Wednesday, May 1, 2013

GE13 PRU13 | The Stain on SPR / EC



>
Lady Macbeth stung! No Stain! See?


Like they say, when there's good there's evil.

The Election Laws affecting GE13 is a doodle. Instead of dipping your index finger in, it'll be painted in a strip. There's just too much work dipping your finger in. The indelible ink for Malaysia's Election Commission(SPR) is fraught with the good and evil maxim. It's now delible! Perhaps SPR might do their job better if THEY do the ELECTING of Malaysian lawmakers. Wouldnt that be more efficient? It will be good for obedient Malaysians.

But lest sane Malaysians think this is a joke, any normal guy out there is all shook up because the EC Worker did not shake the damn bottle!

Shouldn't we hear what really EC Chairman have to say?

What to say? Nak kato apo?

Read MORE here ...Explain, Please EC! [#!!! Link is dead, probably hacked, see full article below]

EC told to explain delible 'indelible ink'

Harakahdaily, 30 April 2013

Apr 30: Hours after advance voting started this morning, the social media were flooded with images of the removable 'indelible ink' marked on voters' fingers.

The discovery by voters led to a barrage of questions being heaped on the Election Commission, which had been dismissing public concerns over irregularities of the electoral system.

The EC had claimed that the ink would last for about a week.

PAS lawyer Asmuni Awi said the party received many complaints from army and police officers that the indelible ink can be washed away from one's index finger using just water and soap.

“We have received many complaints that the indelible ink used today is not permanent and could be washed. Is this true? If so, PAS wants explanation from EC because it had given its assurance that the indelible ink could last at least three days,” Asmuni told a press conference held in Ipoh.

He expressed concerns that the development would lead to double voting on polling day this Sunday.

Despite voters showing how the indelible ink could easily come off, EC chief Abdul Aziz Mohd Yusof insisted that there was no such thing.

“Impossible, I do not believe the indelible ink can be removed by any oil-based lubricant... the ink is made from silver nitrate. When the ink is put on the fingernail, it will seep into the skin,” he was quoted as saying by The Malaysian Insider.

Aziz urged complainants to come forward to prove their claims. On police’s report lodged by several Pakatan Rakyat leaders on the incident, Aziz said he would leave it to the police.

Political analyst Dr Mohammad Agus Yusoff meanwhile questioned Aziz’s sincerity in resolving the matter.

“The people are voting on May 5. Can the police and EC detail their investigation results before then?” he asked.


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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

PRU 13/ GE 13 | Manifesto BN - PERUMAHAN - Janji ditepati !

Kongsi dengan semua pendapat seorang kawan melalui email yang memberi gamabar ini.

Tak perlu huraian lanjut, lebar dan mendalam. Apa lagi nak dikato!?


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Monday, March 25, 2013

On Debut Tonight



Monday 25 March
9.00pm Malaysia Time (GMT+8hrs)


1-800-815-309
info@radiofreemalaysia.org
fb.com/radiofreemalaysia

@RadioFreeM



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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Hak Sejagat | Hak Asasi Manusia



HAK ASASI MANUSIA SEJAGAT



*aniaya Asasi aspirasi teragung berauanah bergerak berhak berhimpun berkahwin bermastautin berperikemanusiaan berucap dagangan hamba abdi *demokratik diperjandaan *ekonomi fikiran gangguan Hak harta hasutan hormat ikrar kanak-kanak *keabadian keadilan keamanan kebajikan kebebasan kebebasan berfikir *kebudayaan *kedamaian kedaulatan kedaulatan undang-undang kehormatan sejagat kelahiran Keluarga Kemahuan kemuliaan kemuliaan manusia kepercayaan keperibadian kesabaran kesatuan keselamatan *keselamatan sosial kesenian kesenian kesihatan kesusasteraan keturunan *keutuhan kewarganegaraan kezaliman makanan maruah media menganut menghinakan meninggalkan menyebarkan maklumat moral nilaidiri nyawa pakaian pekerjaan pelajaran pembezaan pembuangan pemulihan pendidikan pengabdian pengajaran pengangguran penggajian penghinaan *penghormatan pengiktirafan penindasan perasaan hati percerobohan diperhamba perlindungan perlindungan politik persahabatan persefahaman perumahan pilihanraya rakyat rasatakut rumahtangga sains samarata saraan sejagat seksaan surat-menyurat tahanan taraf tangkapan tribunal *ugama undang-undang undi zalim

    PERISYTIHARAN
    HAK ASASI MANUSIA SEJAGAT



    MUKADDUMAH

    Bahawasanya pengiktirafan keutuhan kemuliaan dan hak samarata serta asasi yang tak terpisah bagi seluruh umat manusia adalah asas kebebasan,keadilan dan kedamaian dunia.

    Bahawasanya pengabaian serta penghinaan terhadap hak asasi manusia telah pun mengakibatkan tindakan terkutuk yang telah melanggari perasaan hati umat manusia, dan munculnya sebuah dunia di mana manusia akan menikmati kebebasan berucap dan menganut kepercayaan serta kebebasan dari rasatakut dan citarasa telah pun diisytiharkan sebagai aspirasi toragung seluruh umat manusia.

    Sekiranya kita tidak mahu mendorong manusia dalam keadaan terdesak, sebagai pilihan terakhir, memberontak mementang kezaliman serta penindasan, maka adalah penting bagi hak asasi manusia dipertahankan oleh kedaulatan undang-undang.

    Bahawasanya adalah penting bagi memajukan perkembangan perhubungan persahabatan di antara negara-negara.

    Bahawasanya rakyat Bangsa-Bangsa Bersatu, dalam Piagamnya telah sekali lagi menegaskan kepercayaan mereka terhadap hak asasi manusia, terhadap kemuliaan serta nilaidiri manusia dan terhadap hak samarata lelaki dan perempuan dan telah menetapkan keazaman untuk memajukan perkembangan sosial dan taraf hidup yang lebih sempurna dalam suasana kebebasan yang lebih luas.

    Bahawasanya Negara-Negara Anggota telah berikrar untuk masing-masing mencapai, dengan kerjasama Bangsa-Bangsa Bersatu, pengutaraan kehormatan sejagat terhadap, serta pematuhan, hak asasi manusia dan kebebasan asasi.

    Bahawasanya satu fahaman bersama terhadap hak serta kebebasan ini seluruhnya adalah terpenting demi menjadikan ikrar ini kenyataan sepenuhnya.

    MAKA DENGAN INI

    Perhimpunan agung mengisytiharkan ...

    Perisytiharan sejagat hak asasi manusia ini sebagai suatu ukuran bersama terhadap pencapaian oleh seluruh umat manusia dan kesemua negara dengan tujuan supaya setiap individu dan setiap badan masyarakat, dengan senantiasa mengingati Perisytiharan ini, hendaklah berazam melalui pengajaran dan pendidikan bagi memajukan sanjungan terhadap seluruh hak-hak dan kebebasan ini dan secara langkah-langkah berperingkat-peringkat, di bidang negara dan antarabangsa, bagi menjaminkan pengkitirafan dan pematuhan sejagatnya yang berkesan, kedua-duanya di antara negara-negara anggota masing-masing dan rakyat wilayah-wilayah di bawah bidangkuasa mereka.

  • Perkara 1

    Semua manusia dilahirkan bebas dan samarata dari segi kemuliaan dan hak-hak. Mereka mempunyai pemikiran dan perasaan hati dan hendaklah bertindak di antara satu sama lain dengan semangat persaudaraan.

  • Perkara 2.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada semua hak-hak dan kebebasan yang termaktub dalam Perisytiharan ini, tanpa sebarang apa jua pembezaan, seperti bangsa, warna kulit, jantina, bahasa, ugama, faham politik atau lain-lain fahaman, asal-usul bangsa keturunan atau sosial harta-benda, kelahiran atau apa-apa taraf lain.

    Seterusnya, tiada sebarang pembezaan boleh dibuat berasaskan pada taraf politik atau bidangkuasa ataupun antarabangsa sesebuah negara atau wilayah datangnya seseorang itu, sama ianya merdeka, beraĆ¹anah, tanpa pemerintahan sendiri atau berada di bawah apa-apa sekatan kedaulatan lainnya.

  • Perkara 3.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada nyawa, kebebasan dan keselamatan diri.

  • Perkara 4.

    Tiada sesiapa pun boleh diperhamba atau diperabdikan; keabdian dan dagangan hamba abdi hendaklah dilarang dalam semua bentuknya.

  • Perkara 5.

    Tiada sesiapa pun boleh dikenakan seksaan atau layanan atau hukuman yang zalim, tidak berperikemanusiaan atau menghinakan.

  • Perkara 6.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada pengiktirafan di mana jua sebagai seorang insan di sisi undang-undang.

  • Perkara 7.

    Semua orang adalah samarata di sisi undang-undang dan berhak tanpa apa-apa pembezaan kepada perlindungan yang samarata di sisi undang-undang. Semua orang adalah berhak kepada perlindungan yang samarata daripada sebarang pembazaan yang melanggar Perisytiharan ini dan daripada sebarang hasutan terhadap pembezaan sedemikian.

  • Perkara 8.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada pemulihan yang berkesan oleh tribunal-tribunal kebangsaan yang kompeten terhadap tindakan-tindakan yang melanggar hak-hak asasi yang diberikannya oleh perlembagaan atau oleh undang-undang.

  • Perkara 9.

    Tiada sesiapa pun boleh dikenakan tangkapan, tahanan atau pembuangan negeri secara sewenang-wenangnya.

  • Perkara 10.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak dengan samarata sepenuhnya kepada pembicaraan adil dan terbuka oleh suatu tribunal bebas dan saksama, dalam penetapan hak-hak dan tanggungannya dan sebarang tuduhan jenayah terhadapnya.

  • Perkara 11.

    Setiap orang yang dituduh dengan kesalahan keseksaan adalah berhak dianggap tidak salah sehingga dibuktikan salah menurut undang-undang di dalam perbicaraan terbuka di mana dia telah diberikan segala jaminan yang perlu untuk pembelaannya.

    Tiada sesiapa pun boleh diputuskan bersalah atas sebarang kesalahan keseksaan oleh kerana sebarang tindakan atau ketinggalan yang tidak merupakan suatu kesalahan kesiksaan, di sisi undang-undang kebangsaan atau antarabangsa, pada masa ianya dilakukan. Tiada pula boleh dikenakan sebarang hukuman yang lebih berat dari hukuman yang terpakai ketika kesalahan keseksaan itu dilakukan.

  • Perkara 12.

    Tiada sesiapa pun yang boleh dikenakan kepada sebarang gangguan sewenang-wenangnya terhadap keadaan peribadi, keluarga, rumahtangga atau surat-menyuratnya, atau percerobohan ke atas maruah dan nama baiknya. Setiap orang berhak kepada perlindungan undang-undang terhadap gangguan atau percerobohan sedemikian.

  • Perkara 13.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada kebebasan bergerak dan bermastautin di dalam sempadan sesebuah negara.

    Setiap orang berhak meninggalkan mana-mana negara, termasuk negaranya sendiri,dan kembali semula ke negaranya.

  • Perkara 14.

    Setiap orang berhak memohon dan menikmati perlindungan politik dalam negara lain daripada sebarang aniaya.

    Hak ini tidak boleh dituntut bagi pendakwaan yang benar-benar timbul daripada kesalahan bukan politik atau daripada tindakan yang bertentangan dengan tujuan-tujuan dan prinsip-prinsip Bangsa-Bangsa Bersatu.

  • Perkara 15.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada suatu kewarganegaraan.

    Tiada sesiapa pun boleh dilucutkan kewarganegaraannya secara sewenangwenangnya atau dinafikan hak menukar kewarganegaraanya.

  • Perkara 16.

    Lelaki dan perempuan dewasa, tanpa mengira bangsa, kewarganegaraan atau ugama, berhak berkahwin dan menubuhkan keluarga. Mereka adalah berhak kepada hak-hak samarata berhubung dengan perkahwinan, dalam tempoh masa perkahwinan dan pada pembubarannya.

    Perkahwinan hanya boleh dilaksanakan dengan persetujuan bebas dan sepenuhnya oleh pihak-pihak yang bercadang untuk berkahwin.

    Keluarga adalah yunit kumpulan semulajadi dan asasi dalam masyarakat dan adalah berhak kepada perlindungan oleh masyarakat dan Negara.

  • Perkara 17.

    Setiap orang berhak memiliki harta secara bersendirian serta secara berkongsi dengan orang lain.

    Tiada sesiapa pun boleh dilucutkan harta-bendanya secara sewenang-wenangnya.

  • Perkara 18.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada kebebasan berfikir, perasaan hati dan ugama; hak ini termasuklah kebebasan menukar ugama atau kepercayaannya, dan kebebasan, samada secara bersendirian atau secara bersama-sama dengan orang-orang lain dan secara terbuka atau bersendiri, menganuti ugama atau kepercayaannya melalui pengajaran, amalan, pemujaan dan pematuhan.

  • Perkara 19.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada kebebasan pendapat dan mengeluarkan fikiran; hak ini termasuklah kebebasan memegang pendapat tanpa gangguan dan menuntut, menerima dan menyebarkan maklumat dan buah fikiran melalui sebarang media dan tanpa mengira sempadan.

  • Perkara 20.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada kebebasan berhimpun secara aman dan menubuhkan persatuan.

    Tiada sesiapa pun boleh dipaksa menjadi ahli mana-mana pertubuhan.

  • Perkara 21.

    Setiap orang berhak mengambil bahagian dalam kerajaan negaranya, secara langsung atau melalui wakil-wakil yang dipilih dengan bebas.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada peluang samarata kepada perkhidmatan awam dalam negaranya.

    Kemahuan rakyat hendaklah menjadi asas kewibawaan kerajaan; kemahuan ini hendaklah dibuktikan melalui pilihanraya berkala yang sejati yang mana hendaklah diadakan secara sejagat dan samarata dan hendaklah diadakan secara undi sulit atau melalui acara pengundian bebas yang ketara.

  • Perkara 22.

    Setiap orang, sebagai anggota masyarakat, adalah berhak kepada keselamatan sosial dans berhak menjadikan suatu kenyataan, melalui usaha negara dan kerjasama antara-bangsa dan menurut organisai dan sumber-sumber dalam negara masing-masing, hak-hak ekonomi, sosial dan kebudayaan yang termesti bagi kemuliaannya dan perkembangan bebas keperibadiannya.

  • Perkara 23.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada pekerjaan, kepada pemilihan pekerjaannya secara bebas, kepada keadaan-keadaan pekerjaan yang adil dan berfaedah baginya dan kepada perlindungan daripada pengangguran.

    Setiap orang, tanpa sebarang pembezaan, adalah berhak kepada penggajian yang sama bagi kerja yang sama.

    Setiap orang yang bekerja adalah berhak kepada pembayaran saraan yang adil dan berfaedah baginya yang mana mempastikan buat diri dan keluarganya suatu kehidupan sesuai dengan kemuliaan manusia, dan yang mana ditambah, jika pertu, oleh cara-cara perlindungan sosial yang lainnya.

    Setiap orang berhak menubuh dan menjadi ahli kesatuan sekerja bagi memperlindungi kepentingan-kepentingannya.

  • Perkara 24

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada rihat dan masa lapang, termasuk batasan munasabah keatas masa bekerja dan cuti bergaji yang berkala.

  • Perkara 25

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada suatu taraf hidup yang memadai bagi kesihatan dan kebajikan diri dan keluarganya, termasuklah makanan, pakaian, perumahan dan pengawasan perubatan serta perkhidmatan sosial yang perlu, dan berhak kepada perlindungan ketika berlakunya pengangguran, kesakitan, ketidakupayaan, diperjandaan, keuzuran atau lain-lain kekurangan kehidupan dalam keadaan di luar kawalannya.

    Ibu dan anak adalah berhak kepada jagaan serta bantuan khas. Semua kanak-kanak, samada dilahirkan di dalam maupun di luar nikah, hendaklah menikmati perlindungan sosial yang sama.

  • Perkara 26.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada pelajaran. Pelajaran hendaklah diberikan percuma, sekurang-kurangnya pada peringkat awal dan asasnya. Pelajaran peringkat awal hendaklah diwajibkan. Pelajaran teknikal serta profesional hendaklah disediakan untuk umum dan pelajaran tinggi hendaklah mempunyai akses yang samarata kepada semua orang atas dasar kebolehan.

    Pelajaran hendaklah ditujukan kepada perkembangan sepenuhnya keperibadian manusia dan ke arah memperkukuhkan lagi rasa hormat bagi hak-hak dan kebebasan asasi manusia, lanya hendaklah memupuk persefahaman, kesabaran dan persahabatan di kalangan semua negara, bangsa atau kumpulan-kumpulan ugama, dan hendaklah memajukan segala kegiatan Bangsa-Bangsa Bersatu demi memelihara keamanan.

    Ibu-bapa mempunyai hak terdahulu untuk memilih jenis pelajaran yang akan diberikan kepada anak-anak mereka.

  • Perkara 27.

    Setiap orang berhak secara bebas mengambil bahagian dalam kegiatan kebudayaan masyarakatnya, menikmati kesenian dan sama-sama merasai kemajuan sains dan faedah-faedahnya.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada perlindungan kepentingan-kepentingan moral dan kebendaan hasil dari sebarang penghasilan sains, kesusasteraan atau kesenian yang mana ianya adalah penciptanya.

  • Perkara 28.

    Setiap orang adalah berhak kepada suatu susunan sosial dan antarabangsa dalam mana hak-hak asasi dan kebebasan yang termaktub dalam Perisytiharan ini boleh dijadikan kenyataan sepenuhnya.

  • Perkara 29.

    Setiap orang mempunyai kewajipan terhadap masyarakat hanya dalam mana perkembangan keperibadiannya secara bebas dan seluruhnya termungkin.

    Dalam mengamalkan hak-hak dan kebebasannya, setiap orang tertakluk hanya kepada batasan-batasan seperti yang ditentukan oleh undang-undang semata-mata bagi tujuan menjamin pengiktirafan dan penghormatan yang sepatutnya terhadap hak-hak dan kebebasan orang lain dan untuk mendekati keperluan-keperluan sepatutnya bagi akhlak, ketenteraman awam dan kebajikan umum dalam suatu masyarakat yang demokratik.

    Hak-hak dan kebebasan ini tidak boleh sama sekali diamalkan secara bertentangan dengan tujuan-tujuan dan prinsip-prinsip Bangsa-Bangsa Bersatu.

  • Perkara 30.

    Tiada apa-apa jua dalam Perisytiharan ini boleh ditafsirkan sebagi sedia tersirat memberikan kepada mana-mana negara, kumpulan atau perseorangen sebarang hak untuk melibatkan diri dalam apa-apa kegiatan atau melakukan apa-apa perbuatan dengan tujuan memusnahkan apa-apa hak dan kebebasan yang termaktub dalam Perisytiharan ini.+

    [.pdf] - http://www.ohchr.org/EN/UDHR/Pages/Language.aspx?LangID=mli




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Thursday, February 28, 2013

Freedom of Expression | What the Msian Government dont want You to Know



" As the debate over who can use the word “Allah” to describe God simmers in Malaysia, a Sabah family where there are Muslims and Catholics are showing the way for inter-faith understanding. "Ustazah Nooraidah Hidayah Dakun, 45, and Catholic priest Father Francis Dakun, 44, were born to animist Dusun parents in Tambunan, but they and their 10 siblings willingly converted to Islam and Christianity during their teenage years. Their parents converted to Catholicism in 2000. " - [ TMI ]



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Monday, February 25, 2013

GE 13 | What PAKATAN RAKYAT PROMISES



"We have calculated that on average, a family can buy groceries such as 10kg of rice, 5kg of cooking oil and other essentials per month with RM41.60. That means they have enough to buy food for 12 months with the RM500 BR1M" - PM Najib

If what Malaysia's PM Najib had been quoted to have said has a grain of truth, we could lend Jim Cameron of UK lots of money to tide things out and he wouldn't have to sell military choppers to India!

And with that kind of background noises, Malaysia's opposition,from Pakatan Rakyat, is really offering Liberty, Equality and Freedom Fraternity (LibertƩ, ƩgalitƩ, fraternitƩ) in their proposals for the imminent general elections, the GE13.

Have a look at what they're offering!

MANIFESTO RAKYAT
PAKATAN HARAPAN RAKYAT







MANIFESTO RAKYAT
PAKATAN HARAPAN RAKYAT

[ Please CLICK each Topic below for detailed contents.
Use Browser Back function to RETURN HERE.]










THE PEOPLE’S WELL-BEING

  • Lower oil prices
  • Lower electricity charges
  • Lower water charges
  • Abolish tolls
  • Abolish monopolies
  • Lower car prices
  • 150,000 affordable and comfortable housing
  • National Housing Corporation: investing
  • RM5 billion in the first year and RM2 billion a year after to build affordable and comfortable housing

THE FRATERNITY OF THE PEOPLE

  • Respect the position of Islam as the official religion and guaranteeing the freedom of religion as enshrined in the Federal Constitution
  • Elevate culture as a positive foundation of community
  • Malaysian Women’s Contribution Fund: contribution of RM50 per month for wives who qualify, and husbands will be obliged to provide toward a contribution fund proportionate to their income (between RM10 to RM100 per month).
  • Senior Citizens’ Bonus Scheme (60 years and above): RM1,000 Bonus each year
  • Uphold the national language, ensure the rights of mother-tongue languages, and improve the command of English
  • Additional assistance of RM300 per student each year for the 1,854 people’s religious schools, national-type Chinese and Tamil schools (SJK), private Chinese, Tamil, Iban,
  • Kadazan and mission schools.
  • Free education for all, abolishing PTPTN
  • Eliminate AES, revoking AES summonses Justice for FELDA settlers
  • Increase police capabilities to solving crime
  • Free ward service to all citizens in all government hospitals for class 2 and 3 wards
  • Social Welfare Assistance increased to RM550 a month

THE PEOPLE’S ECONOMY

  • 1 million new job opportunities for the people by gradually reducing dependence on foreign labour
  • Minimum wage of RM1,100 per month; RM2 billion facilitation fund to facilitate minimum wage
  • People’s Pioneer Scheme: train 1 million school leavers without higher education to uplift their skills in technical fields, combining employment opportunities with periodic certification of skills.
  • 5 technical universities and 25 new vocational schools to be built
  • Education reform to drive the economy Cultivate smart partnership of trade unions, employers and government
  • SMIs and innovation to drive the national economy – RM500 million national innovation fund, SMI financing and incentives reshuffle
  • Tax adjustment to promote equity - income band will be broadened so that the 26% tax rate will be payable for taxable income exceeding RM400,000 as compared to RM250,000 at present Sustainable economy – halt Lynas operations, review implementation phases of RAPID, reform all existing legislation related to logging, and will regulate logging activities
  • Defend military veterans’ economy and welfare – RM500 million for Military Veterans’ Small
  • Recognise the Unified Examination Certificate (Combined Chinese Schools) (UEC)
  • Respect the position of Sabah and Sarawak in the Federation – federal cooperation, fair representation, citizenship, recognition of customary Land Rights, competence and capability of Sabah and Sarawak, justice in the oil issue, and unified development
  • Immediate programmes for Sabah and Sarawak – eliminate cabotage system, create investment incentives to create jobs, oil companies owned by the governments of Sabah and Sarawak, highway across Sabah and Sarawak, halt the construction of dams that destroy the environment and displace locals
  • Preserve Orang Asli customary land rights and welfare
  • Entrepreneur Fund, increase government contribution to the Armed Forces Fund Board (AFFB) from 15% to 20% (managed separately from pension funds), Soldiers’ Dividend will remunerate non-pensionable veterans to the amount of RM2,000 per year
  • Making taxi entrepreneurs viable by giving permits directly to taxi drivers
  • R&D investments to reach 5% of GDP
  • Public transport – the lifeline of the national economy – free public transport for differently-abled people, integrated plan involving MRT and buses in the Klang Valley, RM2 billion to double the number of buses and bus routes, initiate steps towards building the first inter-city high speed rail system in Southeast Asia
  • Break monopolies to encourage competition –
  • Anti-Monopoly Cmomission, Public Contracts Commission to evaluate public agreements like IPP and unfair concessions, break up monopolies in communications, essential foods, pharmaceuticals, civil aviation and other key sectors, dissolve 1MDB, open tenders, disposal and handover of government holdings in selected government-linked companies (GLCs) via management buy-out (MBO) to produce more viable entrepreneurs

PEOPLE’S GOVERNMENT

  • Reform Islamic and religious institutions
  • New remuneration and service packages for civil servants
  • Clean, fair and transparent elections
  • Reform the judiciary, Attorney General's Chambers, MACC and PDRM
  • Reform Parliament
  • Media freedom and restore trust in media practitioners
  • Abolish UUCA and ensure academic freedom
  • Abolish legislation that is “anti-rakyat”
  • Corruption Elimination Policy (DEBARAN) – restructure the MACC to focus on big corruption cases that involve the public interest, tighten corruption-related legislation



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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Bengawan Solo | stress over Sulu



Bengawan Solo riwayat mu ini
Sedari dulu, jadi perhatian dewi Sari
Musim kemarau, tak berapa airmu
Di musimhujan air meluap sampai jauh

Mata airmu dari Solo,
Terkurung gunung seribu
Air mengalir sampai jauh
Akhirnya kelaut

Itu perahu,
riwayatnya dulu
Kaum pedagang selalu
Naik itu perahu

-- Gesang Martohartono

This is your story Oh Solo River
Ever since Angels lent their favor
In droughts your waters trickled
In plenty fancies tickled

You came from Solo
Where mountains in thousands kept you captive
Till over the wide oceans you flow
And thence wherever your fancies go

That quaint boat
its story ages told
And traders with ample goods
laden in its hold


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Friday, February 1, 2013

MALAYSIA HUMAN RIGHTS REPORT CARD 2013



HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH | World Report 2013 | Malaysia

In a nationally televised speech on Malaysia Day in September 2011, Prime Minister Seri Najib Tun Razak called for a Malaysia “which practices functional and inclusive democracy, where peace and public order are safeguarded in line with the supremacy of the Constitution, the rule of law and respect for basic human rights and individual rights.” However he added that there had to be “checks and balances … between national security and personal freedom,” and ensuing reforms have favored security over internationally recognized human rights.

Parliamentary elections must be held no later than April 2013, and political tensions were already high in November with both the opposition and the government alleging engagement by their political opponents in election-related intimidation and violence.

CONTENTS



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Preventive Detention

In his September 2011 speech, Prime Minister Najib pledged to replace the notorious Internal Security Act (ISA), which permitted long-term detention without trial, and other rights-restricting legislation. The Banishment Act 1959 and the Restricted Residence Act 1933 were the first to be rescinded, followed by three emergency declarations and the emergency-related laws they made possible. One of the rescinded laws, the Emergency (Public Order and Crime Prevention) Ordinance 1969, had been regularly used to hold criminal suspects indefinitely without charge or trial.

The Security Offences (Special Measures) 2012 Act (SOSMA) replaced the ISA on July 31, 2012. On a positive note, SOSMA reduced initial detention without charge from 60 to no more than 28 days, and required that a suspect be charged in court or released thereafter. However, other provisions reduce human rights protections, including an overly broad definition of a security offense, allowing police rather than courts to authorize interception of communications during investigations, and permitting prosecutors to conceal the source of evidence and to keep the identities of witnesses secret, thereby preventing cross-examination. Even if a suspect is acquitted under SOSMA, the law permits a series of appeals, with bail disallowed, that could result in a suspect’s indefinite detention. Malaysian authorities, using transitional authority at the time SOSMA replaced the ISA, still hold 27 ISA detainees.

Freedom of Assembly and Association

In 2012, the government continued to violate rights to free association and peaceful public assembly. While Prime Minister Najib agreed in September 2011 to review section 27 of the Police Act, which mandated police permits for public assemblies, the government hastily drafted and passed a replacement Peaceful Assembly Act on December 20, 2011.

The new law rescinded the requirement for a permit but also introduced major new restrictions, including a broad ban on “moving assemblies” of any kind. Static protests are also prohibited closer than 50 meters from many prohibited sites, making it virtually impossible to hold an assembly in an urban setting. Other restrictions include empowering the police to set assembly conditions such as time, place, and date after taking into consideration other groups’ objections or “any inherent environmental factor.” Police were also given the power to use all “reasonable force” to break up a protest.

City and federal officials sought to prevent an April 28 sit-in sponsored by Bersih 3.0, the Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections. They barred Bersih from using Dataram Merdeka (Independence Square) in central Kuala Lumpur and barricaded the area. Nevertheless, marchers numbering in the tens of thousands walked peacefully toward the barricaded square and when the announcement came that the rally was over began a peaceful dispersal. However, a small group breached the barricades. The police reacted with excessive force in what became a four-hour onslaught of tear gas, water cannon, and indiscriminate beatings and arrests.

On July 1, 2011, Home Affairs Minister HishammuddinHusseindeclared Bersih an illegal organization under the Societies Act. On July 24, 2012, the Kuala Lumpur High Court overturned that decision, ruling that the original decision was “tainted with irrationality.”

Freedom of Expression

Most major newspapers and television and radio stations remain controlled by media companies close to political parties in the government coalition. A recent amendment to the Evidence Act has raised fears that intermediary liability on the internet will further decrease freedom of expression. The provision creates a legal presumption that an owner, administrator, host, editor, or subscriber to a network service who has in their custody or control any computer from which any publication originates is presumed to have published or republished the content of the publication unless the contrary is proven.

The Printing Presses and Publications Act (PPPA) retains its potency despite some reforms, such as ending the need to renew licenses annually and adding judicial oversight to what was the home minister’s unchecked power to approve or reject license applications. New publications still require initial approval and licenses still may be arbitrarily revoked. Other means of control include calls from the ministry offering “advice” to editors and prison terms and fines for “maliciously” printing so-called false news. The home minister maintains absolute discretion over licensing of printing presses.

In 2012, Malaysian courts partially advanced the right of free expression. Malaysiakini, the largest online newspaper in Malaysia, had repeatedly and unsuccessfully applied to publish a daily print version. On October 1, the Kuala Lumpur High Court ruled the home minister’s refusal was “improper and irrational” and the application should be resubmitted. In a significant statement contradicting the prevailing government view, the judge said that a license to publish was “a right, not a privilege.” The attorney general's chambers and the Home Ministry appealed the court’s decision.

Sisters in Islam, a local nongovernmental organization, also won a significant victory in July when the Court of Appeal dismissed a government appeal to overturn a 2010 High Court decision lifting the ban on Muslim Women and the Challenge of Islamic Extremism, a book of essays originally banned in 2008.

A civil court’s decision that the arrest of political cartoonist Zunar under the Sedition Act and the PPPA in September 2012 was lawful had a more negative impact, reinforcing the unwillingness of printing presses, publishers, and bookstores to be associated with controversial books.

Police Abuses and Impunity

Human Rights Watch and local civil society groups have documented police abuses, including excessive use of force during arrests, suspicious deaths in custody, failure to adequately investigate such incidents and to hold accountable those responsible; and inadequate post-mortem inquiries and investigations. Victims of police violence reported few effective avenues for redress and decried an apparent culture of police impunity for mistreatment.

Trial of Anwar Ibrahim

On January 9, 2012, a Kuala Lumpur court acquitted Anwar Ibrahim, parliamentary leader of Malaysia’s political opposition, of sodomy on the grounds that it could not “be 100 percent certain that the [DNA] evidence can be accepted, as there could have been tampering.” An appeal by the attorney general’s chambers, could add months, if not years, to resolution of the case.

Human Rights Defenders

Many observers believe the investigation was prompted by Suaram’s decision in 2010 to become involved in a French judicial investigation examining alleged corruption in Malaysia’s purchase of submarines from a French defense company.

Throughout September and October, pro-government media alleged that Suaram and a number of other NGOs critical of the government were receiving foreign funding in an attempt to destabilize the government.

Refugees, Asylum Seekers, and Trafficking Victims

Malaysian immigration law does not recognize refugees and asylum seekers. The government is not a party to the 1951 Refugee Convention and lacks domestic refugee law and asylum procedures. Malaysia refuses to permit refugees to work or to allow for education of refugee children.

In February, Malaysia denied the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) access to asylum seeker Hamza Kashgari, who appeared to be an asylum seeker from Saudi Arabia. He had fled after it was learned he had tweeted messages that some deemed insulting to the Prophet Muhammad. Kashgari was deported amid execution calls in his homeland. At this writing, he was still imprisoned.

The Anti-Trafficking in Persons and Anti-Smuggling of Migrants Act conflates trafficking and people smuggling, and fails to provide meaningful protection to victims of either crime. The government confines trafficking victims in sub-standard government shelters without access to services and assistance until legal cases they are involved with are adjudicated.

Detention and Drugs Policy

The Dangerous Drugs (Special Preventive Measures) Act continues to authorize preventive detention. During 2012, an estimated 700 people were held under the act.

The National Anti-Drugs Agency maintains over 20 puspens (drug detention centers) where users are held for a minimum of two years. Rates of relapse in Malaysia have been estimated at 70 to 90 percent and those re-arrested as users face long prison terms combined with caning. Drug traffickers face mandatory death sentences, but the number of people executed is not publicly available.

Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity

In 2012, discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) persons reached new levels of intensity. On June 25, Prime Minister Najib publicly stated that LGBT activities do not “have a place in the country.” On July 19, speaking before 11,000 imams and mosque committee members, he stated that “it is compulsory for us to fight” LGBT behavior.

In March, the High Court dismissed the application of the LGBT group Seksualiti Merdeka for a review of the police ban on their November 2011 festival, leaving the future of the annual festival in doubt.

Two October court rulings concerning transsexuals also caused alarm: in one, a transsexual was refused the right to change the gender recorded on her national identity card; and in the other it was ruled that Muslims born as males may not dress as females.

The government refuses to consider repeal of article 377B of the penal code which criminalizes adult consensual “carnal intercourse against the order of nature,” or to replace article 377C on non-consensual sexual acts with a modern, gender-neutral law on rape.

Key International Actors

The United States has not strongly pressed Malaysia over its failure to honor international human rights standards. Other than its demands for a fair trial for Anwar Ibrahim, the US has allowed concern for security cooperation to trump speaking out about human rights. During Trans-Pacific Pact free trade negotiations, the US has failed to hold Malaysia accountable for its human rights violations.

Malaysia is a member of the UN Human Rights Council (HRC), but has not signed or ratified most core human rights treaties. The government has also opposed including protections on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Human Rights Declaration and has blocked consideration of a comprehensive agreement to protect the rights of all migrant workers in ASEAN. + HRW


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Saturday, January 12, 2013

#KL112 #HKR112 - Himpunan Kebangkitan Rakyat | D-Day



LIVE Reports




Here at MalaysiaKini = http://www.malaysiakini.com/



Here at anilnetto.com = anilnetto.com











It's come. The Day is Today and It will begin at 2.00pm Today 12 January, 2013, better known #HKR112 and #KL112 tags at Twitter. Citizens are pouring into KL and making their way to Stadium Merdeka




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Monday, January 7, 2013

RM207 billions lost | Do you know?






One, if not all these named below, living today, know!



Henry Lee Hau Shik Tan Siew Sin Tun Abdul Razak Tan Siew Sin Hussein Onn Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah Daim Zainuddin Anwar Ibrahim Mahathir Mohamad Daim Zainuddin Mahathir Mohamad Abdullah Ahmad Badawi Najib Razak


{THE NAME LIST SCROLLS FOR CHROME ONLY! FOR NON CHROME BROWSERS THE FULL LIST OF NAMES IS:-}

{Henry Lee Hau Shik Tan Siew Sin Tun Abdul Razak Tan Siew Sin Hussein Onn Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah Daim Zainuddin Anwar Ibrahim Mahathir Mohamad Daim Zainuddin Mahathir Mohamad Abdullah Ahmad Badawi Najib Razak }


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Wednesday, January 2, 2013

WANTS | What the Prime Minister wants



Muslims want Him! Christians want Him!

All Malaysians want Allah; less a few of the rest. Actually, if we had a political party with His name, we'd probably capture any Malaysian General Election. That's a good thing. Or isn't it?

All Malaysians want Him! All for Allah. Allah is Great... Allahu Akhbar!

The majority of Allah followers want Him. Are they Free to be Muslims? Or His followers? Since they are not why did the Malaysian Government under UMNO/BN declare Malaysia a Muslim State, purportedly in its Constitution?

Not all think PM Najib or Ex-PM Mathathir is great or greater. However PM Najib was not in techincal error when he said :

“I don’t want to be Prime Minister for only a particular section of the community. I’m Prime Minister for all Malaysians, and I’ve said that repeatedly.” Dec 25, 2012

He is politically incorrect. It ain't what HE wants. It's what all Malaysia's myriad of communities need. No PM can ever give that. Fundamental rights are never given - they subsist with citizens, be they knowingly or not.

However, many would say, PM Najib is not even their Prime Minister. If he ain't many Malaysians' Prime Minister, then who is?

Like all humanoids on 2 legs, you've had your share of unsavoury "life" things. If all people behaved, Allah would have less work to do, since all Malaysians are already tweeting, facebooking, blogging and messaging of him in some ways. The Atheists among the population must think, unemployment is 100% in heaven. But if too many in any nation are unemployed, its no better than hell. Would that be the reason why they say all dogs go to heaven?

Isn't that good? Even for bizness? Surely, Allah is not just bizness? There's a caveat on that many insist: they say we should rule our lives in the Spirit of His Law ... and not BY HIS LAW or Bye-bye to His Law. Wouldn't you wonder what Rais Yatem would say? Whatever, his hair won't stand on ends!

Tabung Haji is more religiously enlightened: in the Name of Allah, they had bailed out a land scam deal some child or children of Allah in UMNO had brokered that had related to some Oath, though such sleaze is not ever, should never forever ever, be in Allah's name. In fact, Tabung Haji has been helping politicians steal lands in Sabah, Sarawak and all over. Still many people would swear that there has been so many public Oaths declared in Malaysia. In any case, Tabung Haji is embalmed in their Holy service for the Hijrah or spiritual migration. It's not quite clear where the destination of the exodus should be. Perhaps, UMNO knows. Don't UMNO always know?

Tabung Haji's wanton act is damning as this scam has nothing to do with Allah or his religion or who want Him or who don't.

Someone had asked .. why all these?

Maybe the Judges have an answer. They just affirmed that FELDA which could only have a member as its Chairman, now say the Law can be broken and that Isa Samad, not a member can. Yes, he can. You wonder if we have problems in laws. Not that we don't have son-in-laws, father-in-laws or all the outlaws who rob our country.

Then it must be the evil of Capitalism. If you have some kind of "ism" of some sort, you'd earn being labelled a capitalist pig! Well, for the persistent backaches people have, you'd wish like I would, have four legs. That would take off the strain of being a bi-pedal.

But is Capitalism the culprit in our lives? Muslim terrorist? The JI? In Malaysia, consider the ills of the nation: all the daylight robbery going on and the needless wanton loss of lives of its innocent citizens in accidents, murders in Police lockups and government premises, cardiac arrests, diseases and radiation hazards. It must be capitalism. But why not communism? Well, all communists, good and bad, have long been dead and gone. There are though those, however, who say Marx lives. But then, if its the Muslim terrorists, why would the Malaysian Christians want Allah whose followers are terrorists? Maybe they don't like capitalist terrorists?

So what does the PM want? For Malaysia? You won't have the slightest idea. By his statement, it says he only knows what he doesn't want. And not many Malaysians want him as their PM. You wonder what of other things that Malaysians want.

Or more correctly, need!


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