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only 1 percent of Malaysian building protected against earthquakes???

October 13th, 2009
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If earlier report said only 30% of buildings in Klang Valley was exposed to earthquake damage, the report by Assoc Prof Taksiah Abdul Majid, supervisor of Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM)’s Disaster Research Unit is terrifying!

She said that less than one percent of buildings in Malaysia are built according to specifications that take earthquakes into consideration!


Taksiah, who is a leading researcher in earthquakes, said from the unit’s research most buildings did not take the earthquake factor into consideration assuming that Malaysia was not exposed to the risk of earthquakes.

“Malaysia rarely experiences strong earthquakes and that factor causes many specifications for building construction to pay not much attention to earthquakes.

“However, we cannot be complacent as Kuala Lumpur is just 300km from Sumatra which frequently experiences strong earthquakes,” she said.

She said among buildings that followed specifications related to earthquakes were the Kuala Lumpur Twin Towers, the Penang Bridge and the Komtar building.

Taksiah said her unit was preparing building guidelines to be forwarded to the government in efforts to ensure that every building took into consideration the risk of earthquakes.

“The guidelines have been drawn up and are in the process of final checking before being forwarded to parties involved and so that proactive steps towards preventing an unforseen incident can be implemented,” she said.


MIC Deepavali Open House, but others?

October 12th, 2009
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MIC announced that its Deepavali open house will be on 17th October (Deepavali day) from 10am till 1pm at Dewan Merdeka, PWTC, KL.

This made me think – when/where is the open house by the other political parties with Indian members? DAP, Gerakan, PPP, IPF, MIUP, HRP, MINDRAF, PAS (its supporters club!). Don’t tell me only MIC organising open house. CNY time, DAP and Gerakan got do open house. This time how?

If discrimination like this means not fair la to the Malaysians community. We want to go to many, many open house and eat, eat alot alot! 🙂

Note: hopefully the organisers will be sensitive and not serve beef or cow head! Or better still make a vegetarian affair… LOL!

Malaysian Ambassador Sudha Devi

October 12th, 2009
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Ms Sudha Devi, career diplomat, a role model for women in Malaysia:

Malaysian women diplomats are often an unsung force but behind the scenes, their numbers are growing steadily and more are making it to the top rung as ambassadors.

The latest in the line that traces back to the much often mentioned PG Lim is a Kulim-born economics graduate who will head for the world’s fifth largest country and one of the most watched global emerging market.

Meet V Sudha Devi, career diplomat, wife and mother of two teenagers.

Sudha Devi received her letter of appointment from the Yang di-Pertuan Agong on Oct 7 to replace the retired Ismail Mustapha as Malaysia’s ambassador to Brazil which is gearing up to host the 2014 football World Cup and 2016 Olympic Games.

“I am honoured with the appointment, it’s a big trust by the government. I am excited; there will be challenges because Brazil is a big player in Latin America and an emerging economic power in the world,” said the 49-year-old envoy who has had postings to Switzerland, Singapore and Germany in her 23 years so far with Wisma Putra.

The first-time ambassador told Bernama her appointment underlined the equal opportunities for women in the Malaysian foreign service, which she joined in 1986 after undergoing the elite Administrative and Diplomatic Corps (PTD) training.

Debunking the perception that a career with Wisma Putra was for single or divorced women, Sudha Devi said there were many like her who had supportive spouses and juggled the job successfully with a family.

“I have my two children with me throughout my foreign postings but I would not have been able to do it without the support of my husband,” she said, crediting spouse Art Thamboo, a former journalist turned media practitioner.

The Internet and Skype enabled their children, a son and a daughter, to speak to their father in Kuala Lumpur daily when they were abroad.

Women now make up a third of officers in the ministry and 15 percent of the top posts in over 100 Malaysian missions and consulates worldwide, she added.

Currently, woman envoys are heading missions that include The Hague, Poland, Romania, Vietnam, Senegal and Croatia.

Women have more than doubled

“The number of Malaysian woman ambassadors may seem small compared to those in some countries but this has nothing to do with a lack of opportunities.

“The foreign service here was very much male-dominated before but the number of women have more than doubled since I first came here,” said Sudha Devi.

A former student of St Anne’s Convent and Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Sultan Badlishah in Kulim, Sudha Devi takes to her new post a depth in multilateral and bilateral affairs and an economics degree from University Malaya.

“Unlike in the past when politics dominated, economic matters have become a key part of our duties to help boost trade for the country,” said Sudha Devi.

For that, she is making it a priority to learn Portuguese, the dominant language in Brazil, to help her network and add to her knowledge of French and German.

Prior to Brazil, she was the deputy director-general of the Malaysian secretariat for Asean.

Sudha Devi had also served as second secretary at the Malaysia’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations in Geneva, first secretary at the Malaysian High Commission in Singapore and minister counsellor with the Malaysian Embassy in Berlin.

During one of her home stints, she was dubbed the “Queen of Sheba”, a nickname that still tickles her.

“I was handling the African desk for countries south of the Sahara and there were 42 countries, all under my watch,” she said.

“But it has been good training, in Wisma, it is all about training. We are taught not only diplomatic skills but to hone our knowledge and adaptability for all kinds of situations,” she said.

The Malaysian embassy in Brazil was established in 1981. – Bernama

Population imbalance worry

October 9th, 2009
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The PewForum report on Global Muslim population gave some interesting global statistics:

A comprehensive demographic study of more than 200 countries finds that there are 1.57 billion Muslims of all ages living in the world today, representing 23% of an estimated 2009 world population of 6.8 billion.

While Muslims are found on all five inhabited continents, more than 60% of the global Muslim population is in Asia and about 20% is in the Middle East and North Africa. However, the Middle East-North Africa region has the highest percentage of Muslim-majority countries. Indeed, more than half of the 20 countries and territories1 in that region have populations that are approximately 95% Muslim or greater.

More than 300 million Muslims, or one-fifth of the world’s Muslim population, live in countries where Islam is not the majority religion. These minority Muslim populations are often quite large. India, for example, has the third-largest population of Muslims worldwide. China has more Muslims than Syria, while Russia is home to more Muslims than Jordan and Libya combined.

Of the total Muslim population, 10-13% are Shia Muslims and 87-90% are Sunni Muslims. Most Shias (between 68% and 80%) live in just four countries: Iran, Pakistan, India and Iraq.

My focus is on Malaysia. The map below indicates current Muslim population in Malaysia to be about 17 million or 60.4%. The report says the Malaysian Muslim population is about 16,581,000 which is 1.1% of world Muslim population.

world-distribution-weightedClick to enlarge

Most likely this figure will grow, and coupled with lower growth rate of other communities, will lead towards a bigger gap between the majority Muslim and minority non-Muslims in the country. As I worried earlier, population imbalance may lead to various problems. Our political situation at the moment is not actually helping to bridge the gap, while the policies for last half decade have only served to widen the gap between the communities.  The constitution, which guarantees the rights of the non-Muslims, is often subject to interpretration that seems lop-sided.  So, its may well remain words on paper only since the realisation of the constitution is at the hands of politicians and administrators, and the separation between government, judiciary, and legistation is not very clear.

Would a Minorities Act help in this case? A review of the constitution? A check and balance mechanism for all the policies? Population control seems far-fetched of course, at the moment, but may be needed in future.

On hindsight, would an evenly balanced population trigger more social unrest and threat to national security? A minority “Minority” will be easy to subjugate and control.

Indian community support for PM Najib decreases

October 9th, 2009
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Even though Malaysiakini report states the support from the community is the highest among the three communities at 68%, it actually reduced by 6%! And this is the smallest drop among the the biggest groups:

Indians 68% (down 6% from 74%)

Malays 64% (down 10% from 74%)

Chinese 36% (down 12% from 48%) (but high percentage of “don’t know”/’no response” answers).

Overall drop is 9%.

What could have cause the overall drop, and specifically the why lowest among the Indian community? Is it because of the publicity given to benefits announced for the Indian community? Perhaps other communities don’t feel they are getting the attention, so bigger drop among the others? How is the impact of Kg Buah Pala and cow head protest on the community support? Does the emergence of multiple Indian based parties affect the support level?

merdeka-center-survey-2009-sept

Looking at the past one year track, we can see an upward trend till July this year.

merdeka-center-survey-najib-2009

Images from Malaysiakini.