PR) of how to advance policy ideas that don't just abandon 'outdated' social instruments for more market 'solutions'.''

This he said was a serious dilemma for any socially ambitious 'government-in-waiting', fearful of anxious marketeers and capital flight. ''The blackmail threats and constraints of the global neoliberal (dis)order cannot be easily dismissed,'' he told IPS in e-mailed comments. ''Yet, until there are imaginative efforts to craft and pursue people-led economics, the same social divisions, inequalities and business-first agenda will prevail.''

Support for a new social economics was clearly evident in the run-up to the general election in polls. Many Malaysians especially from the working class appeared drawn to election campaign pledges to increase subsidies for fuel and education, to do something about the rising cost of living and to reduce income inequalities between the privileged elite and the toiling masses. There has also been widespread public disenchantment over disastrous privatisation policies that have only enhanced corporate profits and elite salaries while undermining once cared-for public services.

Policies that would promote social investment and poverty-focused spending would thus probably be welcomed by the public. What is lacking though is the political will and radical creativity to realise such policies, pointed out Hilley, adding that the post-election phase ought to be used to explore and build credible alternatives to those proclaimed by corporate interests and the 'market evangelists'.

He stressed that the key impetus for meaningful economic change would have to come from civil society itself -- active NGOs, reformist lobbies, community groups, academic activists and others -- rather than ''a hopeful reliance on politicians whose idea of 'economic delivery' becomes mediated by political office and tamed by the 'realistic' demands of big business''.

Wives of BN officials caught up in scandal

Wives of BN officials caught up in scandal
30 April, 2008

They took title deeds and funds from welfare group after election loss

The murky goings-on at Balkis, which are being replicated in other states such as Penang and Perak which also fell to the opposition in the elections, have since turned into a major scandal over the alleged abuse of public funds by organisations associated with the BN.

By Leslie Lopez, THE STRAITS TIMES

BY THE BOOK: Datin Seri Zahrah holding a two-page statement which says that the transfer of funds out of the Balkis accounts was done in line with the organisation's Constitution. -- PHOTO: THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

SOON after winning the Selangor state legislature last month, the opposition Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) ordered that the state administration buildings and the offices of key state agencies be sealed and nothing be removed.

But they overlooked the premises of a state-funded welfare organisation, Balkis, operated by the wives of the Barisan Nasional (BN) politicians who lost in last month's general election.

Two days after the March 8 polls, key Balkis officials arrived at its office in the Selangor capital of Shah Alam and carted away documents and title deeds of properties it owned.

Another RM9.9 million (S$4 million) in cash deposits were transferred out of the organisation's bank accounts by Balkis officials led by Datin Seri Zahrah Kecik, the wife of former Selangor chief minister Khir Toyo.

The murky goings-on at Balkis, which are being replicated in other states such as Penang and Perak which also fell to the opposition in the elections, have since turned into a major scandal over the alleged abuse of public funds by organisations associated with the BN.

'The whole situation is very disturbing, and there is certainly the possibility of criminal breach of trust in the entire affair,' said Bar Council vice-president Ragunath Kesavan.

The following account is based on interviews with key Selangor state government officials and documents made available to The Straits Times.

Balkis was set up in May 1985 as a non-political welfare organisation which opened its membership to the wives of the elected representatives of the state.

It was primarily a BN vehicle, although its charter did not discriminate between government and opposition elected representatives.

But opposition politicians saw Balkis as one of many similar groupings that made up a nationwide political patronage network built on public funds to finance the political activities of the ruling coalition led by Umno.

Balkis, as the main welfare organisation in Selangor, received strong financial support.

According to state government documents, Balkis was awarded a choice piece of property from the Selangor State Development Corp at a concessionary price of RM250,000 in 2000.

The documents also showed that between early 2006 and September last year, Balkis received donations amounting to RM600,000 from the Selangor State Development Corp to finance various activities, including its annual dinner, the opening ceremony of its administrative office and political activities of the wives of elected representatives.

The welfare organisation often turned to other state agencies to fund other activities, including overseas trips for its key office bearers, state government officials say.

The halcyon days enjoyed by Balkis came to an abrupt halt in the late hours of March 8, when Selangor, together with four other states, fell into the control of Malaysia's opposition headed by former deputy premier Anwar Ibrahim.

As the Balkis charter stipulated that the organisation must be headed by the wife of the sitting chief minister, Datin Seri Zahrah faced the immediate prospect of having to relinquish her position as head of the organisation in favour of the wife of the incoming chief minister from the PKR-led opposition.

To sidestep any handover, Datin Seri Zahrah and her committee members comprising the wives of other BN candidates moved to dissolve Balkis.

According to state government officials, Datin Seri Zahrah and her colleagues turned up at the Balkis administrative office on March 10 and told employees that they intended to alter the welfare organisation's charter to avoid relinquishing control.

They carted away documents, including title deeds and bank statements, officials say.

A day later, the Balkis committee led by Datin Seri Zahrah held an emergency meeting to dissolve the organisation and withdrew RM9.9 million in cash deposits held by the organisation.

They planned to establish a new organisation that would limit membership to wives of BN leaders.

In the interim, Datin Seri Zahrah and her colleagues sought refuge with Bakti, a welfare organisation headed by the wife of the Prime Minister and senior Cabinet ministers.

According to the minutes of a Bakti meeting obtained by The Straits Times, Balkis and another BN-sponsored welfare society from Penang, called Bunga Tanjung, approached the national-level organisation to help them to 'receive and manage their funds for their welfare activities in the interim period'.

Bunga Tanjung transferred RM350,000 to Bakti, while Balkis placed RM9.9 million for safekeeping, the minutes showed.

The Bakti minutes showed that Datuk Heliliah Yusof, its legal adviser who is also a judge in Malaysia's Court of Appeal, endorsed the plan.

In the meantime, the PKR-led Selangor state government has asked the National Registration Department to reject the dissolution of Balkis and is demanding that the transferred funds be returned to the organisation.

But Balkis and its former patron, Datuk Seri Khir, maintained that they did nothing wrong, and that all actions by the committee led by his wife were legal.

'Don't talk rubbish and refer to our lawyer,' the former chief minister told reporters this week.

Dr M, Kah Choon and Pakatan

Dr M's vision for Pakatan government

Dr M has good vision, like he always had, which was why he was our PM for so long. He is a leader, who can lead, who is convincing and who can sway the majority's thinking. He could now see the impact of Kah Choon's move and the impact of a good government, even if it is of the opposition. However he probably intentionally missed the important point and that is it doesn't matter whether it is the Barisan or the Pakatan who is doing the good job of working for the betterment of all Malaysians.

He should be more broad minded in his view as to whoever can do the best job for the country should therefore lead. If Pakatan can do a better job in terms of being less corrupt, more efficient, better longer vision economically, politically, they should be given a chance to perform. However, in the end if we think that another party or leader can do better than that, the old party should be voted out. In this way there will be check and balance, and there will always be someone else who will try to be better than the government of the day.
Dr M has done his fair bit for the country, good and bad. Let the people decide for themselves whether they still want the old guard to govern them or do they now want change. The government in waiting is trying very hard to do their best for the country and I think the people can accept that very well. They will be most welcome in the next election.
And thank you Dr M for pointing out that appointing Kah Choon is a good move for the country and that the move is not politically motivated. Syabas to the new Penang government.

Wednesday April 30, 2008

Don’t take Kah Choon’s move lightly, says Dr M

KUALA LUMPUR: The decision by former Gerakan deputy secretary-general Datuk Lee Kah Choon to accept a job under the Penang DAP Government should not be taken lightly by Barisan Nasional if it wishes to survive and regain the people’s support, says Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad.

The former prime minister said in a letter that Lee might be motivated by a genuine desire to work for the good of Penang and Malaysia but, “it may also be because loyalty to Barisan is now based on personal gains or fear of punishment of some kind.”

He said this was especially so among the leaders and there was no genuine love for the objectives said to be the raison d’etre for the coalition’s existence.

Dr Mahathir added that if the Opposition were able to provide a good government, look after the interests of ordinary people, and lead a Spartan lifestyle, those who voted for them out of anger against Barisan would transfer their loyalty permanently to them.

When that happens, he said Umno and the other component parties could forget about recapturing the states they lost to the Opposition and their turncoat members would remain turncoats who would actively work against Barisan in the next elections.

“To lose once is bad but to lose a second time is an unmitigated disaster,” he said.

Dr Mahathir said unless drastic action was taken now there would not be enough time to rehabilitate Umno and all the other component parties for the next general election.

Muslim clergy opposes Badawi's proposal on conversion

Muslim clergy opposes Badawi's proposal on conversion
Malaysia Sun
Tuesday 29th April, 2008
(IANS)

Senior Islamic leaders of Malaysia have rejected a proposal by Prime Minister Abdullah Amad Badawi that requires non-Muslims wishing to convert to Islam to inform their family before doing so.

Malaysian Islamic Development Department (Jakim) director-general Wan Mohamad Sheikh Abdul Aziz said it was decided at a recent conference that met to streamline Syariah, the Islamic laws and civil laws.

'Based on Syariah laws, there is no 'nas' (quotations from the Quran to prove or settle a point) compelling a person wishing to convert to Islam to inform the family before doing so,' Wan Mohamad said in a statement Monday.

The conference also decided that the need to inform loved ones should be left to the discretion of the person wishing to convert.

Wan Mohamad said present Syariah laws on conversion and related matters were sufficient and the present practices should be continued.

'Nevertheless, provisions for registration, custody and the education of converts need to be formulated in a more effective manner,' The Daily Star quoted him as saying Tuesday.

Wan Mohamad added under the Syariah laws, the duties and responsibility of the convert towards his non-Muslim parents did not stop after the conversion.

Badawi had said the government would introduce a regulation requiring non-Muslims wishing to convert to Islam to inform their family before doing so.

He said this would prevent problems of families disputing the conversion of their loved ones when they die.

Conversion by non-Muslims to Islam and the jurisdiction of courts while settling disputes that arise out of the conversion has been an issue in Malaysia.

Enunciating Badawi's views, minister in the Prime Minister's department Zaid Ibrahim has stressed all laws should be able to address 'the dissatisfaction and problems of various races in the country'.

He pointed out that in a multiracial country, the government should seek the views of the people, instead of acting unilaterally.

'For example, in formulating the Federal Territories Islamic Family Law, the government must make sure that it also takes care of the interest of the non-Muslim community.

'Any party which proposes to charge a non-Muslim with zinah for committing adultery with a Muslim should state clearly under which law and section can this be done,' the newspaper quoted him as saying.

Quotes By Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett
  • I put heavy weight on certainty. It's not risky to buy securities at a fraction of what they're worth.
  • Occasional outbreaks of those two super-contagious diseases, fear and greed, will forever occur in the investment community. The timing of these epidemics is equally unpredictable, both as to duration and degree. Therefore we never try to anticipate the arrival or departure of either. We simply attempt to be fearful when others are greedy and to be greedy only when others are fearful.
  • With enough inside information and a million dollars you can go broke in a year.
  • The first rule is not to lose. The second rule is not to forget the first rule.
  • When you combine ignorance with leverage you get some pretty interesting results.
  • The market, like the Lord, helps those who help themselves. But, unlike the Lord, the market does not forgive those who know not what they do.
  • You could be somewhere where the mail was delayed three weeks and do just fine investing.
  • Never ask the barber if you need a haircut.
  • You don't need to be a rocket scientist. Investing is not a game where the guy with the 160 IQ beats the guy with the 130 IQ.
  • You should invest in a business that even a fool can run, because someday a fool will.
  • You go to bed feeling very comfortable just thinking about two and a half billion males with hair growing while you sleep. No one at Gillette has trouble sleeping.
  • If you gave me $100 billion and said take away the soft drink leadership of Coca-Cola in the world, I'd give it back to you and say it can't be done.
  • Most people get interested in stocks when everyone else is. The time to get interested is when no one else is. You can't buy what is popular and do well.
  • For some reason people take their cues from price action rather than from values. Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.
  • For society, the internet's a wonderful thing. But for capitalists it's probably a net negative.
  • Diversification may preserve wealth, but concentration builds wealth.
  • I'd be a bum on the street with a tin cup if the markets were efficient.
  • In the short run, the market is a voting machine. In the long run, it's a weighing machine.
  • The new issue market is ruled by controlling stockholders and corporations who can usually select the timing of offerings. Understandably these sellers are not going to offer any bargains. It's rare you'll find X being sold for half-X. Indeed, in the case of common-stock offerings, selling shareholders are often motivated to unload only when they feel the market is overpaying.
  • As far as I am concerned, the stock market doesn't exist. It is only there as a reference to see if anybody is offering to do anything foolish.
  • To be successful, you should concentrate on the world of companies, not arcane accounting mathematics.
  • With each investment you make, you should have the courage and the conviction to place at least ten per cent of your net worth in that stock.
  • We like to buy businesses. We don't like to sell and we expect the relationship to last a lifetime.
  • There's very little money to be made recommending our strategy [buy-and-hold].Your broker would starve to death. Recommending something to be held for 30 years is a level of self-sacrifice you'll rarely see in a monastery, let alone a brokerage house.
  • When a chief executive officer is encouraged by his advisors to make deals, he responds much as would a teenager boy who is encouraged by his father to have a normal sex life. It's not a push he needs.
  • It's easier to create money than to spend it.
  • I wouldn't mind going to jail if I had three cellmates who played bridge.
  • I don't try to jump over 7-foot bars. I look around for 1-foot bars that I can step over.
  • Money, to some extent, sometimes lets you be in more interesting environments. But it can't change how many people love you or how healthy you are.
  • I've often felt there might be more to be gained by studying business failures than business successes.
  • It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it. If you think about that, you'll do things differently.
  • Chains of habit are too light to be felt until they are too heavy to be broken.
  • I wouldn't have been the most popular guy in the class, but I wouldn't have been the most unpopular either. I was just sort of nothing.
  • Ben made his customary calculation of value to price and said no.
  • If Bill had started a hot dog stand, he would have become the hot dog king of the world. He will win in any game. He would be very good at my business, but I wouldn't at his.
  • I'd just bet on him. Nobody has lost money doing that yet.
  • Charlie and I can handle a four page memo over the phone with three grunts.
  • Ben Graham wasn't about brilliant investments and he wasn't about fads of fashion. He was about sound investing, and I think sound investing can make you very wealthy if you're not in too big of a hurry. And it never makes you poor, which is even better.
  • Investing in a market where people believe in efficiency is like playing bridge with someone who has been told it doesn't do any good to look at the cards.
  • John Maynard Keynes essentially said, don't try and figure out what the market is doing. Figure out a business you understand, and concentrate.
  • If the business does well, the stock eventually follows.
  • My idea of a group decision is to look in the mirror.
  • When managers want to get across the facts of a business to you, it can be done within the rules of accounting. Unfortunately, when they want to play games, at least in some industries, it can also be done within the rules of accounting. If you can't recognize the differences, you shouldn't be in the equity-picking business.
  • Full-time professionals in other fields, let's say dentists, bring a lot to the layman. But in aggregate, people get nothing for their money from professional money managers.
  • Draw a circle around the businesses you understand and then eliminate those that fail to qualify on the basis of value, good management and limited exposure to hard times.
  • I read annual reports of the company I'm looking at and I read the annual reports of the competitors - that is the main source of material.
  • All there is to investing is picking good stocks at good times and staying with them as long as they remain good companies.
  • I'd rather have a $10 million business making 15 per cent than a $100 million business making 5 per cent.
  • Read Ben Graham and Phil Fisher, read annual reports, but don't do equations with Greek letters in them.
  • Whenever I read about some company undertaking a cost-cutting program, I know it's not a company that really knows what costs are about. The really good manager does not wake up in the morning and say 'This is the day I'm going to cut costs,' any more than he wakes up and decides to practice breathing.
  • Owning Snow White is like owning an oil field. You pump it out and sell it, and then it seeps back in again.
  • When management with a reputation for brilliance tackles a business with a reputation for poor fundamentals, it is the reputation of the business that remains intact.
  • Diversification is a protection against ignorance. It makes very little sense for those who know what they're doing.
  • My favorite time frame for holding a stock is forever.
  • Our prototype for occupational fervour is the Catholic tailor who used his small savings of many years to finance a pilgrimage to the Vatican. When he returned, his parish held a special meeting to get his first-hand account of the Pope. "Tell us," said the eager faithful, "just what sort of fellow is he?" Our hero wasted no words. "He's a forty-four medium."
  • A good managerial record (measured by economic returns) is far more a function of what business boat you get into than it is of how effectively you row. Should you find yourself in a chronically-leaking boat, energy devoted to changing vessels is likely to be more productive than energy devoted to patching leaks.
  • Many corporate managers deplore governmental allocation of the taxpayer's dollar but embrace enthusiastically their own allocation of the shareholder's dollar [to charities of their own choosing]. We've yet to find a CEO who believes he should personally fund the charities favored by his shareholders. Why, then should they foot the bill for his picks?
  • It has become fashionable at public companies to describe almost every compensation plan as aligning the interests of management with those of shareholders. In our book, alignment means being a partner in both directions, not just on the upside. Many 'alignment' plans flunk this basic test, being artful forms of 'heads I win, tails you lose.'
  • The professors who taught Efficient Market Theory said that someone throwing darts at the stock tables could select stock portfolio having prospects just as good as one selected by the brightest, most hard-working securities analyst. Observing correctly that the market was frequently efficient, they went on to conclude incorrectly that it was always efficient.
  • The strategy we've adopted precludes us from following standard diversification dogma. Many pundits would therefore say our strategy must be riskier than that employed by more conventional investors. We disagree. We believe that a policy of portfolio concentration may well decrease risk if it raises, as it should, both the intensity with which an investor thinks about a business and the comfort-level he must feel with its economic characteristics before buying into it.
  • We believe that according the name 'investors' to institutions that trade actively is like calling someone who repeatedly engages in one-night stands a romantic.
  • Our reaction to a fermenting industry is much like our attitude toward space exploration: we applaud the endeavour but prefer to skip the ride. Obviously many companies in high-tech businesses or embryonic industries will grow much faster than will The Inevitables [like Coca-Cola and Gillette]. But we would rather be certain of a good result than hopeful of a great one.
  • Loss of focus is what most worries Charlie [Munger] and me when we contemplate investing in a business that looks outstanding. All too often, we've seen value stagnate in the presence of hubris or boredom that caused the attention span of managers to wander. Would you believe that not a few decades back they were growing shrimp at Coke and exploring for oil at Gillette?
  • Your goal as an investor should be to purchase, at a rational price, a part interest in an easily-understandable business whose earnings are virtually certain to be materially higher five, ten and twenty years from now. Over time, you will find only a few companies that meet these standards - so when you see one that qualifies, you should buy a meaningful amount of stock. You must also resist temptation to stray from your guidelines: If you aren't willing to own a stock for ten years, don't even think about owning it for ten minutes.
  • It's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price, than a fair company at a wonderful price. Now, when buying companies or common stocks, we look for first-class businesses accompanies by first-class managements.
  • After 25 years of buying and supervising a great variety of businesses, Charlie [Munger] and I have not learned how to solve difficult business problems. What we have learned is to avoid them. To the extent we have been successful, it is because we have concentrated on identifying one-foot hurdles that we could step over rather than because we acquired any ability to clear seven-footers.
  • The most common cause of low prices is pessimism - sometimes pervasive, sometimes specific to a company or industry. We want to do business in such an environment, not because we like pessimism but because we like the prices it produces. It's optimism that is the enemy of the rational buyer.
  • Stocks can't outperform businesses indefinitely. Indeed, because of the heavy transaction and investment management costs they bear, stockholders as a whole and over the long term must inevitably underperform the companies they own. If American business, in aggregate, earns about 12% on equity annually, investors must end up earning significantly less. Bull markets can obscure mathematical laws, but they cannot repeal them.
  • Earnings should only be retained [as opposed to being paid out as dividends] when there is a reasonable prospect that for ever dollar retained by the corporation, at least one dollar of market value will be created for owners. This will happen only if the capital retained produces incremental earnings equal to, or above, those generally available to investors.
  • One of the ironies of the stock market is the emphasis on activity. Brokers, using terms such as 'marketability' and 'liquidity', sing the praises of companies with high share turnover. But investors should understand that what is good for the croupier is not good for the customer. A hyperactive stock market is the pickpocket of enterprise.
  • In the search for companies to acquire, we adopt the same attitude one might find appropriate in looking for a spouse: it pays to be active, interested, and open-minded, but it does not pay to be in a hurry.
  • A company that wants to use its own stock as currency for an acquisition has no problems if the stock is selling in the market at full intrinsic value. But suppose it is selling at only half intrinsic value. In that case it is faced with the unhappy prospect of using a substantially undervalued currency to pay for a fully valued property [the negotiated price of the target company]. In effect the acquirer must give up $2 of value to receive $1 of value. Under such circumstances, a marvellous business purchased at a fair sales price becomes a terrible buy. For gold valued as gold cannot be purchased intelligently through the utilization of gold valued as lead.
  • If Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan were to whisper to me what his monetary policy was going to be over the next two years, it wouldn't change one thing I do.
  • A pin lies in wait for every bubble and when the two eventually meet, a new wave of investors learns some very old lessons.
  • We have embraced the 21st century by entering such cutting-edge industries as brick, carpet, insulation and paint. Try to control your excitement.
  • Buy stocks like you buy your groceries, not like you buy your perfume.
  • If you are a know-something investor, able to understand business economics and to find five to ten sensibily priced companies that possess important long-term competitive advantages, conventional diversification (broadly based active portfolios) makes no sense to you.
  • When the whorehouse burns down, even the pretty girsl have to run out.
  • If, after half an hour, you haven't figured out who the patsy is, then you're the patsy.
  • I never attempt to make money on the stock market. I buy on the assumption that they could close the market the next day and not reopen it for five years.
  • Either they're trying to con you or they're trying to con themselves.
  • In a difficult business, no sooner is one problem solved than another surfaces - never is there just one cockroach in the kitchen.
  • I look for businesses in which I think I can predict what they're going to look like in ten to fifteen years time. Take Wrigley's chewing gum. I don't think the internet is going to change how people chew gum.

Peace or war, it is our choice

Peace or war, it is our choice
29 April, 2008

So anyone who perpetrates this heinous crime against humanity should fear what Allah has said about killing of human beings without justification. It is similar to the killing of one’s self and society at large.

Ikim Views
By SUZALIE MOHAMAD, THE STAR


Jihad with its multitude of branches has very strict rules, especially when it relates to confrontation with an enemy.

ONE cannot find words strong enough to condemn the Sept 11, 2001 tragedy. It is not human if one does not share the pain and suffering that the affected families are going through and will endure for a long, long time to come.

Those who choose to define this violent act as jihad or “holy war” need to know that Islam is such a structured and comprehensive guidance that even the procedure to attend to the call of nature is explicitly taught to us by the Messenger of Allah. If one follows those rules while going to the bathroom, it becomes an act of worship.

Islam had nothing to do with this action (Sept 11), even if, after a thorough investigation, those that perpetrated it turned out to have Muslim names or had come from Muslim lands.

Islam does not permit violence. Unfortunately many ignorant Muslims and non-Muslims are not fully aware of this fact, or choose not to acknowledge it.

Jihad with its multitude of branches has very strict rules, especially when it relates to confrontation with an enemy. Indiscriminate killing or harming of women, children, old men, people who take refuge in their houses, animals and even plants, especially those of economic value, is forbidden at all cost.

War is permitted in Islam, just as it is permitted in many other religions, provided it is a pure act of defending the religion, life and state.

The act of waging a war is bound with condition and responsibility. Waging war must be justified with ample evidence that allows defensive actions to be initiated. No war without valid evidence will be engaged since war means killing people.

On this basis, Islam clearly stipulates to only fight (defending oneself) in the cause of Allah against those who fight you, but do not transgress limits as we all know that Allah does not love transgressors.

The war must be immediately ceased if the enemy seeks peace, and we are obliged to enter into a peaceful deal. War is the last resort, and is subject to the rigorous conditions laid down by the syariah.

So anyone who perpetrates this heinous crime against humanity should fear what Allah has said about killing of human beings without justification. It is similar to the killing of one’s self and society at large.

The verse referred to (al Ma’idah 5:32): “We ordained for the Children of Israel that if anyone slew a person, unless it be for murder or for spreading mischief in the land, it would be as if he slew the whole people: and if anyone saved a life it would be as if he saved the life of the whole people. Then although there came to them Our apostles with clear Signs yet even after that many of them continued to commit excesses in the land.”

The fundamental teaching of Islam is to respect and help each other, no other than to seek His blessing so that we can live harmoniously and fully benefit in the life before death on this earth.

The so call Muslim fundamentalists who fully adhere to the fundamentalist teaching of Islam will definitely abide by this rule and bring prosperity to their neighbours and society. It is thus absurd to associate what terrorists have done with Islam.

If one looks at history, especially since the rise of Europe, and of the United States now, and what has been the effect of this rise on the Muslims, one can easily see why there is so much resentment against this domination.

The Crusades, the super-holocaust in Spain and many other parts of Europe, oppressive demolition of the Khilafat, more than two centuries of colonial oppression, and more recently 50 years of oppression and bloodshed in Palestine and Kashmir, more than 50,000 children dead in Iraq, and innumerable other unjustifiable massacres and oppressive wars, have driven many impatient Muslims to desperation.

It is human nature that in a situation of desperation people commit insane deeds.

In this case, many misled Muslims, victims of situation, have taken the law into their own hands to solve problems.

Despite wrong images having been painted of Islam around the globe, people want to know more about Islam. Why its followers react as such, emotionally? What makes the noble content of Islam misinterpreted? To the fact that Islam is growing all over the world, especially in the Western hemisphere.

Why is this happening? Because they know that Islam can provide them with peace and tranquillity, turning them into dignified persons.

The least religious leaders of society therefore are advised not to sensationalise or distort Christian-Muslim relations into a confrontation issue by rallying people to continue with the “Crusade”.

This is unwise thinking and behaviour. It not only provides justification for the crimes of the terrorists and may provoke them further, but also makes the work of those who wish to bring about a change in the world through peaceful means harder.

We, as peace lovers, must work hard to defeat the confrontational, domineering and “crusade-minded” attitude of any government through dialogue and peaceful means, to the best of our endurance, and not let those who are ignorant of Islamic law and impatient in their attitude take unjustifiable and unlawful shortcuts through terrorist attacks.

It does not serve Islam well and is despised in the sight of Allah.

The true JIHAD

The true JIHAD
29 April, 2008

IKIM must stress that jihad is your personal war. It is a war against your own heart. It is a war to resist all forms of temptation. It is a war to evict ego, lust, greed, envy, jealousy, vanity and all forms of diseases of the heart. It is a war very few win.

NO HOLD BARRED

Raja Petra Kamarudin

This is what IKIM wrote in The Star today in its article called Peace or war, it is our choice:

Jihad with its multitude of branches has very strict rules, especially when it relates to confrontation with an enemy.

ONE cannot find words strong enough to condemn the Sept 11, 2001 tragedy. It is not human if one does not share the pain and suffering that the affected families are going through and will endure for a long, long time to come.

Those who choose to define this violent act as jihad or “holy war” need to know that Islam is such a structured and comprehensive guidance that even the procedure to attend to the call of nature is explicitly taught to us by the Messenger of Allah. If one follows those rules while going to the bathroom, it becomes an act of worship.

Islam had nothing to do with this action (Sept 11), even if, after a thorough investigation, those that perpetrated it turned out to have Muslim names or had come from Muslim lands.

Islam does not permit violence. Unfortunately many ignorant Muslims and non-Muslims are not fully aware of this fact, or choose not to acknowledge it.

Jihad with its multitude of branches has very strict rules, especially when it relates to confrontation with an enemy. Indiscriminate killing or harming of women, children, old men, people who take refuge in their houses, animals and even plants, especially those of economic value, is forbidden at all cost.

War is permitted in Islam, just as it is permitted in many other religions, provided it is a pure act of defending the religion, life and state.

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

While I am very careful about disputing or debating the opinions of religious scholars (because many view me as a ‘deviant’ Muslim not worthy of commenting on matters related to Islam), I cannot allow the above piece to pass without some form of ‘engagement’.

If you were to carefully note the gist of the article, it is apparent that the term ‘jihad’ has been taken only in the context of war, in particular a holy war in defence of Islam. No doubt IKIM has taken pains to mention that war is allowed by Islam, a necessary evil of sorts, but it must be waged only in defence of one’s life, limb, property and religion and not as an act of aggression. This can be interpreted as war is not only allowed, but becomes necessary, when one is the victim.

There is nothing Islamic about this at all. Whether one is a Muslim or not, this same concept would apply. You have a right to defend your property and your territory, your life and that of your family, your country and the freedom of your nation, your religion plus the freedom to practice your religion, and so on. Oppression and persecution must be opposed and it is the duty of mankind, Muslims not excluded, to come to the aid of others, even if they are not Muslims, who suffer oppression and persecution. This means, if a Muslim nation is acting unjustly towards non-Muslims, then Muslims must oppose their Muslim ‘brothers’ in defence of the oppressed non-Muslims.

Opposition to oppression and persecution must cut across religious lines. The oppressors must be opposed at all costs. It does not matter who is the oppressor and who is the oppressed. Muslims must fight the oppressing Muslims even if those oppressed are not of the Islamic faith. This is something the IKIM article did not mention.

Most importantly though, what the IKIM article did not mention is that jihad has nothing to do with war. There are many renowned Muslim scholars who disagree that jihad means war. Others would argue that there are two forms of jihad, one being war. Then, of course, there are those who equate jihad to war. Which of the three schools of thought is correct is up to one’s interpretation of Islam. The jury is still out on which is the correct interpretation. And rest assured that there are many interpretations of Islam and everyone believes that his or her interpretation is correct while the others are all wrong.

This not only holds true for Islam. All religions suffer from this and that is why we have many sects in most religions. And the different sects of the same religion would solve their differences by going to war and by killing each other. And, until today, the wars are still going on and millions die just because they have interpreted their holy book differently.

Anyway, the jihad that I am talking about -- which many scholars view as the correct interpretation and which IKIM did not elaborate -- is the ‘war’ against oneself. “Get thee behind me Satan,” some would say. The three ‘religions of the book’ believe that when Satan was evicted from Heaven, he made a ‘deal’ with God that he would mislead mankind to prove that humans, who are made from clay, are weak compared to Satan, who is made from fire. God agreed and challenged Satan to do his worst.

Since that day on, Satan has been attempting to inflict mankind with the ‘disease’ of greed, lust, vanity, jealousy, and much more. And this is the greatest penyakit (sickness) facing mankind. And God wants mankind to fight all forms of temptation that lurk in our heart.

Bearing arms in defence of God, King and Country is easy. Defending your life, family and property is also not that difficult when push comes to shove. But fighting against oneself is the true test of the pudding. We all have egos. We all feel lust. We all suffer from greed. Everyone is vain to a certain extent. And who does not get jealous? In some countries, crimes of passion are not a crime since it is very difficult to fight emotions, in particular jealousy.

So the greatest jihad is the war against your own heart. Some say that this is the only ‘war’ while others says that this is the greater jihad and armed conflict the smaller jihad. Nevertheless, this is the most difficult jihad and many lose this war, miserably.

Just look at what is going on in Malaysia. Just look at all those mosque-going, church-going and temple-going Malaysians. Many ‘religious’ people are the most corrupt. Rape, murder, corruption, abuse of power, oppression, persecution, etc., are committed by not only those who profess a religion but also by those who practice their religion to a fault (in particular leaders in government cum heads of religion). But some of these people are the worst people on the face of this earth. And the perfect gentleman appears to be those atheists and agnostics who are good because they are good at heart and not because they want to go to Heaven -- in fact they do not even believe that there is a Heaven and Hell.

IKIM must stress that jihad is your personal war. It is a war against your own heart. It is a war to resist all forms of temptation. It is a war to evict ego, lust, greed, envy, jealousy, vanity and all forms of diseases of the heart. It is a war very few win. It is a war that even the most religious Muslim, Christian, Jew, Hindu, Buddhist, etc. fall victim to in the battle against Satan.

The new de facto Minister of Law has many enemies, especially in Umno. His critics call him a drunk and an apostate (at least they don’t call him a womeniser, as what most Umno people are). But then I too have been accused by Umno people of the same ‘crime’; so it is no surprise. When Malays want to discredit you, they use these arguments against you. But Zaid is more Islamic than most Malays. At least Zaid opposes ‘un-Islamic’ laws, which most Malays support and defend as necessary.

Syeds are supposed to be descendants of the Prophet -- at least this is what Malays believe. But Syed Hamid Albar says that the ISA shall stay while the ‘drunkard apostate’ Minister is opposed to it. Who is more Islamic? Who is the better follower of Islamic teachings? Give me a ‘dunk apostate’ over the ‘Prophet’s descendant’ anytime. They are certainly better people.

This was what The Sun reported yesterday:

Minister in the Prime Minister's Department Datuk Zaid Ibrahim says he finds the Internal Security Act (ISA), which has been regarded as draconian by the Opposition and the legal fraternity, unacceptable.

"I am against any unjust and harsh law, and ISA and OSA (Official Secrets Act) are unacceptable to me," the de facto law minister said of his stand on the two Acts during an interview with Nanyang Siang Pau.

"In fact, I have stated my stand (on these laws) in my books," he said.

Subsidies to stay, says King

Subsidies to stay, says King

KUALA LUMPUR, April 29 — The Yang di-Pertuan Agong, Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin, said today the government would strive to retain its subsidies and other forms of assistance to enable the people face the consequences of rising fuel prices in the international market.

The King said more than RM36 billion has been allocated for the purpose and so far various forms of subsidy and assistance had been made available to offset higher prices for goods and ease the burden on the people.

"The high fuel prices in the international market have had a direct impact on the prices of goods and services. The government has therefore taken various measures including imposing price controls and stepping up enforcement to stem price increases for the well-being of the people, particularly those in the low-income group," he said.

Tuanku Mizan was delivering his royal address when opening the first session of the 12th Parliament. The Raja Permaisuri Agong, Tuanku Nur Zahirah, was also present.

The King said he was saddened to learn that certain quarters had abused the subsidies by hoarding essential goods and also smuggling them out of the country to make huge profits for themselves.

"These are despicable acts which impose difficulties on the people and violate their rights," he said.

The King reminded the people that the measures taken by the government would amount to nothing unless they themselves exercised prudent spending.

On another matter, he expressed his appreciation to all quarters for the running of a smooth general election (on March 8) and wanted MPs to have the nation's interests as their primary objective and not use the Dewan Rakyat for their individual political interests.

"I extend my congratulations to all the elected members of the Dewan Rakyat and hope that all of you will discharge your duties and responsibilities with dedication, sincerity and honesty and show exemplary conduct.

"The people's respect for and confidence in Parliament as the supreme legislative body depends on the role played by the Members of Parliament. Use this august House as the stage to put forth constructive criticism and enlightening views," he said.

Earlier, the King and Queen were greeted on arrival at the Parliament grounds by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak and their wives, Datin Seri Jeanne Abdullah and Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor, respectively.

A section of the MPs and their spouses at the opening of Parliament this morning including PAS president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang (fifth from right). — Bernama pic

The royal couple were also greeted by the new Speaker of the Dewan Rakyat, Tan Sri Pandikar Amin Mulia, and the President of the Dewan Negara, Tan Sri Abdul Hamid Pawanteh.

At 10.30am, the ceremonial bell was rung and the King entered the Dewan Rakyat gallery accompanied by Pandikar Amin.

Abdullah presented the text of the royal address to the King for the opening of the first session of the 12th Parliament.

The first meeting of the first session of the Dewan Rakyat begins tomorrow. The House will sit for 16 days up to May 27.

In his speech, the King also said he wanted the government to ensure that its five regional economic development corridors will benefit all the people.

This is because the economic development projects were not confined to specific areas but covered the whole country, and had the potential to create more than 12 million jobs in various sectors, he said.

"As such, I hope the implementation of the five regional economic development corridors will spur greater economic activities, raise the living standard of the people, eradicate poverty and reduce the income gap among races, states and regions," he said.

"I extend my congratulations to the prime minister for leading the nation to economic success in the face of external challenges such as a moderate world economic growth, rising world crude oil and food prices, and stiff competition in terms of trade and investment," he said.

The King said the country's economy exceeded the six per cent target to register a growth of 6.3 per cent last year and the per capita income rose to more than RM23,000 while the inflation rate was kept low, at two per cent, and the rate of unemployment maintained at 3.3 per cent.

Tuanku Mizan said he also wanted the government re-evaluate the priorities accorded to the development programmes and projects of the ongoing Ninth Malaysia Plan (9MP) during the mid-term review of the plan so as to achieve the objectives of the National Mission.

Besides, he said, the mid-term review must also give emphasis to efforts to step up the nation's resilience and competitiveness.

"I appreciate the determination of the government in the implementation of the development projects under the 9MP. Up to last March, RM81.7 billion or a sum equivalent to 40.8 per cent of the total allocation of RM200 billion has been spent.

"This has given a positive impact to the nation's economic growth, particularly in the construction sector and construction-related industries. I hope this rate of sustainable growth can be maintained," he said.

Tuanku Mizan said he was proud of the government's success in reducing the poverty rate to 3.6 per cent compared to the 75 per cent when the nation achieved its independence, with the hardcore poverty rate having dropped to 0.7 per cent.

"I am confident that hardcore poverty can be wiped out by 2010," he said.

Tuanku Mizan said he wanted the government, in facing a more challenging environment, to enhance efforts to exploit new sources of growth and new markets while expanding existing markets, come up with new products and services, establish smart partnerships and upgrade efficiency and productivity.

He said he was confident the nation would chalk up bigger successes, comparable to those attained by developed countries, when it entered the second 50-year phase of its development after independence. — Bernama

‘Unemployed’ Umno warlords hold Abdullah’s fate in their hands

‘Unemployed’ Umno warlords hold Abdullah’s fate in their hands

KUALA LUMPUR, April 29 — Pundits are saying that history will judge him well. The neutrals are pleased that his reform agenda is moving along well. His supporters believe that with each passing day he will transfer power only when he is ready.

But, really, their views do not matter.

The slight lift in fortunes for Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi since March 8 could be short-lived if he does not win over a select group of people — the Umno division chiefs. Especially the 90 division chiefs who have become “unemployed” since the Pakatan Rakyat mugged the Barisan Nasional in Election 2008, taking control of Perak, Penang, Kedah and Selangor and claiming the Federal Territory in the process.

The Umno division chiefs dictate the voting pattern at the branch and division levels and influence key decisions at the ground level, including whether special meetings should be convened to discuss Abdullah’s future in the party; whether Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah or Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad should be invited to their divisions; whether Abdullah should receive nominations to contest the party president’s position in December and even which election candidates should be supported.

In short, they are the kingmakers. Dr Mahathir was able to hold on to power in Umno after the sacking of Anwar Ibrahim in 1998 because he was able, through a combination of threats and largesse, to keep these warlords in his corner. But Abdullah faces a stiffer challenge.

Party officials tell the Insider that as many as 90 grassroots leaders from Perak, Penang, Kedah, Selangor and across the country have been “unemployed” since March 8. They are no longer state assemblymen, MPs, state executive councillors or sit on the boards of state agencies. They no longer have salaries, allowances and perks like drivers or bodyguards.

A party official, who has been monitoring the sentiment in Umno for the leadership, told the Insider: “They also have house payments to make, look after their children’s education, school fees and also need funds to run their divisions. They never expected to be out of office.”

He believes that Abdullah needs to look after the division heads or at least take some steps to lighten their burden. Otherwise, they will gravitate to politicians who are interested in forcing the party president to step down before December. Worse yet for Abdullah, they may nominate others to challenge him for the party president’s post.

Branches will begin their meetings in mid-July while divisions will start meetings in September. Between now and then, Abdullah may have to appoint some of these division heads to federal-run agencies in the Pakatan Rakyat-held states, or even give the bigger warlords positions in government-linked companies. The rumblings on the ground suggest that they have not been as impressed with Abdullah’s moves to reform the judiciary or the Anti-Corruption Agency as other Malaysians.

Professor Datuk Mohamed Ariff, the executive director of the Malaysian Institute of Economic Research, wrote: “It is not difficult to argue why Abdullah should continue to be at the helm for some time to come. Contrary to what his detractors may have to say, Abdullah already has much to his credit since he became the prime minister. His leadership differed from that of his predecessor not only in terms of style but also in substance… Indications are that history will not judge him harshly and recognise his iconic contributions to the democratic heritage of the country.”

But for the Umno power brokers at division level, these positive changes have little impact on their lives. They are influenced by less lofty ideals and plans. All they want is their stature, position and livelihood back. Abdullah’s ability to deliver these things could finally decide his longevity as Umno president and Prime Minister of Malaysia.

Raja Petra RTM 27-4-08 Interview

Part 1

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Part 2

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Part 3

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Raja Petra's arrest under ISA in 2001

Found this 2001 article on Raja Petra Kamaruddin by his wife Marina Lee Abdullah on his arrest under ISA.

The Nightmare Goes On...

I pray that no one will ever go through our ordeal again

by Marina Lee Abdullah

I am Marina Lee Abdullah, wife of Raja Petra Bin Raja Kamarudin, the Director of the Freeanwar Campaign (FAC) web site, one of the detainees arrested under the Internal Security Act (ISA). He was detained on 11 April 2001.

We have been together for 33 years. I met Raja Petra at the age of 14 and we have been married for 28 years. Our wedding anniversary: 14 April (Black 14).

Under Arrest

At 9.30am on 11 April 2001, as we were leaving my eldest daughter’s house heading for home. I was driving when a white car cut in front of us and and about five burly men got out of the car. My immediate reaction was to lock the car-doors; I thought we were being robbed. These men pounded on the car for me to open the doors.

When I looked around, we were surrounded by about 15 to 20 people; some were on motorcycles. We had created a traffic jam, but not a single soul stopped to come to our rescue. They just looked and drove by.

The men who stopped us were in plain clothes and their cars were normal vehicles. There were no police signs on the cars. When I unlocked the car doors, they opened the door on the passengers side and asked my husband whether he was Raja Petra and when he said ‘yes’, one of them said, ‘You are under arrest’.

I immediately intervened and asked him, ‘Why are you arresting my husband?’ He replied that Raja Petra was being arrested under the ISA.

He then identified himself as a police officer. My youngest daughter was in the car and she was frightened and in tears. Her father asked her to sit in the front seat and he managed to give our daughter a hug and me a kiss.

They then whisked him into their car. I followed them until they reached the Damansara Utama police station. I waited outside the police station and frantically called my children and everyone else who I thought could help.

Where is Raja Petra?

petra My daughter came and we waited for about 30 minutes. They brought Raja Petra out and got into a car. We then followed them again, my daughter in her car and me in mine. They drove him to Bukit Aman knowing we were following behind.

From then on, we did not know of his whereabouts or his well being until 23 days later, when I was told that the immediate family only could see him at IPPK Wilayah on 3 May 2001 at 3.00 pm.

Seeing him after 23 days, I found that he had lost a lot of weight. He wanted to know about the children and his cats, all 10 of them. He asked me to take care of the children and myself as he assured us that he was fine and getting medical treatment. Our visit lasted about 1½ hours.

It has been a nightmare for us ever since my husband’s detention and the nightmare goes on. To date, we have not been told when we can have our next visit or whether any more visits will be allowed.

It is a very lonely and frightening experience not knowing what the future holds for you. I pray that no one else should ever go through the ordeal that the families of the 10 detainees are going through. The only thing we can do is to pray for the 10 detainees’ early release and their well-being.

My religious teacher once told me that ‘in every good there is a bad, and in every bad there is a good’ but at this point of time I cannot see any good in the bad that is happening to my family.

Raja Petra was released on 2 June 2001 after 52 days in detention

After 10 years, Anwar returns to Parliament

Malaysia: Opposition leader Anwar returns to Parliament, but only as spouse guest

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: Ten years after being kicked out, Malaysian opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim returned to Parliament on Tuesday — but only as a spouse guest.

"This is a new beginning. I have entered. I will never leave again," Anwar said after attending the formal opening of Parliament, where he was once deputy prime minister and finance minister.

Anwar was invited as the husband of Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, who won a seat for their People's Justice Party and is now the formal opposition leader in Parliament.

Anwar said it won't be long before he is elected a lawmaker in a by-election.

He was ousted from government in 1998 by then Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad in a power struggle amid accusations of corruption and sodomy. Anwar denied the charges, which were widely believed to be trumped up.

The sodomy charge was later overturned but he served prison time after being convicted of corruption.

The corruption charge prevented him from holding public office until April 14, 2008, which meant he could not contest the March 8 general elections.

"Yes, 10 years is a long time but it is good to be back," he said after mingling with Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin, Malaysia's constitutional monarch, and other dignitaries including former colleagues, over tea. "They were polite. Just chitchat," Anwar said.

"I always believe that in politics you shouldn't be bitter and personal. In fact I was happy to meet some of my very old friends including those in the Cabinet. They said very nice things and I reciprocated," he said.

A record 82 opposition members from a three-party alliance led by Anwar were elected to Parliament, breaking the ruling National Front's stranglehold over legislative power for the first time in 40 years.

Anwar said his wife is not his proxy. "In the past 10 years she has grown clever and competent in her own accord and strength. She's no longer just here by virtue of being Anwar's wife," he said.

Malaysia's king urges unity among all races.

Malaysia's king urges lawmakers to protect racial peace as he opens new Parliament

The Associated Press
Published: April 29, 2008


KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: Malaysia's king urged lawmakers to preserve racial peace as he formally opened the multiethnic country's new Parliament on Tuesday, packed with a record number of opposition members.

Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin, Malaysia's constitutional monarch, noted that "the key to this country's success is political stability and racial unity."

"With that I urge all parties to bear the responsibility of ensuring that all races are united and to combat any efforts to split the people," he said in a speech to the joint sitting of the lower and upper chambers of Parliament.

A record number of 82 opposition legislators were elected to the 222-member lower house in the March 8 general elections, which dramatically changed the balance of power for the first time in history.

The ruling National Front coalition, which has been in power since independence in 1957, lost its traditional two-thirds majority, winning only 140 seats. Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim has said he can bring down the government, saying at least 30 government lawmakers are willing to defect. But he says he wants to wait until more are ready to cross over.

The National Front's massive loss was attributed to a protest vote for the opposition by the minority ethnic Chinese and Indians, who together form 40 percent of Malaysia's 27 million population.

The minorities are bitter about the government's policies favoring the majority Malays, and say they face racial discrimination in religion, jobs, education, and in dealing with the Malay-dominated bureaucracy.

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's government has said it has learnt its lesson from the election losses. Still, the minority anger has raised fears of racial instability in this country, which has largely been at peace since deadly Chinese-Malay riots in 1969.

Sultan Mizan also urged Parliament to be vigilant about fighting corruption, noting that Abdullah has recently announced a blueprint to restructure the government's Anti-Corruption Agency.

"I hope efforts will be made to raise the effectiveness, transparency and accountability in eliminating corruption in this country," he said. The economic achievements and development of the country "will be meaningless if bribery, abuse of power and corruption still occur," he said.

Parliament will begin its official business on Wednesday when the government will answer questions by lawmakers.

For the first time in Malaysia's history, the opposition leader in Parliament is a woman — Anwar's wife Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, head of the People's Justice Party.

Anwar is the brains behind the party as well as the chief strategist of the opposition alliance that includes his party as well as the left-leaning Democratic Action Party and the religion-based Pan Malaysian Islamic Party.

US$5 billion project from Qatar

Gulf Petroleum gets Malaysia's nod for US$5 billion oil project



KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia:
Qatar-based Gulf Petroleum Ltd. said Monday it has secured the Malaysian government's approval to build a US$5 billion (€3 billion) oil and gas complex project.

Gulf Petroleum said the project's development will start as soon as possible after resolving technical issues regarding a 1,000-acre (400-hectare) site in Malaysia's northern Perak state.

At least two national oil firms from the Middle East will participate in the project, with other consortium members comprising major oil and gas, banking and insurance groups from Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt, Gulf Petroleum said.

The company said the Malaysian Ministry Of International Trade and Industry issued an approval letter April 25.

"In March 2008, Gulf Petroleum received shareholders' approval for the supply of crude oil to the integrated complex, the supply being the most critical aspect of the project," it said, without providing details.

Monday, April 28, 2008

The old UMNO dominance mould has cracked

Calls for PM to resign within ruling UMNO party

KESSLER: The UMNO has never had a setback quite like this and nothing in its past in its way of doing business has prepared it for this situation or to be able to handle it. So the immediate response was first of all to blame everybody but themselves, but then internally and instead of looking at the deep sources of their own failure, it becomes personalised, it's subject to factional strife. But everybody turns on the man responsible, the old saying when the fish stinks, it stinks from the head; well they've decided that they're going to go after, that getting rid of Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi as president of the party and as prime minister is the answer to their problems. Now, they may have to do something very new but they'll have to do something more than simply change the captain on the Titanic as they say.

LAM: So you think the situation is probably bigger than Abdullah Badawi? That it perhaps reflects disunity within UMNO?

KESSLER: There's nothing in UMNO that has prepared it for this kind of situation. They've got to deal with fundamental conflicts which are not external to the party, but to fix anything in Malaysia you have to take on basic interests that are very powerful within, within UMNO itself. So it's very hard to fix those. I suppose that deep down that on the one hand the UMNO has tried to assure itself of its position by winning the Malay vote, which it's done unsuccessfully, and at the price of undermining the support that its non-Malay partner parties get from non-Malay voters.

LAM: Indeed do you think then that the March elections showed that the BN race-based recipe is no longer working?

KESSLER: Certainly that's part of the thing; that the time has come, has well and truly come for them to move beyond on the one hand running a politics, which is the UMNO's politics, a politics of decrying communalism and saying we wish to overcome it, while the government party builds upon, consolidates and is itself dependent upon communalism. The time has well and truly come for the UMNO to lead a Barisan that is a not a confederation of ethnic communalistic parties but is a unitary party that tries to include others in it. In a sense, UMNO dominates the country by dominating the governing coalition, and it dominates the governing coalition by corralling the vast proportion, the preponderance of the Malay vote.

LAM: And Clive, you were in Malaysia during the March elections. Did you get a sense of ... perhaps even the Malays themselves getting a bit tired of this UMNO dominance that you speak of? That perhaps they are ready to share power even within BN itself?

KESSLER: There is a deep discontent not simply with UMNO but with the UMNO Barisan way of doing business. The UMNO mould has cracked. The old UMNO dominance mould has cracked, it's not easily repaired, it's unclear what else can be put in its place on the government side, and meanwhile while there's a great hope and hopefulness and optimism about the new politics that's emerging, the new politics itself is also highly problematic. That whether these five opposition state governments will all be able to hold on for four or five years is by no means a certainty, and the moment one of them falters the initiative may revert to the UMNO and to an UMNO that is ready for some fairly desperate politics. In that sense the outlook is not hopeful.

LAM: Indeed, this new politics that you speak of its leadership, the opposition leaders is derived from the old UMNO. So is that more of the same but under a different guise?

KESSLER: Well if it's just more of the same under a different guise it will have the same problems but there is a great hopefulness - I always draw the distinction between hopefulness and confidence - but people are hopeful that it will be a new politics and there is a new leadership partly from UMNO sources, partly from outside the UMNO. The interesting thing is if you look at the Malaysian press, the control of which has been relaxed slightly, you read all sorts of prominent journalists such as Zainah Anwar and Karim Ruslan who are basically UMNO government inclining kind of people who are making a very, very strong anti, not only criticising the UMNO but expressing a degree of comfortableness with the new politics that Pakatan Rakyat is embodying. And in that sense this is the doing, the achievement of Anwar Ibrahim who has come back from the dead politically to become the broker of unity and the king-maker on the opposition side, the king-maker of the new politics.

Shabery says Anwar should be worried instead

Shabery says Anwar should be worried instead
26 April, 2008

Kota Kinabalu: Information Minister Datuk Ahmad Shabery Cheek on Friday said Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) de facto leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim should be worried because there are partners in the Pakatan Rakyat who are unhappy with the latter's leadership.

Instead of Barisan Nasional (BN) MPs switching camps to the opposition, they (Pakatan members) want to quit the opposition alliance, he said, adding they cited the domineering personality of Parti Keadilan Rakyat's (PKR) leadership.

He was commenting on a claim that several MPs from the BN would be joining the opposition no later than Sept 16.

Ahmad Shabery claimed these Pakatan members were ready to negotiate to leave the coalition.

He also said the PKR won in many places not through their hard work but riding on the strength of other components in the opposition alliance.

"No party can shake the Barisan, especially Umno, which possesses solid strength, he said. "We also have close relations with our friends especially in Sabah and Sarawak who realised that based on records, this (BN) is the best friend."

Only the BN is able to unite and provide leadership to society.

On the promise made by Anwar to give more oil royalty to Sabah during the recent elections, he said it was just gimmick.

He said when Anwar was the Federal Finance Minister, the latter had never done anything for Sabah.

Abdullah Risks Party's 51-Year Grip on Malaysia by Staying Put

Abdullah Risks Party's 51-Year Grip on Malaysia by Staying Put

By Douglas Wong and Angus Whitley



Abdullah has come under pressure to step down since he last month led the United Malays National Organisation and its coalition partners to the smallest electoral victory since independence in 1957. Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim is seeking to court enough lawmakers to topple the government; Mahathir Mohamad, who hand-picked Abdullah as his successor after serving 22 years as prime minister, is leading calls for his ouster to protect UMNO's half-century grip on power.

Abdullah says he plans to stay put at least until party elections in December, fighting his detractors with policies to bolster popular support including larger gasoline subsidies for the poor and a new anti-corruption commission.

``What Abdullah is trying to do is buy a little bit more time,'' said Mohamed Mustafa Ishak, professor of politics at Universiti Utara Malaysia. ``At best, he can delay his downfall.''

The coalition lost its two-thirds majority in the March 8 election for the first time since 1969, after which the government passed laws giving the ethnic Malay majority preferential treatment for college places, jobs and housing. Anwar, 60, focused his campaign on scrapping that system, which he says encourages corruption.

The race-based rules were introduced to help Malays catch up with ethnic Chinese business owners. Abdullah, 68, said last month the government will continue policies to close the gap.

Anwar's Candidacy

Anwar, a former deputy prime minister who was jailed on corruption charges he denied, led a three-party alliance to victory in five of Malaysia's 13 states. He plans to run for a seat in parliament now that a ban resulting from his jail sentence has expired.

``I can't see how UMNO can save itself,'' said Abdul Aziz Bari, a professor at the International Islamic University Malaysia. Abdullah ``can't afford to delay'' his resignation, he said. ``The writing's on the wall.''

Anwar's People's Alliance already scrapped racial quotas for tenders in states it controls. Under the current system, public universities give Malays easier entry than Chinese and Indians. Companies must also sell 30 percent of their shares to Malays and disclose how many they employ if they list on the stock market.

Najib Razak

Najib Razak, Abdullah's deputy, has stood by his boss and worked with him on the policy response. Najib, 54, said this month he has seen no signs that Anwar can tempt lawmakers to switch camps.

Abdullah's policy pledges ``should have been carried out four years ago when he received the people's mandate to fight corruption,'' Anwar's People's Justice Party said in an April 22 statement. Abdullah won a landslide election victory in 2004.

His multiparty National Front coalition already faces declining support from Chinese and Indian minorities upset by the preference system.

Investment projects and business confidence in Malaysia have stalled since the election. The key stock index slumped the most in a decade on the first trading day after the result, and is down 15 percent from a January record.

In Penang, a west Malaysian state that fell to the opposition, the construction of a second bridge to the island has been delayed by nine months, state-run contractor UEM Builders Bhd. said this month.

Train Delay

The government also dropped a proposed 8 billion-ringgit ($2.5 billion) high-speed rail link to Singapore, state news service Bernama said April 23. Abdullah said last week that many projects are under review.

``Investors are cautious because it appears power is draining away from Abdullah by the day,'' said Song Seng-Wun, an economist at CIMB-GK Research in Singapore.

Mahathir started trying to remove Abdullah in 2006, accusing him of achieving nothing since taking office three years earlier. Trade and Industry Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said Abdullah should step down as UMNO head for the good of the party, Bernama reported April 13.

Party rules that Mahathir introduced require 30 percent of UMNO's 191 regional party offices to back a leadership change. That's a hurdle Abdullah's only public challenger to date, Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, may struggle to clear, Aziz said.

Hard to Oust

In an April 4 speech, Razaleigh, a former finance minister, urged UMNO members to hold a special meeting to address what he called an ``emergency'' in the party. ``What we lack is leadership,'' Razaleigh said.

Abdullah's most immediate challenge is the prospect of a no- confidence vote in the new parliament, which convenes today.

``We opposition parties on our own won't have a big enough voice,'' said Lim Kit Siang, a lawmaker for the Democratic Action Party, part of Anwar's alliance. ``We can move a motion, anyone can do so, but to get that vote on our own will be a problem.''

A more likely scenario is for disgruntled coalition lawmakers to abstain from voting on a minor bill, allowing the government to be defeated, said Andrew Aeria, a political analyst for Enterprise LSE, the commercial arm of the London School of Economics.

``If this happens, Abdullah's position would be untenable,'' Aeria said. The opposition could then bide its time before offering to ``save the country,'' he said.

Malaysia planning to subsidize locally grown rice to combat global price hike

International Herald Tribune
Malaysia planning to subsidize locally grown rice to combat global price hike
Monday, April 28, 2008

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: Malaysia's government is planning to subsidize locally-grown rice to prevent consumers from being hit by record high prices of the staple food in the world, a Cabinet minister said Monday.

"The main priority is that the government wants to assure the lower income group that local rice will remain affordable to them," Shahrir Samad, the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs minister, told reporters.

World rice prices have risen sharply this year because of growing demand and poor weather in some rice-producing countries. Some Asian countries, including Vietnam and Cambodia, have curbed rice exports to guarantee their own supplies.

Malaysia grows about 65 to 70 percent of the rice its people consume, while the rest is imported, mainly from Thailand. With the price of Thai rice nearly tripling in the last five months, the government expects consumers to switch to local rice, whose price — so far steady — is expected to rise.

The government currently does not subsidize local rice but provides free fertilizer and other concessions to farmers to ensure the price remains under control. In 2007, the government spent more than 900 million ringgit (US$290 million; €200 million) on these concessions.

"At the moment there is no rice subsidy. We just control the price. But that (subsidy) will come," he said. However, imported rice will not be subsidized.

"We can't say that we must have Thai rice at lower prices than what the Thai themselves have," Shahrir said.

He said the new rice subsidies might be funded by the money saved by a planned reduction of fuel subsidies.

The government said earlier that it is considering charging car owners more for gasoline while maintaining the cost of gasoline and diesel for motorcyclists, school bus operators, fishermen and other needy groups.

"Maybe we can see how we can save subsidies on petrol and diesel. Perhaps we can re-channel to food subsidies," Shahrir said without elaborating. He did not say when the fuel subsidies would be reduced.

The government spends 4 billion ringgit (US$1.3 billion; €810 million) per year on the food related subsidies, including directly subsidizing flour, white bread and cooking oil.

Shahrir warned that Malaysians must face the reality of the global food crisis.

"We will need to see changes in lifestyle among Malaysians to accommodate this economic situation," he said.

He said the government is also looking to boost rice stockpiles and establish a new supply chain system to ensure continuous supply in the market.

Malaysia recently announced plans to boost domestic food security by growing rice on a massive scale in a state on Borneo island.

Penang Global City Centre Dead

Investor shying away from Penang Global City Centre
PENANG, April 29 — The ambitious Penang Global City Centre (PGCC) project looks to be dead in the water – not because of opposition from the state government but because a major property player looking to take a major stake in Equine Capital does not appear interested in pursuing the project.

The Malaysian Insider understands that this listed property company with developments in Kuala Lumpur, Penang, Johor and Malacca has sent its officials to conduct a due diligence of Equine’s projects in the Klang Valley and Penang. They believe that there is value in the company’s land bank and housing projects in the Klang Valley and Batu Kawan but after having discussions with Penang Turf Club officials, they seem less interested in this massive project.

This is not surprising given the behind the scenes tussle going in the turf club over the PGCC. Some club members led by Tan Sri Tan Kok Ping are protesting the decision by the club’s committee to enter into the agreement with Datuk Patrick Lim and Abad Naluri to develop the choice piece of real estate.

They are arguing that the club committee did not get the agreement of the trustees before signing the agreement with Abad in 2004.

As part of the agreement, Abad Naluri agreed with the turf club to acquire the land in Batu Gantong for RM488 million. As part of the deal, the company was supposed to build a race course in Batu Kawan for RM375 million and hand it over to PTC by 2007. The balance would be paid in cash to the club.

But delays in obtaining approvals meant that the original time table could not be met. The defeat of the Barisan Nasional state government in Election 2008 and the misgiving the Opposition has over the viability of the PGCC project complicated matters for Lim.

After the polls, the turf club committee agreed to extend the deal for three more years. But now The Insider understands that Tan and other club members are thinking about lodging a police report against the club’s committee, arguing that it did not obtain the signature of trustees before entering into the agreement with Abad Naluri.

The dissenters know that if this becomes a police case, there is little chance of Lim and Abad Naluri moving ahead with their plans of a new racecourse in Batu Kawan and delivering their end of the bargain.

Some turf club members say that they want to develop the Batu Gantong land themselves. Equine Capital has a 25 per cent stake in Abad Naluri. Given all the legal issues and the opposition from chief minister Lim Guan Eng to the PGCC, the property giant looking to stake a major stake in Equine has indicated to turf club members that it is not keen in pursuing the project to build an iconic structure, high-end condominiums and hotels.

Polygamy Religion?

Before condemning or being emotional, think about it. Why do these people believe in such practice? Out of fear? Out of faith? After all faith do not need science to prove it. Because a charismatic leader convinced them? They believe they can go to heaven with this way of life while enjoying life in this world? Majority believe things easily, don't they? Show someone a piece of stone and tell them it can cure their old, sick folks at home of their sickness and they are willing to part with lots of money. Gullible? Yes, aren't we all. We are willing to take chances, for promise of heaven or good reincarnation, there is no need for proof, just have faith and belief, afterall there is no proof. After I die and go to heaven or become an angel, I'll come back and tell you. But no one has come back to tell anyone.

31 polygamist sect teens pregnant or have babies

Apr 29, 2008
AFP

CHICAGO, USA - MORE than half of the teenaged girls removed from a polygamist sect in Texas are already mothers or are currently pregnant, child welfare officials said.

All of the sect's 463 children were taken in state custody earlier this month amid allegations of widespread sexual, physical and emotional abuse at the YFZ (Yearn For Zion) Ranch.

Officials said girls were being 'groomed' to accept sex with their middle-aged 'spiritual husbands' as soon as they hit puberty and boys were being indoctrinated to perpetuate the cycle of abuse.

They have identified 53 girls who they believe are between the ages of 14 and 17.

'We believe 31 of the 53 have either already had children or are pregnant,' Texas Department of Family and Protective Services spokesman Patrick Crimmins said on Monday.

All but six of the 250 girls and 213 boys seized in the raid have now been placed in foster care across the state, he added.

Those children are currently hospitalised with ailments that include respiratory problems and an ear infection.

The department tried to keep siblings together and placed most of the children in large group settings.

A separate shelter was set up for 17 women who had infants under a year old. The teenaged mothers were not separated from their children and the other mothers were given visitation rights.

Status hearings for the children will begin in mid-May and no long-term decisions have been made about their placement.

Police believe that the desperate call for help which sparked the dayslong raid which began April 3 may have been a hoax.

The call was used to obtain a search warrant of the sprawling ranch and officials said they saw evidence of widespread abuse when they arrived at the compound owned by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

The FLDS split from the mainstream Mormon church when polygamy was banned.

The group holds that plural marriage is a way to get to heaven.

Mainstream Mormons now excommunicate members who engage in polygamy and reject any connection with the FLDS.

The ranch was purchased in 2003 and built by Warren Jeffs, the self-described prophet of the group, who was convicted last year by a Utah court on two counts of being an accomplice to rape, relating to the marriage of a schoolgirl against her will to a cousin.

Ecstasy is top nightspot drug

Fadhal A. Ghani
Mon, Apr 28, 2008
New Straits Times
Ecstasy is top nightspot drug

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA -The seizure of synthetic drugs in the city increased fourfold last year compared with 2006.

The biggest increase was in Ecstasy pills. City police seized 8,139 pills last year compared with 2,360 in 2006.

National Anti-Drugs Agency director-general Datuk Sabran Napiah said synthetic drugs such as psychotropic, ecstasy and amphetamine pills were popular at nightspots such as discotheques. He was speaking at the launch of the "Anti-Drug at Entertainment Centres" campaign yesterday.

The number of drug-related arrests in the city also increased by 17 per cent last year compared with 2006, from 11,859 in 2006 to 13,864 last year.

The campaign aims to make all entertainment outlets drug-free zones.

The agency started its campaign in Penang, followed by Johor Baru soon.

Sabran said the agency, police and local authorities must work together to ensure nightspots were free from drugs.

Robert Lim, chief executive officer of Aloha Club Bistro & VIP Lounge at Jalan P. Ramlee, where the campaign was launched said it was a good move.

"I have done my best to ensure my club is free from drugs."

Sabran hoped other nightspots would emulate Aloha to ensure youth were not exposed to drugs.

Keris apology fans unrest in divided Umno

Keris apology fans unrest in divided Umno
KUALA LUMPUR, April 28 — His apology for the keris waving act may have gone down well with Chinese and Indians, but Datuk Hishammuddin Hussein may have increased his odds against winning support for one of the party’s vice-presidents slots.

In the eyes of the party grassroots, his apology was not a noble act or a sign of maturity but one of weakness. There are more than 10 SMSes circulating among party members slamming him for what they view as a capitulation to pressure from non-Malays.

In coffeehouses and stalls, where political careers are made or broken by Umno operatives, the view is that a Malay leader who cannot defend the Malay symbol cannot be entrusted with a leadership position in the party.

An Umno political operative told The Malaysian Insider today: "What is he going to do next? Tell us that we should change the Umno flag because it contains a keris. This is how some people in Umno are feeling right now. If he is serious about challenging for the vice-president’s position he has a lot of work to do."

Umno Youth chief Hishammuddin has said that he will not defend his position in the youth wing, prompting speculation that he is eyeing one of the three vice-president slots. He will have formidable opponents to contend with if he does decide to go for the number 3 position in the party.

They include Malacca Chief Minister Ali Rustam, Pahang Menteri Besar Adnan Yaakob, Negri Sembilan MB Mohamed Hassan, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Zahid Hamidi, and possibly Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, unless he goes for broke as speculated.

Hishammuddin was criticised for introducing the keris gambit at the Umno assembly in 2005. He explained then that it was not provocative but a ceremonial act involving a symbol held in high esteem by the community. But his critics did not let up, arguing that the keris had negative connotations for Chinese and Indians.

Some Umno politicians also ticked him off privately, saying that it was an act which could have repercussions in the general elections. They were spot on. The Opposition said that keris episode was a perfect example of how arrogant and insensitive Umno had become after 50 years in power.

Hishammuddin’s friends say that he was stunned by the election results and has been thinking about the part he played in the defeat of some of his colleagues from the MCA, MIC and Gerakan. Without consulting any of his comrades in the youth wing, he apologised for the keris waving act at the Barisan Nasional Youth meeting last week.

By and large, his mea culpa has been welcomed BN component parties. They know that their task of winning support back from non-Malay communities will be tough unless they show that they are not submissive and that the senior partner in the alliance is prepared to come down a few notches.

But within Umno, the reaction to his apology was different – another indication of the disconnect between the party and the non-Malay constituency in Malaysia. A disconnect which could derail any move by Umno or its BN partners to "get closer" to Chinese and Indian communities and regain their trust.

Cheras division chief Datuk Syed Ali al-Habshee spoke for many in the party when he criticised Hishammuddin for wilting under pressure and apologising for the keris act. The sentiment among many in the party is that the Chinese and Indians betrayed the BN when they voted for Pakatan Rakyat. There is hurt. There is anger. So why should Hishammuddin be too concerned about what non-Malays think of the keris act?

Also, some party members – despite having 78 seats in Parliament and holding most of the levers of power here – are feeling under siege. They feel that Malay special rights, constitutional monarchy and Malay supremacy are under threat by a more demanding non-Malay constituency.

Viewed through those narrow lenses, Hishammuddin’s apology is seen as evidence of growing challenge to the supremacy of the race. Umno politicians say that the Education Minister should have only considered offering an apology after the party elections in December.

"This apology is not going to help BN now. The damage has been done and the next general election is five years away. What he should have done was concentrate on winning the Umno elections and then look at this keris issue," said a former division chief.

So why did Hishammuddin – a political animal - throw caution to the wind and say sorry now? Probably instinct. In 2005, his instinct told him that the keris act would endear him to the party faithful and cement his legacy as the Umno Youth leader who managed to unite the youth wing and championed his race.

Three years later, his instinct told him that he needed to acknowledge his mistake and move to regain the support of his friends in BN and the respect of Malaysians who have always expected the son of Tun Hussein Onn to be above chauvinism.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

How the Aussies fight corruption

How the Aussies fight corruption
Sunday, 27 April 2008 09:56am

Roy Waldon©NST
by Aniza Damis

Fulfilling transparency promises

Last Monday, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi announced that the Anti-Corruption Agency would be revamped into a Malaysian Commission on Anti-Corruption, granting it greater independence. But how does such a commission work? Can it really be independent? ANIZA DAMIS speaks to Roy Waldon, the executive director of the legal division in the New South Wales Independent Commission Against Corruption (NSW ICAC), and finds out what made this Australian state's 20-year fight against corruption successful

Q: What is the function of the ICAC?

A: To investigate and expose corruption in the New South Wales public sector, corruption prevention so that corruption doesn't repeat itself, and corruption education for the public sector, the importance of reporting corruption and the importance of combating corruption.

Q: Why does ICAC investigate just the public sector?

A: The ICAC was set up primarily because there was concern about corruption affecting the public sector. We have notions of public trust and the importance of public trust in the integrity of our public systems.

If they are undermined in any way, then, it doesn't just affect those agencies where the corrupt activity is occurring, it affects the whole of government, and the delivery of the public service within New South Wales.

The issues of corruption that most concerned people at the time the ICAC was established (in 1988) were allegations involving police corruption, corruption in the judiciary, corruption at ministerial level, and about corruption generally in the public sector.

When the then premier established the ICAC, he talked about some of those issues: the fact that a former chief magistrate was convicted of a criminal offence, and the need to reinforce public confidence in the way government and government agencies were being administered.

The police couldn't look into it because at that time the police themselves were part of the problem, rather than the solution, and the police have other things to do, like criminal investigations to conduct. There were also concerns they didn't have the powers to do what needed to be done.

The ICAC, on the other hand, has been given quite wide and extraordinary powers.

Q: Do you have jurisdiction over politicians?

A: Absolutely. We have powers over everyone in the public sector, ranging from the garbage collector to politicians, our head of government and our head of state.

Q: Who do you report to?

A: We don't really report to anyone, as such. We report to parliament, in a sense.

Q: ICAC doesn't have a prosecutorial function?

A: Yes. We're not set up to focus on prosecutions. We make findings of fact.

If someone's accepted a bribe, we can make that a finding of fact. If the conduct comes within our definition of corrupt conduct, we could make a finding that that person had engaged in corrupt conduct.

And it doesn't have to be limited to a criminal offence. It can also be a disciplinary offence, or other grounds for dismissal of a public sector worker.

I think the idea was we ought not to be burdened by having a prosecutorial function because our focus is on investigation and exposure. The type of evidence and the way we investigate is quite different from how a prosecutorial agency would go about doing what they do.

We are not subject to the rules of evidence, nor limited to evidence which would be admissible in a court of law. Very often the evidence we rely on can also be evidence which may not be admissible in a court of law.

We have a very important power in our hearings, of being able to require people to answer all questions even though the answers may incriminate them. You can't do that in a court of law.

That means if someone objects to answering those questions, they must nevertheless answer those questions. But the fact they have objected means their answer can't be used against them in a subsequent criminal prosecution.

This power is very similar to the sort of powers a royal commission would have -- we're often described as being a standing royal commission.

The prosecutorial function needs to look at what is the admissible evidence -- whether there is sufficient evidence to prosecute.

Some times prosecutions can take quite a long time, whereas, hopefully, our investigations will take maybe a few months, maybe a couple of years.

But once we've conducted a public inquiry, our report is usually out within three months. And then, apart from following up and seeing how our recommendations are being implemented and sending off our material to the director of public prosecutions (DPP), that's usually the end of it for us.

Even once prosecution has been implemented, there are various reasons why it may be dragged out. It could go through a committal proceeding before it could get to court, there may be a conviction in the first instance, there might be an appeal -- it'll certainly be a long-running thing before you get to the end.

With the ICAC, the idea was that in exposing corruption, there ought to be a fairly immediate result, and that result is the public report -- the findings of fact, and the findings of corrupt conduct.

What happens after that is still important, but because it's likely to be some time away from when the actual conduct occurred and the actual investigation was conducted, I think it's important to have a result closer to the actual event.

Q: Would you recommend that the DPP prosecutes?

A: Under our act, we recommend that consideration be given to refer the matter to the DPP to consider prosecution for a particular offence.

Basically, we can say: "This person has engaged in corrupt conduct," but we are precluded from saying: "This person has committed a criminal offence". We're not allowed to say that because only the courts can determine that.

All we can say is: "Here's some evidence, we think the DPP ought to give consideration to prosecuting this person for this offence." The DPP then gets the evidence we send to him, considers the evidence, and then makes a decision.

Similarly, in matters that may involve a disciplinary offence, we can't say someone has engaged in a disciplinary offence. All we can say is the relevant agency ought to give consideration to taking disciplinary action against them in relation to specified conduct.

Q: Are your findings made public?

A: Not only is the finding made public, but the hearing is made public -- it is open to the public, people can attend, and it gets reported widely by the media if it's an interesting hearing.

Q: How can you make something public when it's not a court decision, and at the same time avoid being sued?

A: Our legislation provides that nothing we do is capable of being regarded as being defamation.

Secondly, we conduct ourselves in accordance with our act (the Independent Commission Against Corruption Act). As long as we abide by that, then we can't be taken to court.

The act specifically provides we have the power to make findings of fact and findings of corrupt conduct, and other things. We can also make recommendations of reform to systems.

An important part of our function is not just to say: "This is the conduct that occurred and these are the people to blame." We also want to look at the system and why that conduct was able to occur so that we can make recommendations for change to the system. Hopefully, either it won't occur again, or the likelihood of it occurring again is reduced.

Q: So, the effect you have is actually of a moral "outing"?

A: Yes. And it's a great deterrent effect, I think.

No one likes to be labelled as corrupt, and once you're labelled as corrupt that sticks with you for the rest of your life.

Reports also go on our website and all our reports going back to when we first started in 1989 can be found online. So, anytime someone wants to see if someone was named in an ICAC inquiry, they can do a Google search, and they'll come up with a report and see that there might have been a finding of corrupt conduct.

Q: What if a case that you have reported is lost by the prosecution in court? Is there then a conflict between ICAC's findings and the court's findings?

A: There's no conflict because, first of all, the evidence that may be before the court could be quite different from the evidence before us.

Let's take the hypothetical example of a public official.

If he comes into ICAC, goes into a hearing and says, under objection: "I've accepted A$20,000 worth of bribes last year." That's a fact. We can make that finding a fact and a finding of corrupt conduct based on that person's admission.

But we cannot use that admission as evidence for criminal prosecution because that evidence was given under objection, so it's not admissible.

Secondly, we are not bound by the rules of evidence, and we are not bound by issues of admissibility. The basis on which we make our findings is the civil standard, which is the balance of probabilities.

A court of law is bound by the rules of evidence, so they may not have all the evidence we had. They are concerned about issues of admissibility.

Thirdly, they determine guilt or innocence based on the Beyond-Reasonable-Doubt test and not the Balance-of-Probabilities test.

That's an issue that has been raised in Australia -- particularly in NSW -- we've made a corrupt conduct finding, the person's prosecuted, and they're found not guilty. Does that mean we then have to revisit your corrupt conduct finding? The answer is "No".

Q: Do you get interference by the executive?

A: No. In NSW, if we were investigating someone in government -- say a minister -- and the premier was walking down the street and saw our commissioner walking down the same street, I think the premier would cross to the other side because he wouldn't want there to be even a suggestion that he in any way interfered with or compromised an ICAC investigation. That would be political suicide.

The ICAC has investigated the conduct of a premier and made a finding of corrupt conduct against that premier (Nick Greiner, who, incidentally, was the premier who set up the ICAC). We've also investigated the conduct of ministers. There has never been any attempt by a premier or any other member of government to interfere or influence the outcome or the conduct of those investigations.

I think they (the government) understand that we are independent, we're not subject to ministerial direction or direction by the premier.

I also think they understand what the political realities would be if there was even a whiff of a suggestion, and if that found its way into the media, it would be political suicide for them.

Our commissioners have always been independent. They are well-versed in the law, and I don't see any circumstances in which they would even tolerate or entertain that level of interference.

Q: Who appoints the commissioner?

A: The commissioner is appointed by the governor of New South Wales on the recommendation of the premier.

These appointments are open to public scrutiny. There is a criteria in our legislation for who is eligible to be appointed as a commissioner. It needs to be someone with a legal background. Usually it's a senior judge or a former judge of the Supreme Court (the highest court in the state of NSW) or someone who has a reputation for integrity within the public sector.

It would be very difficult for a premier to manipulate the system to appoint someone he or she thought would be favourable to them -- not least of all since we have a very active opposition in each state parliament, and they would soon highlight that.

And not only would such an arrangement bring our organisation into disrepute, it would bring the government of the day into disrepute -- because there is a very strong interest of the public in what the ICAC does, and how it does what it does, and who leads it.

I don't think there would be any tolerance for a situation to arise where there was even a perception someone was being appointed not because they were independent and qualified, but because it was thought they might be favourable to the government of the day.

Q: What's the annual budget of ICAC?

A: Roughly A$15 million (RM44 million) .

We get about 2,000-2,500 complaints a year. But we only take on what we regard as serious and systemic corrupt conduct. In 2006 and 2007, we commenced 78 investigations. We may do between six and eight public inquiries a year.

Q: How do you get what you need, without putting yourself in a position where you are obliged to the government?

A: The budget generally is fixed, and it goes up each year by a percentage, like most government departments.

A couple of years ago, we were extremely busy. We had a number of investigations -- one of which involved issues of the activities of one or two members of the government -- and we were running out of money.

So, all we had to do was go to the government and ask for extra money, and we got it. We didn't have to provide any detailed justification; we could show the government we'd spent this much money, and we had to spend this much more money in order to complete the investigation.

There was no argument, no debate, no issue about getting the money.

Everyone knew we were very busy because we were doing a number of investigations, including the Orange Grove investigation, which involved the conduct of a couple of members of the government.

Because public perception is very important in a democracy, and particularly in NSW, I think the government would have been concerned about saying: "No, sorry. Go away."

Even if the government had said this for fiscal reasons, I think everyone would have said: "This is not for fiscal reasons, it's because you don't want the ICAC to continue with the investigation." And to the people, it would have been unacceptable.

Q: How much confidence does the public have in being able to complain, without getting into trouble themselves?

A: Our surveys of the public indicate a high level of public confidence in what we do. We've been getting 2,000 to 2,500 complaints for the last 10 to 15 years.

There is legislation that provides that it is an offence for anyone to take detrimental action against someone who has assisted us. There is also legislation which provides protection to a public servant who is a whistle-blower.

Q: Why is it necessary to have a public inquiry?

A: You get to a stage in any investigation where you need to talk to people. You have so much evidence, and maybe that evidence looks fairly conclusive, and maybe it isn't. But you need to actually put it to people, and you need to find out what they've got to say about it.

You can do that in two ways: you can do it in private; in which case it's all closed and no one knows who said what. I think that's difficult because we're promoting public sector transparency and openness.

So, the public inquiry is not a show-trial. It is actually part of the investigation because it's obtaining evidence, while being open and transparent in our processes so that people can see these are the allegations, this is the evidence which supports those allegations, these are the people against whom those allegations are made and what they've got to say.

Sometimes the allegations stick, and sometimes they don't. But people can see and understand that process.

On occasions, there are allegations that this person has done this thing; we investigate, and during the course of the public inquiry, it turns out that that person didn't do it. That clears the air and it clears that person.

But it's the process of having a public inquiry that is important. It's not just that one day this public report emerges, saying: "This didn't happen."

People see the process and are able to understand why it is we have reached this conclusion.

Q: How conscious are you of your independence?

A: It's just taken for granted, I think.

It is sometimes quite difficult to understand. I've been to a number of countries where people have scratched their heads and think: "I don't know that that really works", but it does.

It's one thing to say an agency is independent in isolation, but you've got to look at the surrounding culture, the surrounding political and social environment.

We have a free -- and some would say voracious -- media, and people stand up and voice their opinion. And politics is fairly open -- in each state at the Commonwealth level there's an opposition that's ready, willing, and able, to pounce if they see an issue there.

So, for us, (independence) has never been an issue. When we investigated senior ministers or senior members of the government, there was never even the remotest attempt to influence us. Quite the reverse, actually.

I gave you the example of the Orange Grove investigation where we ran out of money -- even though we were investigating members of the government. The extra money (to complete the investigation) was forthcoming, and there never was any debate about it.

Maybe the government wasn't terribly happy about it -- they never said they were -- but there was no issue about whether we should get the money or not.

Q: And not with an understanding they were going to give you the money, and you were going to stop investigating?

A: No. (laughs) Indeed, any suggestion of that type would be corrupt conduct. That would potentially give rise to an investigation.

Q: Can a member of government ask you to investigate a case?

A: There's a difference between saying: "Here's some information I have. Please consider it," and: "I insist you investigate this matter" -- they can't do that.

Like any member of the public, they can make a complaint to us. In their duties, they often become aware of information which they think may involve corrupt conduct, and they will report it to us. But that's different from attempting to direct what we do or what we don't do.

Our powers are quite extensive. If we thought someone had information about corrupt conduct and that they weren't providing it to us, there would always be a way for us to obtain that information.

We could simply serve them with a notice, asking them to produce documentation, or we could bring them into a hearing and ask them questions, and they would be obliged to answer them.

And if they didn't answer them truthfully, then they would be committing a criminal offence.


Fulfilling transparency promises

by Aniza Damis

KUALA LUMPUR: In the last two weeks, the government has announced the setting up of two important commissions: a judicial appointments commission to ensure judges are appointed fairly, and the restructuring of the Anti-Corruption Agency into a commission.

These pledges for change -- although some pessimists say are too late -- are an indication that the government is aware of the need to fulfil its promise to be transparent and accountable, and, its act of setting up these commissions are in keeping with the eighth principle of Islam Hadhari: moral integrity.

Just what kind of structure the ACA would take after the restructuring, is still under construction.

The plan, so far, is that the Malaysian Commission Against Corruption (MCAC) be given the power to hire and fire its staff, and to set its own policies.

According to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, two bodies would be set up as a check-and-balance to the commission: an independent Corruption Prevention Advisory Board and a Parliamentary Committee on the Prevention of Corruption.

The Yang di-Pertuan Agong, on the advice of the prime minister, will appoint members to the commission, which will be guided by the advisory board.

The board would review and advise action on cases where evidence was lacking, and it would be given the authority to explain to the public why those investigated for corruption and abuse of power could not be prosecuted.

However, the commission would still come under the purview of the prime minister.

Currently, although the agency comes under the Prime Minister's Department, this is for financial and human resource matters only, and it is free from interference from any party.

But how will the new commission be organised?

When it is said that the restructuring is to accord it more independence, just how independent should it be?

What should the function of the commission be? Should it have prosecutorial powers? Or should its objective be to publicly denounce corrupt conduct?

"The commission must be completely independent," said former Court of Appeal judge Datuk Shaikh Daud Ismail.

"Even though the prime minister has said he will be responsible for the commission, I believe it should not be under any government department or ministry.

"Although the prime minister doesn't interfere, the perception is that there is interference. There should not be interference from any political party."

Instead, the commission should report only to parliament, said Shaikh Daud.

It is significant though, that while the objective of reforming the ACA is to give it more independence, the proposed commission seems to have been assigned the moniker the MCAC, whilst its Hong Kong and New South Wales counterparts known as the Hong Kong ICAC and New South Wales ICAC respectively, retain the "I" for "Independent" as their identity.

The Hong Kong and New South Wales ICACs are taken as examples, not only because they are in operation within the region, but because each has had decades of successful experience and existence.

The Hong Kong ICAC was established in 1974 and the New South Wales ICAC in 1988.

Hong Kong ranked 14 in Transparency International's Corruption Perception Index 2007 compared with Malaysia, which ranked 43.

The larger the number, the greater the perception of corruption. Australia, of which New South Wales is the most populous state, was at 11.

Should, for instance, the commission report only to parliament, like the New South Wales ICAC, or should it report to the executive council on major policy issues, like the Hong Kong ICAC?

What should the function of the commission be?

The Hong Kong ICAC functions in the way Malaysians are used to and understand: it seeks to fight corruption by investigating allegations of corruption, with a view to provide evidence for prosecution.

The New South Wales ICAC, although it passes its investigation papers to the prosecutor's office, believes the way to fight corruption is to investigate allegations of corruption, and, if proved, to publicly shame the person who has been involved in corrupt conduct through its public report.

In this way, regardless of whether the case takes a short or long time to unfold in court, public censure of the corrupt conduct is given almost immediately through the New South Wales ICAC's public report.

Should the Malaysian commission have prosecutorial functions?

Like the current ACA, the Hong Kong ICAC does not have a prosecution function, but with one major difference, said ACA deputy director-general Datuk Abu Kassim Mohamed.

"In Hong Kong, when there is no prosecution, the investigation papers will be given to the operational advisory committee which will review the decision.

"In Malaysia, however, if there is no prosecution, the case is closed."

Shaikh Daud believes that in the early stages of the Malaysian commission, it should not be given prosecutorial powers, which should remain with the Attorney-General's Chambers.

However, he qualified this by saying the commission should be given power to question the A-G on why a case was not being prosecuted.

"If the A-G can give a reasonable answer, then the commission should accept it.

"If not, the commission should come out with a public statement," said Shaikh Daud, who was a former senior federal counsel with the ACA.

Although many issues or criteria will arise as the commission is being fleshed out, consideration should be given to who should police the ACA.

Towards the end of his tenure, former ACA director-general Datuk Seri Zulkipli Mat Noor, was being investigated for alleged corruption (the allegation was not proved). This brought up the question: If the ACA is corrupt, who investigates?

The Hong Kong ICAC has an internal investigation and monitoring unit, known as the L Group, which, according to the Hong Kong ICAC website, investigates "all allegations of corruption and related offences made against the ICAC staff", and the decision to investigate rests with the Secretary for Justice.

"All completed investigations are reported to the Secretary for Justice and the Operations Review Committee."

In New South Wales, the ICAC is policed by the Inspector of the ICAC, whose office is also independent and exempt from ICAC actions.

So much to consider, and so little time.

Whichever direction the Malaysian corruption commission chooses to take, let's hope it will one day have effect on Malaysian criminals the way it seems to in Hong Kong movies, where criminals shudder at the mere mention of "I-C-A-C".

China getting concerned over 2nd Penang Bridge

China getting concerned over 2nd Penang Bridge
KUALA LUMPUR, April 27 - All the fuss about the Penang Second Bridge and talk of delays has caught the attention of the Chinese government.

Officials from China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC) have been asked to submit a report within the next 24 hours to the Ministry of Commerce, who are peeved that a project in which a Chinese company is involved in is mired in controversy. Beijing also wants to know if the US$800 million loan to Malaysia is viewed as helpful or an impediment by stakeholders and the public.

The Malaysian Insider has learnt that top Chinese leaders have taken a keen interest in the 24-km-long bridge, seeing it as an opportunity to cement their special relationship with Malaysia, reiterate their commitment to the region and defy critics who argue that an economically strong China will be a military threat.

Government officials are unsure if Beijing will urge CHEC to cut their losses and pull out of the RM4.3 billion project but this week is shaping up to be a crucial one for all those involved in the crossing. Tan Sri Zaini Omar, the head of the task force overseeing the bridge project, is scheduled to have a final sit down with all the stakeholders – the Ministry of Finance, UEM, CHEC – and finalise cost and design issues.


He is said to be mulling over several options including costing portions of the bridge independently and offering them to UEM and CHEC as a fait accompli or asking UEM and CHEC to allow their cost structure to be open to public scrutiny.

CHEC has told the government that its 17-km sea portion will cost RM2.3 billion while UEM has said that its 7-km land portion and fabrication work will cost nearly RM1 billion and RM1.5 billion respectively. After some nudging from the government, UEM is prepared to reduce the cost of the land portion to RM700 million.

Government officials say that CHEC – which has built some of the longest bridges in the world - has indicated its willingness to have independent parties verify its costing for the sea portion. The Chinese construction company has informed the government that it is still confident of completing the sea portion by 2011 if all the red tape and differences are sorted out within the next two months. UEM is set to make its case before Tan Sri Zaini and the Ministry of Finance this week.

The government said on Saturday that it would proceed with the bridge once the construction cost, design and land acquisition process had been reviewed. Second Finance Minister Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yakcop told reporters: “This does not suggest that the federal government is reviewing the project with the intention of scraping it.” He was referring to speculation that the Federal government was going slow on infrastructure projects in Opposition-held states.

Opinion: Malaysia comes of age with thirst for change

Opinion: Malaysia comes of age with thirst for change


Monday, 28 April 2008 08:51am

©NST
by Mohamed Ariff

As winds of change sweep the Malaysian political scenario, MOHAMED ARIFF stresses the need to ensure that domestic uncertainties do not compound the problems being faced by the economy

TIMES have changed for sure. So have mindsets and paradigms. Malaysian politics will never be the same again. Malaysians are no longer afraid of changes, now that the ghost of May 1969 has been exorcised and banished. It is indeed heartening that Malaysia has come of age, with its people looking beyond mundane issues transcending ethnic boundaries, focusing on such loftier concerns as institutional integrity, social justice and civil rights.

Those who choose to ignore such changes do so at their own peril, as the ruling coalition found out to its chagrin in the March 2008 general election.

The dramatic reduction in the size of the majority in parliament and loss of five states to the opposition has been a traumatic experience for the ruling Barisan Nasional, especially Umno, the dominant member of the coalition. The five states now in the hands of the opposition account for well over half of the economy in terms of gross domestic product.

What does all this mean for the Malaysian economy? The tumble the Malaysian stocks took immediately after the election results was only partially attributable to the knee-jerk reactions of investors. Although all bourses in the region also took a dive on March 10, the sharp fall in the Kuala Lumpur Composite Index was clearly out of sync with the regional trend. Anecdotal evidence shows that investors in Malaysia were unnerved more by the calls on Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to resign than by the election outcomes.

There was no cause for investors, local or foreign, to be upset by the election results, as the political changes posed no threat to the investment environment in terms of potential policy reversals. If the opposition's manifestos were anything to go by, policies towards businesses, the private sector's role, trade and investment flows and macroeconomic management were pretty much the same as those that had long been in place.

The opposition, like the ruling coalition, had promised to work with market forces with business-friendly policies that would ensure a dynamic and resilient economy. What made the election results all the more exciting for investors was the new prospect for better governance, enhanced openness, increased transparency and greater accountability through institutional reforms.

A two-party system is generally viewed as a positive development by investors, as it would provide not only checks and balances but also healthy competition in the political arena in terms of policies aimed at maximising economic welfare.

However, there are concerns among investors relating mainly to "adjustment problems" on both sides of the divide and the "inexperience" of the opposition in governing the states and the nation. Upon closer scrutiny, these concerns are overblown. For one thing, the transition has been fairly smooth judging by the progress thus far. For another, lack of experience is not really an insurmountable hurdle for the opposition, as it can count on the experience and expertise available in the civil service.

Political change does not necessarily imply political instability, if the experience of countries that have enjoyed continued political stability amid political change is any indicator. There is certainly a need to ensure that Malaysia remains politically stable despite political change, as there can be no economic progress without political stability.

What would undermine the Malaysian economy at present is the relentless pressure on Abdullah to step down, which threatens to destabilise the system. There are no valid reasons for him to throw in the towel. He has been given a strong mandate to form the federal government, with a very comfortable 13 per cent margin, which is respectable by international standards.

What is more, he is not to be blamed solely for the electoral losses, as if others in the coalition had nothing to do with the outcomes. That he could not deliver his earlier election promises is not good enough as a reason for him to step down, as it is extremely difficult for any one to walk the talk carrying the heavy baggage of the predecessor.

Investors are worried that a forced change in the country's leadership at this point in time would set in motion forces that would cause an implosion, which would bode ill for the economy. The Malaysian economy is already in the throes of growing external challenges arising from global imbalances, the US credit crunch, soaring price of oil and rising food prices.

Domestic political uncertainties would only compound the problems currently faced by the economy. A smooth transition of power would enable the Malaysian economy to cope with external threats.

It is not difficult to argue why Abdullah should continue to be at the helm for some time to come. Contrary to what his detractors may have to say, Abdullah already has much to his credit since he became prime minister. His leadership differed from that of his predecessor not only in terms of style but also in substance. He decentralised the administration, delegated decision-making, tolerated dissent, loosened controls on the press and created space for civil society, all of which would constitute his legacy in no uncertain terms.

Indications are that history will not judge him harshly and recognise his iconic contributions to the democratic heritage of the nation. Democracy is not about having elections every four or five years. It is about institutional integrity, freedom of expression, rights to have information, best practices, transparency, accountability, etc. He has made some interesting beginnings in this direction and needs more time to move forward. And, he has no other choice, given the country's new political landscape.

Reportedly, there are some 4.9 million unregistered voters in the country. Presumably, they chose not to register as they had given up on the system thinking that their votes would not make a difference. The recent electoral outcomes have shown them that their votes can make a difference and the chances are that they will register and exercise their rights the next time around.

Now that the fear of change has given way to thirst for change, a smart government would respond positively to the new challenge by addressing the real issues, instead of sulking in a state of denial or playing the blame game. A leadership change for the sake of it within Umno will not be a wise move as it cannot solve the problem but would only increase political uncertainties, which investors would be loathe to see.

Emeritus Professor Datuk Dr Mohamed Ariff is executive director of the Malaysian Institute of Economic Research

Kerismuddin to be rejected despite insincere apology

Do you trust this man (picture below) when he says that he regrets the keris incident and now apologies? I know, you will say that this apology is dictated by politics post March 8—and I agree. The Barisan Nasional, in particular UMNO Malay nationalists like Kerismuddin and Khairy Jamaluddin, was rejected by the Malaysian voters. If not for the postal votes, fancy tricks of the Elections Commission headed by Rashid Rahman and vote buying antics of the cash rich Barisan Nasional, Malaysia would be under the Pakatan Rakyat government today. And Kerismuddin would probably have retired or just be an ordinary Member of Parliament if he were elected.

Laughing when he should be crying

In my opinion, Kerismuddin is making a tactical retreat because it is politically expedient for him to express remorse or swallow the bitter pill, so to speak. Imagine what he would have done if the Barisan Nasional had won resoundingly in 2008, as it did in 2004. My guess is that he would be wearing the keris under his coat with arrogance as he heads to his Ministry every morning. UMNO arrogance will be on display again.

Unfortunately, like the rest in Barisan Nasional including our Prime Minister, Kerismuddin totally ignored the signals which our Special Branch and Military Intelligence had given to them of an impending political tsunami. In stead, he and Khairy Jamaluddin were talking “sifar pembangkang” (zero opposition). As if in defiance, Malaysian voters sent 82 Pakatan Rakyat candidates to the 13th Parliament, which opens on April 28, 2008.

If he is serious about his apology and wants to show remorse, then Kerismuddin should resign as Minister of Education whose portfolio is in mess, Member of Parliament and senior UMNO party member and retire quietly from politics. In addition, he should do at least a week’s community service, wearing a vest with the words “I am sorry” printed on its back. Otherwise, this apology is meaningless.–Din Merican

www.malaysiakini.com

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Monday April 28, 2008

Kadar Shah: Hisham should resign

(The Star) MUAR: The Muar division wants Umno Youth chief Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Tun Hussein to resign over the keris issue.

Datuk Kadar Shah Tun Sulaiman Ninam Shah, claiming to speak for several branch leaders, made the call yesterday after Hishammuddin admitted that the keris issue was among the causes of Barisan’s poor performance in the March general election.

To admit the mistake is not good enough if the Youth chief does not take the responsibility and resign from all party and government posts, he said.

Hishammuddin had agreed that the keris issue was one factor which had caused Barisan to lose the people’s support, Kadar Shah said here yesterday.

Kadar Shah said besides resigning, Hishammuddin should also seek forgiveness from all Umno and Barisan members as the DAP had manipulated the keris issue to woo supporters.

He said that as a Cabinet minister for several terms, the Youth chief should be mature enough to know what a leader could do, and brandishing the keris could hurt the feelings of other races.

Penang CM and Perak MB calls for abloition of ISA.

Monday April 28, 2008

Nizar, Guan Eng call for end to preventive laws

IPOH: Two Pakatan Rakyat state leaders have called for the abolition of the Internal Security Act (ISA).

While Perak Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Mohammad Nizar Jamaluddin said certain provisions Act at least needed to be reviewed if not repealed, Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng went step further, asking for the Official Secrets Acts (OSA) to be done away with as well.

Home Minister Datuk Seri Syed Hamid Albar had on Saturday said that preventive laws, including the ISA, would not be abolished.

Commenting on a claim by PKR de facto leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim that Pakatan Rakyat would abolish preventive laws should it rule the country, Syed Hamid had said that such laws serve the purpose of maintaining public order.

Lim said he regretted Syed Hamid's decision.

“The fact that you have the ISA and OSA (shows that) you want to frighten the people,” he told a press conference at the Mount Miriam Hospital “Ho Chiak” Charity Food and Fun Fair in Penang yesterday.

“Of course, you cannot frighten political leaders, especially those who have been held under the ISA before,” he added.

Nizar noted that the ISA detention camp was in Kamunting, Perak, and as the new mentri besar he had to answer to the families of the detainees.

“Most definitely the parents and other family members to the more than 80 detainees would come to me and ask what is happening there,” he said in his speech at the Tow Boo Keong temple.

“Please, if there is any room for review over the provisions in the act, do it. Or abolish the ISA completely.”

Nizar added that at the very least the detainees should be given the opportunity to interact with their lawyers and allow their cases to be tried in court.

“Now, they are detained without trial. This is not justice,” he said.

Nizar revealed that he had first broached the matter with the Prime Minister during their first hour-long meeting on April 18, adding that he was the first mentri besar to do so.

In TAIPING, a group gathered in front of the Kamunting detention centre at 5.45pm pressing for the release of all ISA detainees.

Hindraf coordinator S. Jeyathas told reporters that the ISA should be abolished and he hoped newly-elected MPs would look into the matter.

Selfish, corrupt racial politicians are not welcome anywhere in the world.

Looks like BN is still in its old mentality. It is not used to not holding on to money and power. If they can sabotage, they will. They have improved in their own little ways, they know how to bypass laws and they sure look for ways to hold on to money meant for the people. Voters should know what to do in the next election - a total wipe out of corrupt, selfish, racial dictators!!

Some people just won't learn even till they are annihilated.

Monday April 28, 2008 MYT 10:03:19 AM

Guan Eng: It’s a new form of colonialism

By CAROLYN OOI

PENANG: Re-routing the Entrepreneur and Cooperative Development Ministry funds via a different body such as Mara is a new form of colonialism, Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng said.

Lim hoped Minister Datuk Noh Omar would reconsider the decision as such a move would give a wrong impression to the public.

For years, it has been the practice by the Ministry to channel funds worth RM100 mil a year to the respective State Economic Development Corporations.

The money was used for purposes such as upgrading facilities and financing programmes for the benefit of the people.

However, on Saturday Noh announced that the funds would be channelled via Mara, to prevent the rakyat from being "victimised". He did not explain what he meant by the word "victimised".

Such a move was tantamount to forming a parallel government, Lim told reporters during the Mount Miriam Hospital "Ho Chiak" Charity Food and Fun Fair on Sunday.

Lim said that even now there was a separate tourism action council in the state, and the council did not have representatives from the state.

“If this goes on and they (federal government) set up a parallel system and parallel frameworks or other councils, it would be seen as a form of colonialism.

He said the state government would not object to the setting up of similar type of action councils but there should be state representation.

The rise of the Gulf

Gulf economies

The rise of the Gulf

Apr 24th 2008
From The Economist print edition

The Gulf is managing its wealth better during this boom than it did during the last one


MOST countries earn their keep through effort and ingenuity. Those of the Gulf owe their living to geological serendipity. The harder China works, the faster India grows, the higher oil prices climb.

The Gulf swells with confidence or despair depending on the price of “Arabian light” or “Oman blend”. Five years ago, though up from its $9 low in the 1990s, the oil price stood at a mere $26 a barrel. Many of the Gulf's governments were indebted and insecure. Saudi Arabia was facing an al-Qaeda insurgency. Expatriates, used to a secure if sequestered life, tried not to think about the tanks parked outside their compounds. Now the same oil fetches over $100 a barrel and confidence has returned. The insurgency in Saudi Arabia has been quashed. The Gulf is once again a source of envy more than concern.

Surely only good can come from so much cash? Hardly. In the 1970s the Gulf's money was a disaster for Latin America, for, recycled through Western banks, it caused a decade-long debt crisis. The Gulf itself suffered by inflicting stagflation on the West, thus causing a 20-year-long slump in oil prices. They built white elephants such as the King Khalid airport in Riyadh, one of whose terminals has been mothballed since the airport opened in 1983. They allowed a greedy few, many of them arms dealers, to pocket huge fortunes. They distorted their economies in the name of diversification, for example by growing wheat in the desert.

A better Xanadu

Are the Gulf countries handling their windfall any better this time? The sheer quantity of cash is hard to manage. It is too plentiful for small economies to spend, and has therefore added to the glut of global saving that is in part responsible for the financial excesses of recent years. Indeed, some economists see an analogy with the 1970s. Gulf petrodollars have been recycled not to improvident governments in Latin America but instead to improvident homebuyers in the uncreditworthy fringes of America.

The Gulf is doing its best to spend its windfall. Stately pleasure domes are springing up all along the coast. Saudi Arabia announces six, no seven!, new economic cities, which it hopes will create millions of jobs for its restive, youthful population. There are worrying echoes of the wasteful 1970s. But this time round, more of the spending is being done by private companies, with an eye to consumer demand, rather than by states.

Awash with capital, the Gulf countries need labour. Thanks to a liberal attitude to guest workers, in the UAE, for instance, over 90% of the private labour force is made up of foreigners. Some of the follies these Indians, Bangladeshis, Chinese and Filipinos build will not earn much return, but at least they help spread the wealth around. And now that American spending is faltering, a splurge is welcome. As Adam Smith said, outlays on “trinkets of frivolous utility” are what “keeps in continual motion the industry of mankind.”

Still, the Gulf's splurge might be better spent if governments were doing even less of the splurging. Despite tentative reforms, too much money remains in state hands. The Saudis have become friendlier to business, taking steps to liberalise the financial system, airlines and telecommunications. But the government is still too fond of its grandiose projects and too slow to get unglamorous things right. It takes an age, for example, to enforce a contract in the country's courts.

By the same token, it would help if local currencies were allowed to strengthen. Currency reform is not just a way to constrain inflation, but also a means of redistributing spending. At present, the petrodollars are converted into local money at a fixed rate and doled out as governments see fit. With stronger local currencies the state would get fewer dirhams, dinars or riyals for every petrodollar. But Gulf residents would be able to buy more with their money, and guest workers could send more rupees home to families in Kerala.

There is another way to transfer economic initiative from governments to people. At present the Gulf states buy social peace by doling out generous benefits and subsidies, such as cheap housing and medical care, expanding the public payroll and forcing private companies to hire locals in the name of Omanisation or Saudi-isation. Too many Gulf nationals receive a government pay cheque for a meaningless job, or owe their jobs in private firms to a hiring quota. They pretend to work and have neither the time nor the incentive to start businesses or acquire skills.

Could there be a better way? Last winter, 604,000 Alaskans each pocketed a $1,654 cheque from the state's Permanent Fund, which invests Alaska's oil revenues on their behalf. Each year, the fund distributes a fraction of its profits, averaged over five years, to every resident. They do not have to work for it, and are free to spend it as they wish. This notion is as foreign to the Gulf as a glacier to the desert. But in a region that likes to impress people with outlandish projects, paying a simple dividend cheque to every Gulf national would be a more audacious venture than the tallest new tower.

Buy some insurance, while you're at it

Given the impressive levels of spending on education in the Gulf, it is hard to imagine that its middle classes will put up with so little control over their countries' wealth—or, indeed, their governments—for long. There are some signs of change, but they are small. By Saudi standards, King Abdullah is a reformer; by any other standards, he moves exceedingly slowly. There is external danger, too. When Saddam Hussein sent his tanks streaming into Kuwait, he was cheered on by many Arabs whose own countries never won a geological lottery and who continue to resent the undeserving fat cats with oil.

Today's dangers are different. Saddam is gone. But the Gulf states are threatened by the chaotic politics in Iraq and by the rivalry between America and Iran for influence in the region. In their volatile part of the planet, the sheikhs cannot buy perfect security. But they might consider investing a bit more of their windfall in stabilising Iraq and the broader Middle East, not just in their fabulous pleasure domes.

Umno’s really losing the plot

Umno’s really losing the plot
27 April, 2008

They decided that the only way to grab back Selangor and ensure that Selangor remains in Malay hands would be to isolate the non-Malays. And this would be done by kicking out Kuala Lumpur from Selangor and then by creating a new ‘Malay city’ called Shah Alam.

THE CORRIDORS OF POWER

Raja Petra Kamarudin

I have been attending quite a few Umno brainstorm sessions, organised for the specific purpose of conducting a postmortem on the 8 March 2008 general elections. Of course, not all were open forums like the Hotel Singgahsana and Holiday Villa ones. Many were closed-door sessions. Nevertheless, there is no such thing as ‘closed-door’ to Malaysia Today. We not only have our tentacles in the meeting rooms and boardrooms but in the bedrooms as well.

For example, one closed-door session chaired by Muhammad son of Muhammad, the ‘expired’ politician who managed to convince an Australian court that he speekee no Ingleesh, and handpicked by Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to head the ‘Grab Back Selangor from the Opposition’ campaign, came to the conclusion that Malaysia Today was a contributing factor in Barisan Nasional’s disastrous performance.

And what should they do about it? The Vice-Youth Chief of Umno PJ Utara came out with the perfect solution. “Arrest Raja Petra!” suggested the sorry excuse for a Melayu Baru. Yes, why are the Chinese making so much noise about the high Malay and low non-Malay quota in local universities? Can’t the non-Malays see that education is wasted on the Malays? The more you educate the Malays, the more stupid they become. The Melayu Lama like Tun Ghaffar Baba, who only received a Standard Six education, have proven to be cleverer than these Melayu Baru. It is better that the Chinese and Indians are denied places in local universities than they become stupid like the ‘educated’ Malays -- especially if they receive an education in universities headed by BTN operatives like Nordin Kardi.

And why do these ‘highly-educated’ Umno people want me arrested? Because the voters exercised their democratic right in a general election. It seems it is a crime for the voters to vote for any other than Umno and Barisan Nasional. Why then hold the elections? Why not Umno and Barisan Nasional just abolish the elections and the government rule perpetually? Then no crime can be committed because no one would then be able to vote and therefore they will not be able to vote against Umno and Barisan Nasional.

Has it not occurred to these Melayu Baru that not only is voting your right but voting for whomsoever you like is also your right? There has been no crime committed here. So why must I be arrested when what the voters did was merely to exercise their democratic right as enshrined in the Federal Constitution of Malaysia? Read the Constitution properly. It says that elections will be held after three years and before five years from the last election and all eligible citizens may register as voters and exercise their right to vote. It does not say anywhere in the Constitution that the voters must vote for Umno or Barisan Nasional.

As I said, education is wasted on these Melayu Baru from Umno and the Chinese and Indians should thank Umno for the biased New Economic Policy and the manipulation of racial quotas in local universities. I, for one, do not wish for my children or grandchildren to receive a local university education if the end product would be graduates with the narrow and outdated mentality the likes of these Umno Melayu Baru.

Anyway, back to the Umno brainstorm sessions I attended. The latest one was yesterday at the Holiday Villa in Subang and the guest of honour was Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah (see photographs here ). First of all, Muhammad son of Muhammad instructed the Umno branch and division heads and committee members to boycott the event, so the hall was not full in spite of it being quite a small hall (they actually announced this in the gathering). Most of the key people were absent save for those such as Tamrin Ghaffar, Mazlan Harun, Fahmi Ibrahim, Kadar Shah, etc. -- who most of you have probably never heard of. I would not go so far as to classify them as ‘expired goods’ but they would certainly not be in the same league as the powerbrokers, kingpins and warlords.

The theme of the entire session was that the Malays have lost political power. In 2004 there were 119 Malay Members of Parliament if the number of seats that Umno and PAS won are combined. This time around the number of Malay Parliamentarians were reduced to 101. They very cleverly left out the 20 Malay Members of Parliament from PKR which would bring the 2008 total to 121, which is higher than in 2004.

Maybe Umno considers PAS a Malay party. Therefore the 23 PAS Parliamentarians are included in the head count -- while PKR is considered a Chinese-Indian party so the 20 Malay Parliamentarians from PKR are considered ‘non-Malays’. Anyway, the bottom-line is: there was an increase in Malay Members of Parliament this time around, so this ‘Malays have lost their political power’ argument is an outright lie. The figures speak for themselves. We have more Malay Parliamentarians now than in 2004. Period.

But does it really matter what race these Members of Parliament are? What is important is that they do their job, serve the people, and run this country well. I would rather have a sincere, dedicated, honest, hardworking, and God-fearing Chinese, Indian, Christian, Hindu, Buddhist Wakil Rakyat than a slimeball, scumbag, crooked, hypocritical, manipulative, Malay-Muslim whose sole purpose in life is to cheat, rob, rape, plunder and murder people who get in their way and interfere with their plans. And is this not what we have witnessed over 50 years, in particular the last 40 years or so since they ousted the perfect Malay gentleman called Tunku Abdul Rahman?

While on the subject of the Tunku, allow me to talk about what was revealed at yesterday’s session in Holiday Villa. Other than Tengku Razaleigh, who read out his speech from a prepared text, the other two speakers were Mazlan Harun and Fahmi Ibrahim. Mazlan is the son of the infamous Datuk Harun Idris, the engineer and architect of the equally infamous ‘May 13’ race riots in 1969. Fahmi Ibrahim was Datuk Harun’s political secretary.

The MC had a very strange way of introducing Tengku Razaleigh. The MC, who spoke too much and spoke more than what he should, introduced Tengku Razaleigh as a very short man and short men, said the MC, are known to be very smart. Now, what has a man’s height got to do with how smart he is? Next, the MC said that Tengku Razaleigh may be considered too old at 71, but that does not mean he still does not have a few good years left in him.

I was beginning to wonder whether the MC was trying to promote Tengku Razaleigh or whether Muhammad son of Muhammad had slipped him a few Australian Dollars with instructions to sabotage the event by running down Tengku Razaleigh.

Fahmi Ibrahim then spoke about how the Malays once lost political power in 1969 and Tun Razak, who had ousted the Tunku and had taken over as Prime Minister, summoned Datuk Harun and told him to come out with a plan on how the Malays can grab back political power and prevent this fiasco ever happening again.

They decided that the only way to grab back Selangor and ensure that Selangor remains in Malay hands would be to isolate the non-Malays. And this would be done by kicking out Kuala Lumpur from Selangor and then by creating a new ‘Malay city’ called Shah Alam. They sat down to redraw the Kuala Lumpur boundary and two weeks later they submitted the new Kuala Lumpur master plan to Tun Razak.

The federal government then annexed Kuala Lumpur and in the same process the non-Malays were ‘kicked out’ of Selangor. Shah Alam was then developed and flooded with Malays to dilute whatever non-Malays left in Selangor. In fact, constituencies like Bangsar-Brickfields in Kuala Lumpur, which had a majority Chinese-Indian population and which the opposition always won, were also diluted when Malay areas like Pantai, Sungai Pancala (near Kepong), Segambut Dalam (near Jalan Ipoh) and Kampong Pasir (in Old Kelang Road), were merged with Bangsar-Brickfields to become Lembah Pantai.

But now, lamented Fahmi Ibrahim, the Malays are also voting opposition, so these ‘Malay-majority’ areas have fallen to the opposition. This plan works well when the non-Malays vote opposition while the Malays vote government. But when the Malays also vote opposition then the result would be like what we saw on 8 March 2008.

The Umno ‘masterminds’ appear lost. They faced this same problem in 1969 and they solved it then by redrawing the constituencies so that there would be no non-Malay majority areas. And where they can’t do much, like in Kuala Lumpur, they then remove Kuala Lumpur from Selangor. Selangor would then remain in Malay hands while Kuala Lumpur, which will fall into the hands of the non-Malays, can still be controlled through Dewan Bandaraya, the Datuk Bandar, the Minister of Federal Territory, etc. This means, even if all the seats in Kuala Lumpur fall to the opposition, the government will still be able to retain control -- like what is happening now even though 10 out of 11 seats are under opposition control.

Another revelation of Fahmi Ibrahim was that the late Agong, who was then the Sultan of Selangor, cried as he signed over Kuala Lumpur to the federal government. This is actually true and most Malaysians saw this live on TV. The Sultan was terribly unhappy at having to hand over a big chunk of very valuable Selangor territory to the federal government. But there was really nothing much His Majesty could do. The federal government of Tun Razak and the Selangor State Government of Datuk Harun wanted to get rid of Kuala Lumpur so that Selangor could be ‘saved’. Almost 40 years on and they have discovered, much to their horror, that this plan worked for only one generation. One generation later and this senjata sudah makan tuan.

So, now, they are conducting postmortems all over the country to figure out what went wrong. But what they are saying gives an impression that they do not yet have their fingers on the pulse. They are going around in circles like headless chickens trying to figure out what to do. And they keep reflecting on May 1969 when, according to them, the same thing happened. But they had solved the problem in 1969. How come, now, the problem has cropped up again, after almost 40 years or one generation?

Yes, that is how Umno does its postmortems and how it is taking corrective measures to restore the ‘lost Malay political power’. And Hishammuddin Hussein ‘apologises’ that the Chinese misunderstood his keris drama when he was only demonstrating ‘Malay culture’ and which the Chinese should get used to because it may happen again in December this year. And Umno talks about how to grab back the 'Malay states lost to Chinese hands' like how it happened once before in 1969. And Umno tries to sabotage the five opposition-led state governments by squeezing their finances so that the states can be brought to the brink of bankruptcy.

Yes, the more Umno talks, the more damage they create. And the more Umno steals the fives states’ money, the deeper the hole becomes with which we can bury Umno for eternity. Keep talking, Umno. Keep sabotaging the five states. But don’t forget to also look out the window at the very severe economic Tsunami, the extremely high inflation, and the serious food shortage that is coming fast to our shores. By the time Umno wakes up it will be like the morning after Boxing Day when the Tsunami hit this region. There will be nothing left to save amongst those thousands of bodies floating in the flooded fields and rivers. By then it will not matter who is running this country because there may not be any country left to run. And when that happens, the new four-letter word on every Malaysian’s lips will be U-M-N-O.

Raja Aziz Addruse: Let's have certainty in this law

Raja Aziz Addruse: Let's have certainty in this law
27 April, 2008

Since she faced prosecution for apostasy in the syariah court, it was difficult to explain how the question of Kamariah's right to renounce Islam could be dismissed as irrelevant or academic.

By Raja Aziz Addruse, NEW STRAITS TIMES

Kamariah Ali's long legal struggle raises disturbing constitutional questions.
Kamariah Ali's long legal struggle raises disturbing constitutional questions.

KAMARIAH Ali, one of the followers of the Sky Kingdom sect led by Ayah Pin, was convicted of apostasy by the Terengganu Syariah Court on Feb 17, 2008.

Her long and futile legal struggle highlights the need to seriously address the constitutional issue of the right of Muslims to freedom of religion.

Kamariah had years earlier been convicted of deviant practices in the syariah court and sentenced to 20 months' jail. Her appeal against the conviction was dismissed but her sentence was suspended on condition that she appear before the Kadi's Court every month for three years to declare her repentance.

When she breached the condition, a new charge was brought against her. On Nov 5, 2000, when her case was called up, she declared in open court that she had apostatised since August 1998, arguing that she was not subject to the jurisdiction of the syariah court.

Despite having apostatised, she was found guilty of the new charge on Nov 19, 2000 and sentenced to three years' jail. A further charge was brought against her for apostasy, arising from the declaration she had made on Nov 5, 2000.
She made two applications to the civil courts, to seek her release by a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that her conviction and sentence of imprisonment were illegal; and, to ask for a declaration that she had a right to profess and practise the religion of her choice and, therefore, to renounce Islam.

The Kota Baru High Court dismissed both applications and her appeal to the Court of Appeal was also unsuccessful.

But on Nov 5, 2002, she was granted leave to appeal to the Federal Court to determine specific issues, including whether the right to profess a religion under Article 11(1) of the Federal Constitution includes the right of an adult Muslim to renounce his religion; and whether a law imposing any restriction upon the right of such a person to renounce his religion is inconsistent with Article 11(1) of the Constitution and is, therefore, void.

In a joint judgment delivered on July 21, 2004, four of the five judges of the Federal Court who had heard the appeal (the fifth having in the meantime retired), dismissed it.

The court held that although she had apostatised in 1998, Kamariah was still liable for any offence she had committed while she was still a Muslim.

The court said if Muslims charged for syariah offences were allowed to say that they were no longer Muslims to escape the jurisdiction of the syariah court, the whole administration of Islamic law (and possibly other religions as well) would be affected.

In the court's view, the issues posed by the questions were not relevant and were academic.

Kamariah, it said, should raise the issue of her right to freedom of religion at her trial on the apostasy charge.

Since she faced prosecution for apostasy in the syariah court, it was difficult to explain how the question of Kamariah's right to renounce Islam could be dismissed as irrelevant or academic.

What had been expected to be a landmark decision from the highest court of the country turned out to be a great disappointment.

All the efforts put in by Kamariah's lawyers and over eight months of waiting for the judgment proved a waste of time. The Federal Court had showed itself to be unequal to the task of discharging its most important constitutional function.

Kamariah's lawyers had been careful to make sure the questions which the court had to consider and answer were couched in precise terms.

But it was not any ambiguity that was the problem: it was just that the court was avoiding the issue.

One gets the distinct impression that the civil courts have been too quick to decline jurisdiction whenever the issue of Article 11 has cropped up.

In the Lina Joy case, the High Court referred to various provisions of the Constitution which it said were relevant to the reading of Article 11.

But looking at those provisions closely, none of them appears to have any bearing on the issue.

The view, for example, that a Malay, by virtue of the definition of the term "Malay" in Article 160(2), cannot renounce Islam as his or her religion but remains in the Islamic faith until his or her dying days, is contrived.

The definition of "Malay" in Article 160(2) is nothing more than just that: it is intended for the specific purpose of identifying the "Malays" referred to in a number of provisions of the Constitution.

A "Malay" as defined does not even have to be ethnically a Malay. The late Tan Sri Mubin Sheppard, an Englishman, who professed the religion of Islam, habitually spoke the Malay language and conformed to Malay custom, was a Malay for the purpose of the definition.

The Federal Court has a duty to establish some certainty in the law. The current practice of deciding each case on an ad hoc basis, with each decision providing no satisfactory solution, is unacceptable.

The civil courts, if they are to have any credibility, must base their decisions on sound legal principles, uninfluenced by personal prejudices and predilections.

It is not good enough to say, in declining jurisdiction, that allowing a Muslim to come out of Islam would "create chaos and confusion" or would "threaten public order". Those are not acceptable reasons.

The civil courts have the jurisdiction to interpret the Constitution and protect the fundamental liberties, including the right to freedom of religion under Article 11.

That jurisdiction cannot be taken away by inference or implication, as seems to be the argument, but by an express enactment which says that it is the intention of parliament to deprive the courts of their jurisdiction.

The Kamariah case also highlights other aspects of our justice system. When she was convicted of apostasy, the syariah court judge had deferred her sentencing to March 3 to give her a chance to show that she had repented.

In sentencing her to prison for two years, the judge said that he was not convinced that she had repented because she had failed to respond when he greeted her with Assalamualaikum at the start of the court proceedings.

The picture of a lonely woman who has been ostracised from society, being continually harassed to repent, offends our sense of justice and fair play.

No one should be subjected to such humiliation and shame, particularly by a court of law, even a syariah court.

The sentence passed by the syariah court took into account public interest and the sentiments of Muslims in the country. Those are factors which, to lawyers practising civil law, are too nebulous to use as principles for sentencing.

Kamariah had served a two-year jail sentence in 1992, also for apostasy.

No doubt the Federal Court will one day have to rule if a person like Kamariah can be charged again and again for the same, or virtually the same, offence.

The writer is a former Bar Council president and former president of the National Human Rights Society (Hakam).

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Copy Jews and Chinese, Malays told

Sunday April 27, 2008

Copy Jews and Chinese, Malays told

PENANG: The Malays should emulate the Jews and the Chinese who are far-sighted in developing a progressive society.

Second Finance Minister Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yakcop said the Jews, for example, would make development plans that would ensure they would excel for another 1,000 years.

“That's unlike us (the Malays), who only make four- or five-year plans,” he said at a dinner held in conjunction with the Penang Malay Chamber of Commerce’s annual general meeting at a hotel here on Friday night.

He said the Chinese in China also took measures to ensure collective success of their race.

He said that over the last 50 years the standard of living among Malays had improved tremendously.

“The question now is: where we are heading?” he said.

On another matter, Nor Mohamed said Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi had appointed him as the chairman of the Penang Economic Action Council.

Quotes by Peter Lynch

Peter Lynch
  • Never invest in any idea you can't illustrate with a crayon.
  • Investing without research is like playing stud poker and never looking at the cards.
  • Warren Buffett, the greatest investor of them all, looks for the same opportunities I do, except that when he finds them, he buys the whole company.
  • Investing in stocks is an art, not a science, and people who've been trained to rigidly quantify everything have a big disadvantage.
  • To me, an investment is simply a gamble in which you've managed to tilt the odds in your favour.
  • It only takes a handful of big winners to make a lifetime of investing worthwhile.
  • I like buying companies that can be run by monkeys - because one day they will be.
  • Twenty years in this business convinces me that any normal person using the customary three per cent of the brain can pick stocks as well as, if not better, than the average Wall Street expert.
  • There seems to be an unwritten rule on Wall Street: If you don't understand it, put your life savings into it. Shun the enterprise round the corner, which can at least be observed, and seek out one that manufactures an incomprehensible product.
  • Whoever imagines that the average Wall Street professional is looking for reasons to buy exciting stocks hasn't spent much time on Wall Street. The fund manager most likely is looking for reasons not to buy exciting stocks, so that he can offer the proper excuses if those exciting stocks go up.
  • Between the chance of making an unusually large profit on an unknown company and the assurance of losing only a small amount on an established company, the normal mutual-fund manager, pension-fund manager, or corporate-portfolio manager would jump at the latter. Success is one thing, but it's more important not to look bad if you fail.
  • You don't have to invest like an institution. If you invest like an institution, you're doomed to perform like one, which in many cases isn't very well.
  • In stocks you've got the company's growth on your side. You're a partner in a prosperous and expanding business. In bonds, you're nothing more than the nearest source of spare change. When you lend money to somebody, the best you can hope for is to get it back, plus interest.
  • The list of qualities [an investor ought to have] include patience, self-reliance, common sense, a tolerance for pain, open-mindedness, detachment, persistence, humility, flexibility, a willingness to do independent research, an equal willingness to admit mistakes, and the ability to ignore general panic.
  • When it comes to predicting the market, the important skill is not listening, but snoring. The trick is not to learn to trust your gut feelings, but rather to discipline yourself to ignore them. Stand by your stocks as long as the fundamental story of the company hasn't changed.
  • When ten people would rather talk to a dentist about plaque than to the manager of an equity mutual fund about stocks, it's likely that the market is about to turn up. When the neighbours tell me what to buy and then I wish I had taken their advice, it's a sure sign that the market has reached a top and is due for a tumble.
  • If you're considering a stock on the strength of some specific product that a company makes, the first thing to find out is: what effect will the success of the product have on the company's bottom line?
  • If I could avoid a single stock, it would be the hottest stock in the hottest industry, the one that gets the most favourable publicity, the one that every investor hears about in the car pool or on the commuter train - and succumbing to the social pressure, often buys.
  • Although it's easy to forget sometimes, a share of a stock is not a lottery ticket. It's part ownership of a business.
  • If you remember nothing else about p/e ratios, remember to avoid stocks with excessively high ones. A company with a high p/e must have incredible earnings growth to justify its high price.
  • I got positive feelings when I saw that Taco Bell's headquarters was stuck behind a bowling alley. When I saw those executives operating out of that grim little bunker, I was thrilled. Obviously they weren't wasting money on landscaping the office.
  • When you buy a stock for its book value, you have to have a detailed understanding of what those values really are. At Penn Central, tunnels through mountains and useless rail cars counted as assets.
  • If you can find a company that can get away with raising prices year after year without losing customers (an addictive product such as cigarettes fills the bill), you've got a terrific investment.
  • Some people automatically sell the 'winners' - stocks that go up - and hold on to their 'losers' - stocks that go down - which is about as sensible as pulling out the flowers and watering the weeds. Others automatically sell their losers and hold on to their winners, which doesn't work out much better. Both strategies fail because they're tied to the current movement of the stock price as an indicator of the company's fundamental value.
  • If you know why you bought a stock in the first place, you'll automatically have a better idea of when to say goodbye to it.
  • Warren Buffett thinks that stock futures and options ought to be outlawed, and I agree with him.
  • Just because the price goes up doesn't mean you're right. Just because it goes down doesn't mean you're wrong. Stock prices often move in opposite directions from the fundamentals but long term the direction and sustainability of profits will prevail.

Mahathir wants western leaders on war crime charges

Mahathir wants western leaders on war crime charges
26 April, 2008

LONDON - FORMER Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad called here for an international tribunal to try Western leaders with war crimes over the war in Iraq, a spokesman for the organisers said.

In a speech at Imperial College on Friday, Dr Mahathir called for a tribunal to try United States President George W. Bush plus former prime ministers Tony Blair of Britain and John Howard of Australia for their part in the conflict, said a spokesman for the Muslim group the Ramadhan Foundation, which set up the event.

Spokesman Mohammed Shafiq said that Dr Mahathir, who was in office from 1981 to 2003, wants to see the trio tried 'in absence for war crimes committed in Iraq'.

'It was a opportunity for students to put a range of questions about war crimes and the international situation.

'He said that people have to stop killing each other and use arbitration, negotiation and discussion as an alternative to violence, war and killing.'

On the war in Iraq, Dr Mahathir spoke about 'the thousands dying, the economic war, the power of oil and how we could utilise some of these tools to have a leverage against the people who commit countries to war', Mr Shafiq said.

He purposely did not speak about or answer questions from students on the political situation in Malaysia, said Mr Shafiq.

Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is facing growing demands to quit, following an unprecedented electoral setback in March.

More than 450 people attended the speech and about 200 more had to be turned away.

Dr Mahathir was in Cuba earlier this week to take part in the first International Conference of the Cuban Centre for Studies on Defence Information.

The Ramadhan Foundation is a leading British Muslim youth organisation working for peaceful co-existence and dialogue between communities. -- AFP

Selangor has no need to pay concessionaire RM200m

Saturday April 26, 2008

Selangor has no need to pay concessionaire RM200m

By ELAN PERUMAL

THE Selangor Government will not pay any compensation to highway concessionaire Grand Saga Sdn Bhd.

State Local Government committee chairman Ronnie Liu said the state government had no contract with Grand Saga, the concessionaire for the Cheras-Kajang Highway in Cheras.

Under the circumstance, he said the state government had the right to open the access road in Bandar Mahkota Cheras so that the residents would be provided with the option of a toll-free access to the area.

“It is absurd to pay compensation totalling RM200mil to the concessionaire when there is no contract.

Liu: ‘It is absurd to pay compensation’

“The contract is between Grand Saga and the Federal Government and therefore there is no reason why we cannot provide an access road on our land,'' he told StarMetro.

He stressed that the state was determined to open the access road, adding that the Selangor government was firm in its decision on the matter.

“We are the people's government and our stand will favour the people and there is no way things will change on our side,'' he said

Besides that, Liu said the highway builder, Narajaya Sbd Bhd, had not obtained approval for the construction of the highway from the Kajang Municipal Council.

He said they had in fact failed to get the nod from the Malaysian Highway Authority before the highway was constructed.

“To make matters worse, the developer did not submit an application to the council for the construction of the highway,'' he said

He added that after detailed research, he found former Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Mohamad Khir Toyo's claim that the concessionaire must be compensated RM200mil if the access is to be opened as baseless.

Dr Khir was quoted as saying that when the road was first opened in 2005, the concessionaire had asked for RM200mil in compensation for loss of toll collection based on the formula in the concession agreement.

“That is why we decided that the toll-free access road should be closed as it would be unfair to use taxpayers money to pay such a huge sum,” he said at a press conference this week.

He said the state had asked the developer, Narajaya Sdn Bhd, to pay the sum but the company also found the figure too high.

The present state government, he said, had promised to open the access road recently but added that it should not use public funds as it was unfair to the rest of the taxpayers in the state who would not benefit from it.

Anwar’s power game goes on

Anwar’s power game goes on
25 April, 2008

Many civil society leaders and ordinary Malaysians have questioned Anwar’s stated methods, seeing it as an unethical way to undermine democracy, free elections and respect for the public mandate.

BARADAN KUPPUSAMY, THE MALAY MAIL

DEFACTO opposition leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim has put his credibility on the line by once again claiming he has the “numbers” to topple the government, meaning at least 30 Barisan Nasional backbenchers are ready to defect for him to form and head the next government.

Previously, Anwar had said the defection could happen “today, tomorrow or next week” without giving a definite deadline.

But in a carefully managed media event on Wednesday and, significantly, while on a visit to Sabah and Sarawak, Anwar firmed his position by saying the Pakatan Rakyat, which controls 82 seats in the 222-seat Parliament, would be ready to form the next government by Sept 16, Malaysia Day, this year.

“God willing, we will be there. If not next month, the following month, then if not June or July, (it will be) on Merdeka (Aug 31) or Malaysia Day. I think we should not go beyond that (Sept 16),” he told reporters on arrival in Sabah.

Before getting on the plane, Anwar gave an interview to French news agency AFP and on the plane he was interviewed by an AP wire reporter.

To all, the message was the same — he was ready to be the next prime minister and the way was through defections which would happen sooner, not later.

A master at using the inter national media, Anwar has sent a message to the world that in the new Malaysia, he would be the man to deal with.

While Anwar burnished his credentials, Barisan National leaders from Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi down wards were left denying that no government backbencher was defecting, let alone in numbers that could topple the government.

More importantly, Sabah BN political leaders from Chief Min ister Datuk Musa Aman to Tan Sri Bernard Dompok and Datuk Maximus Ongkili have repeatedly said Anwar was bluffing.

Nevertheless, Deputy Prime Min ister Datuk Seri Najib Razak said last week that BN was vigilant. When asked whether a snap election would be a possibility if defections did happen, he said: “We can’t rule it out.”

Many civil society leaders and ordinary Malaysians have questioned Anwar’s stated methods, seeing it as an unethical way to undermine democracy, free elections and respect for the public mandate.

“We elected a responsible op position to act as a check and balance, not an opposition that undermines democracy and engineers defection,” said a senior bank officer, who is involved with the People’s Parliament movement started by human rights lawyer Haris Ibrahim.

“Anwar should play the role of a responsible opposition leader in Parliament. He should stand for election and get elected and sit in Parliament and prepare for the next election. He should face the people and let the people decide whether he should be prime minister.

“What he is doing now is anti-people and anti-democracy. What is he offering to engineer defections? People are not changing loyalties because they love him or believe in his cause.

“If he is offering positions or money it could be a crime under the law.”

At the ‘Black 14’ rally in Kampung Baru last Monday, Anwar answered some of these issues but his replies fell flat.

He posed the question ‘some people say it is immoral to engineer defection?’ and answered it by arguing that he was arrested, stripped naked, beaten and thrown into jail on trumped-up charges.

“Is that moral?” Anwar asked and the crowd shouted back “No! No!”

The ethics of engineering defections aside, can Anwar pull it off? Is he bluffing and if so, what are his motives? Looking at the numbers, defections seem near-impossible.

While Anwar needs 30 from the BN to form a one-seat majority government, the BN only needs eight from the opposition to en joy a two-third majority in Parliament again.

For Anwar to form a stable government, he needs at least 50 backbenchers to cross over and give him a 20-seat majority in Parliament. Otherwise his government will suffer from the same malaise — an unstable govern ment that is easily held to ransom by a clique.

It is not that Anwar is unaware of all of this. He has been hard at work trying to make the numbers and his emissaries have met back benchers and their point people.

Meetings have been held in Singapore, Indonesia and the Middle East — countries Malaysian leaders travel frequently to without raising suspicions.

“The meetings are aimed at finding out where East Malaysian backbenchers stand given the changed political landscape,” said a senior aide to Anwar.

A Sabah political leader, however, said the is sue was not just about changing political loyal ties for money or positions.

He explained: “Before there was only one political centre — Umno. Now there is Umno and Anwar. For the first time we have a choice and we can choose. We are the king-makers, we get VIP treatment and we have the ears of the prime minister and Anwar.

“Anwar is offering us 20% in oil royalties. It is an irresistible offer,” he said, adding that currently they only get 5% of “our own oil.”

“We are attracted to 20% but we are not falling for it just yet. Anwar was finance minister for eight years but he never offered us more then the 5%. Now he wants to give 20%. Why not 30% or even 50%?” he said.

“The political tsunami that hit the country recently has also woken us up,” said another Sabah politician.

“We are not naïve natives anymore to fall for the first sarong salesman that comes along. Don’t expect us to fall all over Anwar. He needs us more than we need him,” said the deputy minister in the State Cabinet.

It is clear that crossovers in the numbers that Anwar needs is difficult, almost impossible.

It is made more difficult, in the case of Sa bah and Sarawak, by the fact that both State governments are controlled by BN. Their MPs will not defect unless the State governments also fall to Pakatan Rakyat.

So why is Anwar persistent in saying he has the “numbers” to topple the BN government?

Political insiders say, it is to keep up the spir its of Pakatan Rakyat supporters who have fought long and hard so that Federal power is finally within reach.

Another possible reason is that Anwar is just impatient, as before, and is stepping on it at the cost of his credibility.

RM10m gone in 3 days

RM10m gone in 3 days
25 April, 2008

R. Nadeswaran and Terence Fernandez, The Sun

PETALING JAYA (April 24, 2008): Three days after their husbands lost power to rule Selangor, the wives got into the act – plotting to dissolve a welfare body and remove almost RM10 million from its bank accounts.

But their attempts have been thwarted by Mentri Besar Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim who wrote to the Registrar of Societies (ROS) to question the validity of the decision to dissolve the Association of Wives of State Assemblymen and Members of Parliament in Selangor (Balkis).

It is learnt that Abdul Khalid has ordered a thorough investigation and audit into the affairs of the association which was set up in 1985 to undertake welfare work.

According to documents sighted by theSun, Datin Seri Zaharah Kechik, the wife of former mentri besar Datuk Seri Dr Mohamad Khir Toyo had on March 11 convened an extraordinary general meeting of the committee to dissolve Balkis and close its bank accounts. The following day, the accounts were closed, with the money transferred to another account and then to Bakti – the federal Organisation of Wives of Ministers which Balkis is affiliated to.

On March 13, the former exco members of Balkis issued a notice of dissolution to the ROS, which included amending the constitution of Balkis and establishing a new organisation – Balkis-BN, is among the names suggested.

“This was to prevent the Balkis premises (Kompleks Wawasan Balksi - KWB) and the association itself from being taken over by the new state government,” said an insider.

“Once this was done, then the money will be transferred back to the new organisation,” the insider added.

However, the ROS in a letter stated that Balkis' application for dissolution was incomplete and gave it 30 days to furnish additional information.

The constitution of Balkis states that the mentri besar's wife should be the president. Sources in the state government argue that since Mohamad Khir is no longer MB, Zaharah is no longer the president and has no power whatsoever to dissolve the association or liquidate its funds. Incidentally, the constitution also states that the organisation must remain apolitical.

Legal experts say by right, following the events of March 8, the exco headed by Zaharah should have convened an emergency meeting to discuss the handing over of Balkis to a new exco – with the new president being Abdul Khalid’s wife Puan Sri Salbiah Tunut.

Bakti, meanwhile, according to minutes of a recent meeting it held, had under advice of a sitting judge received the RM9.9 million from Balkis, which it has placed in a fixed deposit. The money would then be transferred back to the new organisation set up by the former Balkis members.

Bakti would also take over a Special Education Project involving millions of ringgit until the “new” Balkis is formed.

This is clearly goes against Balkis’ constitution which states that in the event of a dissolution, all monies must be transferred to the government or a similar fund, with the approval of the Inland Revenue Board director-general.

Meanwhile, it is learnt that Abdul Khalid had in his letter to the ROS on Wednesday (April 23) said of the amount in Balkis’ accounts, about RM850,000 was donated by state government companies – Kumpulan Darul Ehsan Bhd which gave RM268,862 last year and Perbadanan Kemajuan Negri Selangor (PKNS) which contributed RM590,379.50 between 2006 and 2007.

It is understood that Abdul Khalid is also investigating the transfer of 43,560sq ft of land in Section 7, Shah Alam, which the state government had in 2002 offered to Balkis at a nominal cost of RM250,000 (RM5.74/sq ft) for the setting up of a shelter home for women that cost RM5 million.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Hishammuddin's apology was politically correct, but his reasons were not.

Hishammuddin's apology was politically correct, but his reasons were not.

Hishammuddin made an apology (see report below) with regards to his keris-kissing act because it caused the party much loss in votes.

However the reasons he gave undermined his sincerity. He said non-Malays were "fearful" (you cowards), and Malays are not able to uphold their symbol of heritage (cowards, not loyal, traitors). "Sad lesson" to you all Malaysians- "I would have done so much for you all you-know-who!" "Until the time when the benefits of such act is realised by those concerned, such symbolic kissing will temporary be shelved."

"Till we have more power again.....just wait and see."

I also apologise for reading too much between the lines of his apology. Malaysians are mostly very forgiving. We forgive for good reasons and we can forgive for wrong reasons. This is what made Malaysia different. And that is why certain politicians are still representing the people when they should have other better things to do.


Saturday April 26, 2008

Hisham regrets wielding keris, he apologises to all Malaysians

By TEH ENG HOCK

KUALA LUMPUR: Umno Youth chief Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Tun Hussein has admitted that his raising of the keris was among the causes of the Barisan Nasional’s poor performance in the general election.

Apologising to all Malaysians for his action, he said: “If it affected anyone, I cannot run away from the reality of it. I apologise to the non-Malays and the Malays.

“To the non-Malays because of the fear to a symbol which was not my intention. And to the Malays for not being able to uphold their symbol of heritage.”

Describing it as a “sad lesson”, he said as a leader, he must be gracious and accept the consequences because the party came first.

The wielding of the keris was introduced at the Umno Youth assembly in 2005 to symbolise Malay tradition. At the start of the assembly, a procession carrying the keris would proceed to the hall to hand it to the Youth chief, who would then unsheathe and kiss it.

In the 2006 assembly, there was uneasiness among non-Malays when some speakers made racially slanted remarks about using the keris. Things were made worse as the proceedings of the assembly were telecast live.

MCA and several other Barisan component party leaders criticised the use of the keris in such a manner.

However, Hishammuddin had then defended his action, saying the keris was a symbol of Malay culture.

Hishammuddin, who is the Education Minister, however did not want to say if the tradition of kissing the keris would be stopped at future Umno Youth assemblies.

“This is not the forum to discuss it,” he told reporters after chairing a BN Youth central committee meeting at Menara Dato Onn.

Among those present were MCA Youth chief Datuk Liow Tiong Lai, MIC Youth chief Datuk S.A. Vigneswaran, and Umno Youth deputy chief Khairy Jamaluddin.

Hishammuddin also said the BN Youth proposed that the coalition’s representatives from Sabah and Sarawak be given more recognition.

“We recognise the role and contribution of Sabah and Sarawak BN (in the general election), and they are now the anchor and backbone of BN,” he added.

He said Barisan leaders in the peninsula could share and learn from the experience of their Sabah and Sarawak counterparts on issues such as religion and racial relations.

Impractical to turn Malaysia into Islamic state: opposition leader

Impractical to turn Malaysia into Islamic state: opposition leader
Malaysia Sun
Friday 25th April, 2008
(IANS)

Malaysia's newly formed three-party opposition alliance Pakatan Rakyat (PR) that includes the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Parry (PAS), which is committed to an Islamic state, has said it would strive to retain a multi-racial character.

The other two parties in the alliance, which goes to the 12th parliament with an unprecedented 82 members and control of four states, are the Parti Keadalan Rakyat (PKR) and the Democratic Action Party (SAP).

'We must recognise that Islam is the country's official religion but it is impractical to turn multiracial and multi-religious Malaysia into an Islamic state, everything must be based on the federal constitution,' the alliance's parliamentary leader Wan Azizah Wan Ismail said in an interview to Chinese language daily Sin Chew.

Visualising a government headed by her husband and former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim, Wan Azizah said it would champion the cause of 'Ketuanan Rakyat' (people's supremacy) instead of shouting for 'Ketuanan Melayu' (Malay supremacy).

She said: 'Although it is PAS' ideology to create an Islamic state, it can only be practiced in the overwhelming Malay-majority state of Kelantan, and not the whole of Malaysia due to the country's multiracial makeup.'

In a multiracial society, she said, PKR's coalition partner PAS will definitely not be able to set up an Islamic state, The Sun daily said quoting the interview Friday.

'The fact is, we all accept that Islam is the official religion of Malaysia, and the three parties should cooperate within the framework of the constitution,' she said.

'The reality is that the Malaysian society is made up of Malays, Chinese, Indians and other minority races, making it impossible to establish an Islamic state.'

Anwar Ibrahim has claimed that many lawmakers of the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) want to cross over following the electoral upset last month.

He said his alliance would remove the government of Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi by September.

Majority Muslim Malays, the indigenous people called 'boomiputera' or sons of the soil, form over 60 percent of the Malaysian population of 28 million that has significant ethnic minorities of 33 percent Chinese and eight percent Indians.

While many Chinese practice Buddhism, there are significant groups of Christians. Tamil Hindus account for over two million and there is a Sikh community of 100,000.

An Open Letter to Chandra Muzaffar

An Open Letter to Chandra Muzaffar

Dear Dr Chandra,

I remember the first time I saw you speaking. I was in sixth form and you were speaking in a public forum at the Komtar Dome in Penang. I was in awe of your intellectual courage. You spoke the language of justice and equality in an environment where equality seemed a dirty word.

Fast forward two decades later, reading your analysis of BN [Barisan Nasional]'s dismal showing at the polls ("The Polls - and the BN debacle", The Star, March 17, 2008), I must say, I was disappointed.

You seemed to have regressed. And your words belie a lack of understanding and sympathy for fellow Malaysians who long to be counted as equal citizens of this country.

I had no problems when you criticised [Parti Keadilan Rakyat de facto leader Datuk Seri] Anwar Ibrahim although it was clear you took advantage of the platform readily offered to you by the pro-BN media. You are entitled to your opinions and I believe you had your reasons to warn us against Anwar.

Although your choice of platform dents your integrity, I am all too willing to give you the benefit of the doubt. After all, I too, do not trust Anwar Ibrahim entirely, just as I distrust any DAP, PKR, PAS or BN leader. I would rather invest my time, not in bolstering support for any political party or leader, but in strengthening the democratic structures of this country – the media, the judicial system, the electoral process, the right to information. For only these structures can guarantee a nation free from the corruption of power and the tyrannies of all too powerful governments.

Back to your article in The Star, I thought your analysis of the Opposition's sterling performance was myopic. You suggest that the Opposition managed to attract votes because they harnessed ethnic discontentment "to the hilt" – from the Hindraf debacle and the Malay response towards it, to the keris waving incident and the non-Malay reaction against it.

You seem to see everything through a racial lens. And instead of moving beyond it, you are imprisoned by it. Your analysis of why non-Malays voted heavily for the Opposition is that it was a vote of protest and racial dissatisfaction. But I think you fail to realise that many of us voted for a new politics, one that is non-racial, non-discriminatory and inclusive.

Referring to Anwar as being a successful personality in harnessing this racial dissatisfaction, you said: "…whenever a prominent Malay leader articulates non-Malay grievances, the Chinese and Indian anti-establishment vote shoots up significantly. It is as if they are encouraged, even emboldened, by the stance of the Malay leader."

I am one of the many, many who voted for the Opposition and I did so NOT because I am encouraged, or even emboldened by a Malay leader. To suggest that is offensive, and it shows your ignorance of and condescension towards non-Malay voters.

I voted the Opposition because I am sick of the BN's racialised politics and corruption. I want a party that reflects my vision of a Malaysia for all Malaysians. Not one that tells me that I need an MCA or an MIC to fight for my rights. As a citizen of this country, why aren't my rights already protected? Why do I need a party to fight for my rights based on my ethnicity?

I also do not agree with you assessment that racial discontentment is the reason why voters deserted the BN. Many international media portrayed the elections like this: "Malaysians go to the polls amidst racial tension." That was misleading. This elections was not about inter-racial discontentment.

Malaysian Malays, Chinese and Indians are NOT fighting among themselves nor do they hate each other. What we did was to throw out the old order that divides us and continually tells us that some of us are above others, and others should just be thankful for being allowed to exist on this land.

That is why we saw so many first time voters, and witnessed non-Malays voting heavily against the BN, by voting not just for the DAP but for PAS and PKR, too.

In Titiwangsa, a mixed constituency where Dr Lo' Lo' [Mohd Ghazali] of PAS was contesting, I saw many lower income Chinese in their 40s and 50s wearing PAS caps and campaigning for the party. In many constituencies where PKR was contesting, I saw Indian youths carrying PKR flags, zig zagging on their motorbikes. In Lembah Pantai, when Raja Petra [Kamarudin] with Anwar Ibrahim declared that Indians and Chinese would be defended with Malay bodies, the largely Malay audience erupted into cheers. All this clearly shows that many, many of us have transcended the racial allegiance that the BN expects us to hang on to.

I believe we are seeing the dawn of a new nationalism. Malaysians are asking – what does it mean to be a Malaysian. In fact, we are not only asking, we are answering it with our votes. It's a search for a new Identity. We want a Malaysia where all Malaysians are equal.

I think the role of public intellectuals like you should be to articulate that hunger and move the nation away from the harmful ideology and practices that may have served us before, but which no longer do today.

In doing so, we need to be aware of our language. Quit drawing on the same old racialised language because it won't work anymore. And listen to the youths of today. It is their vision that will make the country from now on.

Jules Ong,

March 20, 2008

Where to put your money now

Where to put your money now
April 24, 2008

Even some great investing minds are confused. But don't run scared. We found a few intriguing opportunities including steel, Microsoft - and cattle futures.

By Jon Birger, senior writer

(Fortune Magazine) -- How treacherous are the financial markets these days? So treacherous that you can get blind-sided even if you're one the world's great investors, even if years ago you anticipated the credit crisis now roiling Wall Street - even if you're George Soros.

After posting big gains in 2007, Soros's $17 billion Quantum Endowment hedge fund has been flat in 2008. The profits Soros earned shorting the dollar have been wiped out by big positions in free-falling Chinese and Indian stocks. Yet Soros seems unperturbed. "We are in a period of acute financial wealth destruction," the 77-year-old superstar speculator tells Fortune. "If you can preserve your capital in a period of wealth destruction, you're doing pretty well."

Soros isn't the only investor struggling for answers. Fortune interviewed a dozen or so leading money managers and market gurus about where to invest now, and the only thing they agreed on is how unpredictable the financial markets have become. "The avoidance of risk and the search for safety is more intense now than I've ever seen in my career," says Bob Doll, chief investment officer for equities at Wall Street money manager BlackRock (BLK, Fortune 500).

Everyone has his own take on what's safe and what's risky, of course. Soros thinks U.S. stocks and bonds are risky. In his view, the United States is either near or in a recession, unemployment (now 5%) will continue to rise, and the housing crisis will only deepen as more homeowners get slammed with rate resets on their interest-only mortgages.

He's also worried that the Federal Reserve's aggressive rate cutting has laid the groundwork for an inflation spike. Soros summarizes his investment strategy for 2008 this way in his new book, The New Paradigm for Financial Markets (available in e-book form at georgesoros.com now, in print in May): "Short U.S. and European stocks, U.S. ten-year government bonds, and the U.S. dollar; go long Chinese, Indian, and Gulf-state stocks and non-U.S. currencies." He likes the short-term outlook for oil and commodities too.

Credit bubble alarm

Soros began sounding the alarm about a credit bubble years ago, and what's interesting about his macro view - and what's telling about the challenge of investing successfully these days - is that a slightly different interpretation of the credit bubble's impact could be used to construct a radically different investment strategy.

After all, the same easy credit that fueled the U.S. real estate boom helped energize the rally in commodities and emerging markets. As the financial markets de-lever - in other words, as banks trim exposure to exotic investments and cut lending to consumers, hedge funds, and corporations - the risk of a commodities or emerging markets collapse intensifies.

"Name any growth story from the last five to seven years, anywhere around the world, and I will tell you it's directly or indirectly tied to the credit bubble," says Merrill Lynch (MER, Fortune 500) chief investment strategist Richard Bernstein, who thinks U.S. stocks are now a better value than those of developing nations.

Another wildcard is the cost of crude. Bears think the bursting of the credit bubble will starve speculators of leverage they've used to help bid up oil prices. Also, a recession in the U.S. will further dampen fuel demand. According to MasterCard SpendingPulse, drivers bought 7% less gasoline during the week ending April 4 than during the same period last year. If that trend continues, a return to $65 a barrel (the price a year ago) seems possible.

Leave oil in the ground

Or oil could reverse course and shoot up to $165, which seems no more or less likely. To some extent, basic market mechanics have broken down. Typically, high prices in the futures market serve to stimulate new production. Over time, that brings down prices. But according to James Burkhard, director of oil market analysis at Cambridge Energy Research Associates, a shortage in oilfield personnel coupled with the rising cost of rigs and other equipment has reduced oil companies' willingness to invest in expanding production or developing new fields.

On top of that, there's little incentive for state-owned oil companies to boost output. "If Saudi Arabia pumps more oil, it tends to depress prices, and it generates a bunch of cash that they need to invest," says John Brynjolfsson, a commodities fund manager at Pimco. The Saudis might accept lower prices if they could get good returns on their investments, he adds, but in today's low-rate environment, that's tough. In other words, they can get a better return leaving the oil in the ground.

With the markets giving off so many mixed signals, it's more important than ever to stick to sound investing principles. Diversify. Use dollar-cost averaging - move money into new investments gradually rather than in one lump sum. Seek out mutual funds with low expenses. And pay extra-close attention to valuations and balance sheets when picking stocks. Being wrong about a company with little debt and a low price/earnings ratio will usually be less harmful to your portfolio than being wrong about one with a 40 P/E and a 50% debt-to-equity ratio.

Also, don't follow the crowd. For instance, do you want to bet on corn prices doubling or tripling again? Or would it be smarter to invest in agricultural commodities that often track corn but that so far have been shut out of the agricultural boom?

Finally, listen to investors who have demonstrated a consistent knack for putting up good returns in almost any market environment. Soros is obviously one. Warren Buffett is another.

A contrarian approach

A less appreciated luminary is CGM Funds' Ken Heebner. Heebner's exploits since 2000 have been well chronicled in these pages. His CGM Focus (CGMFX) returned 80% last year and boasts the best one-, three-, and five-year annualized returns (58%, 33%, and 38%) of any diversified U.S. stock fund. His CGM Realty (CGMRX) fund hits the same trifecta for the real estate fund category, boasting one-, three-, and five-year annualized returns of 27%, 30%, and 39%.

How does Heebner do it? By pairing a contrarian streak- one grounded in deep research - with a willingness to go all in (or all out) when he feels most confident about his ideas. Heebner made a bundle short-selling tech and telecom stocks in 2000. In 2001 he built a huge position in homebuilders, only to unload every single share just before real estate cooled. In 2005 and 2006, Heebner plowed his homebuilder profits into oil and copper stocks, and last year he juiced his returns with well-timed short sales of bond insurer Ambac and mortgage lenders Countrywide and Indymac.

Steel

Following the principles outlined above led us to three disparate areas. The first is Heebner's latest big bet: steel. Three steelmakers- Arcelormittal (MT), Nucor (NUE, Fortune 500) and United States Steel (X, Fortune 500) - accounted for 16% of CGM Focus's assets as of Jan 1.

For Heebner, steel is essentially a proxy for infrastructure - a bet that developing nations like China, India, Brazil, and Saudi Arabia will continue to build new hospitals, roads, bridges, and power plants. "We've never had a global steel shortage before, but all the ingredients for one are present today," he says. Heebner thinks heightened demand could eventually push steel prices up to $2,000 a ton from $800 today.

Value plays

One of the enduring traits of bear markets is that good stocks inevitably get thrown out with the bad. Two such stocks are Annaly (NLY) and Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500).

Annaly was a pick in our 2008 Investors Guide. A real estate investment trust that pays out the bulk of its earnings in dividends, Annaly has a business model that sounds terrifying, which is probably why its stock remains unloved. Annaly is essentially a hedge fund that buys mortgage-backed securities with borrowed money.

Yet Annaly is no Bear Stearns. It doesn't take any credit risk - it buys only mortgages guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac - and the steepening of the yield curve (short-term rates have fallen while long-term mortgage rates have climbed) has been fantastic for Annaly's bottom line. The company just announced a 40% dividend increase - the current yield is 12% - and analysts expect Annaly's earnings to climb 95% this year. Still, the stock trades at a mere 13 times the past 12 months' earnings.

The case for Microsoft is equally straightforward- regardless of whether its unsolicited bid to acquire Yahoo proves successful. Microsoft's 16 P/E is at a near-record low. Earnings rose 92% last quarte r- helped along by strong demand for the Windows Vista operating system and the Xbox game player - and are expected to be up 25% for the fiscal year ending in June. On top of that, Microsoft has a sterling balance sheet, with no debt and $23 billion in cash to fund acquisitions, share buybacks, or dividend increases. "For years software companies were derided for having such conservative balance sheets," says Microsoft fan Manny Weintraub, a former Neuberger Berman managing director who runs his own firm, Integre Advisors. "Now they look pretty smart."

Cattle futures

Turning to a different kind of stock, an offbeat play to consider is cattle futures. Despite rising global food demand, the price of cattle has actually fallen this year thanks to turmoil in the livestock business. "There comes a point where corn prices are so high that you can't afford to keep feeding your animals," explains Judith Ganes Chase, a consultant and agricultural commodities analyst.

Walloped by rising feed costs - corn has soared from $2 to $6 a bushel in two years- ranchers and cattle feeders have essentially flooded the market with beef. Just to stay afloat, they've been forced to sell younger and younger animals to slaughterhouses. Geoff Blanning, head of commodities investing at London-based money management firm Schroders, thinks this is about to change. "Meat prices will be the next to rise," he says. According to the latest USDA cattle report, the 2007 calf crop of 37.4 million head was the smallest since 1951. Couple that shrinking supply with rising beef exports - projected to be up 20% in 2008 - and you've got all the makings for a big rally. The easiest way to invest in cattle futures is via an exchange-traded fund available on the London Stock Exchange: ETFS Live Cattle, which tracks the Dow Jones-AIG Live Cattle Sub Index.

What Warren thinks...

What Warren thinks...
April 14, 2008

With Wall Street in chaos, Fortune naturally went to Omaha looking for wisdom. Warren Buffett talks about the economy, the credit crisis, Bear Stearns, and more.


count_me_out.03.jpg
Buffett says he 'got a call' about Bear Stearns, but bailing out the investment bank with only two days for due diligence, he says, 'took some guts that I didn't want to match.'
(Fortune Magazine) -- If Berkshire Hathaway's annual meeting, scheduled for May 3 this year, is known as the Woodstock of Capitalism, then perhaps this is the equivalent of Bob Dylan playing a private show in his own house: Some 15 times a year Berkshire CEO Warren Buffett invites a group of business students for an intensive day of learning. The students tour one or two of the company's businesses and then proceed to Berkshire (BRKA, Fortune 500) headquarters in downtown Omaha, where Buffett opens the floor to two hours of questions and answers. Later everyone repairs to one of his favorite restaurants, where he treats them to lunch and root beer floats. Finally, each student gets the chance to pose for a photo with Buffett.

In early April the megabillionaire hosted 150 students from the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School (which Buffett attended) and offered Fortune the rare opportunity to sit in as he expounded on everything from the Bear Stearns (BSC, Fortune 500) bailout to the prognosis for the economy to whether he'd rather be CEO of GE (GE, Fortune 500) - or a paperboy. What follows are edited excerpts from his question-and-answer session with the students, his lunchtime chat with the Whartonites over chicken parmigiana at Piccolo Pete's, and an interview with Fortune in his office.

Buffett began by welcoming the students with an array of Coca-Cola products. ("Berkshire owns a little over 8% of Coke, so we get the profit on one out of 12 cans. I don't care whether you drink it, but just open the cans, if you will.") He then plunged into weightier matters:

Before we start in on questions, I would like to tell you about one thing going on recently. It may have some meaning to you if you're still being taught efficient-market theory, which was standard procedure 25 years ago. But we've had a recent illustration of why the theory is misguided. In the past seven or eight or nine weeks, Berkshire has built up a position in auction-rate securities [bonds whose interest rates are periodically reset at auction; for more, see box on page 74] of about $4 billion. And what we have seen there is really quite phenomenal. Every day we get bid lists. The fascinating thing is that on these bid lists, frequently the same credit will appear more than once.

Here's one from yesterday. We bid on this particular issue - this happens to be Citizens Insurance, which is a creature of the state of Florida. It was set up to take care of hurricane insurance, and it's backed by premium taxes, and if they have a big hurricane and the fund becomes inadequate, they raise the premium taxes. There's nothing wrong with the credit. So we bid on three different Citizens securities that day. We got one bid at an 11.33% interest rate. One that we didn't buy went for 9.87%, and one went for 6.0%. It's the same bond, the same time, the same dealer. And a big issue. This is not some little anomaly, as they like to say in academic circles every time they find something that disagrees with their theory.

So wild things happen in the markets. And the markets have not gotten more rational over the years. They've become more followed. But when people panic, when fear takes over, or when greed takes over, people react just as irrationally as they have in the past.

Do you think the U.S. financial markets are losing their competitive edge? And what's the right balance between confidence-inspiring standards and ...

... between regulation and the Wild West? Well, I don't think we're losing our edge. I mean, there are costs to Sarbanes-Oxley, some of which are wasted. But they're not huge relative to the $20 trillion in total market value. I think we've got fabulous capital markets in this country, and they get screwed up often enough to make them even more fabulous. I mean, you don't want a capital market that functions perfectly if you're in my business. People continue to do foolish things no matter what the regulation is, and they always will. There are significant limits to what regulation can accomplish. As a dramatic illustration, take two of the biggest accounting disasters in the past ten years: Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. We're talking billions and billions of dollars of misstatements at both places.

Now, these are two incredibly important institutions. I mean, they accounted for over 40% of the mortgage flow a few years back. Right now I think they're up to 70%. They're quasi-governmental in nature. So the government set up an organization called OFHEO. I'm not sure what all the letters stand for. [Note to Warren: They stand for Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight.] But if you go to OFHEO's website, you'll find that its purpose was to just watch over these two companies. OFHEO had 200 employees. Their job was simply to look at two companies and say, "Are these guys behaving like they're supposed to?" And of course what happened were two of the greatest accounting misstatements in history while these 200 people had their jobs. It's incredible. I mean, two for two!

It's very, very, very hard to regulate people. If I were appointed a new regulator - if you gave me 100 of the smartest people you can imagine to work for me, and every day I got the positions from the biggest institutions, all their derivative positions, all their stock positions and currency positions, I wouldn't be able to tell you how they were doing. It's very, very hard to regulate when you get into very complex instruments where you've got hundreds of counterparties. The counterparty behavior and risk was a big part of why the Treasury and the Fed felt that they had to move in over a weekend at Bear Stearns. And I think they were right to do it, incidentally. Nobody knew what would be unleashed when you had thousands of counterparties with, I read someplace, contracts with a $14 trillion notional value. Those people would have tried to unwind all those contracts if there had been a bankruptcy. What that would have done to the markets, what that would have done to other counterparties in turn - it gets very, very complicated. So regulating is an important part of the system. The efficacy of it is really tough.

At Piccolo Pete's, where he has dined with everyone from Microsoft's Bill Gates to the New York Yankees' Alex Rodriguez, Buffett sat at a table with 12 Whartonites and bantered over many topics.

How do you feel about the election?

Way before they both filed, I told Hillary that I would support her if she ran, and I told Barack I would support him if he ran. So I am now a political bigamist. But I feel either would be great. And actually, I feel that if a Republican wins, John McCain would be the one I would prefer. I think we've got three unusually good candidates this time.

They're all moderate in their approach.

Well, the one we don't know for sure about is Barack. On the other hand, he has the chance to be the most transformational too.

I know you had a paper route. Was that your first job?

Well, I worked for my grandfather, which was really tough, in the [family] grocery store. But if you gave me the choice of being CEO of General Electric or IBM or General Motors, you name it, or delivering papers, I would deliver papers. I would. I enjoyed doing that. I can think about what I want to think. I don't have to do anything I don't want to do. It might be wonderful to be head of GE, and Jeff Immelt is a friend of mine. And he's a great guy. But think of all the things he has to do whether he wants to do them or not.

How do you get your ideas?

I just read. I read all day. I mean, we put $500 million in PetroChina. All I did was read the annual report. [Editor's note: Berkshire purchased the shares five years ago and sold them in 2007 for $4 billion.]

What advice would you give to someone who is not a professional investor? Where should they put their money?

Well, if they're not going to be an active investor - and very few should try to do that - then they should just stay with index funds. Any low-cost index fund. And they should buy it over time. They're not going to be able to pick the right price and the right time. What they want to do is avoid the wrong price and wrong stock. You just make sure you own a piece of American business, and you don't buy all at one time.

When Buffett said he was ready to pose for photographs, all 150 students stampeded out of the room within seconds and formed a massive line. For the next half hour, each one took his or her turn with Buffett, often in hammy poses (wrestling for his wallet was a favorite). Then, as he started to leave, a 77-year-old's version of A Hard Day's Night ensued, with a pack of 30 students trailing him to his gold Cadillac. Once free, he drove this Fortune writer back to his office and continued fielding questions.

How does the current turmoil stack up against past crises?

Well, that's hard to say. Every one has so many variables in it. But there's no question that this time there's extreme leveraging and in some cases the extreme prices of residential housing or buyouts. You've got $20 trillion of residential real estate and you've got $11 trillion of mortgages, and a lot of that does not have a problem, but a lot of it does. In 2006 you had $330 billion of cash taken out in mortgage refinancings in the United States. That's a hell of a lot - I mean, we talk about having $150 billion of stimulus now, but that was $330 billion of stimulus. And that's just from prime mortgages. That's not from subprime mortgages. So leveraging up was one hell of a stimulus for the economy.

If that was one hell of a stimulus, do you think the $150 billion government stimulus plan will make an impact?

Well, it's $150 billion more than we'd have otherwise. But it's not like we haven't had stimulus. And then the simultaneous, more or less, LBO boom, which was called private equity this time. The abuses keep coming back - and the terms got terrible and all that. You've got a banking system that's hung up with lots of that. You've got a mortgage industry that's deleveraging, and it's going to be painful.

The scenario you're describing suggests we're a long way from turning a corner.

I think so. I mean, it seems everybody says it'll be short and shallow, but it looks like it's just the opposite. You know, deleveraging by its nature takes a lot of time, a lot of pain. And the consequences kind of roll through in different ways. Now, I don't invest a dime based on macro forecasts, so I don't think people should sell stocks because of that. I also don't think they should buy stocks because of that.

Your OFHEO example implies you're not too optimistic about regulation.

Finance has gotten so complex, with so much interdependency. I argued with Alan Greenspan some about this at [Washington Post chairman] Don Graham's dinner. He would say that you've spread risk throughout the world by all these instruments, and now you didn't have it all concentrated in your banks. But what you've done is you've interconnected the solvency of institutions to a degree that probably nobody anticipated. And it's very hard to evaluate. If Bear Stearns had not had a derivatives book, my guess is the Fed wouldn't have had to do what it did.

Do you find it striking that banks keep looking into their investments and not knowing what they have?

I read a few prospectuses for residential-mortgage-backed securities - mortgages, thousands of mortgages backing them, and then those all tranched into maybe 30 slices. You create a CDO by taking one of the lower tranches of that one and 50 others like it. Now if you're going to understand that CDO, you've got 50-times-300 pages to read, it's 15,000. If you take one of the lower tranches of the CDO and take 50 of those and create a CDO squared, you're now up to 750,000 pages to read to understand one security. I mean, it can't be done. When you start buying tranches of other instruments, nobody knows what the hell they're doing. It's ridiculous. And of course, you took a lower tranche of a mortgage-backed security and did 100 of those and thought you were diversifying risk. Hell, they're all subject to the same thing. I mean, it may be a little different whether they're in California or Nebraska, but the idea that this is uncorrelated risk and therefore you can take the CDO and call the top 50% of it super-senior - it isn't super-senior or anything. It's a bunch of juniors all put together. And the juniors all correlate.

If big financial institutions don't seem to know what's in their portfolios, how will investors ever know when it's safe?

They can't, they can't. They've got to, in effect, try to read the DNA of the people running the companies. But I say that in any large financial organization, the CEO has to be the chief risk officer. I'm the chief risk officer at Berkshire. I think I know my limits in terms of how much I can sort of process. And the worst thing you can have is models and spreadsheets. I mean, at Salomon, they had all these models, and you know, they fell apart.

What should we say to investors now?

The answer is you don't want investors to think that what they read today is important in terms of their investment strategy. Their investment strategy should factor in that (a) if you knew what was going to happen in the economy, you still wouldn't necessarily know what was going to happen in the stock market. And (b) they can't pick stocks that are better than average. Stocks are a good thing to own over time. There's only two things you can do wrong: You can buy the wrong ones, and you can buy or sell them at the wrong time. And the truth is you never need to sell them, basically. But they could buy a cross section of American industry, and if a cross section of American industry doesn't work, certainly trying to pick the little beauties here and there isn't going to work either. Then they just have to worry about getting greedy. You know, I always say you should get greedy when others are fearful and fearful when others are greedy. But that's too much to expect. Of course, you shouldn't get greedy when others get greedy and fearful when others get fearful. At a minimum, try to stay away from that.

By your rule, now seems like a good time to be greedy. People are pretty fearful.

You're right. They are going in that direction. That's why stocks are cheaper. Stocks are a better buy today than they were a year ago. Or three years ago.

But you're still bullish about the U.S. for the long term?

The American economy is going to do fine. But it won't do fine every year and every week and every month. I mean, if you don't believe that, forget about buying stocks anyway. But it stands to reason. I mean, we get more productive every year, you know. It's a positive-sum game, long term. And the only way an investor can get killed is by high fees or by trying to outsmart the market.

The Soros Solution

As any reader of this space may be able to tell by now, I’m a big fan of bailouts. Some believe that the markets should go through the pain of what they have wrought on themselves in order to come out the other side cleaner, stronger, faster. Not me. If there’s an easy way out, I’m for it.

I liked it years ago, when they bailed out Chrysler. And when the S&Ls needed help? That was a terrific one, wasn’t it? Countrywide (CFC)? Same deal! Why not? And when BenCo moved to… I’m not sure “help” is the right word… whatever they did to Bear Stearns (BSC), I was all for it, too.

Coming up, if and when Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) sink to their pretty knees under the weight of all those loan guarantees, I’ll be right there to support the first trillion dollar bailout ever! A new record — until the next one.

The tsunami of assistance being offered to institutions large and small is always explicated in the same terms: This is the way that the larger eco-system can make sure that smaller fry aren’t destroyed when the big fish get caught in the net of destruction. By helping the large, we are protecting the small. Right. I get that.

Destruction is never the best option, even if comfortable and sometimes nasty people prescribe it for the good of the system. If stuff can be saved with money, well, that’s what money is for, I think. This is possibly why, when I’m personally depressed, I always help my emotional infrastructure with the expenditure of disposable income. This in turn improves the economy and creates the need for new mercantile establishments, like the Container Store, to contain my effluvia. Money may not be able to buy happiness permanently, but as a short term solution to all kinds of problems it really can’t be beat.

This emphasis on top-down help, however, does have its limits if you look at it hard enough. Why are the big always propped up when the small are allowed to get flushed into the drink? Those who raise such questions are often accused of naivete, which is to be distinguished from the outright stupidity that smart people seem to have suffered while creating our current debacle. The risk managers, hedge fund moguls, debt-mongers and analysts may have been the idiots who got us into this. But they don’t stop giving advice, and they’re not naive enough to think that helping little folks can do anything to protect their packages.

This is why it’s refreshing to see someone who has some success in the financial arena articulate what to many might seem a simple, naive and hopelessly humanistic idea. Enter George Soros, cited in the May 15 edition of the New York Review of Books. Here’s what the always opinionated and controversial Mr. Soros had to say when Ms. Woodruff asked him how long the housing crisis was going to last:

“Well, it depends on when the authorities wake up, because you need to reduce the number of foreclosures. You need to keep as many people as possible in their houses so that they don’t come onto the market. You need to arrest the decline in house prices, but you also need to prevent human suffering and social disruption because it’s going to be very, very severe. Certain communities are already hurting and it’s going to get a lot worse. So action will have to be taken, but I don’t think it’s going to happen during this administration.”

Wow. Preventing suffering. Keeping people in their homes. Trying to work from the bottom up to save the system from the mistakes of its proprietors?

Nah. Not this gang.

Let’s just bail out another big loser, shall we?

Second death from illegal sex drug reported in Singapore

Second death from illegal sex drug reported
25 April, 2008
The Straits Times

A 50-year-old man has died last week from complications of an infection, when he fell into a coma after taking an illegal sex drug, said the Health Sciences Authority (HSA) on Friday.

This is the second death from the consumption of illegal health products with sexual enhancement claims. Since February, HSA has issued an alert over such drugs like 'Power 1 Walnut' and 'Santi Bovine Penis Erecting Capsule'.

In its first update on the cases since April 11, HSA said the man was admitted to hospital earlier this month in a comatose state.

He regained partial consciousness but subsequently succumbed to complications of an infection arising from his medical condition.

HSA said there have been 16 new cases of serious adverse reactions associated with the illegal drugs. Of these new cases, three are very serious, with two patients in a coma state and one patient with extensive neurological damage caused by very low blood sugar in the brain, leading to memory loss.

The authority said there are now a total of 35 confirmed cases of men falling seriously ill after taking the drugs with another 70 suspected cases, in which the patients refuse to say what they took.

HSA ask members of the public who know someone who has bought or taken such illegal products to advise them to stop taking the illegal products.

Anyone who has taken such illegal products and are having symptoms suggestive of low blood sugar - sweating, drowsiness and confusion - should seek medical advice immediately.

Scientists say menstrual blood can repair hearts

Scientists say menstrual blood can repair hearts
25 April, 2008
AFP

TOKYO - THE monthly discomfort many women see as a curse could pay off someday as Japanese researchers say menstrual blood can be used to repair heart damage.

Scientists obtained menstrual blood from nine women and cultivated it for about a month, focusing on a kind of cell that can act like stem cells.

Some 20 per cent of the cells began beating spontaneously about three days after being put together in vitro with cells from the hearts of rats. The cells from menstrual blood eventually formed sheet-like heart-muscle tissue.

The success rate is 100 times higher than the 0.2-0.3 per cent for stem cells taken from human bone marrow, according to Shunichiro Miyoshi, a cardiologist at Keio University's school of medicine, who is involved in the research.

Separate in-vivo experiments showed that the condition of rats who had suffered heart attacks improved after they received the cells derived from menstrual blood.

Dr Miyoshi said women may eventually be able to use their own menstrual blood.

'There may be a system in the near future that allows women to use it for their own treatment,' Dr Miyoshi said on Thursday.

The cells can be stored for a long time in a tube the size of a pinky finger and cultivated when necessary, he said.

He also said menstrual blood could be used to build stockpiles of cells which have a variety of immune types.

This could help people with matching HLAs, or human leukocyte antigens, a key part of the human immune system, he said.

'In proper storage, we would be able to stock up a tremendous count of cells in a small space. If they are not used for 100 years, they could stay there for 200 years or 300 years' waiting for a perfect match, he said.

In a strict sense, the connective cells harvested from menstrual blood cannot be called stem cells, which can turn into any type of cell in the body, Dr Miyoshi said.

But they also have high potential to develop into muscle cells, suggesting the blood could in time be used to treat muscular dystrophy, he said.

The study has been conducted jointly by researchers from private Keio University and the National Institute for Child Health and Development.

Initial results were recently published in the online edition of the US journal Stem Cell. -- AFP

Bus operators seek fare hike

Bus operators seek fare hike

25 April, 2008

The Star

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA: Long-distance bus operators want an increase of fares because of the hike in diesel prices.

The Pan Malaysian Bus Operators Association has asked the Government to approve an increase in the fares of long-distance express buses.

"The last fare increase of 20% was in May 2005. Since then the Government has announced several increases in diesel price from 88.1sen per litre in 2005 to RM1.58 in 2006. This price hike has negated the fare increase," said association president Datuk Mohamad Ashfar Ali.

"We are pre-empting the government's move to change the subsidy mechanism which may result in omission of certain subsidies," he said.

He added that the fare hike proposal was one of the points in the memorandum the association submitted to the Entrepreneur and Cooperative Development Ministry on April 14.

It is learnt that the association is asking for at least a 50% increase in the fare structure, which also involves stage buses.

The association also called for an increase in diesel subsidy.

At present, bus operators pay RM1.48 per litre of diesel and enjoy the subsidy for only 80 litres per bus.

"This is insufficient. We want the Government to subsidise diesel at RM1 per litre like what fishermen are paying. Subsidising 80 litres is not sufficient as buses use approximately 200 litres a day," he said. .

"Due to fast eroding margins and big monetary losses, certain bus operators have no choice but to cut corners just to survive."

The association also supports the proposal by Konsortium Transnasional Berhad (KTB) to set up an independent authority to govern all land transport (buses, lorries, taxis and tour buses) matters.

"This agency is crucial in order to better regulate the industry as well as enforce regulations pertaining to all land-based transport," he said, adding that the agency should have the power to issue permits and be involved in policy-making decisions.

At present, the Commercial Vehicle Licensing Board issues licences and permits while the Tourism Ministry issues permits for tour buses.

"Different ministries and departments are involved. We need a body to solely govern the matters of land transport," he said.

KTB chairman and managing director Datuk Mohd Nadzmi Mohd Salleh called for the Government to also set up a national registry to enable access into drivers' track records.

Malaysian Institute of Road Safety (Miros) director-general Prof Datuk Dr Radin Umar said the institute welcomes the proposals and hopes to work with KTB to promote road safety and improve the industry.

Blogs can ruin your life

Blogs can ruin your life
Pam Pastor
Thu, Apr 24, 2008
Philippine Daily Inquirier, ANN
After countless names have been thrown around the World Wide Web and smeared with nastiness, many have expressed fear about people blogging about them.

But the truth is, you should be concerned not only with what others post about you. You should also be careful about what you post about yourself.

Blog backfire

Twenty-two-year-old Lisa called in sick one Friday afternoon. But she wasn't really sick. She was planning to start the weekend early by going to the beach with her friends. Days later, she posted pictures of the outing on her blog. Someone in her office found the link. Soon, she was called to her boss' office. She didn't lose her job, but she got into a lot of trouble.

Eighteen-year-old Anne enjoys an independent life. Both parents are in the US. She blogged freely about her misadventures'drunken nights out, failed tests, her penchant for bad boys. She thought her blog was being read only by her friends.

But a concerned relative sent the link to her parents who immediately jumped to action, calling Anne up and threatening to fly her to the US where she could be put under their watch. Anne is still in the country but has deleted her blog.

The two girls have experienced blog backfire. Things they posted online ended up working against them.

Make sure it doesn't happen to you, too. Here are some things to think about when you blog.

1. You don't know who is reading your page.

Unless your entries are locked and you have total control over who has access to them, you're never sure who is reading your entries. Your parents, your teachers - they're all just a google search away from unlocking your deepest thoughts.

2. What you post can make or break your career.

While some people have gotten book deals after building a huge blog readership, most bloggers need to realise that employers have started using Google searches as a tool to scan job applicants.

3. Will your post hurt anyone?

It is easy to vent online your anger with a friend or a family member. But let the anger simmer before hitting the 'publish' button. Sleep on it, think it over because once it's online, it will not be easy to get rid of - not with the cache features of online searches.

4. Can your entries be lifted and used against you?

Your blog entries may be lifted anytime by anyone who knows how to highlight and press Ctrl and C. Your photos may be stolen as easily and defaced, like some have been on gossip blogs. It may be smart to add javascript that prevents readers from right-clicking on your page. It's not total protection, but it may save you from the less-techie lurkers.

5. Will your entries attract the wrong kind of people?

Most blog readers are kind. They leave comments, they send you e-mails and sometimes, you even find people you can be friends with. But some of the more popular bloggers have had problems with blog stalkers. High internet traffic is a good thing, but not when it leads to scary encounters

Christian newspaper challenges Malaysia's government in court for right to use 'Allah'

Christian newspaper challenges Malaysia's government in court for right to use 'Allah'

Authorities in this Muslim-majority nation ordered The Herald weekly in December to stop using "Allah" in its Malay-language section. The paper — the main organ of the Catholic church in Malaysia — was warned it could lose its publishing license if it defied the order.

Lawyers representing The Herald told the Kuala Lumpur High Court Friday that they want to go to trial to reverse the government's order.

"We are saying that the decision should be squashed and there should also be a declaration that ... The Herald is entitled to use the word 'Allah' in its publication," lawyer Porres Royan told reporters after a brief hearing.

The government told The Herald to drop the word "Allah" because it refers to the Muslim God. But the newspaper insists "Allah" has been used for centuries to mean "God" in Malay.

"It is basically a birth right to use the word 'Allah' because it is the only word for God in the Malay language," The Herald's editor, Rev. Lawrence Andrew, told The Associated Press.

The court is expected to hear further arguments next week. Dozens of Christians packed Friday's hearing, including Malaysia's Roman Catholic archbishop.

The Herald — which publishes reports in English, Malay, Mandarin and Tamil — is still using the word "Allah," but some fear it could lose its publishing license when it comes up for annual review in October.

The case illustrates growing complaints by religious minorities that their rights have been undermined by government efforts to bolster the status of Islam, Malaysia's official religion.

Ethnic Malays — who are legally required to be Muslim — comprise nearly 60 percent of Malaysia's 27 million people, while ethnic Chinese and Indians — mostly Buddhists, Christians and Hindus — are the main minorities.

Dissatisfaction with court rulings over the right to leave Islam, along with religious issues like the demolition of Hindu temples by state authorities, contributed to the ruling government's poor performance in March elections, when it lost its two-thirds majority in Parliament.

In a separate case, the Sabah Evangelical Church of Borneo has also filed a lawsuit to be allowed to use "Allah" after officials last year banned the import of books containing the word. Hearings in that case remain in the preliminary stages.

Let’s send the Altantuya murderers to hell

Let’s send the Altantuya murderers to hell
25 April, 2008

Today, we shall not be talking about politics. We shall also not be talking about race or religion. Today, we shall talk about doing the human thing. Today, let’s discuss how to launch a ‘Justice for Altantuya: restore Malaysia’s dignity’ campaign. And let’s send those bastards who murdered Altantuya to hell where they belong.

NO HOLDS BARRED

Raja Petra Kamarudin

I had dinner with a few friends last night and on the way to the restaurant another good friend, Din Merican, phoned to fill me in on the details of Dr Shaariibuu Setev’s press conference that was held earlier that day. I listened as Din filled me in on what transpired and could not help but blurt out, “I am a father of two daughters. I can imagine what Shaariibuu must be feeling. Fucking assholes!”

“I have three daughters,” Din responded. “These people are animals, bloody animals. Fuck them! Fuck them!” This is what I would call ‘at a loss for words’ -- and when you just have to say something but no words can fully describe how you feel, then ‘fuck’ is the only word you can use which will console you enough and make you feel you have expressed your anger and disgust in a most ‘appropriate’ manner.

“Hey, don’t insult animals,” I replied. “Animals are cute. I love cats, dogs and horses. These people are worse than animals. Even animals will not do something like this.”

“Even pigs can be cute,” my wife who was driving the car butted in and I repeated what she said. “Yes, even pigs are cute. These people are not even the same level as pigs. They are lower than pigs. Melayu babi, the whole lot of them.”

I found it very difficult to hold back my tears as Din continued with his narration of what Dr Shaariibuu said at his press conference. Yes, I am a very emotional person as many may have suspected by now. But I can also be very stubborn and stiff-lipped as well when facing an adversary, as the Special Branch officers from Bukit Aman have discovered. I am what the Malays would call ‘marah nyamuk, bakar kelambu’. And I would not hesitate to deny my body food and water as an act of defiance just to prove to my jailors that they may incarcerate my body but they can never own my mind or break my spirit. But hearing what Dr Shaariibuu had to say ‘broke’ me. Even my degil got tamed.

“Let’s bring these bastards down,” I told Din. “Let’s launch a ‘Justice for Altanatuya: restore Malaysia’s dignity’ campaign’ or something like that. These assholes must be sent to hell.”

Understandably, much of the dinner conversation thereafter was focused on the Altantuya murder. What was most amusing -- not that I would classify this tragic murder as ‘amusing’ -- is that none at the dinner table are lawyers by profession. But all were able to skilfully ‘argue their case’ as any seasoned lawyer with decades of litigation experience under his or her belt can -- or maybe even better than that because not all lawyers are smart (trust me on this one). I always say you need brains to become a lawyer but you do not need to be a lawyer to have brains.

Sure, ‘certified’ lawyers would pooh-pooh such ‘coffee shop’ arguments as just that, coffee shop arguments. And have we not overheard and scoffed at many an ‘expert’ at the next table offering his or her legal prognosis to all and sundry who would care to listen? Yes, opinions are like assholes -- everybody has one.

But there are opinions and there are opinions -- and, just like assholes, no two are alike. So, while we value the expert opinions of our ‘learned’ legal eagles (yes, that is what they call each other in court even though they may be arguing -- how civil), we too have conducted our own trial by court of public opinion and we have already arrived at our verdict even while the Altantuya murder trial is halfway through and long before we can see the end of what many consider a show-trial in a kangaroo court.

Of course, we are not at liberty to say this as this may tantamount to subjudice or contempt of court or something like that (the courts have all sorts of fancy words and phrases to throw at you when they want to send you to jail whenever you differ with their opinion). So I would never dare state that the Altantuya murder trial ‘a show trial in a kangaroo court’ for fear of getting sent to jail. All I am at liberty to say is that many consider the Altantuya murder trial a show-trial in a kangaroo court and leave it at that without declaring whether I too share the opinion of the majority of Malaysians (not sure whether that statement can still get me sent to jail).

Anyway, back to the dinner last night and to what all those ‘self-made lawyers’ who never argued even one case in court their entire life had to say. As I said, neither they nor I am a lawyer but I have attended a decade of trials and hearings since the birth of Reformasi in 1998 and my ‘practical experience’ has exposed me to much of what goes on in court. And all I can say is that, and I repeat, while you need brains to become a lawyer, you really do not need to be a lawyer to have brains, as my dinner friends proved last night.

It was a long dinner and much was discussed and everyone had an opinion plus, as I said, all skilfully ‘argued their case’. However, to avoid this piece turning into a fifty-page thesis, which may see me getting an honorary law degree (or see me getting sent to jail), allow me to summarise how the ‘case’ was argued last night.

First concerns the Affidavit that Razak Baginda submitted to the court during his bail application hearing in the Shah Alam High Court. Justice Segera had initially cautioned Razak’s lawyer that there was no necessity in submitting an Affidavit since it was only a bail application hearing and, anyway, bail is not allowed in murder cases. But the lawyer insisted in pursuing the matter in spite of repeated warnings from the Judge. So the Judge had no choice but to accept the Affidavit as it is the right of the accused to defend himself/herself the way he/she sees fit.

Justice Segera then read the Affidavit and remarked that, after reading it, he is even more convinced that Razak is guilty. How then to grant bail, notwithstanding the fact that bail should automatically be denied anyway in cases of murder? Justice Segera was then immediately removed from hearing the case and was replaced by a junior judicial commissioner.

Note that Justice Segera is a senior Judge and the most suited to hear this very controversial and high-profile case. Was he removed because he had prejudged the case or because he was now privy to certain information that may influence his decision or because they want to ‘kill’ the Affidavit?

This was the first bone of contention. Karpal Singh, who is holding a watching brief on behalf of Altantuya’s family, then raised this matter during the trial and he asked the police officer on the stand as to why they did not investigate the Affidavit since much has been revealed in that document. The police officer replied that they did not investigate the Affidavit because ‘tidak ada arahan dari atas’ (so instructions from the top).

This further enhances the belief that there is some very damaging evidence in that Affidavit and which the government is trying to hide. The fact that the Affidavit exists and Karpal raised the matter in court and the police did not deny it -- other than explain they did not investigate it because of no instructions from the top -- convinces most that something is amiss here.

It seems the Affidavit also reveals that Altantuya was camped outside Razak’s house and this caused him to panic. He then went running to Najib, and Rosmah summoned Najib’s ADC, Musa Safri, and instructed him to solve Razak’s problem. Musa then summoned the two police officers currently on trial. So, it appears like Razak and the two police officers are not the only ones involved. Najib, Rosmah and Musa have also been implicated in this entire thing. And why the need for the police officer to declare that he had already killed six people before this if murder was not what was on everyone’s mind?

Then the Attorney-General did a very strange thing. Just before the trial started, he made a public announcement that only three people and no others are involved in the murder. This is not only strange but highly irregular as well. It is not the Attorney-General’s job to determine this. This is for the court to decide. Furthermore, the trial had not even started yet so how does the Attorney-General know what is going to surface in the trial? No one has testified yet and until all the testimonies are heard who knows who else is involved and whether the three accused who on trial are even guilty or not? The Attorney-General made it appear like he knows the outcome of the trial even before the trail commenced? How not to feel that the trial is a show-trial?

The Sunday morning before the trial was supposed to start, I received a SMS that said the charges against Razak would be withdrawn. At 4.00pm, I received another SMS saying that the entire team of prosecutors will be replaced because they did not agree to drop the charges against Razak. The following morning, the new prosecutor requested a one-month postponement on the excuse that he had just that very morning been told he is taking over the case so he needs time to study the files. The judge gave them a two-week postponement. The SMS may have been inaccurate but the actions thereafter lent credence to the SMS. And this SMS was from a Deep Throat in the Attorney-General’s Chambers so I am not about to just dismiss it as lies and slander.

The next point is about where Altantuya’s remains were found, which was deep in the jungles. The three accused deny killing Altantuya yet the police knew exactly where to go to look for the remains. How did the police know where to go when the three denied killing her? Did they use a bomoh? Was there an informer? No, the police just happen to know that deep in the jungles they would find Altantuya’s remains without anyone having to tell them.

It makes one wonder whether the police knew where to go because it is a ‘gazetted dumpsite’ where all ‘bumped off’ people are disposed. Does this then mean that the two police officers on trial alongside Razak are police hit men whose job it is to bump people off and then get rid of their bodies at that site where they retrieved Altantuya’s remains? This, of course, remains mere speculation but there is certainly cause for speculation and the evidence all seem to point to this assumption.

The whispering amongst those who walk in the corridors of power is that when they went to the ‘dump site’ they retrieved the remains of many others as well. Some say it was the remains of seven people and others say nine. So Altantuya was not the first. There were many others before this, almost ten judging by the remains.

This, of course, has never been made public and probably never will. So, until it is, we must assume that the ‘whispering’ is unfounded. But then, what about Razak’s Affidavit we talked about earlier, which stated that the police officer had admitted to killing six people before this. This would then make Altantuya the seventh victim. Against this backdrop, the ‘whispering’ about the police retrieving the remains of seven or nine people begins to sound like very loud whispers.

Many other ‘key issues’ raised by my non-lawyer friends, who all argued as if they were conducting the Altantuya murder trial, were matters such as how Altantuya’s immigration records could be erased from the Immigration computers, the letters Najib wrote to the Malaysian embassy supporting Altantuya’s visa application, the photograph of Altantuya, Najib, Razak and Kalimullah taken during Altantuya’s birthday party in the Mandarin Hotel in Singapore, and much more.

Rumour has it, and it remains just that, a rumour, is that all this ‘evidence’ has been given to Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. Okay, maybe Abdullah is using this information to keep Najib in line -- which appears to be working seeing that he is constantly licking Abdullah’s hand. But this is not about politics and should not be dealt as such. This is about the Prime Minister of Malaysia withholding crucial evidence in a murder trial. Abdullah is an accessory to murder and burying evidence that will affect the outcome of the trial and interfere in seeing justice done renders Abdullah as guilty as those currently on trial and those who also should be on trial but are not.

I really wish I could write about all the above which was discussed by those at the dinner table last night. Unfortunately, since the trial is still ongoing, I will not be able to talk about any of these matters. The best I can do is relate what those at the dinner table discussed last night and leave it at that without giving my opinion. And the above is what was discussed by those who are not lawyers and never once in their lives argued any case in court.

Of course, since all these people are not lawyers, most of what they said is based purely on logic and not on points of law. It is actually quite ridiculous that people not tutored in matters of law would attempt to dissect and analyse the Altantuya murder trial and pass judgement as if they are trained and certified lawyers. Anyway, as I said, opinions are like assholes and every one has one so we should not take too much notice of what my dinner friends said last night. Meanwhile, read what my friend, Din Merican, e-mailed to me this morning:

In ancient times, nations go to war at the slightest provocation. In the 21st century, fortunately, we are more civilised than our progenitors, although there are still exceptions. After all, we are members of the United Nations and, I am told, we subscribe to the UN Declaration on Human Rights. Yet, we in Malaysia, treat foreign nationals with total disregard for compassion and human decency. Are we a bunch of cynics? I wonder.

Take the case of the beating-up of the Indonesian karate/judo coach and the brutality towards, and extortion of, Indonesian guest workers by Rela, the murder of a Mongolian national, etc. Is the way we deal with our neighbours and other nation states? I wonder whether we are a nation of laws or a country run on the basis of the law of the jungle.

Our Prime Minister, Badawi, and his Foreign Minister (at that time Syed Hamid) did not have the courtesy to reply to the letters from their counterparts in Ulan Bator, Mongolia, seeking a fair trial and justice for the family of the late Altantyua Shaariibuu. Too busy maybe? Surely not!

It is going to be tragic for Malaysia’s image if the Altantuya family cannot get justice for the brutal murder of their loved one. How can we blow to smithereens a human being, someone’s loved one, and a mother to two young children, using an explosive which is only utilised in times of war to destroy bunkers, bridges and buildings? This is unheard off anywhere in the world. This case, therefore, has a lot of international implications, especially when the deed was done by ‘servants’ of this country.

We are being viewed as arrogant by the Indonesians, Thais, Singaporeans, as well as by many of our neighbours. Now, we add to this list the Mongolians. How indecent and irresponsible of the PM and his Foreign Minister for not even acknowledging the receipt of letters from their Mongolian counterparts. Who are we protecting?

There is no point in Badawi trying to convince us that his Administration is keen to restore the image of the judiciary. He cannot even fix his own Police Force and the AG’s Office. Frankly, Malaysians should have sent Badawi and his cohorts in BN out of office in the last general election.

The mainstream media is just hopeless in the cause of justice for Altantuya and dignity for Malaysia. Malaysians and civil society movements must now pressure the Badawi government to expose the real culprit behind this murder and bring to closure this long and costly trial. Let justice prevail and let us put an end to the culture of impunity, where the powerful and politically connected are above the Law.

As a father of six kids (of whom three are girls, including a 16-year old) and a grandfather, I feel for Dr. Setev Shaariibuu and his family. I was at the press conference on April 24 at the Office of Dato Seri Anwar Ibrahim and I personally saw the agony on Dr. Shaariibuu’s face.

It is time for Malaysians to push this issue and not allow the murderers who walk in the corridors of power to get away with this vile and evil deed unscathed. It is time to ‘storm the Bastille’. It is time we sent these sorry excuses for human beings to hell where they deserve to be.
**************************************************************************************
written by FFT, April 25, 2008 | 14:49:45


Photo: A very rush handshake.

Altantuya’s dad, Stev Shariibuu, was in Parliament today. He waited half a day to meet with Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and his deputy Najib Tun Razak.

He did manage to meet Abdullah after lunch at the Parliament entrance. Shariibuu was about to leave when Abdullah emerged. The dad went straight to meet him and shook his hands. He said he was Shariibuu from Mongolia.

A surprised Abdullah said “Hello. How are you?”

Before Shariibuu could reply, Abdullah walked away. To be fair, he was rushing to attend the afternoon session of the swearing in ceremony of the new MPs.

But I felt the least he could is exchange some words and say words of condolences to Shariibuu for the lost of his daughter. But alas!

After him, Shariibuu waited for Najib, but the later was no where to be seen.

But a few minutes later, Khairy Jamaluddin, Abdullah’s son-in-law emerged.

Shariibuu managed to shake hands with him. He introduced himself again. Khairy replied “I know”.

Then Shariibuu told him that he was waiting to see Abdullah, to which Khairy reply “Oh, really”.

He later told Shariibuu he was attending a meeting and would catch up with him later.

After Khairy, Shariibuu was again waiting for Najib.

But we heard he had left the premises. Oh, Najib, where are you?

Ps. Shariibuu’s lawyer Karpal Singh said he had informed Abdullah that Shariibuu had waited to meet him. The PM replied that he was VERY busy.

What a shame!

Thursday, April 24, 2008

PKR to champion for 'Ketuanan Rakyat'

PKR to champion for 'Ketuanan Rakyat'
Kong See Hoh

PETALING JAYA (April 24, 2008): If Pakatan Rakyat (PR) comes to power at federal level, a coalition government headed by PKR adviser Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim will be championing "Ketuanan Rakyat" (people's supremacy) instead of shouting for "Ketuanan Melayu" (Malay supremacy).

Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) president Datin Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail said this during an interview with Sin Chew Daily.

In the interview, published today, she stressed that PKR will not become a single-race party but will stay true to its multi-racial party politics.

In a multiracial society, she said, PKR's coalition partner PAS will definitely not be able to set up an Islamic state.

Wan Azizah said although it is PAS's ideology to create an Islamic state, it can only be practised in the overwhelming Malay-majority state of Kelantan, and not the whole of Malaysia due to the country's multiracial makeup.

"We must recognise that Islam is the country's official religion but it is impractical to turn the multiracial and multireligious Malaysia into an Islamic state, everything must be based on the Federal Constitution," she said when asked to state PKR's stand on the Islamic state ideology espoused by PAS, and the party line should PR get the chance to form the federal government.

Wan Azizah is to be nominated for the Parliamentary Opposition job when the 12th Parliament begins its maiden session on Monday.

The Opposition has won 82 parliamentary seats to deny the Barisan Nasional (BN) a two-thirds majority.

It also wrested control of Kedah, Penang, Perak and Selangor from BN in the March 8 general election.

On the opposing stand taken by DAP and PAS on the Islamic state issue, Wan Azizah said: "Islamic state has always been PAS' agenda and DAP, as everyone knows, is against it (making Malaysia an Islamic state).

"The fact is, we all accept that Islam is the official religion of Malaysia, and the three parties should cooperate within the framework of the constitution."

She said the country has the Federal Constitution, and we should follow what is provided for under the constitution.

The reality is that the Malaysian society is made up of Malays, Chinese, Indians and other minority races, making it impossible to establish an Islamic state, she said.

She said PAS alone cannot form the federal government and PAS must recognise the fact that its Islamic state ideology will remain just an idealistic concept.

She also stressed that the voices of the minority races cannot be denied.

"As such, we should not keep talking about Malay supremacy or marginalising a certain race, which is not what the people want to see."

She also refuted the assertion that the Malay leaders in PR have sacrificed the interests of Malays in order to appease non-Malays in the country.

Giving the Selangor state government's decision to go ahead with the centralised pig farming project as an example, she said there is no "so-called sacrifice".

"The project is given the thumbs up because (we) don't want to see (the present) pig farms to continue to pollute the environment.

"We must accept that it is the right of the Chinese to eat pork. Although Muslims do not consume pork but they have no rights to stop non-Muslims from eating pork.

"We must accept others' rights, but not including polluting the environment," she added.

"You can eat pork, but (you) cannot pollute the environment. I believe no one can accept filth and another Nipah outbreak, but its your right (to eat pork) and the Malays should accept centralised pig farming."

Mongolian Government to severe ties with Malaysia?

Friday April 25, 2008

Shaariibuu’s statement shocks consul

PETALING JAYA: The Mongolian honorary consul-general to Malaysia Datuk Syed Abdul Rahman Alhabshi was shocked when he heard that Mongolia would sever political ties with Malaysia if the Altantuya Shaariibuu murder case was deemed to be unfair.

He said the Mongolian government had not officially made such a decision.

“I was shocked when I heard that statement on television just now,” he said.

Syed Abdul Rahman said the Mongolians were monitoring the trial very closely.

“The Mongolian prime minister has written to the Malaysian Prime Minister three times but there is still no reply. Mongolia should not be taken for granted,” he said.

Altantuya's father Dr Shaariibuu Setev had earlier told reporters at the PKR headquarters here yesterday that Mongolia would sever political ties with Malaysia if the judgment in the high-profile Altantuya murder case was deemed “irresponsible and unfair.”

Dr Shaariibuu, who claimed he was conveying this message on behalf of Mongolia's Prime Minister and Foreign Affairs Minister, said his country was tired of waiting for an outcome in the murder trial.

Record high oil prices 'a strain' on Malaysia budget - minister

Thomson Financial News
Record high oil prices 'a strain' on Malaysia budget - minister
04.22.08, 6:19 AM ET

KUALA LUMPUR (Thomson Financial) - Record-high world oil prices will put a strain on Malaysia's budget as the government will be forced to allocate more money to fuel and food subsidies, a senior minister said Tuesday.

Shahrir Abdul Samad, domestic trade and consumer affairs minister, said that with oil prices at $117.26 per barrel, it will 'put a strain on the budget.'

'With oil prices at $117, petrol and gas subsidies would be at least 40 billion ringgit ($12.9 billion) for the year,' he told Agence France-Presse.

Shahrir's remarks comes after Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said Tuesday that infrastructure projects under its multi-billion-dollar five-year development plan may be delayed due to escalating costs.

Abdullah, who is also finance minister, said high on the casualty list is the construction of a vital second bridge linking the northern island of Penang to peninsular Malaysia.

Last September Abdullah warned a spike in global oil prices could affect the country's multi-billion-dollar development programmes.

Shahrir said the government wants to reduce the adverse impact of rising fuel and food prices on Malaysia's low income earners.

'With increased food prices, we have to decide how to give priority to our spending,' he said.

Shahrir said the government may impose a price control mechanism and provide subsidies to contain price increases in essential goods such as some types of the rice, milk powder, cooking oil, flour and white bread.

Malaysia, Southeast Asia's third-largest economy, last September unveiled a 176.9-billion-ringgit budget which was focused on promoting sustainable domestic economic expansion.

Shahrir also said the rise in the price of certain grades of rice was a global phenomenon, adding that local farmers of vegetable products were not pushing up prices.

'There has not been any reports of profiteering by local farmers since they are producing perishable goods. They are not exploiting the situation.'

Tun Salleh Abbas's Private Notes

Monday, April 21, 2008

Tun Salleh Abbas's Private Notes

Whatever happened to our judiciary in 1988 only history will be able to judge. What needs to be heard is HIS STORY (Tun Salleh Abbas's). Here I reproduce this account which is based on his private notes and was reproduced in Aliran Monthly, soon after his dismissal in 1988.

When I arrived at the Prime Minister’s Department I was met by a policeman who took me by lift to a waiting room. After waiting for about two or three minutes, I was shown into the Prime Minister’s Office by an officer, whom I did not recognise. There I found YAB Perdana Menteri (then prime minister Mahathir Mohamad) seated at his table with YAB Encik Ghafar Baba, Timbalan Perdana Menteri (then deputy prime minister) and Tan Sri Sallehuddin Mohamed, Ketua Setiausaha Negara (the then chief secretary to the government) seated at the same table opposite the Prime Minister. When I entered the room I gave the Prime Minister and the others my salam very loudly and he replied my salam. (Peace be on You).

After I had taken my seat, the Prime Minister told me that he had an unpleasant duty to perform and on being asked what it was, he replied that he had been asked by (the then) DYMM Seri Paduka Baginda Yang Di Pertuan Agong to tell me that I should step down. I then expressed my surprise in an Islamic way saying “Glory to God, who is free from any partnership.” Then I asked him for the reasons and in reply he said that he was not prepared to argue with me, but finally he said the reason was that I had written a letter to DYMM Seri Paduka Baginda Yang Di Pertuan Agong regarding the state of relationship between the Judiciary and the Executive. I told him that I wrote the letter simply because Judges, at a meeting on 25 March 1988, had informed me that they were very concerned about the present situation and asked to express their views through me. YAB Perdana Menteri then said that I made speeches indicating that I am biased and I am not qualified to sit in UMNO cases. I told him that I said nothing of that and the speeches I had made only dealt with the criticisms levelled at the Judiciary. I am not at all biased or bipartisan in political matters. While all this was going on, YAB Encik Ghafar Baba kept his head down while Tan Sri Sallehuddin was writing in a note book, which he was then holding.

When finally I said I would not resign, he told me that if I stepped down I would be given everything that I was entitled to. I told him that I was entitled to nothing since I was not yet 60. Obviously, he was surprised when told I was not 60 yet. Finally, he said that if I did not step down he would institute a Judicial Tribunal with a view to removing me. I told him I would not resign because if I did, I could not show my face to anyone and I might as well die.

He said that I could see the Agong if I wanted to and he would not stop me from doing so.

I told him that I would not be resigning and he could do what he pleased with me, including going ahead with the Tribunal. As there was nothing else to discuss, I finally said “Datuk, I should not waste anybody’s time”, and I shook his hand, also Encil Ghafar Baba’s and Tan Sri Sallehuddin’s. None of these three looked me right in my face and I could detect Encik Ghafar Baba was strangely silent and Tan Sri Sallehuddin only caught me by the side of his eyes but he too appeared to be subdued.

The Prime Minister himself, from the beginning to the end, did not even look me in the eye. He was looking down at his table all the time.

I left his room and I only sa