Thursday, December 3, 2009

Mengapa DAP Tak Pijak Gambar Anwar - Penganjur 16 September 2008

Mahukah DAP pijak gambar Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim yang jadi tukang canang ‘lompat parti 16 September'?

Jawabnya tentu sekali tidak. Sebabnya semua sedia maklum – ia untuk kepentingan politik bersama.

Rabu Setiausaha DAP Perak, Nga Kor Ming mengadakan sidang akhbar di bangunan parlimen untuk memohon maaf kepada rakyat Malaysia yang tersinggung dengan perbuatan beberapa pemimpin parti itu memijak poster wajah tiga anggota Bebas Dewan Undangan Negeri Perak semasa konvensyen parti itu di Ipoh Ahad lalu.

Kor Ming yang juga Ahli Parlimen Taiping terpaksa memohon maaf bagi pihak DAP setelah tindak tanduk mereka memijak gambar Hee Yit Fong (Jelapang), Jamaluddin Mohd Radzi (Behrang) dan Mohd Osman Jailu (Changkat Jering dikecam hebat berbagai pihak termasuk oleh para Ahli Parlimen PKR.

Beliau memberi alasan perbuatan memijak itu bertujuan menunjukkan rasa keji terhadap tiga ADUN Perak itu kerana berpaling tadah daripada prinsip demokrasi, kawasan Parlimen mereka serta parti sehingga menyebabkan kejatuhan kerajaan pembangkang.

Kor Ming tegas berkata parti itu menentang budaya 'lompat parti'.

Ramai yang bertanya bagaimana agaknya bentuk kenyataan Setiausaha DAP Perak itu misalnya jika gerakan 16 September Anwar menjadi kenyataan dimana pakatan pembangkang menguasai kerajaan pusat kerana tindakan melompat para Ahli Parlimen BN.

Jawabnya seribu satu macam alasan akan diberi untuk ‘ menghalalkannya’.

Makanya memang menarik untuk mendengar Kor Ming mendakwa kesediaan memohon maaf itu kerana DAP adalah parti yang berbudi bahasa, dan tidak bertoleransi kepada pengkhianat rakyat.

''Ini adalah budaya yang tidak sihat dan kita 100 peratus tidak bersetuju kerana kita berpegang teguh kepada prinsip parti,'' katanya.

Nga Kor Ming berharap melalui kenyataan minta maaf itu isu pijak gambar itu akan dapat diselesaikan secepat mungkin.
''Kita manusia kadang-kadang ada buat silap, tetapi kita memohon maaf kepada rakyat Malaysia yang tersinggung perasaan," katanya.-2/12/2009

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Stepping On Photos An Uncultured Act : Rais

2009-12-01 
KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 1 (Bernama) -- Information Communication and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim today described as uncultured and disrespectful of individual rights and democracy the action of DAP leaders stepping on a poster bearing the facial images of three former Pakatan opposition assemblymen now friendly to the Barisan Nasional (BN).
He said their action was not at all synonymous with Malaysian society or the principles of the Rukunegara (National Ideology) or the Federal Constitution.
The action of those in the DAP who stepped on the photographs of their former colleagues was totally uncultured and demeaning, he told reporters after launching a book, "Kebudayaan Malaysia: Sebuah Pengenalan" (Malaysian Culture: An Introduction), at the Craft Complex, here.
The poster bearing the facial images of Hee Yit Fong (Jelapang), Jamaluddin Mohd Radzi (Behrang) and Mohd Osman Jailu (Changkat Jering) was placed at the entrance to the convention hall where the Perak DAP held its annual convention yesterday, and delegates had to step on the poster to get to the meeting.
"This goes to show that politics is above everything else (for the DAP leaders and delegates) and they do not have any humanitarian feelings or respect for individuals and their democratic rights," Dr Rais said.
He said that if the DAP appreciated democratic values, it should accept the fact that the three assemblymen left their parties on the principles of their struggle.
"Why step on their photographs when entering the hall? The three of them can respond, if they want to, by placing the photographs of (DAP parliamentary leader) Lim Kit Siang along with his colleagues in the Pakatan opposition and stepping on them. How would that feel?" he said.
Dr Rais said acts depicting shallow thinking and ill-mannered politics such as this were unacceptable.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Kelantan Haruslah Utamakan Rakyat Bukan Kerajaan PAS Negeri



Kerajaan Kelantan harus pentingkan rakyat, bukannya politik kerajaan PAS di negeri itu, kata ahli Parlimen Bebas Pasir Mas, Datuk Ibrahim Ali mengulas kenyataan Exco negeri, Datuk Husam Musa yang tidak mengiktiraf pemberian wang ehsan hasil pengeluaran minyak oleh kerajaan Pusat.


Katanya terpulang kerajaan negeri jika mahu terus membawa isu royalti itu ke mahkamah tetapi ianya bukan boleh diselesaikan dalam masa singkat.

Ibrahim percaya, Husam sebenarnya mahu wang itu diberikan terus kepada negeri supaya boleh mereka gunakan mengikut kehendak kerajaan PAS Kelantan.

“Bagi saya, elok duit itu (wang ehsan) diterima sekarang supaya rakyat cepat dapat faedah. Kalau nak tunggu royalti, kena tunggu kes itu menang dulu. Ini ambil masa tak tahu entah bila. Ibarat sakit, kita kena ikhtiar dulu sebelum dapat doktor pakar,” katanya kepada Agendadaily.

Beliau mengalu-alukan keputusan kerajaan Pusat memberikan wang ehsan pada Kelantan mulai 2010 seperti diumumkan Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak di Dewan Rakyat, Rabu.

“Rakyat Kelantan pasti gembira dan sambut baik keputusan ini. Sukanya ambo,” ujarnya.

Katanya, rakyat Kelantan yang terhimpit ekonomi akan dapat faedah melalui pemberian wang ehsan ini.

Ibrahim juga berharap wang berkenaan diurus tadbir dengan telus, menepati sasaran dan adil kepada semua rakyat Kelantan.

Bagaimanapun, Husam yang juga Pengerusi Jawatankuasa Ekonomi, Kewangan dan Kebajikan Kelantan dalam respons awalnya tidak mengiktiraf pembayaran wang ehsan sebaliknya bertegas bahawa kerajaan negeri tetap menuntut pembayaran royalti.

Katanya di Kota Bharu, kerajaan negeri menimbang melantik panel peguam untuk mengkali tindakan membatalkan perjanjian dengan Petronas yang ditandatangani pada 1975.

“Kita juga akan kaji ambil unjuksi terhadap syarikat yang beroperasi di kawasan pengeluran pesisir Kelantan di mahkamah luar negera iaitu Amerika Syarikat dan Kanada,” katanya.

"Namun, kerajaan negeri tidak menutup pintu rundingan dan sedia berunding dengan Kerajaan Pusat," katanya pada sidang media di pejabatnya.-4/11/2009

Monday, June 22, 2009

BN Government can go it alone without unity government, says Najib

PUTRAJAYA, June 22 -- The Barisan Nasional (BN) government has the capacity to continue administering the country even without the formation of the proposed unity government, Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak said Monday.

The prime minister said the BN government was strong and had the capability to implement its development programmes.

As such, the question of the BN government being weak so much so that there was a need for a unity government did not arise, he told reporters after a meeting of the heads of Malaysian foreign missions at the Putrajaya International Convention Centre, here.

He said the government had merely responded positively to a proposal by PAS for a unity government.

Najib was asked to comment on a meeting today among PAS, DAP and Parti Keadilan Raykat (PKR) which decided to dismiss the proposal for the formation of a unity government.

Najib said the government had responded positively to the proposal because it assumed that it was for the good of the country.

"We are consistent in our stand. Anything for the good of the country must be worked on together, even if the proposal comes from an opposition party," he said.

The proposal for a unity government came from PAS president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang but it was opposed by many senior leaders of the party itself as well as the party's partners in the opposition alliance, DAP and PKR.

Asked whether the Malays would stand to lose now that the opposition alliance had dismissed the unity government proposal, Najib said: "I don't think so. I hope they are very measured in whatever they do and we will not go overboard with whether we have the talks or we don't have the talks (on the unity government).

"What's important is that we manage our differences and that we always have the nation in our hearts and minds."

Asked whether the unity government talks would re-emerge in the future, Najib said anything was possible in politics.

-- BERNAMA

Friday, June 19, 2009

Hilary Clinton, once Barack Obama's fiercest opponent has become one of his most solid allies


Jun 18th 2009
From The Economist print edition



Illustration by KAL
Illustration by KAL


ONE of Barack Obama’s riskiest decisions, on winning the presidential election, was to choose Hillary Clinton as his secretary of state. The Obama-Clinton duel was among the most vicious in Democratic Party history, and some of the sharpest clashes were over foreign policy.

The Obama camp accused Mrs Clinton of Bush-like support for invading Iraq and shaking up rogue states (at one point she even threatened to “obliterate” Iran if it attacked Israel). The Clinton camp retorted that Mr Obama was a soft-hearted neophyte who was too eager to talk to dangerous strongmen, such as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. These ideological tensions were reinforced by personal animosities. Richard Holbrooke has had a running feud with Anthony Lake, one of Mr Obama’s closest foreign-policy advisers. Samantha Power, another Obama adviser, described Mrs Clinton as a “monster” and was fired for it.

Mischief-makers have been trying to discover tensions between the two former rivals ever since Mrs Clinton moved to Foggy Bottom in January. So far they have been frustrated, despite the fact that the issues that once divided them have been at the heart of foreign policy, and many of the same egos are still at work (Ms Power is now ensconced in the National Security Council and Mr Holbrooke is “special representative” for Afghanistan and Pakistan.)

Mr Obama and Mrs Clinton have hewed to the same line over the current uproar in Iran—expressing worries about the violence but avoiding raising the spectre of “American interference”. Mrs Clinton has followed Mr Obama’s lead in holding out a welcoming hand to assorted anti-American strongmen. “President Obama won the election. He beat me in a primary in which he put forth a different approach,” was her sharp response to a Republican congressman who reminded her of her former hawkishness when Mr Obama shook Hugo Chávez’s hand. Mrs Clinton now enjoys the highest popularity rating of any of Mr Obama’s cabinet; she also enjoys the admiration of some Republicans, such as Mark Kirk, a member of the congressional subcommittee that overseas the State Department, who calls her “the superstar of the cabinet”.

Mrs Clinton’s success has partly been a matter of good fortune. The State Department is delighted to see the arrival of an administration that does not regard Foggy Bottom as enemy-occupied territory. It also has better relations with the Pentagon than it has had for years. If Donald Rumsfeld went out of his way to antagonise State, Robert Gates, who replaced him in 2006, has bent over backwards to woo it, publicly agonising over the “creeping militarisation” of foreign policy and calling for a “dramatic increase” in the “civilian instruments” of national security, such as diplomacy and foreign aid.

But Mrs Clinton has also made the best of her opportunities. She has struck a balance between deploying her star power and deferring to the president. She is routinely greeted as a rock star wherever she goes, and has enjoyed mixing with ordinary people: holding a spirited discussion with the teenage audience of an Indonesian television show, “Awesome”, for example. But she has always known when to defer to Mr Obama or other cabinet secretaries, such as Tim Geithner.

Mrs Clinton has also brought a tough-minded professionalism to her job. She has inevitably encountered resistance, given the number of fingers in the foreign-policy pie—including those of a vice-president, Joe Biden, with a long-standing interest in foreign affairs. The State Department bureaucracy is critical of her habit of surrounding herself with loyalists such as Cheryl Mills, a former White House lawyer who was one of her most important aides during the final days of her presidential campaign. Human-rights activists are also furious about her reluctance to lecture foreign governments, particularly China, on that subject.

But she has won more battles than she has lost—notably with Mr Biden, over whether America should send 21,000 troops to Afghanistan. And America’s foreign-policy machinery is now working as well as it has in years. One of her shrewdest moves was to divide the job of deputy secretary into two, with James Steinberg focusing on policy and Jack Lew on management. Mr Steinberg is respected on both sides of the former Clinton-Obama divide. Mr Lew, a former White House budget director, helped Mrs Clinton win a 10% budget increase for the department.


Mrs Clinton has also seemed content to delegate the day-to-day management of some of the world’s most volatile regions to special envoys: the Afghanistan-Pakistan region to Mr Holbrooke; the Middle East peace process to George Mitchell; and the Gulf and south-west Asia to Dennis Ross. (That last appointment, though, has gone awry: Mr Ross is apparently being moved to the White House.) But in general Mrs Clinton has disentangled herself enough from the daily demands of these regions to focus on strategic questions that are too often given short shrift: overhauling the management of foreign aid, improving the United States’ relations with Latin America and managing the rise of Asia, which is arguably the most important strategic issue facing the country. Mrs Clinton’s new-found collegial style and managerial competence is a godsend for the Obama administration at a momentous time for American foreign policy—and a principal reason why the country has been spared from one of the “difficult transitions” that Mr Steinberg once wrote a book about. The only disappointment, from her point of view, is that she did not bring the same skills to fighting Mr Obama, a year ago, that she is now bringing to serving him. If she had, Mr Obama might have been the one learning how to play second fiddle.


Economist.com/blogs/lexington

Monday, June 15, 2009

Karpal gesa PAS nilai semula kedudukannya dalam pakatan pembangkang


Pengerusi Kebangsaan DAP Karpal Singh meminta PAS menilai semula kedudukannya dalam pakatan pembangkang berikutan hasrat parti itu untuk mengadakan perbincangan perpaduan dengan Umno.

Menyatakan kesabaran parti itu ada hadnya, Karpal berkata PAS tidak sepatutnya meneruskan agendanya itu yang akan menjejaskan lagi pakatan pembangkang.

Hasrat PAS untuk mengadakan perbincangan perpaduan dengan Umno merupakan penentangan serius terhadap keikhlasan yang diharapkan daripada PAS sebagai komponen pakatan pembangkang, katanya dalam kenyataan di Kuala Lumpur Rabu.

Bernama melaporkan Karpal berkata PAS sepatutnya sedar bahawa ia bukan parti dominan dalam pakatan pembangkang kerana ia hanya mempunyai 24 kerusi di Parlimen berbanding dengan 28 kerusi yang dipegang DAP dan 31 kerusi oleh Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR).

Katanya PAS sepatutnya tidak bersikap keterlaluan dengan membuat kenyataan , terutamanya melalui presidennya Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang untuk mengadakan perbincangan perpaduan dengan Umno.

Karpal turut menafikan kenyataan Abdul Hadi bahawa DAP bersetuju dengan cadangan mengadakan perbincangan perpaduan dengan Umno seperti yang dinyatakan secara terbuka oleh Abdul Hadi.

"Hadi memilih untuk mengelirukan bukan sahaja anggota dan pemimpin PAS tetapi juga rakyat. Secara terbuka mengaku telah menipu rakyat tidak akan memberikan kelebihan kepada Hadi," katanya.

Mengenai kritikan PAS terhadap Sisters-In-Islam (SIS), Karpal berkata tindakan itu tidak akan menjadikan PAS lebih disayangi oleh mereka yang menyokongnya dalam pilihan raya umum Mac lepas dan begitu juga dengan desakan PAS supaya wartawan wanita yang membuat liputan Muktamar ke-55 parti itu baru-baru ini berpakaian "sopan".

Bagaimanapun, pendirian pemimpin PAS bahawa Malaysia akan dijadikan sebagai negara Islam sekiranya parti itu berkuasa, merupakan sesuatu yang bercanggah dengan Perlembagaan Persekutuan yang secara spesifik menetapkan Malaysia sebagai sebuah negara sekular dengan agama Islam sebagai agama rasmi, kata Karpal.-10/6/2009 Agendadaily

Sunday, June 14, 2009

1Malaysia tidak ketepi hak Melayu



Najib Tun Razak bersalaman dengan Ibrahim Ali yang mengetuai delegasi Perkasa dalam pertemuan di Bangunan Perdana Putra, Putrajaya, semalam.


PUTRAJAYA 12 Jun - Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak memberi jaminan pelaksanaan konsep 1Malaysia tidak akan mengetepikan hak-hak orang Melayu dan bumiputera seperti termaktub dalam Perlembagaan Persekutuan, malah terus diperkasakan.

Perkara itu dinyatakan oleh Perdana Menteri kepada delegasi Pertubuhan Pribumi Perkasa Malaysia (Perkasa) yang melakukan kunjungan ke pejabatnya di sini hari ini.

Presiden Perkasa, Datuk Ibrahim Ali berkata, walaupun bertanggungjawab kepada semua kaum, Najib tetap mahu agenda orang Melayu diberikan perhatian utama.

"Kita mengalu-alukan dan amat senang hati apabila Perdana Menteri menyebut konsep 1Malaysia tetap bertunjangkan kepada Perlembagaan Negara, ini asasnya.

"Sebagai Perdana Menteri yang menunaikan kewajipan kepada semua kaum rakyat Malaysia, agenda Melayu tetap dekat di hatinya (Najib)," katanya.

Beliau berkata demikian kepada pemberita selepas mengadakan pertemuan kira-kira dua jam dengan Najib di sini hari ini.

Delegasi Perkasa terdiri daripada 20 orang pakar dalam pelbagai bidang seperti ekonomi, kewangan, agama, bahasa, undang-undang dan keselamatan negara.

Menurut Ibrahim, perbincangan tersebut juga menyentuh isu-isu berkaitan liberalisasi yang turut akan menjaga kepentingan orang Melayu dan bumiputera.

Antaranya, jelas beliau, Perdana Menteri mahu pengambilan bilangan pelajar Universiti Teknologi Mara (UiTM) ditambah kepada 200,000 orang bagi melahirkan lebih ramai profesional Melayu.

Selain itu, tambahnya, Majlis Amanah Rakyat (Mara) diberi suntikan sebanyak RM550 juta untuk program-program pembangunan orang Melayu dan bumiputera.

Sehubungan itu, Ibrahim memberitahu, Perkasa akan terus memainkan peranan sebagai 'mata dan telinga' kepada orang Melayu dalam menjelaskan pelaksanaan konsep 1Malaysia dan liberalisasi kerana ramai yang masih keliru.

Katanya, Perkasa akan mengadakan sesi penerangan bergerak ke seluruh negara untuk memberi maklumat kepada rakyat di peringkat akar umbi mengenainya.

Ia dijadual bermula pada 21 Jun ini di Negeri Sembilan diikuti Wilayah Persekutuan, Johor, Perak, Selangor dan negeri-negeri lain termasuk Sabah serta Sarawak.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

What's your stand now, Kit Siang asked

KUALA LUMPUR: MCA president Datuk Seri Ong Tee Keat has challenged DAP adviser Lim Kit Siang to state his stand on the resolutions tabled by PAS at its muktamar last week.

Ong said the people would like to know where he stood on the matter.

“PAS has stated its stand, which is contrary to DAP’s stand. Now, the people wish to know whether you (Kit Siang) are agreeable to this. What say you, Kit Siang?”

Ong said this during a press conference at his service centre in Taman Muda, Cheras, yesterday.

At the muktamar, PAS had proposed a unity government between Umno and PAS. It also called for the 30% bumiputra quota to be maintained, opposed the liberalisation of the 27 service sub-sectors announced by the Government and wanted Sisters in Islam banned.

Ong said Lim had appealed to the Chinese community to support PAS in the previous general elections and said the party would take the Chinese community’s needs and wishes into consideration.

“You asked the Chinese community to throw their weight behind PAS. We hold you responsible. You cannot say that your words are meant for the election period only,” he said. The Star

Geopolitics is making a comeback in Asia

The notion that geography is power is making an unwelcome comeback in Asia

Illustration by M. Morgenstern
Illustration by M. Morgenstern


A CENTURY ago the ideas of an American naval officer, Alfred Thayer Mahan—pal of Teddy Roosevelt, inventor of the term “the Middle East”, advocate of American expansionism in Asia and father of the modern American navy—were much in vogue among military strategists and great-power leaders. Now they are back in fashion again, this time among Asia’s rising powers.

Mahan was a founding father of geopolitics, in particular the notion that geography—poring over maps—should inform foreign policy more than any other consideration. It was the wine-dark sea that interested him most. His book, “The Influence of Sea Power Upon History”, was self-fulfilling, helping sea power shape history, though not for the better. Mahan concluded that command of seaborne commerce was the key to winning wars, and that what was needed was an “overbearing power on the sea which drives the enemy’s flag from it”. Wilhelm, the German Kaiser, loved the book, once saying he was trying to learn it by heart. The naval arms race between Germany and Britain that followed was both catastrophic and avoidable.

The understanding of sea power has since evolved, yet Mahan is now hugely admired in Asia’s two most populous powers. Banyan was recently in Singapore for the Shangri-La Dialogue, run by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank. It seems Britain’s former naval dominance of Asia has been forgiven or forgotten (or perhaps is recalled with admiration), for this forum is where defence types now get together with old friends and future foes. And whenever Banyan prodded a military man from India or China, out leapt a Mahanite.

For China’s strategic planners, securing sea lanes against hostile powers has become perhaps the chief preoccupation. For India’s, it is the growth of China’s presence in its backyard, in and around the Indian Ocean. In both countries Mahan is pressed into service in one planning paper after the next. James Holmes and Toshi Yoshihara of the United States Naval War College have followed the uses and abuses of Mahan. He is often selectively quoted, suppressing his equal emphasis on peaceful commerce. There is also this dictum: “Whoever controls the Indian Ocean dominates Asia. This ocean is the key to the seven seas in the 21st century. The destiny of the world will be decided in these waters.” Both Chinese and Indian papers quote it. But it is a fabrication; Mahan never wrote it.

That Asia should be looking to the sea makes sense. Threats to the two biggest countries historically came from their Central Asian hinterlands. But in terms of the spread of commerce, culture, religion and empire, Asia’s is a largely maritime history, carried on the monsoon winds. Asia’s modern “miracle”—economies plugged into globalised networks of supply and demand—is essentially a littoral story too, even when it falters, as now. A remarkable sight in Singapore is possibly the largest fleet ever gathered: hundreds of supertankers and bulk carriers from around the world, lying idly at anchor.

Despite the global slump, Asian growth continues. More than four-fifths of crude oil bound for China crosses the Indian Ocean before passing through the narrow Malacca Strait. Vast ship-borne imports of iron ore, coal and bauxite make up other raw ingredients for Chinese growth. India imports four-fifths of its oil, mostly from the Persian Gulf, plus liquefied natural gas from Qatar and Indonesia. Writing in Foreign Affairs, Robert Kaplan, an American journalist, whose poring over maps also suggests Mahanite tendencies, describes the whole Indian Ocean seaboard as “a vast web of energy trade”. Global energy needs are expected roughly to double by 2030, with India and China accounting for nearly half of the new growth in demand. Maritime security concerns are inevitable and legitimate.

The danger comes when concerns are amplified or imagined, and hitched to Mahanite prescriptions. The chief threats to peace in Asian waters come from non-state or pariah-state actors: Somali pirates, North Korean nuclear smugglers, water-borne jihadists, drug- and people-traffickers. For Chinese strategists, however, the threats are still America and India. In Singapore Robert Gates, America’s defence secretary, met his Japanese and South Korean counterparts, to reassure them in the face of North Korea’s nuclear bluster. Yet a Chinese general disapproved of the meeting and bluntly told Banyan that America’s alliances in North-East Asia were intended to threaten China.


Other strategists gaze at maps and conjure up evil shapes. For Japanese imperialists (also Mahan fans), the Korean peninsula was a dagger at Japan’s heart; for Chinese strategists it is a threatening “bridgehead”. As for the Indian subcontinent, it is, in this Chinese analysis, “akin to a massive triangle reaching into the heart of the Indian Ocean” or, like Japan and Taiwan, “a giant and never-sinking aircraft-carrier”. India, in turn, espouses its own “Monroe doctrine”, demanding that outsiders keep out of its backyard. So it decries China’s “string of pearls” (roads, pipelines and ports being built in friendly countries around the Indian Ocean) as a provocation. Rivalry is helping drive a build-up of naval arms: three new aircraft-carriers for India; new destroyers, submarines and hints of an aircraft-carrier programme for China.

Mercifully, it is not all preordained to end in a rerun of 1914. The task of economic development concentrates Chinese and Indian minds at home. Smaller Asian navies are expanding as a counterbalance to the big powers, and they have an interest in keeping hands off the choke-point of the Malacca Strait. And America remains the defining force in Asia, able for now to enforce the peace. But, even if history never repeats itself, the persistence of Mahan’s doctrines suggests the past likes to have a try.


Economist.com/blogs/banyan

Friday, June 5, 2009

Selamat datang Lee Kuan Yew, Selamat berjuang Samy Vellu!


Olih Ruhanie Ahmad

Lee Kuan Yew akan menjelajah Malaysia minggu depan. Beliau akan mengadap Yang di-Pertuan Agong, Sultan Perak dan Sultan Pahang. Beliau juga akan mengunjungi Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak dan Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin. Seterusnya, beliau akan menemui Naib-Naib Presiden UMNO, Presiden MCA, Menteri Besar Selangor, Menteri Besar Perak, Menteri Besar Kelantan dan Ketua Menteri Pulau Pinang (The Malaysian Insider).

Semalam Samy Vellu mahu Awang Selamat dikenakan tindakan di bawah Akta Hasutan semata-mata kerana kolumnis itu menyiarkan semula kenyataan Tan Siew Sin mengenai fakta sejarah etnisiti di Malaysia (atikel Awang Selamat ini disiarkan dalam Mingguan Malaysia 31.5.2009).

Hari ini ada pemimpin pemuda MIC buat laporan polis terhadap Presiden Perkasa, Datuk Ibrahim Ali, semata-mata kerana ayat ini: Bila orang Melayu membela hak Melayu, mereka kata perkauman, namun apabila mereka membela hak mereka dan ada kalanya menyinggung perasaan orang Melayu dan raja-raja Melayu, mereka tidak menganggapnya sebagai perkauman (Ibrahim Ali, Presiden Perkasa, Utusan Malaysia: 4.6.2009).

Secara kebetulan, antara rumusan posting saya malam tadi adalah kenyataan ini: Bila orang Melayu dan Bumiputera bertindak untuk menyuarakan kebenaran, tindakan itu cepat-cepat dilabelkan oleh sesetengah bukan Melayu sebagai tindakan rasis dan anti-perpaduan. Tetapi, bila sesetengah bukan Melayu mengungkit-ungkit, mengasak dan cuba menginjak-injak kedudukan Melayu pada hari ini, tidak ada siapa pula yang berani melabelkan tindakan segolongan bukan Melayu itu sebagai cauvinis dan rasis. Jika beginilah keadaannya, bilakah akan wujud perpaduan nasional yang tulin di Malaysia? Jika beginilah keadaannya, sampai bilakah orang Melayu dan Bumiputera akan menjadi mangsa label yang double-standard semata-mata kerana sebagai peribumi, orang Melayu dituntut supaya sentiasa bersabar dan bersikap amat toleran terhadap gelagat sesetengah bukan Melayu yang seolah-olah mahu mencabar kesebaran orang Melayu dan Bumiputera (Ruhanie Ahmad, Ketua Penerangan Perkasa, kuda-kepang: 3.6.2009).

Seterusnya, untuk renungan Samy Vellu, anak buahnya yang membuat aduan polis mengenai Ibrahim Ali, Lim Guan Eng yang diberitakan menyekat wartawan Utusan Malaysia daripada menghadiri satu sidang akhbar anjuran PKR di Pulau Pinang, Lim Kit Siang yang diberitakan sebagai memfitnahkan MARA kononnya kehabisan dana untuk membiayai biasiswa pelajar Bumiputera, orang kuat Gerakan yang nak bawa balik Chin Peng, dan lain-lainnya yang pada hujung tahun 2008 mengungkit-ungkit hal ehwal orang Melayu, saya paparkan di sini imbasan berita daripada Berita Harian 25 Jun 1965 seperti berikut:

KUALA LUMPUR, 24 JUN 1965 – Menteri Kerjayara, Pos dan Telekom, Datuk V.T Sambanthan, hari ini telah bertanyakan Lee Kuan Yew, Perdana Menteri Singapura, di negeri mana di dalam dunia ini bangsa-bangsa yang mendatang diterima baik menjadi warganegaranya beramai-ramai.

Beliau menegaskan bahawa hanya negara ini sahaja di dalam dunia ini telah memberi segala kemudahan kepada semua bangsa yang mendatang di sini menjadi warganegaranya.

Datuk Sambanthan berkata demikian di dalam Dewan Rakyat tadi ketika dewan mendebatkan titah ucapan Seri Paduka Yang Di Pertuan Agong.

Di dalam ucapannya selama 45 minit, Datuk Sambanthan telah mengkecam hebat sikap Lee Kuan Yew yang memainkan peranan perkauman di sini untuk kepentingan diri sendiri.

Beliau menuduh Lee Kuan Yew cuba memainkan politik perkauman dengan mengatakan Kerajaan Melayu Pusat cuba menguasai Kerajaan Negeri.

Datuk Sambanthan telah bertanyakan Lee Kuan Yew di mana letaknya logik tuduhannya itu.

Katanya: “Jikalau sungguhlah dakwaan Lee Kuan Yew itu, memang bodohlah pemimpin-pemimpin Melayu di sini dalam tahun 1957 dahulu memberi segala kemudahan kepada bangsa-bangsa asing di sini menjadi warganegara di sini.

“Jika benar laungan-laungan Lee Kuan Yew itu bahawa Kerajaan Melayu Pusat hendak mengusai bangsa-bangsa lain, mengapa mereka membenarkan bangsa-bangsa asing itu dengan senang saja menjadi warganegara di sini”.

“Ini amat bodoh sekali kerana adanya lebih ramai bangsa-bangsa asing (khususnya Cina dan India) menjadi rakyat di sini, tentu sukar bagi orang-orang Melayu di sini hendak menguasai bangsa-bangsa lain itu.

“Jika benar mereka hendak menguasai bangsa-bangsa asing di sini, mereka denga mudah sahaja berbuat demikian dalam tahun 1957 dahulu dengan tidak memberi kemudahan untuk bangsa-bangsa asing menjadi warganegara.

Beliau menerangkan bahawa sungguhpun orang-orang Melayu telah bermurah hati menerima baik bangsa-bangsa asing, tetapi sekarang ini mereka itulah (Melayu) golongan bangsa yang termiskin sekali.

Datuk Sambanthan bertanya: “Siapa yang memiliki bandar-bandar dan gudang-gudang serta ladang-ladang di sini. Adakah gudang-gudang dan ladang-ladang ini dimiliki oleh orang-orang Melayu?” (Berita Harian: 25.6. 19650).

Hansard yang menjadi asas kepada kenyataan Sambanthan di atas pastinya masih tersimpan di pusat data Parlimen Malaysia. Kenyataan tersebut amat relevan kepada Samy Vellu, DAP dan kita semua, khususnya orang Melayu yang asyik dituduh sebagai perkauman, walaupun dalam menyatakan kebenaran mengenai sejarah etnisiti di tanah air ini. Fikir-fikikanlah!

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

PAS elections - its all about the party's future, not personalities


THE heated contest for the Pas deputy presidency on Saturday goes beyond personalities.

Instead, the results would reflect the members' aspirations for the party's future -- whether to enhance better relations with its other partners in Pakatan Rakyat or foster co-operation with Umno.

It is widely known that two-term incumbent Nasharuddin Mat Isa is a major player in the unity talks with Umno, while his strongest challenger, Datuk Husam Musa, is all for Pakatan Rakyat.

In fact, Husam was reported as saying that his main priority, if he wins, is to end any form of co-operation with Umno.

Nasharuddin is known to be the preferred choice of Pas president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang, who has been returned unopposed, while Husam is the protege of party spiritual leader Datuk Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat.

Both senior leaders have refrained from naming their preferred candidate.

The presence of another contender, Mohamad Sabu, known for being vocal, is unlikely to have much impact. Many are expecting Mohamad to withdraw at the last minute and throw in his support for Husam.

Nasharuddin is said to have the upper hand as word has it that he had secured more than half the nominations during the divisional meetings.

"Pas members know that Hadi prefers Nasharuddin. The party president is highly respected and it is likely that members will not want a result which is seen as being in conflict with Hadi.

"Furthermore, Nasharuddin has lived up to expectations since winning the post in 2005. He is seen as a soft person and this is the kind of leader we want," said a source.

Another advantage enjoyed by Nasharuddin is that he is favoured by the powerful Dewan Ulama which wants a religious figure to occupy the seat and not Husam, who belongs to the professional group.

The views of the Dewan Ulama are likely to influence the delegates' voting trend as the group has always been held in high esteem.

Husam is seen as rather aggressive and this is not something that Pas members are comfortable with. Even in his home state, Kelantan, Husam does not have the full support of party members.

Although on the surface the party election looks rather quiet, the inside story is different altogether. Campaigning has been going on and it has gained momentum over the past few weeks.

"Our style of campaigning is different. We have our own dramas as well but it is just not actively covered, unlike during the Umno election. That is why people think that there is not much movement on the ground."

Indeed, this is true as candidates going for top posts are always careful not to be seen as campaigning aggressively.

Party elections director Datuk Mustafa Ali said the candidates were free to travel all over the country and meet delegates. "We are not stopping them. But such a practice is not rampant in Pas as members prefer candidates who lie low. Looking at past results, delegates tend to shun candidates who are seen as over-enthusiastic in campaigning."

The deputy presidential contest aside, the much anticipated sparks for the three vice-president's slots fizzled out after the withdrawal of two most talked about party leaders -- Datuk Seri Azizan Abdul Razak and Datuk Seri Mohammad Nizar Jamaluddin.

Nizar was said to be a favourite for the post but his withdrawal has raised eyebrows.

"Azizan's explanation that he wants to concentrate on his post as Kedah menteri besar is justified. But what is Nizar's motive as he had received quite a number of nominations and was seen as a frontrunner?

"Perhaps, Nizar was afraid that he would not get the votes from the ulama group and the more conservative delegates as some of them are not too pleased with his extremely close relationship with DAP leaders in Perak," said a source,

Of the five candidates, the favourites are party information head Datuk Mahfuz Omar, outgoing Youth head Salahuddin Ayub and central working committee member Mujahid Yusof Rawa, who is the son of former Pas president Yusof Rawa.

Also in the race are central working committee members Datuk Nik Mohd Amar Nik Abdullah and Datuk Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man.

When the results are announced, Pas members are likely to get a clear picture on the future direction of Pas, based on the results of the deputy president race. NST

Monday, June 1, 2009

USM apologies for technical glitch over admission


GEORGE TOWN: A technical blunder on Universiti Sains Malaysia’s (USM) official website has created confusion among 4,574 students about their eligibility to enter the university.

And USM deputy vice-chancellor (Academic and International Affairs) Prof Ahmad Shukri Mustapa Kamal apologised unreservedly for it. The students, who had received offer letters via soft copies on the website, were left disappointed when they were told of a technical mistake by USM.

The university had wrongfully uploaded all the names, together with 3,599 successful applicants, on the website.

Prof Ahmad Shukri said that about 8,000 students had pre-qualified for the university from a total of 22,000 students who had applied to enter USM.

“They met the minimum criteria to enter the university in accordance to the programme of USM.

“However, after the final three-day selection from May 26-28, we have decided to take in only 3,599 of them.

“The remaining names will be submitted to the University Admission Unit (UPU) main pool for selection into other public universities,” he said during a press conference Sunday.

Ahmad Shukri said USM only realised their mistake at about 3pm on Saturday, some 24 hours after the names of the 8,000 odd students were put up at the website on Friday.

“We took two hours to rectify the problem. By 5pm on Saturday, only the actual successful applicants were notified with the issuance of offer letters and letter of acceptance.

“We regret the mistake that caused inconvenience to the anxious parents and students.

“I apologise for the mistake and USM will do whatever we can to solve the matter,” he said.

He said USM had since notified all the successful applicants via SMSes and phone calls, adding that an official letter would also be sent out.

He said this was the first time that USM was selecting students directly after it was granted Apex status recently.

He assured that the names of students, who were not accepted by USM, would reach UPU.

“We have a short time in notifying the successful candidates. We have no choice but to inform them via SMSes, website and phone calls,” he said.

On the officer who committed the mistake, Ahmad Shukri said he wanted to resolve the matter before carrying out a post mortem and deal with the culprit.

In Petaling Jaya, Higher Education department director-general Datuk Prof Radin Umar Radin Sohadi said that those rejected by USM will be placed in the UPU’s main pool for selection into other public universities.

He said USM had been given autonomy to organise its own intake under its Apex status.

“Whoever is qualified, is offered a place and if he accepts the offer will go to USM. These students will also be excluded from the main pool.

“However, if they are rejected by USM - then they will be put into the main pool automatically. This process of selection will be done soon and will be announced in the third week of June,” he said when contacted on Sunday. The Star

Sunday, May 31, 2009

10 Most Poisonous Animals in the World





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1. Box Jellyfish

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The top prize for The World Most Venomous Animal,would go to the Box Jellyfish.

It has caused at least 5,567 recorded deaths since 1954.

Their venom is among the most deadly in the world. Its toxins attack the heart, nervous system, and skin cells. And the worst part of it is that jelly box venom is so overpoweringly painful, that human victims go in shock, drown or die of heart failure before even reaching shore. Survivors experience pain weeks after the contact with box jellies..

You have virtually no chance to survive the venomous sting, unless treated immediately. After a sting, vinegar should be applied for a minimum of 30 seconds. Vinegar has acetic acid, which disables the box jellys nematocysts that have not yet discharged into the bloodstream (though it will not alleviate the pain). Wearing panty hose while swimming is also a good prevention measure since it can prevent jellies from being able to harm your legs.

Jelly box can be found in the waters around Asia and Australia.

2. King Cobra
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The King Cobra (Ophiophagus hannah) is the worlds longest venomous snake - growing up to 5.6 m (18.5 ft) in length.

Ophiophagus, literally means snake-eater as it eats other snakes.. One single bite of this deadly snake can easily kill a human.

This snake is even capable of killing a full-grown Asian Elephant within 3 hours if the larger animal is bitten in a vulnerable area such as the trunk.

Its venom is not as toxic as other venomous snakes, but King Cobra is capable of injecting 5 times more venom than black mamba and can result in mortality up to 5 times faster than that of the black mamba. It is quite widespread, ranging across South and South-east Asia, living in dense highland forests.

3. Marbled Cone Snail
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This little beautiful looking Marbled Cone snail can be as deadly as any other animal on this list.

One drop of its venom is so powerful that it can kill more than 20 humans.

If you ever happen to be in warm salt water environment (where these snails are often found) and see it, dont even think of picking it up.

Of course, the true purpose of its venom is to catch its prey.

Symptoms of a cone snail sting can start immediately or can be delayed in onset for days.

It results in intense pain, swelling, numbness and tingling. Severe cases involve muscle paralysis, vision changes and breathing failure.

There is no antivenom. However, only about 30 human deaths have been recorded from cone snail envenomation.

4. Blue-Ringed Octopus
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The Blue-Ringed Octopus is very small, only the size of a golf ball, but its venom is so powerful that can kill a human. Actually it carries enough poison to kill 26 adult humans within minutes, and there is no antidote. They are currently recognized as one of the worlds most venomous animals.

Its painless bite may seem harmless, but the deadly neurotoxins begin working immediately resulting in muscular weakness, numbness, followed by a cessation and breathing and ultimately death.

They can be found in tide pools in the Pacific Ocean, from Japan to Australia.

5. Death Stalker Scorpion


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Contrarily to the popular belief most of the scorpions are relatively harmless to humans as stings produce only local effects (pain, numbness or swelling). However, the Death Starker Scorpion is highly dangerous species because its venom is a powerful cocktail of neurotoxins which causes an intense and unbearable pain, then fever, followed by coma, convulsions, paralysis and death. Fortunately, while a sting from this scorpion is extremely painful, it would be unlikely to kill a healthy, adult human. Young children, the old, or infirm (with a heart condition) are at the biggest risk.

Death stalker scorpions are spread in North Africa and Middle East.

6. Stonefish
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Maybe Stonefish would never win a beauty contest, but it would definitely win the top prize for being The World Most Venomous Fish.

Its venom causes such a severe pain that the victims of its sting want the affected limb to be amputated. It is described as the worst pain known to man.

It is accompanied with possible shock, paralysis, and tissue death. If not given medical attention within a couple of hours It can be fatal to humans.

Stonefish stores its toxins in gruesome-looking spines that are designed to hurt would-be predators.

Stonefish mostly live above the tropic of Capricorn, often found in the shallow tropical marine waters of the Pacific and Indian oceans,

ranging from the Red Sea to the Queensland Great Barrier Reef.

7. The Brazilian wandering spider
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The Brazilian Wandering Spider (Phoneutria) or banana spider appears in the Guinness Book of World Records 2007

for the most venomous spider and is the spider responsible for most human deaths.

This spider is believed to have the most potent neurotoxic venom of any living spider. Only 0.006mg (0.00000021oz) is sufficient to kill a mouse.

They are also so dangerous because of their wandering nature.

They often hide during daytime in highly populated areas inside houses, clothes, boots, and cars.

Its venomous bite causes not only intense pain, the venom of the spider can also cause priapism - uncomfortable erections

lasting for many hours that lead to impotence.

8. Inland Taipan
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The prize for The Worlds Most Venomous Snake goes to the Inland Taipan of Australia.

Just a single bite from this snake contains enough venom to kill 100 human adults or an army of 250,000 mice.

Its venom is at least 200 - 400 times more toxic than a common cobra.

The Inland Taiwans extremely neurotoxic venom can kill an adult human in as little as 45 minutes.

Fortunately this snake is very shy and there have been no documented human fatalities (all known bites were treated with antivenin).

9. Poison Dart Frog
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If you ever happen to be running through the rain forests somewhere in Central or South America,

do not ever pick up beautiful and colorful frogs - it can be the Poison Dart Frog.

This frog is probably the most poisonous animal on earth.

The 2 inch long (5cm) golden poison dart frog has enough venom to kill 10 adult humans or 20,000 mice.

Only 2 micrograms of this lethal toxin (the amount that fits on the head of a pin) is capable of killing a human or other large mammal.

They are called dart frogs because indigenous Amerindians use of their toxic secretions to poison the tips of their blow-darts..

Poison dart frogs keep their poison in their skins and will sicken or kill anybody who touches or eats it.

10. Puffer Fish
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Puffer Fish are the second most poisonous vertebrate on earth (the first one is golden dart Frog).

The meat of some species is a delicacy in both Japan (as fugu) and Korea (as bok-uh) but the problem is that the skin and certain

organs of many puffer fish are very poisonous to humans.

This puffy fish produce rapid and violent death..Puffers poisoning causes deadening of the tongue and lips, dizziness, vomiting, rapid heart rate, difficulty breathing, and muscle paralysis. Victims die from suffocation as diaphragm muscles are paralyzed.

Most of the victims die after four to 24 hours.

There is no known antidote, Most deaths from fugu happen when untrained people catch and prepare the fish.

Statistics show that there were 20 to 44 incidents of fugu poisoning per year between 1996 and 2006 in all of Japan

and up to six incidents per year led to death.

Since Fugus poison can cause near instantaneous death, only licensed chefs are allowed to prepare it.

Malay Billionaires

Nine Malay billionaires have been listed among the “40 Richest Individuals in Malaysia” by Forbes Asia with collective assets of US$2.603bil (RM9.132bil), reported Berita Harian.

That, however, is almost 29% lower than the US$3.65bil (RM12.84bil) gained last year and it only represented 7% of the entire US$36.41bil (RM127.74bil) accumulated wealth of all the 40 individuals on the list.

Prominent corporate figures Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar Al-Bukhary and Ambank group chairman Tan Sri Azman Hashim maintained their positions as the top two richest Malay men.

Syed Mokhtar’s assets are worth US$1.1bil (RM3.86bil) while Azman’s assets totalled US$470mil (RM1.65bil).

Three additional Malay magnates entering the list this year are Puncak Niaga Holding Bhd chief executive officer Tan Sri Rozali Ismail at the 31st position with US$130mil (RM456.08mil), Hard Rock Cafe Malaysia Enterprise chairman Tan Sri Syed Yusof Syed Nasir placed 37th with US$100mil (RM350.83mil) followed by Ranhill Bhd chief executive officer Tan Sri Hamdan Moha-mad at No. 38 with US$98mil (RM343.82mil).

Friday, May 29, 2009

A National School System can help realize 1Malaysia

KUALA LUMPUR, May 28 -- For 1Malaysia to succeed, the government needs to streamline the education system by having a national school system to promote national integration, said former Dewan Negara Speaker Tan Sri Michael Chen.

He said through the system, the national language would be the basic language or the medium of instruction to promote nation building, while Mandarin, Tamil and English would be taught as an option.

Chen said the system was similar to the Switzerland education system where parents were given the opportunity to choose the preferred language to be learned by their children, whether Italian, German or English, depending on their needs.

"All schools will have the same system, same finance (financial aid) and the same curriculum from the government," he said at a forum on "1Malaysia" organised by the Malaysian National News Agency (Bernama)'s Centre of Excellence and Taima Journalism Academy, here, Thursday.

Forum moderator and Bernama deputy editor-in-chief Zulkefli Salleh had earlier asked Chen for his opinion on the 1Malaysia concept mooted by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak.

He said the national school system would enable children of different races to seek education at the same type of school, thus promoting racial integration from an impressionable age.

"This means if the parents want their children to excel in English, Mandarin or Tamil, they can send them to any school they want," said Chen who served under three prime ministers - Tun Abdul Razak Hussein, Tun Hussein Onn and Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad.

However, he said, this did not mean that vernacular schools would be abolished.

"The vernacular schools will remain but will be using the national curriculum where the national language is a compulsory subject, while the other languages will be taught as an option.

"Through the proposed system, everyone will have an equal platform to get an education, thus eliminating claims of government favouritism towards certain schools when disbursing aid," he added.

-- BERNAMA

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

At last my problem is solved!!

The Two PKR Leaders admitted meeting Aminah

BUKIT MERTAJAM: A PKR supreme council member and a special assistant to a Penang executive councillor have owned up to meeting former party colleague Aminah Abdullah.

Lawyers Cheah Kah Peng and Peter Lim Eng Nam, however, denied any wrongdoing, saying they had met for lunch at Aminah’s house and the atmosphere was jovial and light-hearted.

“I feel sad because she has converted a perfectly bona fide chat into something that has turned ugly,” Cheah told a press conference yesterday.

Aminah created a storm when she claimed that two PKR leaders had offered her the Penang Municipal Council president’s post to withdraw from contesting the Penanti by-election.

She claimed that she was also offered the Penang Deputy Chief Minister I post to rejoin the party if she won.

She also claimed that she would be given RM80,000 as compensation for what she had spent so far in preparation for the May 31 by-election.

Cheah stressed that he and Lim, who is a special assistant to state Agriculture and Agro-Based Industry, Rural Development and Flood Mitigation Committee chairman Law Choo Kiang, went to Aminah’s place on her invitation.

He said they also went “in their own personal capacity” without representing any organisation, including PKR.

Cheah added that Aminah had during their lunch conversation expressed how good it would be to meet old friends and to possibly re-join the party.

“One of the things she implied during our chat was that she might not continue with her potential candidature in the by-election.

“She was inviting us to share our views on this matter. So, we gave her our two cents worth,” he said.

Cheah, who has been in PKR since 1998, said he got to known Aminah and her family a year later.

Lim, who is Batu Kawan PKR division deputy chief, said he got to know her in 2000.

They said they would visit her during Hari Raya and on other festive occasions.

Even after Aminah quit the party in 2007, Cheah said he and Lim kept in contact with her.

He said they attended her daughter’s engagement ceremony in March.

Lim said he was disappointed that Aminah, who had cooked for them, had also quietly recorded their conversation.

“I did not expect to be used this way. I feel sad and very hurt,” he said. The Star

Monday, May 25, 2009

Sultan Selangor safely home from US after heart surgery


SEPANG: Selangor Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah, who was in the United States for heart surgery, returned home on Monday to a warm welcome.

The private jet touched down at 3.40pm and he walked out with minimal help to greet family members, Raja Muda Perak Raja Dr Nazrin Shah, Selangor Mentri Besar Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim and 250 others at KLIA’s Bunga Raya VIP complex.

Dressed in a brown moleskin jacket over a denim shirt, black trousers and sneakers, the Sultan had some tea before going home.

His personal physician Datuk Dr Anuar Masduki said the heart surgery on May 2 involved three procedures over nine hours and went smoothly with the Sultan making satisfactory recovery.

Followup treatment would be done at Sime Darby SJMC, he said. The Star

Friday, May 22, 2009

The Chinese and Arabs are buying huge farmland abroad

Outsourcing's third wave

Rich food importers are acquiring vast tracts of poor countries' farmland. Is this beneficial foreign investment or neocolonialism?



EARLY this year, the king of Saudi Arabia held a ceremony to receive a batch of rice, part of the first crop to be produced under something called the King Abdullah initiative for Saudi agricultural investment abroad. It had been grown in Ethiopia, where a group of Saudi investors is spending $100m to raise wheat, barley and rice on land leased to them by the government. The investors are exempt from tax in the first few years and may export the entire crop back home. Meanwhile, the World Food Programme (WFP) is spending almost the same amount as the investors ($116m) providing 230,000 tonnes of food aid between 2007 and 2011 to the 4.6m Ethiopians it thinks are threatened by hunger and malnutrition.

The Saudi programme is an example of a powerful but contentious trend sweeping the poor world: countries that export capital but import food are outsourcing farm production to countries that need capital but have land to spare. Instead of buying food on world markets, governments and politically influential companies buy or lease farmland abroad, grow the crops there and ship them back.

Supporters of such deals argue they provide new seeds, techniques and money for agriculture, the basis of poor countries’ economies, which has suffered from disastrous underinvestment for decades. Opponents call the projects “land grabs”, claim the farms will be insulated from host countries and argue that poor farmers will be pushed off land they have farmed for generations. What is unquestionable is that the projects are large, risky and controversial. In Madagascar they contributed to the overthrow of a government.

Investment in foreign farms is not new. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 foreign investors rushed to snap up former state-owned and collective farms. Before that there were famous—indeed notorious—examples of European attempts to set up flagship farms in ex-colonies, such as Britain’s ill-fated attempt in the 1940s to turn tracts of southern Tanzania into a limitless peanut prairie (the southern Tanganyika groundnut scheme). The phrase “banana republics” originally referred to servile dictatorships running countries whose economies were dominated by foreign-owned fruit plantations.

But several things about the current fashion are new. One is its scale. A big land deal used to be around 100,000 hectares (240,000 acres). Now the largest ones are many times that. In Sudan alone, South Korea has signed deals for 690,000 hectares, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) for 400,000 hectares and Egypt has secured a similar deal to grow wheat. An official in Sudan says his country will set aside for Arab governments roughly a fifth of the cultivated land in Africa’s largest country (traditionally known as the breadbasket of the Arab world).

It is not just Gulf states that are buying up farms. China secured the right to grow palm oil for biofuel on 2.8m hectares of Congo, which would be the world’s largest palm-oil plantation. It is negotiating to grow biofuels on 2m hectares in Zambia, a country where Chinese farms are said to produce a quarter of the eggs sold in the capital, Lusaka. According to one estimate, 1m Chinese farm labourers will be working in Africa this year, a number one African leader called “catastrophic”.



In total, says the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), a think-tank in Washington, DC, between 15m and 20m hectares of farmland in poor countries have been subject to transactions or talks involving foreigners since 2006. That is the size of France’s agricultural land and a fifth of all the farmland of the European Union. Putting a conservative figure on the land’s value, IFPRI calculates that these deals are worth $20 billion-30 billion—at least ten times as much as an emergency package for agriculture recently announced by the World Bank and 15 times more than the American administration’s new fund for food security.

If you assume that the land, when developed, will yield roughly two tonnes of grain per hectare (which would be twice the African average but less than that of Europe, America and rich Asia), it would produce 30m-40m tonnes of cereals a year. That is a significant share of the world’s cereals trade of roughly 220m tonnes a year and would be more than enough to meet the appetite for grain imports in the Middle East. What is happening, argues Richard Ferguson, an analyst for Nomura Securities, is outsourcing’s third great wave, following that of manufacturing in the 1980s and information technology in the 1990s.

Several other features of the process are also new. Unlike older projects, the current ones mostly focus on staples or biofuels—wheat, maize, rice, jatropha. The Egyptian and South Korean projects in Sudan are both for wheat. Libya has leased 100,000 hectares of Mali for rice. By contrast, farming ventures used to be about cash crops (coffee, tea, sugar or bananas).

In the past, foreign farming investment was usually private: private investors bought land from private owners. That process has continued, particularly the snapping up of privatised land in the former Soviet Union. Last year a Swedish company called Alpcot Agro bought 128,000 hectares of Russia; South Korea’s Hyundai Heavy Industries paid $6.5m for a majority stake in Khorol Zerno, a company that owns 10,000 hectares of eastern Siberia; Morgan Stanley, an American bank, bought 40,000 hectares of Ukraine in March. And Pava, the first Russian grain processor to be floated, plans to sell 40% of its landowning division to investors in the Gulf, giving them access to 500,000 hectares. Thanks to rising land values and (until recently) rising commodity prices, farming has been one of the few sectors to remain attractive during the credit crunch.


But the majority of the new deals have been government-to-government. The acquirers are foreign regimes or companies closely tied to them, such as sovereign-wealth funds. The sellers are host governments dispensing land they nominally own. Cambodia leased land to Kuwaiti investors last August after mutual prime-ministerial visits. Last year the Sudanese and Qatari governments set up a joint venture to invest in Sudan; the Kuwaiti and Sudanese ministers of finance signed what they called a “giant” strategic partnership for the same purpose. Saudi officials have visited Australia, Brazil, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kazakhstan, the Philippines, South Africa, Sudan, Turkey, Ukraine and Vietnam to talk about land acquisitions. The balance between the state and private sectors is heavily skewed in favour of the state.

AP
AP

But where’s it going?

That makes the current round of land acquisitions different in kind, as well as scale. When private investors put money into cash crops, they tended to boost world trade and international economic activity. At least in theory, they encourage farmers to switch from growing subsistence rice to harvesting rubber for cash; from growing rubber to working in a tyre factory; and from making tyres to making cars. But now, governments are investing in staple crops in a protectionist impulse to circumvent world markets. Why are they doing this and what are the effects?

“Food security is not just an issue for Abu Dhabi or the United Arab Emirates,” says Eissa Mohamed Al Suwaidi of the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development. “Recently, it has become a hot issue everywhere.” He is confirming what everyone knows: the land deals are responses to food-market turmoil.

Between the start of 2007 and the middle of 2008, The Economist index of food prices rose 78%; soyabeans and rice both soared more than 130%. Meanwhile, food stocks slumped. In the five largest grain exporters, the ratio of stocks to consumption-plus-exports fell to 11% in 2009, below its ten-year average of over 15%.

It was not just the price rises that rattled food importers. Some of them, especially Arab ones, are oil exporters and their revenues were booming. They could afford higher prices. What they could not afford, though, was the spate of trade bans that grain exporters large and small imposed to keep food prices from rising at home. Ukraine and India banned wheat exports for a while; Argentina increased export taxes sharply. Actions like these raised fears in the Gulf that one day importers might not be able to secure enough supplies at any price. They persuaded many food-importing countries that they could no longer rely on world food markets for basic supplies.


What to do instead? The obvious answer was: invest in domestic farming and build up your own stocks. Countries that could, did so. Spending on rural infrastructure is the third largest item in China’s 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) economic-stimulus plan. European leaders said high prices showed the protectionist common agricultural policy needed to be preserved.

But the richest oil exporters did not have that option. Saudi Arabia made itself self-sufficient in wheat by lavishing untold quantities of money to create grain fields in the desert. In 2008, however, it abandoned its self-sufficiency programme when it discovered that farmers were burning their way through water—which comes from a non-replenishable aquifer below the Arabian sands—at a catastrophic rate. But if Saudi Arabia was growing more food than it should, and if it did not trust world markets, the only solution was to find farmland abroad. Other Gulf states followed suit. So did China and South Korea, countries not usually associated with water shortages but where agricultural expansion has been draining dry breadbasket areas like the North China Plain.

Water shortages have provided the hidden impulse behind many land deals. Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, the chairman of Nestlé, claims: “The purchases weren’t about land, but water. For with the land comes the right to withdraw the water linked to it, in most countries essentially a freebie that increasingly could be the most valuable part of the deal.” He calls it “the great water grab”.

For the countries seeking land (or water), the attractions are clear. But what of those selling or leasing their resources? They are keen enough, even sending road shows to the Gulf. Sudan is letting investors export 70% of the crop, even though it is the recipient of the largest food-aid operation in the world. Pakistan is offering half a million hectares of land and promising Gulf investors that if they sign up, it will hire a security force of 100,000 to protect the assets. For poor countries land deals offer a chance to reverse decades of underinvestment in agriculture.

In developing countries as a whole, the average growth in cereal yields has fallen from 3-6% a year in the 1960s to 1-2% a year now, says the World Bank. This reflects, among other things, a decline in public investment. In the 14 countries that depend most on farming, public spending on agriculture almost halved as a share of total public spending between 1980 and 2004. Foreign aid to farming also halved in real terms over the same period. Farming has done worst of all in Africa, where most of the largest land deals are taking place. There, agricultural output per farmworker was the lowest in the world during 1980-2004, growing by less than 1% a year, compared with over 3% a year in East Asia and the Middle East.

The investors promise a lot: new seeds, new marketing, better jobs, schools, clinics and roads. An official at Sudan’s agriculture ministry said investment in farming in his country by Arab states would rise almost tenfold from $700m in 2007 to a forecast $7.5 billion in 2010. That would be half of all investment in the country, he said. In 2007, agricultural investment had been a mere 3% of the total.

China has set up 11 research stations in Africa to boost yields of staple crops. That is needed: sub-Saharan Africa spends much less than India on agricultural R&D. Even without new seed varieties or fancy drip-feed irrigation, investment should help farmers. One of the biggest constraints on African farming is the inability to borrow money for fertilisers. If new landlords just helped farmers get credit, it would make a big difference.

Yet a certain wariness ought to be maintained. Farming in Africa is hard. It breaks backs and the naive ambitions of outsiders. To judge by the scale of projects so far, the new investors seem to be pinning their hopes on creating technologically sophisticated large farms. These have worked well in Europe and the Americas. Paul Collier of Oxford University says Africa needs them too: “African peasant farming has fallen further and further behind the advancing commercial productivity frontier.”

But alas, the record of large farms in Africa has been poor. Those that have done best are now moving away from staple crops to higher-value things such as flowers and fruit. Mechanised farming schemes that grow staples have often ended with abandoned machinery rusting in the returning bush. Moreover, large farmers are often well-connected and spend more time lobbying for special favours than doing the hard work.

Politics of a different sort poses more immediate problems. In Madagascar this year popular hostility to a deal that would have leased 1.3m hectares—half the island’s arable land—to Daewoo Logistics, a South Korean company, fanned the flames of opposition and contributed to the president’s overthrow. In Zambia, the main opposition leader has come out against China’s proposed 2m-hectare biofuels project—and China has threatened to pull out of Zambia if he ever came to power. The chairman of Cambodia’s parliamentary foreign-affairs committee complains that no one has any idea what terms are being offered to Kuwait to lease rice paddies.

The head of the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation, Jacques Diouf, dubs some projects “neocolonialist”. Bowing before the wind, a Chinese agriculture-ministry official insists his country is not seeking to buy land abroad, though he adds that “if there are requests, we would like to assist.” (On one estimate, China has signed 30 agricultural co-operation deals covering over 2m hectares since 2007.)

EPA
EPA

Chinese neocolonialism going down well with Mozambique’s elite


Objections to the projects are not simply Luddite. The deals produce losers as well as winners. Host governments usually claim that the land they are offering for sale or lease is vacant or owned by the state. That is not always true. “Empty” land often supports herders who graze animals on it. Land may be formally owned by the state but contain people who have farmed it for generations. Their customary rights are recognised locally, but often not accepted in law, or in the terms of a foreign-investment deal.

So the deals frequently set one group against another in host countries and the question is how those conflicts get resolved. “If you want people to invest in your country, you have to make concessions,” says the spokesman for Kenya’s president. (He was referring to a deal in which Qatar offered to build a new port in exchange for growing crops in the Tana river delta, something opposed by local farmers and conservationists.) The trouble is that the concessions are frequently one-sided. Customary owners are thrown off land they think of as theirs. Smallholders have their arms twisted to sign away their rights for a pittance.

This is worrying in itself. And it leads to so much local opposition that some deals cannot be implemented. The Saudi Binladin Group put on hold a $4.3 billion project to grow rice on 500,000 hectares of Indonesia. China postponed a 1.2m hectare deal in the Philippines.


Joachim von Braun, the head of IFPRI, argues that the best way to resolve the conflicts and create “a win-win” is for foreign investors to sign a code of conduct to improve the terms of the deals for locals. Various international bodies have been working on their versions of such a code, including the African Union, which is due to ratify one at a summit in July.

Good practice would mean respecting customary rights; sharing benefits among locals (ie, not just bringing in your own workers), increasing transparency (current deals are shrouded in secrecy) and abiding by national trade policies (which means not exporting if the host country is suffering a famine). These sound well and good. But Sudan and Ethiopia have famines now: should they be declining to sign land deals altogether? Many of the worst abuses are committed by the foreign investors’ local partners: will they be restrained by some international code?

There are plenty of reasons for scepticism about these deals. If they manage to reverse the long decline of farming in poor countries, they will have justified themselves. But like any big farming venture, they will take years to reveal their full impact. For the moment, the right response is to defer judgment and keep a watchful, hopeful but wary eye on their progress. The Economist

The Mandailing Story

The Mandailing or often called as "The Mandailing Batak" is a traditional cultural group in Southeast Asia. They are found mainly in the northern section of the island of Sumatra in Indonesia, the Mandailings are considered as a part of the Batak people.

They came under the influence of the Kaum paderi who ruled the Minangkabau of Tanah Datar. As a result, the Mandailing were influenced by Muslim culture and converted to Islam. Previous to their conversion, they practised Hinduism and Parmalim (Batak native religion).

There are also a group of Mandailing in Malaysia, especially in the states of Selangor and Perak but they refuse to be considered as a part of Batak people.

The etymology of 'Mandailing' is said to be a compounding of the words manda, meaning 'mother', and ilang, meaning 'lost'. Thus, the name is said to mean 'lost mother'.

Some research has suggested that the Mandailing are the descendants of the Toba Batak, who migrated to the south centuries before the coming of the Portuguese and Dutch colonisation of Sumatra.

There they converted to Islam and intermarried with Minangkabau and the Malay peoples. Mandailing society is patriarchal, employing family names, or marga, in the same manner as the Toba Batak.

The same marga can be found, such as Lubis, Nasution, Siregar, Hasibuan, Harahap, Dalimunthe (originally from Munthe), Matondang, Rangkuti, Parinduri, Pulungan, Rambe, Daulae(y), Pohan, Batubara (not to be confused with the Batu Bara people from the east coast of Sumatra), Barus and Hutajulu. They are closely related to the Angkola, who are mixed between Muslim and Christian adherents.

'Mandailing' is the name of region (Luat Mandailing) which is now almost in Mandailing Natal Regency in North Sumatra Province. The first group who came to this region were the Lubis and Nasution later followed by the Siregar, Harahap and so forth. These groups migrated from the northern region, which now belongs to North Tapanuli Regency and Tobasa Regency. One of these groups, the Harahap, left, which makes their identification to the region difficult.

Matondang, Rangkuti and Parinduri are the local groups of Luat Mandailing. Harahap and Siregar dwell almost in Luat Angkola, which now belongs to South Tapanuli Regency, situated between Mandailing-Natal Regency and North Tapanuli Regency.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Barack Obama must just not scold Israel's leader but also promote his own plan soon

Don't hold back



Reuters
Reuters


FOR the first time in many years, an Israeli government is scared stiff that an American administration may squeeze it until its pips squeak. That is surely a good thing, if it makes the Israelis more amenable to giving the Palestinians the fair deal—in essence, a proper state of their own—that might bring peace to the two peoples and to the wider region of the Middle East. So when Barack Obama meets Binyamin Netanyahu in the White House on May 18th, he must be tough with him.

Mr Netanyahu refuses publicly to accept the notion of two states. He seems to want to continue to squeeze the Gaza Strip until its elected government, run by the Islamist movement, Hamas, is toppled. He says he will not give Syria back the Golan Heights, which Israel conquered in 1967. He now adds a demand that the Palestinians should not just recognise Israel as a country but as a specifically Jewish state. He refuses to freeze the growth of Jewish settlements that continue to bite into what is left of a barely contiguous Palestinian state on the West Bank. And, most pressingly, he seeks to link peace with the Palestinians to a prior deal between the West and Iran to ensure that the Islamic Republic is prevented from having a nuclear bomb. His stance on these issues makes him appear an unpromising partner in negotiation; but much the same was said of Menachem Begin, whom the Americans persuaded to make peace with Egypt 30 years ago, so it’s certainly worth Mr Obama’s while to put some political capital into budging him.

Mr Obama must tell Mr Netanyahu that he is flat wrong on all those counts. No more settlements can be built or expanded—on pain of a reduction in American aid. On Iran, Mr Netanyahu’s logic is back-to-front. For sure, sensible leaders the world over, including Arab ones, want Iran to forgo the bomb. But how much easier it would be to persuade the Iranians to drop their ambitions if they were unable to invoke the unresolved conflict over Israel as part of a holy nuclear cause.

It is not just for the Palestinians’ sake that Mr Obama needs to take a tough line. Being too kind to the Israelis, as American administrations have been in the past, does them no favour in the long run either. Israel’s long-term security can be ensured only by America cajoling and even threatening its leaders in the hope that they will accept that the Israeli state’s safety depends overwhelmingly on the viability of a Palestinian one.

Mr Netanyahu does, however, have one good question to pose to the American administration. Who would govern the Palestinian state the world wants him to create in the West Bank and Gaza? Mahmoud Abbas and his Fatah party run the West Bank under Israeli supervision but are chronically weak. Hamas is strong. Both movements say that Israel must withdraw from every inch of land occupied in 1967 and accept back to what is now the Jewish state all the Arab refugees who fled more than 60 years ago. But unlike Fatah, which has explicitly accepted the idea of two states, Hamas, while groping towards a de facto acceptance of Israel, has yet to renounce its desire eventually to liberate all of Palestine from the Jordan river to the Mediterranean sea.

So far Mr Obama has held his cards to his chest. But if he is to push Israel into concessions he needs to answer the Hamas conundrum. Unlike George Bush’s team, Mr Obama’s has endorsed the idea of a Palestinian government that would include Hamas and so talk with more authority to the Israelis, making any agreement more likely to stick. The snag is that the two halves of the Palestinian movement are at daggers’ drawn and have fluffed repeated opportunities to reconcile.

The chances are that Mr Netanyahu’s rendezvous at the White House will not end in a public fracas. The Israeli leader is too clever for that, and shouting in public is not Mr Obama’s style. More likely, the pair will frankly acknowledge differences. Mr Netanyahu is a practised opportunist—and may indeed edge towards an acceptance of the two-state idea over time. After all, he says he accepts Mr Bush’s “road map” that led nowhere but clearly affirmed a two-state solution.


Still, if the meeting does end in a stalemate, it will not be enough merely for Mr Obama to mutter doleful thoughts about reassessing America’s special relations with Israel—and then back off. Former administrations told the Israelis and Palestinians that, in the end, it was for the two sides to negotiate peace. It is now plain that this approach does not work. America too needs to be deeply involved from start to finish.

Jordan’s King Abdullah, reasserting the Arab peace initiative of 2002, has boldly called for all Muslim governments to state clearly that they would accept Israel. They must make Hamas do so too. Next month Mr Obama goes to Egypt on his first presidential visit to an Arab country. That would be the perfect moment to unveil his detailed plan for peace, along with a promise that under his administration America intends at last to implement the two-state vision, not just talk about it. The Economist