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Daily Archives: March 11th, 2008

Mukriz Mahathir cheated in elections? « * SUSAN LOONE’s blog * 

Got an interesting mail today. It says:

Proof that Mukhriz Mahathir, son of Mahathir Mohammad, cheated in the
2008 Malaysian General Election !!
=========================================

Mukhriz Mahathir ran for the P5 Jerlun parliamentarian seat at Kedah.

SPR officially announced that Mukhriz Mahathir won with a 2205 vote
majority.

But there’s a catch –

         In the P5 Jerlun parliamentarian race,
        99.85% of the 37,297 voters turned out to vote !!

Hard to believe? You bet it is !!

According to SPR’s official result (available at
http://pru12.spr.gov.my/spr/
) – of the 37,297 voters, 37,242 came out to vote.Put it another way – of the 37,297 voters, only 55 voters have failed
to vote !

Yes, I kid you not ! You can go check out the SPR official result
yourself !

The 99.85% turnout rate is ABSOLUTELY THE HIGHEST of all the 222
parliamentarian races in the election.

The following is from the SPR website :

=========================================

P.5-JERLUN IDRIS BIN AHMAD PAS 17,219
MUKHRIZ MAHATHIR BN 19,424 MNG

JUMLAH PEMILIH : 37,297
KERTAS UNDI DITOLAK :     599
KERTAS UNDI DIKELUARKAN : 37,242
KERTAS UNDI TIDAK DIKEMBALIKAN : 0
PERATUSAN PENGUNDIAN : 99.85%
MAJORITI :   2,205

=========================================

And I’ve also put a copy of the SPR result at http://kedah.4shared.com/

Check it for yourself ! See what a blatant cheater Mukhriz Mahathir
is !!

Mukriz Mahathir cheated in elections? « * SUSAN LOONE’s blog *

 

It’s best for Samy to do a Koh

COMMENT
By BARADAN KUPPUSAMY

The MIC has taken its worst beating to date and many blame party president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu for it but it remains to be seen what the party will do now.

IN victory and defeat, former Penang chief minister Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu Koon, an academic turn politician, is always humble and high-minded.

After he and his Gerakan colleagues were unceremoniously shown the door on Saturday, Dr Koh’s first worry was for the incoming government of rival Lim Guan Eng to take office in a smooth and safe manner.

He immediately issued a “don’t worry” statement and offered to take responsibility for the change over.

He invited Guan Eng to his office and showed him around and pledged his help for a smooth transition.

What’s more telling, Dr Koh admitted defeat, took responsibility for the Gerakan disaster and offered to resign.

In stark contrast MIC President Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu, who was equally trounced with his candidates, has vowed to soldier on.

In a statement he said he will “restructure and rebuild” the MIC, which has become totally cut off from the Tamil masses.

He also speaks of a “new wave” that will come and lift him and the party from the disaster that has hit them.

If only Samy Vellu heads to a tea stall and hear what ordinary Malaysians, not just Indians, are saying he would have a second shock, bigger than the drubbing in Sungai Siput.

The only thing that matters to many ordinary Indians is not that the Opposition had captured five states or the Barisan Nasional was denied its two-third majority in parliament, but that Samy Vellu has been defeated.

They rejoiced at his defeat because he has become the focal point of all their sufferings and anger and for him to soldier on shows how disconnected he has become with the community he claims to represent.

Only three of his candidates survived and three is not enough to fill the party’s quota of one minister, three deputy ministers and three parliamentary secretaries.

“People are angry with him more than anything else. He has been lording over us for 30 years,” said teacher A. Perumal.

Others chipped into the conversation saying most of the MIC candidates lost because the voters did not see the candidates but saw Samy Vellu in all of them.

“They did not distance themselves from him. If they had, some could have survived,” said another teacher Thomas Arulpragasam.

“The community needs to heal, to see new faces leading us, to hear new voices giving new hope,” he said.

Why then is Samy Vellu refusing to accept responsibility and offering to quit like Dr Koh has done?

Unlike Dr Koh and Gerakan, it is even more difficult, with the MIC defeated and smashed, for Samy Vellu to walk away, his supporters say.

“He feels if he quits now history will remember him as the man who destroyed the MIC,” said the former vice-president who did not want to be named.

Some others say if Samy Vellu, who dominated MIC politics for so long, quits immediately the party will be hit by turmoil.

Whatever the case for Samy Vellu, it is too late in the day to reshape history and reverse the nightmare of defeat and disgrace that has fallen on him and the MIC.

The best course is to walk the path Dr Koh has taken – accept responsibility and retire and let the man who takes over do the “rebuilding and restructuring” that the MIC sorely needs if it wants to survive as a political representative of the Indian community.

To stay on is untenable and will only complicate and worsen matters.

It’s best for Samy to do a Koh

Please read this:

“We will see when I announce the new line-up. I will be working and planning for a cabinet that can work. The cabinet that will regain the confidence of the people,” he told reporters after chairing both meetings at the Putra World Trade Centre (PWTC), here today.

Is he telling us anything new. He knows the old cabinet did not work, but on the other hand he will appoint the same old people to gain confidence of the people. I don’t understand.

clipped from www.malaysiakini.com

Among the issues that BN admits were factors that led to such results are corruption, inflation, and the rising crime rate, Abdullah conceded.

He also said BN will ensure that the government will represent all communities despite the loss of several key leaders from its component parties due to their defeat at the polls.

It is expected those who have lost will be appointed as senators which will allowed them to be appointed to the cabinet.
  blog it
If you leave behind anything you love, you cry, and two things come to the mind, you wanted to stay but were forced out, second you will miss the place that gave you so much.
clipped from www.utusan.com.my

Tajol Rosli kunci pintu dan menangis

IPOH 9 Mac – Kekalahan mengejut Barisan Nasional (BN) Perak pada Pilihan Raya Umum Ke-12 semalam merupakan sesuatu yang di luar jangkaan banyak pihak terutama Menteri Besar, Datuk Seri Mohd. Tajol Rosli Ghazali.

Beliau yang berjaya mempertahankan kerusi Dewan Undangan Negeri (DUN) Pengkalan Hulu dikatakan hanya mampu menangis di kediaman rasminya bersama penyokong dan pemimpin kanan UMNO negeri malam tadi.

  blog it

BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | New strain on Malaysia’s ethnic ties

This article was written before the elections. The assumption that relations between the government and the 2 million Indians is strained was very clearly shown in the election results.
The visa policy is a government to government matter and I don’t think there will be drastic changes to the rules governing Indians coming to work in Malaysia, as I look around a sizeable number of Indians are working in the cleaning sector particularly with the municipal councils and in other sectors and I think the labour force is doing it work diligently.
There is this wrong concept that the Hindraf rally was a move by the Indians to take away what is owned by the Malays. This is far from the truth. The problems highlighted by the rally was to bring attention to the government ills suffered by the Indians in regard to socio-economic shortcomings, it did not originate to show differences between the Malays or Chinese. The message was simple, we are part of the Malaysian community and we want to share part of the cake the government has got to offer without any reference to other races. It is purely an Indian problem. In relating the problems it might have been inevitable to show proof like how a Malay gets his license to do business without much fanfare, but the Indian has to undergo hassle and delay in getting the same document, but nowhere does the Indian blame the Malay for his predicament, but it is more with the Little Napoleons in the civil service who make the process difficult. Invariably the Little Napoleon may be a Malay, but the anger is not directed at the person as an individual but the government which controls the Little Napoleon. Hence it is wrong to say the Indians are angry with the Malays, but they are angry with the government for making life so difficult and MIC is blamed for not looking after the welfare of the Indians.
If there is any ethnic problem that exists it is because leaders are so free with their predictions violence will erupt for a problem between the Indian community and the government, it is nothing against any other race Malay, Chinese or otherwise.
May 13 was caused by the election defeat and the disturbances in Old Klang road were troubles that erupted between an Indian and Malay and escalated to communal proportions. These two cannot be used as a measure to say one community is ready to pounce on another. Indians, Malays and Chinese live in mixed areas, work together, study together etc but there is no underlying friction amongst them. They get along well,
It may be noticed that the communal groups follow the adage birds of a feather live together, by mixing only with their kind in housing estates and schools but this is brought about by the division of race, religion and politics depending on the colour of the skin that is spelled out by the government in race based political parties, different type of schools, employing one race in the civil race and so forth. The government does this for the political advantage of keeping the races segregated to ensure continuity in the management of the country, but the people are studying, living and working together, they have no problems.
It is the government that must act. For a start, no race based political parties, is the right thing to do. This enforced segregation must stop.
My neighbour is a Chinese, across me lives a Malay, we live peacefully, we are not waiting to pounce on one another, plotting day and night.
Observe the elections, Indians voted Malays and Chinese, Malays voted Chinese and Indians, Chinese voted Malays and Indians, does it show ethnic friction.   

 

New strain on Malaysia’s ethnic ties

By Robin Brant
BBC News, Kuala Lumpur

Pedestrians in Kuala Lumpur walk past a billboard displaying the city skyline (file photo)

Malaysia has been a culturally-mixed country since the 1800s

Relations are not good right now between the Malaysian government and the two million plus people living here who are descended from Indian migrants.

There is confusion over exactly what has happened in recent days, but if the government really has decided to tighten up its visa policy for all Indian migrant workers, it would be a startling diplomatic gesture.

Just as political leaders across the world are lining up to do deals with India, Malaysia appears to have gone the other way.

It is unexpected, to say the least.

India and Malaysia have a long history of close cultural, economic and political ties.

Indians migrated here in their thousands in the 1800s, to work the rubber plantations. There are now more than two million Malaysian Indians.

The big problem here that we have is that nobody trusts each other anymore

Manjit Bhatsia

But dissent has been brewing. It boiled over with a public protest last November – a rare thing here.

Thousands took to the streets to demonstrate, in defiance of a police ban.

The cabinet decision to suspend visas is proof that the event, with images of riot police and water cannons beamed around the world, has shaken those at the top of government.

They are worried – worried about instability and what it might do to the economy, and worried about the delicate coalition that is modern-day Malaysian society.

‘No trust’

Ethnic Chinese Malaysians at a temple in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (14/10/2007)

Ethnic Chinese are reaping the rewards of the economic boom

Indians are one of the three dominant groups here.

The Chinese established communities over centuries. Together with the Malays they all make for a fragile but mostly harmonious mix.

This mix is in trouble now, though, according to Manjit Bhatsia, an academic and writer who was born in Malaysia but now lives and works in Australia.

“The big problem that we have is that nobody trusts each other anymore,” he said.

“There’s a working relationship, a very strong working relationship at the top level of society, but at every other level of society it just doesn’t work.

“That’s the problem, this administration needs to understand that it has created a monster.”

The root problem is the years of discrimination some Malaysian Indians say they have endured, accusing ethnic Malays of enjoying preferential treatment.

The underlying problems that we have can easily erupt between the communities

Deputy PM Najib Tun Razak

A government strategy to lift the majority Malays out of poverty has ensured discounts on housing, quotas for civil service jobs, and places at university for the bumiputera, the “sons of the soil”.

Malaysia is riding high on an oil-fuelled boom.

Ethnic Indians see Malays enjoy the spoils of political domination and the Chinese reap economic rewards.

They feel left behind, and some are demanding change.

The men who organised the march in Kuala Lumpur six weeks ago are in prison now.

They were arrested and detained indefinitely under stringent security laws, having been deemed a threat to national security.

“It’s a very delicate situation in Malaysia,” the country’s deputy prime minister told me when I interviewed him last weekend.

In a blunt assessment of the fragility of the ethnic mix here, Najib Tun Razak said: “The underlying problems that we have can easily erupt between the communities.”

As for the demonstration, illegal under Malaysian law, he said: “If we allow street demonstrations to take place on a regular basis, it will in fact entice or aggravate other sections of the community who want to respond to it.”

There is a history of racial violence in Malaysia. In one incident in 2001, six men died in a week of clashes between Malays and Malaysian Indians in an area west of Kuala Lumpur called Kampung Medang.

It started when a man kicked over a chair as he passed a wedding celebration.

Some of the victims were hacked to death.

International message

Water cannon spray protesters in Kuala Lumpur  (10/11/2007)

The government has made it clear it will not tolerate more protests

With a general election approaching, there is a fear, even an expectation among some, that the clashes in Kampung Medang could be repeated.

I have walked around the new estate which has since risen up to replace the squats in the Kampung Medang.

One simple image conveys the divide.

On one side of a road, running through the low-rise tower blocks, I saw a Malaysian Indian making roti – thin fried bread – in a restaurant.

On the other side of the road, a Malay man was chopping chicken to order as a Malay woman in a headscarf selected fish from an ice-packed polystyrene box.

They live side by side but most people will tell you that they do not share their lives.

I interviewed one of the men who organised the protest in November just before he was arrested.

P Uthayakumar said the public demonstrations would go on.

“What else can we do?” he said. “We’ve exhausted all avenues.”

The government has made it clear it will not tolerate any more marches. The organisers are locked up, indefinitely.

The decision to tighten visa controls for Indian workers wishing to come here was a message sent on the international stage but to a domestic audience – along the lines of: “Stop what you are doing or we will make life difficult for your friends and relatives seeking to join you”.

As Malaysia prepares to elect a new government, the stakes are high.

Malaysia is oil-rich and developing quickly. Stability is the key.

At the moment, Malaysia is in a rare state of instability.

 

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