Archive for April, 2009

PKR and Hindraf supporters join MIC

April 24th, 2009
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Malaysiakini says 50, Star says 100, so let’s leave out the numbers.  I will agree on members from political parties switching camps. PKR to MIC. After few months, MIC to PKR. After another few months, open new party. All this is common.  One can be member of one party at one time, that’s clear. But where does HINDRAF come in this matter? Do these people “quit” HINDRAF to join MIC or PKR in the first place? Can anyone guarantee that MIC members don’t support HINDRAF? Or all PKR supporters guaranteed to support HINDRAF? I dare say majority of MIC members supported HINDRAF but not able to say it openly. I still remember the period between Aug 2007 until May 2008, nearly every Indian I meet talked positively about HINDRAF – temples, wedding, family functions, relatives, friends.  Now, there’s less noise and enthusiasm due to its leadership being broken up and stifled.

One more interesting thing about this defection is that one of them, J Kumaresan, claimed to be personal aide to MP for Kapar, Manikavasagam.  Kumaresan, who was also the PKR Kepong Youth chief,  felt frustrated because he could not do anything for the Indian community when in PKR.

“I couldn’t achieve anything for the community. That is why I have decided to join MIC,” he said, adding that there are no allocations from the party or the Pakatan Rakyat-controlled Selangor state government to uplift the Indians.

“I have been with YB Manikavasagam even before he became a member of Parliament. I know what he has done for the community. I am aware how hard it is to help the community without funds,” he added.

Kumaresan is confident that the situation would be different with MIC. “I want to make use of this situation to find ways for me to be useful for the community,” he said.

That didn’t go down well with MP Mike, who  denied that Kumaresan was his aide.

“I challenge him to prove this. I will lodge a police report on this.”

“He was only with me for a week to help out in the election campaign,” he added.

The MP also denied the allegation that PKR and the Selangor state government were not helping the Indian community, stating that allocations have been given to Tamil schools and temples.

Meanwhile,  T Mohan claims 30,000 youths (Star said 1000 only – don’t this reporters carry recorders around???) are ready to join MIC. I wonder how many are joining PPP after seeing the effort of Murugiah. 50,000? How’s the membership increase in PKR and DAP? Increase or decrease? And it will be good to remember that the numbers does not translate into votes for you. Many Indians are smart nowadays. They will join political parties solely to get access to the benefits and facilities. Come to election time, they will not hesitate to vote differently.

Muhyiddin visits SJKT Ladang Bukit Jalil

April 24th, 2009
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Today’s papers splashed photos of DPM Muhyiddin who is also Education Minister visiting two schools yesterday. One of the schools is the controversial SJKT Ladang Bukit Jalil. This is a school which have been flooded 13 times over since 2007, and its new site was proposed to be next to cemetery. This is the school where parents chipped in to hire contractor to widen a drain.  The Ex MP also cried after visiting this school. And, last but not least, this is the school that was missing from KL City Master Plan.  Yup, THAT school.

The people living there were given eviction notices, and the school given a plot of 0.4 ha only, that too to be shared with the temple.

Utusan mentioned that Muhyiddin asked some changes to b made to the building plans so that it can accommodate 200 students in 2011 intake. The school has 90 student now, and the new building is expected to cost RM2 million. The 70-years old school will be rebuilt on government land in 18 months, in time for the new intake in 2011. At that time, it will be a fully-aided school. So, is it still going to be built next to cemetery, on a small piece of land? Anyone already briefed new Education Minister about this? That’s because he announced that the school will be build on City Hall land, measuring a smaller 03.ha area while Star quoted 0.4ha.

SJK (T) Ladang Bukit Jalil headmistress Tamilselvi Suppiah said the 75-year-old school was originally built on estate land, and had six classrooms for 92 pupils from Years One to Six, and 14 teachers.

“Our enrolment figures started to drop after the school was affected by floods 13 times in the last two years,” she said.

Anyway, with current interest for parents to enrol in Tamil schools, 200 places will not be enough for SJKT Ladang Bukit Jalil in two years time.  The area is surrounded by townships that has significant number of Indian families. So, we will be back to square one – lack of facilities and overcrowded school.

The point is, if do things, do it properly. Research the suitability of the location for school. Do some study on future needs and then do the allocation.

children to remain in original religion says cabinet

April 23rd, 2009
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A sort of miracle happened today! The cabinet decreed that children in a case where one parent converts are to remain in the original religion. However, the decree is meaningless until the laws are changed. How long for that? Months maybe. So, in future, we hope to avoid more crime as done by Subashini and Indira’s husbands. But, at the moment, the fate of Indira’s childre in still in limbo. Until the Sultan’s consent to change in the state laws, and parliament passes the changes in constitution and laws, we have to keep our fingers crossed.

Further to that, the cabinet also decided that civil marriages must be resolved in civil courts and the convert can’t use the excuse that he converted to escape from his obligations.

The Cabinet has decided that children of parents where one of them opts to convert must be raised in the common religion at the time of marriage.

Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Nazri said it was decided in the Cabinet meeting on Wednesday that a spouse who has converted into Islam would also have to fulfil his or her marriage responsibilities according to civil marriage laws.

Religion should not be used as a tool to escape marriage responsibilities. Conversion is not a grounds for the automatic dissolution of a marriage,” he said at a press conference at Parliament building Thursday.

“The children should be brought up in the common religion. For the spouse who intends to convert into Islam, he or she would also have to come clean,” he said.

Nazri said religious conversion must come with the innocent party being protected from being victimised, as well as protection being affored to the new religion of the converted person.

Civil marriages have to be resolved according to civil laws. The conversion takes effect on the day of conversion and is not restropective.

“The convert would have to fulfil his or her marriage responsibilities according to civil laws prior to the conversion,” he added.

Nazri also said the Cabinet has instructed the Attorney-General to look at all relevant laws which needed to be amended in line with what has been decided on civil marriage laws and others.

For Islamic enactment, he said the matters have to be brought up with the respective Sultans as they are the heads of religion in their respective states.

More details from NST:

“The Cabinet feels there is an implied and constructive contract between husband and wife that their children should be brought up in accordance to the common religion at the time of marriage or whatever religion they had agreed their offspring should practice,” he said.

Nazri said in the case of Indira Ghandhi, both she and her husband were Hindus at time of marriage, so it was implied that their children be brought up as Hindus.

Nazri said Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Maj-Gen (R) Datuk Jamil Khir Baharom, who is in charge of Islamic affairs, has been instructed to meet with Muhammd Ridzuan to settle the case amicably.

He will also meet with the relevant authorities (like the Perak Islamic Affairs Department) to settle this in accordance with the cabinet decision.”

Nazri said the Cabinet was of the view that conversion came with responsibility and cited two reasons – the first is to protect the innocent party from being treated unfairly and victimised and the second is to protect the new religion of the person who converted to the new faith or in this case, Islam.

Religion should not be used as a tool to allow a party to a marriage to run away from his or her responsibility as husband or wife, he said.

I do not think any religion would want it to be used as a convenient tool to run away from responsibility,” he said.

Nazri said the question of the children’s custody in Indira Ghandi’s case does not arise at this juncture as the marriage has yet to be dissolved.

“The marriage followed civil laws and the Cabinet stand by the principle that a civil marriage should be dissolved in a manner provided for by civil courts.

“Conversion to another religion is not a ground for automatic dissolution of a civil marriage.”

Nazri noted that the couple were separated at the point when Pahtmanathan converted to Islam.

“The Cabinet has agreed that the relevant date for application of Islamic laws should be on the date of conversion and it is not retrospective.

“Past acts should be resolved under the relevant civil laws. Islamic laws apply on the day of his conversion. He must resolve all his problems first and he should come clean as to his responsibilities before he converts to any other religions.

Nazri said to give effect to its decision, the Cabinet has instructed the Attorney General to look at the relevant laws which need to be amended.

“Civil marriage laws or any other laws to be amended. If it affect Islamic enactment it will be brought to the Sultan’s attention.” he said.

Thus, the children should remain as Hindus, and the custody depends on the outcome of the divorce case. The unlikely (but possible) outcome will be Hindu children being raised in a Muslim house.

The ruling also may give a glimmer of hope for Subashini to revoke the conversion of her children by her husband.

Meanwhile, the Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism is taking the issue of conversions to the Malay rulers, so its a good time to follow up the cabinet’s decision with the rulers, especially the Sultan of Perak so that can speed up the paperwork.

Its president, Datuk A. Vaithilingam, said the council made the decision yesterday after meeting to discuss the plight of M. Indira Ghandi, whose estranged husband had converted their children to Islam without her knowledge.

Vaithilingam said they wanted to raise the problems associated with controversial conversions as religious matters fell within the ambit of the state governments.

Since the sultans were the heads of Islam in their respective states, Vaithilingam felt they would be able to assist in finding a solution to the problem.

“We are appealing to the sultans. We will write to them once we have determined how to go about it,” Vaithilingam said yesterday after the council had met Indira Ghandi.

Vaithilingam explains more in Malaysiakini:

Council president A Vaithilingam said the council would be writing to the Keeper of the Rulers’ Seal requesting that the Conference of Malay Rulers intervene in this particular case.

“The rulers are responsible for the religion of Islam in their respective states and the king is responsible for the country.

“As we are all their subjects, so we call upon the rulers to see that there is justice and fair play for all of us,” he said.

The inter-religion affairs council – which held a two-hour meeting this morning with 35-year-old Indira – expressed their disappointment with act of the Syariah Court in Perak which granted custody of her three children to her husband without her knowledge.

The children were born to a couple married under civil law, therefore until the civil court has decided on a divorce, if there is one and on alimony and custody, the children cannot be converted,” said Vaithilingam.

The conversion of the children, to us, is illegal as we believe that all those who are below 18 years of age should be allowed to decided on their faith only when they old enough,” he added.

Vaithilingam, who met the five ministers yesterday, said they told him that they were sympathetic to Indira’s predicament and gave their assurance that it would be solved soon.

“But this assurance has yet to materialise […] we don’t want to reconvene again with another man or woman who has become another victim,” said Vaithilingam.

He reiterated the MCCBCHST was not against Islam but stressed that the conversion process should be more stringent in tandem with the reform of existing family laws.

“We were promised so many times that there would be reforms to family laws to ensure that such a situation will not reoccur. Yet here we are again […] no attempts have been made to make the changes although there has been a lot of talk of reform,” said Vaithilingam.

He said grey areas under the law dealing with conversion should have been resolved ever since the controversy following the death of famous mountaineer M Moorthy, popularly known as ‘Everest Moorthy’, who was buried with Muslim rites despite his family’s claim that he had not converted.

The council appealed for a quick resolution to the Indira case as the pressure had taken a heavy toll on the young family.

“Frankly, since the council had been formed in 1983, we have achieved very little,” said Vaithilingam, adding that he hoped that Indira’s youngest child, who is with her father, would be reunited with the mother.

Well,  looks like the new Cabinet is trying to do something instead of talking only, unlike the previous ones. If they can successfully ring the changes and ensure that such injustice doesn’t have a chance of occurring again, it will win them valuable points from the aggrieved communities. Do more by looking at all of us as Malaysians, and it will be a better country.

Only 10 percent of ASM units taken

April 23rd, 2009
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This news is a bit of a revelation. As expected the Chinese quota was sold out within hours.  For the bumiputra (Malays to be precise), its about 0.45% (7.65 million out of 1.665 Billion) and for the Indians, its 10.71% (53.5 million out of 499.5 million units).

Let’s look at the poor take up of the bumiputra group. Possible reasons:

– no money/cash

– not able to secure loan

– have other avenue of investment that gives better return (like ASN, Tabung Haji, Bank Coperatives etc)

– Most have already invested all the available funds

I think perhaps theres too many options for the bumiputra until there’s a glut – less people, more units and products.

How about the Indians? Why only 10% have taken up the offer?

– no money/cash

– not able to secure loan

– already invested in other funds (like unit trust or share market)

– lack of awareness

The return from the units is between 6.5 and 8.5% per annum, which is higher than goverment bond, EPF, and fixed deposits.  But being in an unequal playing field, the funds that are specifically for bumiputras get a higher return of between 10 -13% annum. So, one can understand the lack of take up of ASW and ASM funds by that group.

Despite the lack of take up by the community, MIC is proposing a bigger allocation, 25%, for the community:

THE MIC has asked the Govern­ment to reserve at least 25% of the 100 million units of the free Amanah Saham Wawasan (ASW 2020) shares for the Indians to realise the community’s 1.5% equity participation target, as outlined in the Ninth Malaysia Plan, by next year.

Tamil Nesan, in its front page, reported party president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu as saying that the MIC would also ask the Government to allocate at least 20% from the 49% of the two billion units of ASW 2020 set aside for non-bumiputras to the Indian community.

What MIC can also propose is a scheme just like for the Malays, low interest (or better still,  interest-free) loan for Indians to buy the units under ASW/ASM. This can be done under tie-up with banks like BSN, Agrobank, Bank Rakyat, etc. Then maybe can see some increment in the equity participation.

Have Astro no aid

April 23rd, 2009
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Actually, earlier the minister in charge mentioned that if a house has “facilities” like TV or sofa, they won’t be eligible for aid. So, what’s next? Having motorbike, car, telephone, PC, or handphone means you are rich? Are we trying to keep the poor in the dark ages instead of empowering them?

So imagine when you read something like the news below:

The words “disabled, Astro” and “aid” cannot occur in the same sentence, as far as the Welfare Department is concerned.

The department bars the disabled from getting welfare aid if they have Astro or a television set at home.

The rule applies even if one lives in someone else’s house, temporarily or otherwise.

S. Karupanan, 73, found this out the hard way three months ago when the department cut the RM200 aid to him as he was temporarily staying in a house which “had Astro service”.

The department had paid for surgery on one knee and promised to underwrite the cost of the operation on the other knee.

But while awaiting the second surgery, he moved into his daughter’s house and his troubles began.

Welfare officers who came to visit him saw red when they chanced upon the Astro connection and immediately withdrew the aid.

For K. Shanmugam, 51, who applied for welfare assistance in 2005 on becoming paralysed, it has been a string of “no’s” from the department for aid.

His mistake, he believes, was his honest reply when asked if he had a television set and Astro at home.

“That’s the first question they asked. When I said I had both, they immediately said that I was not eligible for assistance as there were others poorer than me.”

The former crane driver, who was earning RM2,000 in Singapore when a motorcycle accident four years ago left him paralysed, was baffled by the department’s decision.

He said that the bills of the family of six were paid by relatives who realised that he only had Astro to keep him company when the children were out of the house.

“I cannot work. The only pleasure in my life now is the Astro service,” he said.

Another extreme case is that of a a disabled 40-year-old, paralysed from the neck downwards, who lives with her partly-paralysed mother.

The disabled woman, who declined to be identified, decided against applying for an Astro connection after being warned by a welfare officer that they would cut aid to them if she did so.

What she cannot understand is why they would do so as Astro was the “only” company she and her mother could have at home.

“We cannot leave our house and we live on donations and welfare aid. What’s wrong if some people who sympathise want to get us an Astro connection?”

I will agree with the Welfare department in the scenario that the aid given may be “misused” to subscribe to Astro services. I mean, if you can save the extra RM35 or RM50, it can be used for medication, food, savings etc.
However, in this era, the idea that TV is a luxury item is ludicrous to say the least, more so if by staying in a house that has TV (let’s say recuperating from injuries at your relative’s place) , your aid is cut off. The TV can obtained in many ways – second hand, hand-me-downs, gifts etc. Astro is also the only window to the world and information from some category of people, like the bed-ridden. Besides, it also provide cheaper entertainment for folks who can’t afford to go to cinema or hangout in shopping centers. So, the problem may lie in the definition/criteria used by the Welfare Department. I hope its not something created 20 years ago!
Now, I’m not promoting Astro or TV-watching, but I think it should not be a criteria for selection of people for aid. MIBA and KIOKU thinks the same as well:

The Malaysian Indian Business Association wants the government to review the decision to deny aid to the disabled if they have an Astro connection or a television set at home.

Its president, P. Sivakumar, said the Welfare Department should realise that the disabled had little else but television programmes to keep them company. “We have received many complaints of welfare aid being withdrawn after the department found out that the disabled person had an Astro connection or television set at home.”

Disabled Persons’ Integrated Family Services (Kioku) secretary-general Chris S. Kali Thasan said the Welfare Department should not impose such conditions on people seeking assistance. “I remember years ago even those who had a refrigerator were denied assistance. Now it’s Astro. It’s unfair in many cases as Astro bills are usually paid by relatives or well-wishers.”

He said Astro programmes were a good diversion for the disabled who could not work and had to stay at home.

Representatives from disabled people groups met Minister Shahrizat yesterday to show their unhappiness. Shahrizat promised to look into their request:

Women, Family and Community Development Minister Senator Datuk Seri Shahrizat Abdul Jalil said the department would be reviewing the ruling that bars the disabled from getting aid if they had a television set or Astro service at home.

She said this at a meeting with 12 disabled people who came to see her at her ministry yesterday over the issue.

The disabled, who came in wheelchairs, were from the Disabled Persons Integrated Family Services (KIOKU), Independent Living and Training Centre and the Malaysian Animal-Assisted Therapy for the Disabled and Elderly Association.

“You are telling me to look at it, which I will. I think it’s a reasonable request and I will look at it,” she said, adding the ruling did not constitute discrimination against the disabled.

“We will come back with realistic answers.”

… She said the ruling only applied to those under the Disabled Persons Unable to Work scheme, who were being given RM150 per month in aid.

“The underlying principle for welfare aid to the poor and needy is to ensure that their basic needs, such as food, clothing and shelter, are met.

“As such, the ruling on Astro is applicable because it gives an indication of the affordability of the applicant to spend on something extra, in this case entertainment.”

She said Astro was considered a monthly expense that would reduce welfare aid being used for basic needs.

Shahrizat said the ruling did not affect the other two welfare schemes for disabled workers and people caring for a bedridden disabled person, who get RM300 a month.

She said action would be taken against officers who imposed the ruling on people in these two schemes

…. She said she understood the predicament of the disabled, with most lying on a bed the whole day, with nothing to do but stare at empty walls.

Shahrizat said she would also speak to Astro to provide free services to the disabled as part of the company’s corporate social responsibility. There are 28,608 disabled people registered with the ministry.

Well, as part of CSR, Astro can afford to waive the fees, so its a good suggestion by the Minister. We hope it becomes a reality. Maybe by showing their OKU cards, the relevant groups can get waiver of fees.

It seems Baitulmal, which provides aid for muslims also have similar ruling, according to Sisters In Islam.