Thursday, May 29, 2008

BMC fracas: Police beat up youth


By his account, he was only a curiosity-seeker who wanted to know what was going on at the site of a disputed barricade near Bandar Mahkota Cheras (BMC) last night.

In no time at all, however, Chang Jiun Haur was soaked in his own blood after being repeatedly beaten by 20 riot squad (FRU) personnel armed with batons and kicked with boots.Chang, 21, his sister and two friends were driving away from the site of the barricade about 11.30pm, when their car was surrounded by police personnel who had earlier dealt with a fracas involving BMC residents.A high-ranking police officer at the scene claimed that Chang had run over a FRU personnel with his car.

“He asked for it. He ran over a policeman and he got what he deserved,” the officer told Malaysiakini a few minutes after the incident.Asked to identify the person who was hit by the car, the officer had initial difficulty in persuading the individual to come forward.

When he did so, the man - who appeared unscathed - claimed: “He tried to run me over... look at my baton, it is broken. What more evidence do you want?”However, a police officer who took Chang to the Kajang Hospital said none of the personnel had been hit by the injured man's car.Chang, when met at the hospital at 12.30am, have also denied this as well: “We had just come back (to Kuala Lumpur) from Port Dickson and wanted to see what was going on.”He was lying on a bed, with a bloodied mouth. His shirt had been torn off by the police, and his shorts were drenched in blood.

He was crying from the shock and trauma, and was unable to say much more.It is learnt that Chang was placed in the intensive care unit. The other occupants of his car were arrested last night, but were released today according to BMC Open Road Committee chairperson Tan Boon Hwa who has been keeping tabs on last night’s dramatic events.DAP Selangor executive councillor Ronnie Liu, who visited Chang later last night, said the police had over-reacted and that the excessive use of force could not be justified.“The police should maintain law and order and not assault people. I am disappointed. My party will provide Chang and the others with lawyers,” Liu said.According to Liu, the beating was so severe that Chang lost one or two of his teeth.
‘Journalists attacked’Chinese-language dailies reported today that more than 10 people were seriously injured in yesterday’s incident, which saw BMC residents assaulted by ‘thugs’ allegedly hired by toll concessionaire Grand Saga. However, the company has disassociated itself from the incident, also saying it does not condone violence.About 7pm yesterday, defiant residents attempted to tear down the barricade that had just been rebuilt, but were confronted by unidentified men armed with iron rods, helmets and sticks.“They attacked the residents immediately. About 10 people were assaulted, and three of them were reporters. Their cameras were confiscated as well,” claimed Tan.

Star reported that Utusan Malaysia photographer Roy Azis Abdul Aziz had been beaten up when he tried to take photos of the fracas.BMC resident Chin Kee Chong’s right arm was broken (right) and he suffered injuries to his head, while another resident - Lee Ah Seng - sustained severe injuries to his head, which required seven stitches.Some residents claimed that several policemen present during the incident had failed to intervene.Kajang police chief Shakaruddin Che Mood, however, said they were only traffic policemen whom he had sent to the area for traffic control.“They were too busy controlling traffic and could not do anything,” he told reporters, adding that five police reports have been lodged on the assault.Grand Saga has been involved in a long-running dispute over its bid to block a toll-free access road from BMC to the Cheras-Kajang Highway.

The barricade has been rebuilt on three occasions, after being torn down by residents.The Selangor menteri besar's political secretary, Nik Nazmi Nik Ali, has said that a response will be issued today over last night’s incident.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

World No Tobacco Day - 31st May

As you know, 31st May is the World No Tobacco Day. This year's theme is "Tobacco Free Youth". As MPS has been positively seen as an (if not the most!) active NGO in tobacco control, we should take this opportunity to participate at the event.

This yr the National Cancer Society Malaysia, NCSM (www.cancer.org.my) is organizing the Relay For Life KL 2008, which will be held on 31st May-1st June, the weekend of World No Tobacco Day and International Cancer Survivor's Day, at the MSN Training Stadium, Bukit Jalil,Things are falling into place nicely. We have a few NGOs joining a marquee provided FOC by NCSM for us, namely the Msian Assoc. for Adolescent health (MAAH), Msian Council for Tobacco Control (MCTC) and MyWATCH. I am trying to get a youth percussion group to join - it will be exciting! I got info from the organizer that they require the booth to be manned at a minimum

· from 4.00pm to 11.00pm on 31st May 2008
· from 7.00am to 10.00am on 1st June 2008

We plan to increase awareness of the harmful effects of tobacco use and promote cessation. There is the RM10/person reg fee
website: www.cancer.org.my


PROGRAMME (31st May – 1st June 2008 )

4.00pm onwards Registration / Marquees open to public

4.00-5.40pm Light Entertainment
5.00pm Arrival of VIPs
5.30pm Arrival of YB Dato’ Liow Tiong Lai,
Minister of Health

5.40pm OPENING CEREMONY
Negara-Ku
Bacaan Doa

5.50pm Speech by YB Dato’ Liow Tiong Lai

6.10pm ‘Tobacco Control Gambit’
Gong struck every 8secs by a child/adult/survivor to signify a death from
tobacco.
After 3 gongs –Dr.Zarihah will read a poem (2 mins).
Gong continues…. Roughly 25pax

6.15pm Arrival of ‘Road To Relay’ Cyclists

6.25pm OPENING CEREMONY FOR RFL
N Yawa – Youth Percussion Group

6.30pm Speech by Dato’ Zuraidah Atan
Chairman, RFL KL

6.35pm Survivors gather for start of RFL

6.40pm SURVIVORS’ LAP: Flagged off by
YB Dato’ Liow Tiong Lai

6.50pm LAP BY MOH in support of WNTD
IRFL Kids Parade
Sponsors
Public

7.00pm Entertainment –
Temple of Fine Arts
Presenting Eddie Francis……….
Maya Yoga Studio
SoulSisterz
PARTS Dancers
Dikir Barat by UKM
Linda Jasmine Performing Arts
Yana
N Yawa
‘Miss Relay’ Pageant
Relay continues…………….
8.30-9.30pm LUMINARIA CEREMONY
Torch Bearers
‘Celebrities Give Back’
KL Kids Choir – 3 songs
Zamil – 1-2 songs
Soul Sisterz Quartet – 1 song
Ferhad – 1 song
Anita Sarawak
End of Luminaria

9.30pm Performance – “Hairspray” by Cancer Survivors
CTC Presents…………………
Line Dancing Performance
Relay continues…………….

9.50-11.20pm Suria FM Showcase
Relay continues
11.20-12am ‘Let’s Do The Poco Poco’
12midnight International Cancer Survivors
Day – ‘Mardi Gras’ Parade
12.30am ‘Pajama Party’ Contest

1.00am Games & Races – Stay awake all
Onwards night

1.30am School & College 8 x 100m Relay
Relay continues………………
5.00-7.00am Endurance Race
Relay continues………………
6.30am Breakfast – Relay Cont…………..
7.30-8.15am Maya Yoga Studio Demo &
Beginners Stretch Class
Relay Continues……………..
8.30am Kids – 50m Sprint
9.00am Business House 4x100m Relay
Relay Continues………………
9.55am Countdown to the ‘Last Lap’
10.00am Last Lap & Closing Ceremony

Monday, May 26, 2008

KL Bar Paintball Battle


The Young Lawyers Committee (YLC) together with the Social, Arts and Culture Committe (SAC) of the KL Bar Committee is organising a Paintball Game at Tanamera Paintball Field, in Sungai Buloh.This will take place on Saturday 14 June 2008, from 9.30am - 5pm. Do email Seira (seirasacha @ gmail.com) so that we can know the number of people attending.


Total cost for playing the whole day:RM85 for rental of the marker i.e. gun, face mask, 500 pellets. You can rent a “bulletproof” vest for an additional RM10. All in, you don’t need more than RM110 or so.




Meeting place:Everyone to meet at the Sungai Buloh jejantas restaurant at 9am. Alternatively, you can follow the directions below and meet at Tanamera itself at 9.30am sharp.


Directions: Take the NKVE (the highway that passes in front of One Utama, the Curve, etc) towards Sungai Buloh. After the toll (RM1.60), take the left exit heading for Sungai Buloh. Warning - the Sungai Buloh turnoff is a bit confusing - it seems to suddenly appear but there is a U-turn up ahead. Then go straight down the road for approximately 8km and turn left at the junction with the red sign that reads “Tanamera”.


Video of Tanamera PaintballWhat to wear: Army camo gear. Failing which, dark (or army camouflage) long sleeved t-shirt, dark long pants (track pants or cargo pants will do), and hiking boots or sports shoes. Don't wear your nicest pair of sports shoes, they are going to get muddied and the soles might drop off. You may also want to bring along a cap and/or bandanna.


Do bring: A change of clothes, water and/or 100-plus, mosquito repellant (a must-have! Layer on that mosquito repellant!)

Lai Chee Hoe
Chair
Social, Arts and Culture Committee

Should Anwar apologise? (Malaysiakini)


In a recent interview in The Star, Haris Ibrahim, the initiator behind the People's Parliament, made an intriguing observation।


He said that he would like to hear PKR de facto leader Anwar Ibrahim apologise for all his actions (and inactions) during his 16 years in government."My contention is very simple," he says. "Tell this nation, 'I was wrong. I am sorry and I want to work with you', and I think we can move forward."Haris added that he had been tracking Anwar's public statements for the last few years and he has yet to see him make an unqualified apology to the nation.


The question of whether Anwar should admit and apologise for certain mistakes or wrongdoings is all the more relevant now that there is a serious possibility he might become the next prime minister if his Pakatan Rakyat coalition takes over power.Anwar is no angel nor is he a saint. During his time in the upper echelons of the Umno leadership, and especially as deputy prime minister, he was guilty of doing many of the things he now criticises.His maneuverings to control the media is well-known in journalism circles.


He also allowed for undeserved appointments to top positions in public universities. And he also had his fair share of corporate cronies, details of which can be found in KS Jomo's book ‘Malaysia's Political Economy’.While Anwar has, on occasion, bucked the Umno way, for example when he spoke up for Lim Guan Eng over his sedition trial and subsequent prosecution, these instances were few and far between and are vastly outnumbered by the times when he made use of the system rather than go against it.


Anwar has been questioned on his role within the administration time and again after his release from prison. In many of these interviews, most notably on BBC's ‘Hardtalk’, he was evasive rather than frank and never once did he own up to his mistakes. As long as he refuses to come to terms with his Umno past, this matter will keep cropping up.An admission and apology will get this monkey off his back and enable him to start off on a clean slate. In the United States, it's not uncommon for politicians to apologise for their actions in the past.


For example, many political and even religious leaders have apologised for their actions (and non-actions) during the tumultuous and historic civil rights movement in the 1960s.Anwar can do the same but we don't think he will. There are two possible reasons for this. Firstly, he might have the ‘George W Bush Syndrome’ of not wanting to ever admit to any mistakes, much less wrongdoings. Secondly, he might not want to give ammunition to his enemies in Umno.Love means not having to say you're sorryCasting himself as a victim of the system (which he certainly was) rather than someone who was complicit in its actions for a long period of time (which he also was) has not harmed his international reputation.


But there are enough people in this country who have a knee-jerk distrust of – and in some cases, disdain for – him. For that reason, he should own up and apologise.The ‘George W Bush Syndrome’ - he has to grapple with on his own. We can't help him there. But if he's afraid that Umno will be able to exploit any mea culpa about past mistakes, we believe it's totally possible for him to apologise in such a way that gives nothing to his enemies.Anwar could say that he was misled, that he was sucked into the system, that it was a shortcoming on his part to succumb to Umno's ways.


He could then say that after suffering through six years of jail and experiencing firsthand just how unfair the system is, he is now a truly changed man. He can then vow never to do such things again. Such a move would warm the hearts of the people who still don't trust him, including Haris Ibrahim.Perhaps the best opportunity for him to do this would be when (or rather, if) he manages to take over the government. It would make sense for him to do so from a position of strength. An admission of guilt, a heartfelt apology, and then the unveiling of a grand vision for the future would be an excellent start for an Anwar administration.


While we believe he probably can topple the current government in due time, we don't think he will ever apologise for past mistakes. Nothing in his public statements or demeanor suggests he will. For Anwar, sorry seems to be the hardest word.He probably believes that if he makes all the key reforms he has promised – such as dismantling the Internal Security Act, freeing up the media, replacing the New Economic Policy with something more inclusive – it would be enough to secure his legacy.


It's said that love means not ever having to say you're sorry. Anwar probably thinks this applies to politics as well.Anwar may suffer from the ‘George W Bush Syndrome’ but he also has a ‘Nelson Mandela Complex’. If he wants to be seen as the great leader that he potentially could be, it would do well for him to be big-hearted enough to admit that he was wrong in the past and to apologise for his mistakes.

Govt keen to open up legal sector to foreign firms (The Star)

KUALA LUMPUR: The Government is keen on opening up the legal sector to international foreign firms particularly in specialised areas.

In an immediate response, the Bar Council said it was ready to open up in "permitted practice areas" and believed that liberalisation of the legal sector is something inevitable in today's age of globalisation.

At a press conference Monday, de facto Law Minister Datuk Zaid Ibrahim said liberalising the legal profession has been talked about for a long time but it is time now "to put more energy and urgency" into it in view of the global economy.

"We must allow the realities of the market place to be a factor in our decision to open up. How do we retain our best lawyers if we don't have international law firms in our country?

"If we can have some well known international names here, then perhaps we can keep them (our lawyers) here. We must open up. We must have a competition policy. We must have freer trade and environment," he said, urging the Bar Council to sit down and focus on this again.

Zaid said that if Malaysia wanted to bring in big foreign investments and multinationals, it was important to open up the financial services sector and the legal profession.

"It is not the number of lawyers but the skills that we need to build up this country. The big foreign MNCs and big banks normally want to use lawyers that they feel will suit their needs.

"We cannot keep thinking of our own self-interest. We have to think in terms of the interest of the country," he said, adding that countries like Singapore, Hong Kong, United Arab Emirates and Kuwait had opened up their legal sector and reaped benefits from it through huge investments.

"If we want to continue to forge ahead and develop, then we should open up," adding that joint-ventures with the foreign firms might be one of the approaches.

Zaid said local law firms should not be afraid of the liberalisation because it would not impinge on their business.

He said this was because the liberalisation would be in selected specialised areas like intellectual property, maritime law, structured finance, banking and aviation law.

"We are not saying we are going to open up everything. Most international foreign firms are not interested in the small firms' businesses.

"Local firms business will not be jeopardised in areas where our standards are high," he said, adding that when foreign law firms were operating here this would also open up employment opportunities for local lawyers and for them to gain expertise.

Bar Council president Datuk Ambiga Sreenevasan said they are prepared for foreign firms to come in particularly in corporate transactions.

"It's inevitable. There are no two ways about it," she said, adding that the Bar Council had drafted up rules on the "permitted practice areas" that could be opened up.

The areas are transactions involving international capital market, asset securitisation which goes beyond the (yet to be determined) stipulated amount, transactions governed by foreign laws and those involving the Malaysian International Islamic Financial Centre (MIFC).

She said they were keen in joint-ventures between foreign and local firms in the MIFC but Bank Negara had asked to consider allowing standalone foreign firms and "we are looking at this proposal."

She said the Bar Council was working closely with the International Trade and Industry Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin in liberalising the legal sector to deal with trade negotiations like the Free Trade Agreements and the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS).

She said the Bar Council also reserved the right to increase the areas to be opened up.
"We are ready. We accept that we must be global," she said, adding that with the MIFC the opening up would be "faster than we think", possibly within a year.

She said the ultimate goal was to strike a balance by meeting the challenges of globalisation while at the same time promoting the interest of the local law firms.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Be prepared for snap polls, officers told


PUTRAJAYA: The Election Commission (EC) has informed its officers to be prepared for a snap election, said chairman Tan Sri Abdul Rashid Abdul Rahman.Stressing that he was not one to speculate, Abdul Rashid said the EC was prepared “for anything” and was capable of handling a snap election as it had all necessary infrastructure in place.In an interview with mStar Online yesterday, he revealed that after the post-mortem of the 12th General Election, he had instructed all returning officers (RO) to be prepared for any eventuality.Similarly, the 140,000 people involved in the general election have also been advised to not refuse when called upon again for duty in the event of a snap election.
“But I don’t want to speculate, and it is not for us to speculate, but we are prepared for anything. In the past two months of meeting with the ROs, I’ve already told them to be prepared as it may be called anytime,” he said.Abdul Rashid was responding to talk on recent events that have led to speculations of Umno members defecting from the party en masse and even party hopping following Barisan Nasional's dismal showing in the elections.Various parties have since come forward in favour of an anti-hopping law proposed by Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Mohd Zaid Ibrahim in March
In the same light, tension has been fuelled in Barisan following the shocking announcement of Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s resignation from Umno on Monday।
Political observer Dr Chandra Muzaffar said the possibility of a snap election in the near future could not be dismissed

“However, I do not consider it as a serious possibility, only that in politics, such possibilities cannot not be rejected outright,” he said

Universiti Putra Malaysia political communications lecturer Associate Prof Dr Abdul Muati @ Zamri Ahmad said it was possible a snap election could take place if MPs were to cross over.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Live bullet sent to Karpal




DAP leader and member of Parliament Karpal Singh received a live bullet in an envelope at his law firm in Kuala Lumpur this afternoon.

The live bullet was accompanied with a note warning him against speaking out on the controversial issues of Malay rights and the constitutional powers of the sultans.“Kalau tak berhenti, peluru ini akan melekat pada kepala dahi kau!” (If you don’t stop, this bullet will be lodged in your forehead).The one-page note, printed in Bahasa Malaysia, added that this was the “first warning” .The wheelchair-bound politician lodged a police report over the death threat at 5pm at Dang Wangi police station.Met at the police station later this evening, Karpal told reporters that the envelope was hand-delivered to his receptionist at 12.30pm.
“The man was wearing a helmet and he had his visors drawn down. He left hurriedly,” he said, adding that the police have confirmed that bullet was a 9mm ‘live bullet’. When quizzed by reporters, Karpal said he had no clue who the culprits were and would not rule out that the incident could be politically motivated.
“It is difficult for me to say, but based on the wordings of the note, it appears to have political motives,” he said. Will seek police protection ‘if necessary’The DAP chairperson and criminal lawyer found himself some unwanted attention recently when some of the remarks he had made concerning the royalty had come under the spotlight.Over the past week, the renowned lawyer has had 20 police reports lodged against him after he had said the Sultan of Perak had acted unconstitutionally in the transfer of a religious department official and criticised Regent of Kelantan's message at a forum last month.
Karpal, who is member of Parliament for Bukit Gelugor in Penang, added that he would consider asking for police protection in the future “if necessary”. Asked if the incident would change his stand on the Perak Sultan’s recent order for the Religious Department Director Jamry Sury to be reinstated, Karpal said he issue had been deemed settled. He said that he and other quarters have all voiced their arguments and that there was no need to prolong the debate any further. Veteran DAP leader Lim Kit Siang described the incident as deplorable and urged the police to get to the bottom of the matter. “This sort of things should not happen in a country like Malaysia,” said Lim, who were among four DAP MPs to accompanied Karpal to the police station, including his son Gobind who is Puchong MP.

Ex-No 1 Umno member continues attack on PM


A day after he quit the party which he has been a member since its foundation 62 years ago, Dr Mahathir Mohamad continued his attack against his successor-turned-nemesis, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.

In his latest salvo, the former prime minister zeroed in on Iraq’s oil-for-food scandal which had embroiled his ex-deputy, Abdullah, four years ago.In a blog posting today, Mahathir had demanded to know whether Abdullah’s involvement in the scandal constituted “lobbying, corruption or abuse of power”.In 2004, Malaysiakini revealed several Malaysians, including one ‘Abdullah Badawi’, had gained illegal financial benefit from deposed Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein in an illicit deal involving the United Nations-administered oil-for-food programme.

According to the 2004 report by the United States’ Iraq Survey Group, Abdullah was given vouchers in 2000 to sell two million barrels of Iraqi oil. It was estimated that the profit could be as high as 65 cents per barrel.It added that Abdullah - through a company called Tradeyear - had sold 1,949,900 barrels, making a tidy profit of as much as US$1.3 million.Also named in the report was state-owned oil company Petronas, a former Malaysian ambassador, two other Malaysian companies and an Iraqi, who was described as an immigrant to Malaysia.Abdullah had denied knowledge of the scam, arguing that he as deputy premier then had written letters of recommendations for his in-laws.

Close relatives implicated
A year later, another report said it found ‘no evidence’ that Abdullah had profited from the programme, but it nevertheless implicated two of his close relatives.The duo were identified as Faek Ahmad Shareef and Noor Asiah Mahmood.Faek, an Iraqi immigrant, was married to Abdullah’s sister-in-law - a sister of the premier’s late wife, Endon Mahmood - but the couple had divorced later. Meanwhile, Noor Asiah is another Endon's sister.It claimed that the duo via a Malaysian trading company called Mastek, paid a whopping US$10 million to Saddam’s regime for the single largest oil allocation under the UN-administered oil-for-food programme.
“Supposing a deputy prime minister writes a letter of recommendation for his sister-in-law to an official or minister of another country who could be expected to take a serious view of the recommendation because the writer is a deputy prime minister of a friendly country and the recommendation is for his sister-in-law, does this constitute lobbying, or corruption or abuse of power,” asked Mahathir.“We need to know if they were written before, can action be taken against them now since we are now taking action on things which happened in the past.”Mahathir appeared to refer to the Lingam Tape Royal Commission report which last week recommended that the former premier and five others should be investigated for their role in a judicial fixing scandal.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Mahathir quits Umno


Former Umno president Dr Mahathir Mohamad today announced that he was quitting Umno with immediate effect and urged other members to emulate him.

He said he was quitting the party, which he led for almost 22 years until handing over the reins to Abdullah Ahmad Badawi in 2003, as a sign of no confidence in his successor's leadership."I will only come back to the party when there is a change in leadership," the ex-premier told a crowd at a forum in his home state of Kedah this morning.

He also called on all Umno ministers, deputy ministers and all levels of party leaders to join him in quitting the party.However, he asked these members not to join other political parties."Wait 'till Abdullah quit as the prime minister and party president and then we can return to Umno," he said.Mahathir dropped the bombshell during his speech at the 'The Position of Malays post-12th General Elections' in Alor Star. His resignation appears to be part of his strategy in upping the ante in his bid to force Abdullah to step down in the wake of the ruling coalition's worst setback in the March 8 polls.

Abdullah's most vocal critic
Mahathir, 82, joined Umno at its inception in 1946 and in recent years has been Abdullah's most vocal critic.
He entered active politics as a member of Parliament for Kedah's Kota Star Selatan in 1964.
He lost the seat in the disastrous 1969 general elections, and was expelled from the party after attacking then president and prime minister Tunku Abdul Rahman.Mahathir was invited back into the party by second prime minister, Abdul Razak, and re-elected to Parliament in 1974 for the seat of Kubang Pasu, also in Kedah.
Soon after he was appointed education minister. Within four years he was deputy leader of the party, and in 1981, became prime minister.

Friday, May 16, 2008

Commission: Act against Dr M, 5 others


The Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Lingam video clip has recommended that former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad be investigated under various laws for his role in the appointment of judges.



Other persons also named to face possible action are former chief justices Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim and Eusoff Chin, senior lawyer VK Lingam, former minister Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor and business tycoon Vincent Tan.In its 191-page report, the commission recommended that they be investigated under a slew of laws - Sedition Act, Official Secrets Act, Penal Code and obstruction of justice.De facto law minister Zaid Ibrahim today said that the cabinet has directed the Attorney General's Chambers to institute immediate investigations against the six.Earlier, Zaid said that the government has decided to release the commission's report to the public.The four-volume report will be sold at RM542.10 and be available next week.While volume one - which is the report itself - has only 191 pages, volume two containing the notes of evidence is 1,187-page long, while volume three has all the statutory declarations submitted to the commission (513 pages) and the final volume contains the exhibits (998 pages).




Copies of the report were not distributed to the media today but a ministerial aide read out one paragraph."We are of the view that there was conceivably an insidious movement by VK Lingam with covert assistance of his close friends Vincent Tan and Tengku Adnan Mansor to involve themselves actively in the appointment of judges, in particular the appointment of Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim as President of the Court of Appeal, and subsequently as the Chief Justice."

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Waytha's passport revoked: Amnesty


The government has revoked the passport of a Hindu Rights Action Force chairperson P Waythamoorthy, Amnesty International said on Thursday.




Waythamoorthy, who has been living in London since he fled the country in December, has sought asylum in Britain, Amnesty's Washington-based Asia-Pacific advocacy director T Kumar told AFP.The activist had planned to visit Washington for talks with leaders of the US Congress and Amnesty and other rights groups, "but it has been put off because of his passport's cancelation", Kumar said.




Waythamoorthy had sought the talks to highlight alleged discriminatory policies against minority ethnic Indian Malaysians as well as the arrest under the powerful Internal Security Act of five senior Hindraf members at home.The five, who led a massive anti-discrimination rally in Kuala Lumpur in November, are being held without trial and for an indefinite period.Kumar said Waythamoorthy only became aware of his passport's revocation when he returned to London from Geneva after talks recently with the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.




"He was shocked to be informed by British immigration officers that Kuala Lumpur has revoked his passport," Kumar said. "This makes him de facto stateless.""This is the first time I have heard of a political activist's passport being revoked by his own country's government," he said.Kumar called on Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to give a "full explanation on the rationale for the cancellation."Asylum applicationThe British authorities will hold hearings to consider Waythamoorthy's application for political asylum, he said.Waythamoorthy said in a statement to Amnesty that the Malaysian government revoked his passport in the belief that the British authorities would deport him to Kuala Lumpur where he could be arrested under the Internal Security Act."This unwarranted act has given me greater 'inner' strength to continue to struggle for the Malaysian Indians and for the unconditional release of my fellow brothers held unjustly under the Internal Security Act," he said.




Malaysia's highest court on Wednesday refused to release the five activists, including a newly sworn-in state lawmaker.Ethnic Indians make up less than eight percent of the 27 million population of the mainly Muslim-Malay country.Lawyers for the five said they would appeal on Monday for the Federal Court to review its decision.Rights groups say 70 people, mainly alleged Islamic militants, are being held under the Internal Security Act.

Petrol bombs thrown at DAP HQ in Ipoh (malaysiakini)


Three homemade Molotov cocktails were hurled at DAP’s Perak headquarters in Ipoh early this morning but no one was hurt from the attack.
MCPXIn the 2.20am incident, two persons on a motorbike with helmets were spotted hurling the fire bombs outside the DAP office.One of the bombs broke the glass of the office’s window which was located on the second floor of the two-storey shoplot, a stone throw away from the Perak state assembly building.However, the bombs bounced off the window as it had been boarded off and they fell onto the street below.A security guard at a school opposite the building who witnessed the attack had lodged a police report this morning.DAP state leader and senior executive councillor Ngeh Koo Ham told Malaysiakini that he believed the attack was politically motivated."However, I cannot comment if this was related to Karpal," he said when asked whether the incident was connected to the controversy over DAP chairman Karpal Singh's questioning regarding the limits of the sultans' constitutional powers.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Ong: I've nothing to do with snoop squad (Malaysiakini)


MCA president Ong Ka Ting today dismissed accusations that he had set up a snoop team to spy on rival party leaders.

MCPX"This is an unsubstantiated allegation which was widely publicised. There is no truth in it at all," he said in a statement released after his meeting with a specially formed three-member panel to look into the snoop squad allegation."I have nothing to do with it. The allegation is totally baseless," he said.Ong had met the panel, headed by Sak Cheng Lum with Michael Chen and Roger Tan being the other two members, for about an hour in Parliament.
Chen told reporters at the MCA headquarters in Jalan Ampang that the party president explained his role in the various allegations made to the panel by MCA Petaling Jaya Utara adviser Wong Leong last Tuesday.Wong had claimed that party president Ong Ka Ting had set up the squad to expose the private lives of certain leaders who could threaten his position.He also named MCA Youth chief and Health Minister Liow Tiong Lai, Deputy Youth and Sports Minister Wee Jeck Seng and former Gerakan Belia Bersatu leader Tee Ann Chuan as being members of the snoop squad.He further alleged that Tee was under Ong's payroll for RM10,000 per month for the snooping purpose.

Both Liow and Wee have denied the accusations.Political smearToday Ong stressed that Wong's allegations were politically motivated and a smearing campaign undertaken to disrepute him in the run up to the party polls later this year."There is no truth that I paid Tee. The allegations are totally baseless," he repeated.He also said that he acted under the mandate granted by the party to pick candidates for the March 8 general election.His detractors have claimed that he has picked wrong candidates for the election and that had caused the party to suffer a humiliating blow in the polls.Ong said that the allegations made against him were defamatory in nature and that he was reserving his right to initiate legal action.
Character assassination

Meanwhile Liow met the panel for about 30 minutes and after his meeting he too issued a statement denying his alleged role in the snoop squad."These are serious allegations and I deny outright my involvement in it (snoop squad)," he said.He said that the allegations amounted to "character assassination and dirty tricks to achieve personal agenda".

CLP exams to be abolished (Malaysiakini)


De facto law minister Zaid Ibrahim said the Certificate of Legal Pratice (CLP) will be abolished and replaced with the Common Bar Course (CBC) and Common Bar Examination (CBE).The Legal Profession Qualifying Board is working on various measures in this direction and a thorough study of the implementation of the CBC is in its final stage, he said.At a press conference in the Parliament lobby today, Zaid said details will be revealed in two months after the CBC committee - set up to conduct the study - completes its report. “This is part of efforts to improve the (standard of) legal practice,” he replied, when asked if this is part of the judicial reforms he had pledged upon assuming office in March.
Zaid had called the press conference to explain a parliamentary written reply he had issued to Karpal Singh (DAP-Bukit Gelugor) today. Karpal asked whether the government plans to scrap the CLP, which was implemented in 1984.Passing the CLP is a compulsory pre-requirement for graduates with a Bachelor of Laws degree from universities in England, Wales and Northern Ireland and certain universities in Australia and New Zealand.
The examination is conducted once a year. Candidates are examined on general aspects of law, civil procedure, criminal procedure, evidence and professional practice.Once the government replaces the CLP with CBE - now used to examine students in UK who want to be barristers - it will standardise the requirement for both local and overseas law graduates. Students have long complained of the high rate of failure in the CLP examination, for which a strict quota of passes is set each year.The CLP has also been tarnished by a scandal, where question papers were found to have been sold to students six years ago. Allegations also arose late last year that there is a bumiputera quota set aside for passes but the claim was denied by the Legal Professional Qualifying Board.

'Enhancing quality'
Elaborating on the CBC committee, Zaid said it is led by an in-house consultant-cum-adviser appointed by the board.It comprises representatives of the Attorney-General’s Chambers, Bar Council and Malaysian Qualification Agency as well as a senior lawyer.“The CBC and CBE will be managed by a non-profit organisation that will supported by the government,” the minister stated in his written reply to Karpal.Zaid also noted that the CBC committee has been advised to follow the model of the Bar Vocational Course in the United Kingdom. He added that local universities have agreed to be part of the implementation of the CBC course.The minister said the government will make a further announcement when the study is completed.“When the CBE is (implemented), it will ensure a uniform standard which will enhance the quality of legal practitioners, whether in the public or private sectors,” Zaid added in the reply.There are currently about 13,000 lawyers in the country.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Hannu Lintu

In conjunction with the upcoming MPO performance on 31.5.2008, we have done a google search on the conductor for the night, Hannu Lintu and his biodata is indeed impressive.


He is a rising star in the constellation of brilliant young Finnish conductors, Hannu Lintu has recently been appointed Chief Conductor of the Tampere Philharmonic. His duties will begin there in August of 2009. Working extensively in Europe and the rest of the world, Mr. Lintu has made guest appearances with the Bergen Philharmonic, Berlin Symphony, Danish Radio Symphony, Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra, Orchestre National de Belgique, Orchestre National de Bordeaux, Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Stavanger Symphony, Stuttgart Radio Symphony, and regularly conducts all the major orchestras in his native Finland. Outside Europe, he has recently worked with the Malaysian Philharmonic, Nagoya Philharmonic in Japan, New Zealand Symphony, Oregon Symphony, Sydney Symphony, and Vancouver Symphony, Festival appearances include the Adelaide Festival, Berliner Festspiele, Flanders Festival, Grant Park Festival, and the Golden Autumn Festival in Beijing.During the current season, Mr. Lintu opened the season for the Copenhagen Philharmonic, and will make his debuts with the symphonies of Houston, Indianapolis, New Jersey, Phoenix, and San Antonio.
He will also appear with the Barcelona Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre National des Pays de la Loire, Orquestra Nacional do Porto, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, and return to the Finnish Radio Symphony, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra, Malaysian Philharmonic, Nagoya Philharmonic, Oregon Symphony, and Sinfonia Lahti.Equally at home in opera, Hannu Lintu has conducted several productions for the Finnish National Opera including Bizet’s Carmen, Mozart’s The Magic Flute, Wagner’s Parsifal, Aulis Sallinen’s King Lear and Kalevi Aho’s Before We Are All Drowned.
In 2004, he conducted a concert performance of Gianni Schicchi at the Grant Park Festival in Chicago and recorded Tauno Pylkkanen’s opera Mare and Her Son. Future opera engagements include La Traviata and a new opera by Mikko Heiniƶ, The Snake’s Moment.For Ondine and Naxos, Mr. Lintu has released CDs of works by Rautavaara, Saariaho and Luca Francesconi with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Avanti! Chamber Orchestra, Finnish Radio Orchestra and the Danish National Radio Orchestra.
He has made two recordings with the Helsingborg Symphony for Danacord: The Sound of Shakespeare and the two piano concertos of Shostakovich with pianist Oleg Marshev. Recent releases include works by the Finnish composer Jouni Kaipainen with the Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra for Ondine and works by Schumann, Dietrich, Gernsheim and Volkmann on Hyperion with the Berlin Rundfunk Sinfonieorchester.
Mr. Lintu has held artistic director positions with the Helsingborg Symphony, Turku Philharmonic and the Bergen Collegium Musicum Chamber Orchestra. He is a regular guest conductor of the Avanti! Chamber Orchestra and was the artistic director of their 2005 Summer Sounds Festival, reflecting his strong commitment to contemporary music.Born in Finland, Hannu Lintu began his musical studies with the cello and piano at the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki. He continued there to study conducting with Eri Klas and Jorma Panula, and later at the Accademia Chigiana in Italy with Myung Whun Chung. In 1994, Mr. Lintu was first-prize winner at the Nordic Conductor’s Competition in Bergen, Norway.

Raja Petra to post bail today (Malaysiakini)


Breaking News: Malaysia Today news portal webmaster Raja Petra Kamarudin has agreed to post bail after meeting his wife Marina Lee Abdullah at the Sungai Buloh prison this morning. Marina is at the Petaling Jaya Sessions Court with Raja Petra's lawyer J Chandra waiting for the court to reopen after lunch to post bail.


After showing proof that she had paid the RM5,000 bail through a bank to the court, the judge will then issue the 'order to produce' (OTP) to allow the Sungai Buloh prison department to release Raja Petra.
"The OTP will be sent by hand by the police," said Chandra."Normally this process takes one day, but we are trying to expedite (the release). We are confident that our client will be released today."

Raja Petra, who has been charged for sedition, had opted to go to prison instead of paying the RM5,000 bail two days ago, which he said he could not afford.Hearing has been fixed from Oct 6 to 10 and Raja Petra would have to remain in custody until the hearing date in five months' time should he decide not to post bail.

Yesterday, he refused to meet everyone, including his wife, and was said to have gone on a hunger strike.Marina had gone to the Sungai Buloh prison to meet her husband yesterday morning to ask him if he would want to post bail after having raised RM35,000 from well-wishers.

However, she was told by the prison warden that Raja Petra did not want to see anybody, including her, and had also refused to eat. Marina was finally able to meet her husband today.
Charged for sedition
Raja Petra was charged on Tuesday with sedition at the Petaling Jaya Sessions Court over an article which he wrote in his website.
The article allegedly implied that Deputy Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak and his wife of being involved in the killing of a young Mongolian woman.
Raja Petra claimed trial to the charge. He was charged under Section 4(1)(c) of the Sedition Act for publishing seditious article on April 25 on Malaysia Today.
He is the first blogger to be charged for sedition in Malaysia.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

MPO seating arrangement


As per the invitation to watch the MPO performance on 31.5.2008, the seating arrangement is as follows. As you can see from the jpeg file, the RM25 is not that bad afterall.
Hope to see all of you there. I will provide you with further details on the composers and the pieces which will be played that night.

Malaysia Today news portal webmaster Raja Petra Kamaruddin was today charged with sedition at the Petaling Jaya Sessions Court over an article which he wrote in his website.
The article allegedly implied that Deputy Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak and his wife were involved in the killing of a young Mongolian woman.
Raja Petra claimed trial to the charge. He was charged under Section 4(1)(c) of the Sedition Act for publishing seditious article on April 25 on Malaysia Today.
Hearing has been fixed from Oct 6 to 10 and Raja Petra was granted a bail of RM5,000, which he refused to post, deciding instead to remain in custody until the hearing date.
He has been taken to the Sungai Buluh prison to be remanded.
If found guilty, Raja Petra could be jailed for a maximum of three years and/or face a fine of up to RM5,000.The chargesheet also highlighted nine paragraphs of the article which was titled "Let's send the Altantuya murderers to hell" as seditious.Deputy Public Prosecutor Nordin Hassan is prosecuting while Raja Petra was represented by a team of six lawyers led by Karpal Singh.Earlier this morning Raja Petra was asked to present himself at the Petaling Jaya Sessions Court to face the sedition charge.
He had been waiting to be charged at the Kuala Lumpur Magistrate's Court when he received a telephone call from the police at about 10.20am asking him to go to the PJ court instead.
Summoned yesterdayLate yesterday the popular webmaster was ordered to surrender at the Jalan Duta court complex at 9.30am this morning to face a sedition charge.Talking to reporters at the Jalan Duta court complex this morning, Raja Petra said that he was a victim of political persecution."I knew this was coming. They are going to find ways and excuses to charge me but these are stupid excuses," he said."Once they charge me, we will show that there is no evidence against me," he added.He said that he was aware of a call made by an Umno leader from Petaling Jaya (Utara) about three weeks ago that "they should find ways to arrest me".News about Raja Petra's case spread like a wild fire last night and this morning a large crowd had gathered at the court complex to show support for him.Also present were DAP leaders Lim Kit Siang and Ronnie Liu as well as Lembah Pantai MP Nurul Izzah Anwar.
Najib's statement
Last Friday, Raja Petra was called in by the police to have his statement recorded over an Internet posting two weeks ago pertaining to the murder case of Altantuya Shaariibuu, a Mongolian national.On April 25, Raja Petra posted the article titled 'Let's send the Altantuya murderers to hell' on his blog, Malaysia Today. The posting implicated Najib and his wife Rosmah Mansor in the high-profile case.Najib subsequently issued a denial through his press secretary Tengku Sariffuddin Tengku Ahmad, whereas Rosmah has also denied the allegations against her.The Altantunya murder trial is currently ongoing at the Shah Alam.

Monday, May 5, 2008

Let’s send the Altantuya murderers to hell (Raja Petra)


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 Setev Shaariibuu’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:
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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.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

High Court grants Church leave to seek judicial review (The Star)

KUALA LUMPUR: The High Court on Monday granted the Catholic Church leave to seek judicial review over the government's decision to forbid the use of the word "Allah" in its weekly publication Herald.
In January, former Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Abdullah Mohd Zin said the Herald was not allowed to use the word "Allah" in its publications, citing Cabinet decisions on the matter.
He said restrictions on the use of the word "Allah", as decided by the Cabinet in two of its meetings on Oct 18 and Nov 1 2006, were in force and were to be upheld.
On Dec 31 last year, the publication’s editor Father Lawrence Andrew said the weekly was allowed to continue printing its Bahasa Malaysia section with no restriction on the use of the word "Allah" for God.
He said a representative from the Internal Security Ministry delivered a letter dated Dec 28 with the permit to print the newspaper and that according to him, the letter did not place any restrictions whatsoever.
The newspaper carries reports in English, Bahasa Malaysia, Tamil and Chinese, about the Catholic community. It has a circulation of 12,000.
 
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