Saturday, August 7, 2010

The Malaysian Bureaucracy has become the "berukerusi"







With urbanity pervasively fast seeping into our Malaysian lives in the city, surburban and town areas it's goodbye to old adages : those wisdoms in short crisp expressions that today sound very square but wistfully missed.

When the spat between Lim Guan Eng and a Federal Officer in Penang blew up in the open, it gave the ugliness of Federalism a perceivable form. What now leads to further aggravation is the public disapproval and resentment on Government policies whose implementation underlies the many problems, controversies and dissatisfaction. A good example in Sarawak is the Penan problem with its larger complexity involving native land.

These problems instead of being addressed are further fed as fodder for endless controversies.

You feel like you're getting a raw deal with development, progress. It's like being unable to get a luscious rice crust with an electric cooker, the "kerak nasi" has disappeared. You can't get things done any more for want of something sorely lacking, like a luxury lost.



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Friday, August 6, 2010

Police bust in Malaysia over an unlit candle




Arrested for Possession of an Unlit Candle

| Posted: August 4, 2010 11:30 AM | Zac Hill* | huffingtonpost.com |


"You can blow out a candle, but you can't blow out the fire." --Peter Gabriel

"This is the first time I've seen the back of a police van," Tshiung Han See tweets.

He is sitting on a rickety rear bench seat with four of the thirty-seven other people arrested without cause on August 1, 2010, the fiftieth anniversary of Malaysia's Internal Security Act--an Act that, like the Patriot Act here in the US, allows for arrest and detention without trial of any individuals deemed to constitute a security risk for the State. The men have been separated from the women, and all of them are being taken to Petaling Jaya Police Station for 'questioning.'

But Han has his cell phone.

"Arrested for possession of an unlit candle," he writes--and I, sitting in a cafe on literally the other side of the world, watch the words blink to the top of my computer screen.

Han was, in fact, arrested for holding a candle. The Abolish ISA Movement (known by its Malay-language acronym GMI) organized a series of candlelight vigils to honor the more than 10,000 individuals detained under the ISA since its inception.

These vigils--held across the nation in urban centers like Petaling Jaya, Kelantan, Johor Baru, Penang, and Negeri Sembilan--quickly drew the attention of law enforcement.

In PJ, somewhere between eighty and one hundred officers were dispatched to manage a crowd of just over two hundred people. Eyewitnesses reported riot police beating the protestors and chasing stragglers into a nearby mall. In Penang, participants gathered in Speaker's Square--a common area established expressly for citizens to assemble and voice their concerns, only to be told that "Here at...Speaker's Square, we do not allow issues against any laws in the country" by the Georgetown Police.

The irony of my reading, over a leisurely morning cup of coffee, a live account of a "Security" crackdown as it happened was not lost on me. It highlights not only the degree to which laws like the Internal Security Act (passed in 1960 to deter Communist rebels during the Malayan Emergency) are outmoded, but also the degree to which the institutions charged with implementing them are ill-equipped.

"Still waiting for the police to record our statements," Han is telling me via Facebook. "None of us have been searched yet. One kid was lead away in a sleeper hold by a plainclothes policeman. His eyes were fluttering from oxygen deprivation."

Han and the other detainees, including GMI leader Syed Ibrahim, were eventually released on August 2nd after a 'questioning' process that mostly involved standing in a series of queues. I asked Han to talk a little more about his time at the police station, and his general sense was very few people on either side understood why the arrests were happening.

"The last thing we had to do before we left the compound," he explains, "was photocopy my Identity Card and the receipt. The officer had no idea how to use the photocopier. At one point there were 4 officers trying to solve the problem of the photocopier. This was the first time they had been ever asked to photocopy something. I got the sense that 1) the police had no choice; and 2) that they advance in the organization by obeying orders."

"I had a brief conversation," he continues, "with a policeman who didn't understand the significance of the candles. I had to explain to him what a vigil was."

Han was hardly the only person broadcasting about the arrests as they happened. A YouTube video composed of stills from the PJ arrest went live, and blogger Pamela Lim set up a TweetCast from the scene.

"They are dispersing the crowd & I'm standing amongst the police taking videos!" she tweets.

Like the USA Patriot Act, the Malaysian ISA represents a clear violation of human rights. And efforts to silence dissent over the law prove increasingly embarrassing, as ordinary Malaysian citizens with access to rudimentary pieces of technology spread news of their discontent worldwide--almost literally beneath the police's noses.

"My Cabinet colleagues and I gave a solemn promise to Parliament and the nation that the immense powers given to the government under the ISA would never be used to stifle legitimate opposition and silence lawful dissent," said Tunku Abdul Rahman, Malaysia's first Prime Minister.

Zac Hill* 2008-2009 Henry Luce Scholar at the Centre for Independent Journalism in Kuala Lumpur


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Thursday, August 5, 2010

Awang Mahyan | the revenge of NGAP Sayot


Mahyan to seek revenge?

| Wednesday, August 4, 2010 |by Sebanaku Sarawak |

KUCHING: To some in Sarawak or even in Malaysia, Awang Mahyan Awang Mohamed is a legendary figure in football.

Although in term of achievement, his successors could be better than him, it is undeniable fact that his era as the Sarawak football coach is more electrifying and exciting if compared with any coach in Sarawak.

It was during his short reign that he coined the Ngap Sayot battle cry which is still famous until now.
In fact the battle cry was used in the recent Sibu parliamentary by-election by the oppositions which later won the seat defeating the Barisan Nasional (BN) candidate.


Awang Mahyan Awang Mohamed was reported by the press as unhappy with this because he was not consulted.

He is the creator of the battle cry and he thinks that anybody who wants to use the famous battle cry must get his permission.

Awang Mahyan Awang Mohamed's popularity is not confined to the football enthusiasts but also those at the corridors of power in the state.


...will the famous battle of cry Ngap Sayot be adopted by the Pakatan Rakyat???

NGGGGGGGGAAAAAAAAAPPPPPP SSSSSSSSAAAAAAYYYYYYYYOOOOOOOOOTTTT!!!!!!!!!

Read more ...



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Monday, August 2, 2010

After the ISA Vigil | Vigilant still

There are reports on the number of people arrested yesterday, August 1. The numbers are not firm nor officially acknowledged and or released. Were there people arrested yesterday we didn't know about? And never will? There isn't an official statement from the Minister of Home Affairs or Police yet.

At the Kuching Vigil at Satok, a senior citizen Dr.Idwar lamented his experience of losing his dad for 6 years. For the first 3, nobody in the family or anyone else knew his dad's whereabouts. He just didn't know where his father was. He did know one thing - ISA took away his father. That was decades ago.

Addressing Human Rights abuses in Malaysia is not tolerated. The abuses against Penans and other rural natives met with strange reactions from the Government - initially it was denial; then denying the denial, then accepting that someone somewhere did not act. Subsequently, due to international criticisms there was some relent and an undertaking to do something. Vague even up to now what that something is.

You can't help, in thinking about life in Malaysia, Sarawak in particular, that the so-called elected Government isn't working for the people. The socio-economic efforts undertaken have largely benefited ruling political leaders. It's coming to a head now, with world economic problems engulfing every nation, that when there are signs our "poor" neighbors such as Indonesia and the Phillipines are able to attract capital, we experience the opposite - investors shy away from Malaysia.

It's tough enough having no father. It's too much that when having one, he's taken away. The glaring truth is: our Government supposedly elected, takes away parents, citizen's rights for social and economic advancement and freedom to believe in progressive ideals, in a future that will take Malaysia beyond its borders and to take the rightful place amongst the community of world nations.

The irony is the Government of the day in Malaysia is in "opposition" to its people. The opposition members in Parliament fighting tooth and nail for the rakyat, is taking it's rightful place as "the legitimate government".

Will the national Vigil end? It will when nobody needs to take away parents from their children. What shouldn't stop is vigilance.


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Sunday, August 1, 2010

Abolish ISA Candlelight Vigil | Malam Mansuhkan ISA

What's happening?


6:00pm :
KUCHING: Al Idrus building looked deserted, just a few passersby, no sign of any impending Vigil.

IPOH: At ISA Vigil Venue, Dataran MBI Majlis Bandar Ipoh, 2 packed Police Jeeps pulled up to take position. About a dozen or less men.

8:28PM:
IPOH: Police blocked area around Dataran Imbi and Vigil looked impossible to hold

8:40+-:
KUCHING: Had gone to the wrong place, finally found Satok Vigil just as it was ending. Crowd of less than 100, some dozen Policemen and SB Officers. Crowd was well mannered, no shouts, no taunts. As the last candle put out, people milling around. A good outing and event

8.50:
KL: A call came in a person was arrested at the Amcorp Mall, in PH/KL

9.09:
IPOH: 1 arrest in Ipoh, 11 in KL

9.26:
KL/PJ: Problem with some pix from PJ/KL. A crowd had gathered in front of PJ Police Station insupport of the arrests at Amcorp

9.26:
IPOH: Vigil crowd estimated at about 60, another 30 dispersed or were displaced

9.28pm:
KL: Total arrest 24, 6 of them women

9.37:
IPOH: Syed Ibrahim of GMI/Mafrel arrested

9.39pm:
PJ/KL: Vigil participants and supporters gathered in front of PJ Police Station showing support for those arrested. Police securing the Station, some reported chasing and attempting arrest of some people.
In IPOH Police were back in action at crowd control.


10.21pm:
Estimated 29 arrests nationwide; Penang 2, Ipoh 1, KL 17:

11.34pm :
KUCHING: Huge bunch of Kuching pix now in of event missed. Will put out soones. Meanwhile total Police arrests aren't clear.


Anti ISA Vigil, Satok, Kuching, 1 August, 2010

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Candlelight Vigil

"Malam Mansuhkan ISA"

1st August 2010,
8.30pm 8.00pm
Keadilan HQ
Lot 468-469,Bangunan Al Idrus,
Commercial Center
Jalan Satok.
Kuching.



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