Daily Archives: February 14th, 2008

Apparently, RM 20 million was allocated for a Hindu Cultral Centre some 3 years ago by the State Government. Thats a lot of money. Who is to manage this. Two contenders are there. One is V.Jagarasah the state assemblyman, the other R.Nadarajah the temple president. There were disputes, who gets the bulk of the share, both tussled, no solution, When two powerful bulls clash who suffers the earth maybe, meaning the earth is shaken up, one is a Government man, the other a confidante of MIC boss. The MIC boss cannot take sides, he advises constraint. Result Indians don’t get the facility. Can you blame the Government. Reminds me of the RM 10 million Telecoms shares given but the boss says we have no money, but any bank will accept the application for a loan, hence RM 9 million given to 2 dollar companies and Indians lost.So here again, Jegarasah is finished and there won’t be any recreation centre. Please read my postings as under:http://aarvidi.wordpress.com/2008/02/06/changing-the-face-of-batu-caves/

http://aarvidi.wordpress.com/2008/02/11/history-of-mic/

Please comment.

clipped from www.malaysiakini.com
Batu Caves is the only place where Indians gather once a year to fulfill their vows to their lord. If we now transform this holy place into a recreation and tourism centre, it will automatically become nothing more than a theme park much like Sunway Lagoon or the Lost World of Tambun.
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Rashid is playing the game well. He has got to do it, reciprocating the gift of the Government for extension of his service. Financially he should be doing well.What he is required to do is simple and straight forward. You don’t have to be a genius to put things right. 104 voters are found aged above 100. This is not a laughing matter. The best source is of course the Registration Department. No details, go to the addresses given check by inquiries check with neighbors, get help from the Police.. Still no luck, advertise details, give them a time frame, and if no response is received delete their names. Can’t he do it. Only small things like this leads on to bigger mistakes, and if you can’t rectify a small mistake, can you be trusted to deal with big mistakes. Come Rashid, you are too told to be taught to suck eggs.What is wrong in you being questioned as if in a court of law. If not probed, you will run away with answers like, report to Police the ACA, let them investigate. But unfortunately your records are muddled and there is no way you are going to answer without probing questions. Are you aware you are the sole and main custodian of the electrol rolls and you have to, if necessary face a court to answer questions pertaining to the election register.

Your secretary dare not face the complainant of irregular registering, to listen and find solutions, do you still require a secretary of that nature. Does he want God to come down and confirm yes they are with me. How ludicrous.

The 104 voters is already a complaint. What the heck did you do or propose to do.

The Election Commission in India took action against Indira Gandhi for using Government facilities in her campaigning and she lost the elections won.

You are not in the category of the Indian Election Commission, and you can’t even if you want to. You are a paid servant of the Government and therefore obliged to favour them. But please or please no more press conferences trying to boost your ego, just do your job even though every one knows how badly you do it. Do you know how history will remember you “The innocent man who messed up the election process.” Mild perhaps, but it conveys the meaning.

clipped from www.malaysiakini.com
Earlier this week, electoral reform group Bersih has presented proof of the existence of 104 voters aged above 100 in the Selangor electoral roll to the Selangor EC.
Pressed by a reporter on this issue, he rebutted: “You want to argue over small things like this? You’re questioning me like in a court of law.”
EC secretary Kamaruzaman Mohd Noor, who was present, said the EC acknowledged the existence of the 104 registered centenarian voters but there is no proof to show that these people are dead.
He told critics to forward their complaints to the EC to be investigated.
Meanwhile, Abdul Rashid stressed that no election candidates should be involved in offering gifts to voters during campaigning as it violates provisions under the Election Offences Act 1954.
“But mind you, EC is not the agency to enforce (this law). The enforcement is by the police and if it involved corrupt practices, (the enforcer will be) Anti-Corruption Agency,” he explained.
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Article | ReutersArticle | Reuters

This is Reuters take on our elections.

Malaysian polls: anything possible, except new government

Thu Feb 14, 2008 2:03am EST

By Mark Bendeich

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) – Malaysia’s March 8 election is likely to shape the course of economic and social policy over the next five years, even if it doesn’t deliver a new government.

The ruling coalition has governed in various forms since independence in 1957, telling voters it is the only group that represents all major races and can keep the peace between them.

The Barisan Nasional coalition portrays opposition parties are racially divided and a threat to stability, but even the opposition admits it is too weak to challenge for power.

Instead, elections boil down to a battle over public policy and reputations, but there can still be a surprising number of political casualties.

Here are some possible scenarios.

THE PM’S WORST NIGHTMARE

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi wakes up on the morning after the vote to discover that he is still in office but he has failed to secure a two-thirds majority in federal parliament, the first time the coalition has failed to do this since 1969.

Worse, he has lost Terengganu, the biggest oil producing state, to the opposition Islamist party, PAS, which also held onto neighboring Kelantan state despite a concerted coalition campaign to win it back.

This is as bad as it could conceivably get for the coalition, and Abdullah’s leadership would be under threat. The main ruling party, the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), might then turn to his deputy and leader-in-waiting, Najib Razak.

The coalition would have to lose more than 50 seats for this to come true, but political analysts believe this is more an opposition fantasy than something Abdullah really fears.

Even in the 1999 elections, which followed a far more turbulent chapter in Malaysian politics, the coalition still managed to hold on to a two-thirds majority. It lost Terengganu state that year, but reclaimed it in the 2004 landslide.

Though Abdullah’s approval rating has sunk to a personal low, it remains around 60 percent, according to a recent poll, and the economy is still a relatively strong selling point.

The electorate is unhappy over rising prices, racial tensions and street crime, but overall the economy is holding up well despite a U.S. slowdown, creating jobs.

OPPOSITION, ISLAMISTS LOSE GROUND

Even if opposition parties steal seats from Abdullah’s Barisan Nasional (National Front) coalition, they could still be painted as losers if they don’t make major inroads federally.

For the Islamist party, PAS, it could be a disaster if it fails to retain Kelantan, the only opposition-held state.

A recent opinion poll by the Merdeka Center, a local market research firm, showed that Malays, the majority ethnic group and followers of Islam, are least likely of all the major racial groups to lodge a serious protest vote against the government.

A contented Malay community would rob the opposition of traction in the most important part of the electorate: Malays make up just over half the population and wield even greater electoral clout, partly because of the way boundaries are drawn.

This could be painfully evident in the sleepy rural villages of Kelantan, which PAS has ruled for 18 years but now holds by a razor-thin, one-seat majority after electoral setbacks in 2004.

Abdullah, himself an Islamic scholar who advocates his own brand of moderate Islam, recently pledged millions of dollars of investment for the state in an attempt to end PAS’s shaky reign.

ANWAR IBRAHIM: COMEBACK OR COMPLETE COLLAPSE?

Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim could also face sleepless nights during the campaign.

Anwar is barred from standing as a candidate until April 2008 because of a conviction for corruption, a charge he said had been contrived to wrongly imprison him for six years until his release in 2004. So he will not be standing in the March 8 poll.

But his party, Parti Keadilan Rakyat (People’s Justice Party), will be contesting, striving to expand its presence in federal parliament beyond the single seat it currently holds.

Keadilan, and by extension Anwar, is either on the brink of political oblivion or a long-awaited comeback at these polls.

A charismatic Malay leader, Anwar is potentially dangerous because he has shown that he can bring thousands of young people from all races onto the streets against the government.

He did that in the late 1990s, becoming a lightning rod for popular disenchantment with then premier Mahathir Mohamad. But Abdullah is a much less divisive character, and the political and economic climate is not as hot as in Anwar’s “Reformasi” heyday.

The main ruling party, UMNO, disowned Anwar during that period and is determined to bury Keadilan at the elections.

Even though Keadilan holds just one federal seat, courtesy of Anwar’s wife, it remains important an a political vehicle that tries to appeal to secular-minded Malays who do not vote for the coalition but dislike the Islamist platform of PAS.

(Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

Article | Reuters

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Read the report between the lines. Is not Badawi telling Sami please don’t include your name in the list. Is there any other polite way Badawi can resort to.For old times brother, says Badawi, I saw your announcement that you want to contest, but then you can always say no can’t you.
clipped from www3.bernama.com
Abdullah, who was bombarded with questions on the fate of Works Minister and MIC President Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu, said: “I haven’t decided yet…maybe when the list comes, he may not put his name on the list.” The Prime Minister was also asked on the intention of former MIC deputy president Datuk S. Subramaniam to contest in the election and the rumours about a minister from Perlis being excluded from the state’s list. Pressed further on Samy Vellu’s fate, Abdullah said: “I don’t know what’s going to be there (on the list), let me have a look first, so stop asking me because I haven’t seen the list yet.”

Asked about Samy Vellu’s recent announcement that he would defend his Sungai Siput parliamentary seat, the Prime Minister said: “Anybody can say anything to the press, later on they do something else.”
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These are empty promises to bring in votes. For 4 long years the people have seen the Barisan Nasional running the country as their own kingdom without a care for the people.The working of the Government has been likened to a mega series in Astro, a cliff hanger at the end of the daily allotted time, and a newer story the next day. Nothing happens. It is the same old story.

Release the names and the people will know the bad apples, they have a 4 year old experience behind them. What about their report cards. Is it being released as well.

clipped from www.malaysiakini.com

Barisan Nasional chairperson Abdullah Ahmad Badawi today assured that his government was committed in bringing progress for the people.

As such, he said, BN would ensure only able candidates who can serve the people with honesty, integrity and efficiency are fielded in the coming general election.

abdullah ahmad badawi pak lah and election annoucement parliament disolveHe said that this was to prove to the people that the party was serious in its responsibility to develop the country.
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Have you read my post on Samy’s altercation in Penang. http://aarvidi.wordpress.com/2008/02/13/samy-vellu-rebuffed-in-penang/
Now this in Klang Valley. To refresh your memory please also read the people’s anger at him in my post.
http://aarvidi.wordpress.com/2007/12/03/hindraffpadang-java-video/
clipped from thestar.com.my
PETALING JAYA: MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu was surrounded by some youths who jeered him during the ground-breaking ceremony for a new Tamil school here.�
Samy Vellu was walking back to a canopy after performing the ceremony for the SRJK Tamil Seaport in Kampung Lindungan when the youths surrounded him.�
The school is being relocated from Kelana Jaya.�
MIC supporters quickly came in to help but Samy Vellu and the youths were already involved in a heated argument by then.�
Police were called in and they escorted Samy Vellu from the area.�
Selangor Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Mohamad Khir Toyo was also at the ceremony.�
Earlier, as Samy Vellu got down from his car, a group of about 30 people held placards stating that the land area for the school had been reduced.�
After listening to their grievances, Samy Vellu assured them that the new school building would be bigger. �
He said the new building could hold 450 pupils compared to the 150 now. �
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This is written by Carolyn Hong, Malaysia Bureau Chief, The Straits Times.She urgently requires a kick in the ass to put her right and to think rationally. She cannot interpose two different ideas, one correct and the other false, without facts and I can’t vouch much for her journalistic capability. Among her points in the article you read the following.:

Hindraf supporters children are trying to hand over flowers to Badawi on Valentime’s day. This is in doubt now that permission has been denied by the Police for the gathering.

Then she goes on to say BN cannot expect support from the 7 per cent Indian population because they feel that they are being marginalised, and 70% of the group live on society’s fringes and don’t enjoy access to jobs and education.

She said figures indicate Indians monthly income exceeds 15 higher than the national income. This is disputed but, I suppose she can have a say, but at the same time reckons there is a gap between rich and poor.

Next she refers to the Chinese, a bigger minority, receiving attention, which according to her is caused by an aggressive Malay Agenda and Islamisation.

Indians don’t form a majority, in any constitution, with only 10 Parliamentary and 34 state seats where Indians having a 20 per cent stake.

Rambling on she points out bigger issues on jobs, education, temple demolitions and conversion to Islam have not been resolved.

All these one would note, has been supportive of what the Indians have missed out and she also feels the government can’t do much at short notice.

Beautiful indeed. But the catch is here, she ends the article by hitting out at Hindraf as saying it is anti-Malay and anti Muslim.

This is where she uses the dagger of hate to plunge it deep and at the same time twisting it good. Where did she get this idea. Was it planted on her by someone, hoping the Indians would have cold feet and go back to MIC and Barisan. What specifically has Hindraf done to anger the Malays by being anti-Malay and anti-Islam. Even the government has not said Hindraf is anti Malay and anti-Muslim. It was reported the group had relations with some foreign terrorist organisations and later withdrew this allegation. Does this lady have more info than the government does.

I think she owes everybody an explanation.

clipped from www.malaysia-today.net
There is little that the government can really do in a short time, and without angering the Malay ground, which sees Hindraf as anti-Malay and anti-Muslim.
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