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Manohara to quit?

May 5th, 2009
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While others are not stating their stand, Selangor Gerakan is hoping that Manoharan would not quit his post, so says its  chief Deputy Minister Kohilan  Pillay.  However, Gerakan would contest if he quits say Kohilan. He says its the Pakatan leaders fault for not offering enough support to Manoharan’s wife in managing the constituency:

Its chief, A. Kohilan Pillay, said Manoharan should see his term out and blamed Pakatan Rakyat for the Internal Security Act detainee’s frustrations.

“Voters there knew what they were getting into when they voted for him. We want him to continue, as the voters decided on him.”

Kohilan said Manoharan’s problems could be solved if Pakatan Rakyat offered more support to Manoharan’s wife, S. Pusphaneela, who is acting for him in his absence.

“Pakatan Rakyat members should deliver. Where is the team spirit? I don’t think they are doing enough to help her.”

However, he said Gerakan would contest the seat if Manoharan resigned.

“We are not urging him to stay because we are afraid of a by-election. But if he decides to quit, we will field a candidate.”

Anyway, Manoharan is expected to make a decision after talking to Karpal Singh on 19th May.

Earlier, he issued a statement, which was read out by his wife:

I once again take this opportunity to thank the voters of Kota Alam Shah in having voted me in as Kota Alam Shah Adun (state representative). Despite having not met me in person, over 12,699 voters voted for me on March 8, 2008, with a majority of 7,184 votes over and above the BN candidate.

I apologise to my constituents for being unable to serve personally due to my detention without trial under the ISA. I must thank my constituents for their patience over the past 14 months. The constituents’ patience and support has kept me going in Kamunting prison thus far.

But the fact remains that over the last 14 months, I have not been able to effectively serve the public, in particular the constituents of Kota Alam Shah.

I feel a sense of guilt of being unable to serve the voters who have voted me as their representative in the Selangor state assembly. I feel I am being unfair to my constituents thus far.

I now have to consider resigning as a Selangor state assemblyman for Kota Alam Shah paving the way for a by-election in order for my constituents to re-elect their new representative who will be better able to serve them, and who will be able to physically attend all the sittings of the Selangor state legislative assembly and matters arriving therefrom.

I wish to convey to all, in particular to my constituents, that during the last 17 months of my detention in Kamunting prison, I tried my very best in appealing to the authorities and by way of applications to call for my freedom in order for me to effectively serve the public and my constituents in particular. I have exhausted all avenues for my release.

I have written a letter to ex-prime minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, three letters to now Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak, eight letters to former home minister Syed Hamid Albar, and two letters to Selangor Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah.

Also my applications to the home minister for me to attend the state assembly sittings have all been rejected and I was forced to apply for leave from the home minister.

Further, I have also attended the sittings before the ISA advisory board and all three sittings of the panel members have rejected my pleas for my release.

The High Court of Malaya have dismissed my three habeas corpus application. The Federal Court have dismissed all the three appeals from the High Court.

So all the efforts have been to no avail.

I am very disappointed that despite the 12,699 voters of Kota Alam Shah having voted to show that I have never ever been a threat to national security, the home minister defied the voice of the people and the democratic voice of these voters.

My 17 months of detention thus far have been very painful, which has been made worse by me being in the state of helplessness in being unable to serve my constituents.

As such, I hereby wish to inform that I will announce my official decision after meeting my party chairman Karpal Singh, who will be meeting me in Kamunting prison on May 19, 2009.

M Manoharan
ISA detainee and Kota Alam Shah state assemblyperson

Before that, everyone, including his wife, was surprised when Malaysiakini broke the news of Manoharan thinking of resigning. I wonder how the others can know before the own wife know about it. Strange world indeed.

Pushpaneela said he did not mention anything when she meet him more than two weeks ago:

In dismissing a Malaysiakini report yesterday, Manoharan’s wife, S. Pushpaneela said she was shocked with the report as her husband did not say anything about quitting when she met him two weeks ago.

Lawyer Manoharan, who was also a leader of the banned Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) movement, is being detained at the Kamunting prison under the Internal Security Act.

“I am shocked. I met him two weeks ago and he was in good spirits.

“He did not say anything about this. I am meeting him again tomorrow and will be in a better position to comment after that.”

Pushpaneela said the report came as a shock as in recent weeks,  she had expanded the Kota Alam Shah state assembly service centre.

“I had taken in more people to help me run the centre,” said Pushpaneela, who acts as Manoharan’s representative to the voters.

Selangor executive councillor Ronnie Liew also denied the Malaysiakini report.

“The report said that Pushpaneela was under a lot of pressure from constituency work, but this is not the case.”

Malaysiakini in its report quoting a source close to Manoharan, had said that the detained lawyer wanted out as he was growing frustrated over his inability to serve voters.

Pushpaneela revealed later that she can only do so much by being a representative of the assemblyman:

Between being the breadwinner of her family and replacing Manoharan as the state assemblyperson, Pushpaneela, however, conceded that her contributions in the constituency is still unsatisfactory.

Even though she had acted on behalf of her husband for the past 14 months, she said that she still “can’t bring the constituents grievances to the state assembly”.

“I can do as much as I can in the constituency, but I cannot attend the state assembly sitting. As a state representative, you need to bring their grievances to the august House but these people have been denied (this),” she said.

Despite the hardest decision that her husband has to make, the mother of four children however said that Manoharan was “in good spirit”.

“But he just feels very guilty … the people only saw his posters and not him in person. He tried his best to be out (of prison) to serve them … but he can’t even attend the assembly sitting,” said Puspaneela.

She also said that Manoharan had been thinking about resigning for last few months.

Indira’s saga continues

May 5th, 2009
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The husband has filed an application at Ipoh High Court to set aside the interim order granted to Indira Gandhi last week and also to remove the injunction to prevent him from entering their house. The reasons given in the application are: (i) that the civil court has no jurisdiction over him,  (ii) that he has obtained a Syariah Court order for custody of his children and (iii) that the cabinet’s directive on conversion issues was irrelevant. The application will be heard in chambers today.

The husband, Patmanathan @ Ridzwan is still hiding to avoid the court order. Even though private investigator was hired by Makkal Sakthi group, still can’t find him or the baby.

Indira had received many calls giving encouragement and support, but no clues on the whereabouts of her baby and husband.

According to her lawyer, Kulasegaran, they believe the baby and husband are being given protection by certain people, in order to not submit to the court order.

But the Perak religous department claims to be in the dark on the husband’s location.

Ipoh district police chief Assistant Commissioner Azisman Alias said Mohd Ridzuan last contacted religious officers on Friday, the day after the cabinet decided that children be raised according to the faith of their parents at the time of marriage, should a spouse decide to convert.

… Azisman said the department told the police that it would be referring the matter to the state legal adviser, as the High Court order was in conflict with the order from the syariah court.

“They have to wait for instructions on which court order to follow.”

Azisman said police were still monitoring Mohd Ridzu-an’s house and his mother’s house in Pasir Puteh, pointing out that he was still under police bail. But they would not arrest or force him to surrender Prasana Diksa to Indira.

“We will just inform the wife or the religious department,” he said, adding that the court order was only for the police to assist in the matter.

Perak religious department director Datuk Mohamah Nor Mansor and state legal adviser Datuk Ahmad Kamal Md Shahid could not be contacted for comment.

So, what will the court decide today? Is the convert still subject to civil court order or is the order in conflict with Syariah court order? Which order is to prevail?

Meanwhile, the government is planning to hold a meeting “soon” to iron out the conversion issue. So says Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Maj-Gen (R) Datuk Jamil Khir Baharom. It will involve several ministries (Human Resources and Women, Family and Community Development ministries) and religious departments, and  perhaps even religious associations.

One wonders what Human Resource had got to do with parent converting and children forcibly being converted. Any calculation on manhours lost? Or is it because the MIC representative Dr S Subra is there? I really think its not the ministry which is involved, but just the minister who is representing the MIC who is supposed to represent the Indian community.

Who will represent us? MCCBCHST and MHS? MIC? Tamil Mamandram?

In order to proceed with the meeting, the minister wants to meet two other ministers (Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz, who is in charge of legal affairs, and Senator Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu Koon who is responsible for issues on racial relations ) to get their “opinion” on the proposed meeting. So, another meeting is needed before that meeting is arranged.

Q: How soon is the meeting?

A: Soon la. Soon means soon la. Which part of soon you don’t understand? All this takes time, this is sensitive issue. You asking irerelevant question. Don’t know meaning of soon ah? Go for English class before you want to ask question.

Ganesan as new Perak assembly speaker

May 5th, 2009
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If all goes according to plan, we will see the first time in 52 years an Indian will be appointed as state assembly speaker by the BN government. If all does not go well, we shall be maintaining the existing Indian speaker appointed by newly elected state government (in March 2008). Well, who cares about copying as long as something good comes out of it right? 🙂

Datuk R. Ganesan, the former two-term Sungkai state assemblyman, has been nominated as Barisan Nasional’s replacement candidate for the state assembly speaker’s post.

Ganesan, who was bypassed in favour of MIC vice-president Datuk S. Veerasingam in the last general election for the Sungkai seat, was nominated by Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Zambry Abdul Kadir.

The nomination was seconded by senior state executive councillor Datuk Hamidah Osman.

V. Sivakumar, the speaker from Pakatan Rakyat, posted Ganesan’s nomination as his replacement in his blog (speakforperak.blogspot.com).

In his blog entry on Thursday night, Sivakumar said the nomination, via a motion before the state assembly, was submitted to the office of the secretary of the assembly on Thursday morning.

“The motion dated April 29 was attached with an acceptance letter from Ganesan,” he said in his blog.

Speaking to the New Straits Times yesterday, Ganesan, who is Perak MIC secretary and the party’s central working committee member, thanked Zambry for nominating him.

“This is another journey in my political career since I joined MIC in 1976. I will serve to the best of my abilities,” he said, adding that he only knew about his nomination when he was called to Zambry’s office on Tuesday to sign the acceptance letter.

Ganesan, 57, a practising lawyer, was born in Hutan Melintang and served as a teacher before reading law. He was called to the Bar in 1997.

He has been the Ipoh Timor MIC division chairman since 2000, having served as the division secretary from 1994.

Married to Datin D. Saraswathy, who is headmistress of SRK (Tamil) Sungai Pari, Buntong, the couple have with three sons aged 18 to 28.

Ganesan was among three candidates proposed by MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu for the post.

One of the other candidates named was Datuk Dr S.Vasan, who contested the Pasir Panjang seat last year but lost to ousted menteri besar Datuk Seri Mohammad Nizar Jamaluddin.

There is the small matter of the speaker dismissing the motion as being not urgent or of importance.

Kavyeas feeling the heat

May 5th, 2009
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No surprises in this. All talk and no action for how many years now? Stepping on the toes of other BN parties. Party called mosquito for obvious reasons. Obviously one will feel the heat.

People’s Progressive Party (PPP) president Datuk M. Kayveas will defend his post in the party elections set to be held in the first week of June.

He said although the supreme council had passed a motion last week that there should not be a contest for the post of president, there was talk that someone would challenge him.

“I hear three names, including one who is not a supreme council member, going around the country looking for support,” he said at a press conference after the party’s supreme council meeting yesterday.

Although Kayveas did not name who his challengers were, party insiders believe that one of them could be former Youth leader Senator Datuk T. Murugiah.

On the issue of official line-up, Kayveas said that this time, he wanted to look at candid-ates who are loyal to the party and its leadership.

Nominations for PPP’s party election is on May 30 and the election date will be set after getting confirmation from Barisan Nasional chairman Datuk Seri Najib Razak.

It seems got scent of money politics (in pun mau copy ka? just call it bribery la!) in the party, claims Kavyeas. Others may see it as a plot to oust the contender.

Malaysian Indian attacked by Indian High Commission staff

May 4th, 2009
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Yup, you read that right. The MIC Youth sent a protest memorandum against the attack, but they were snubbed and even challenged to a fight. Hmm..they should have taken it and bashed those security guards 🙂

The memorandum which was not accepted by the officials:

4th of May 2009

His Excellency the High Commissioner,
The High Commission of India,
Kuala Lumpur.

Your Excellency,

RE : INHUMANE TREATMENT OF MALAYSIAN CIVILIANS AT INDIAN HIGH COMMISSION,MALAYSIA

We, members of Social and Welfare Bureau of Malaysian Indian Congress Youth Wing, hereby submit our memorandum to register our vehement protest against the Indian High Commission’s inhumane treatment towards Mr Arunagiri Nathan and Mrs Gogelavani at Indian High Commision on 30th of April 2009.

For your kind information Your Excellency, Mr and Mrs Arunagiri Nathan Gogelavani has been coming to Indian High Commission two (2) consecutive days prior to the incident for foreign workers application.

On 30th of April 2009, Mrs and Mrs Arunagiri Nathan were stopped at Entrance of the High Commission for a security check by security guard. When Mrs Arunagiri asked the security guards not to use scanning devices on her body due to her pregnancy, the security guards were rude and verbally assaulted her by claiming that the premise was “Indian territory” and Malaysians do not have any rights on them.

When Mr Arunagiri responded to the security guards, he was dragged into the High Commission premise and the gate was locked from within, living his wife stranded outside of the High Commission building. The security guard started to hit Mr Arunagiri with a long stick. He was repeatedly beaten without mercy by the security guards and other unnamed officers from High Commission.

He was strangled, beaten, verbally assaulted and man handled until his shirt was torn. Due to the blunt trauma on his skull and hands, he was rushed to Selayang Hospital for further treatment. As for now, he has been having recurring headaches and his hands were swollen due the beatings. This incident has been reported to Royal Malaysian Police by Mrs Gogelavani (Report Reference Number: SENTUL/005689/09).

We, Social and Welfare Bureau of MIC Youth, most respectfully, request His Excellency to take this incident as a serious breach of basic human rights. We demand the personals involved in this incident to be suspended and handed over to the Royal Malaysian Police immediately for further investigation.

We also demand an official apology by High Commission of India to Mr and Mrs Arunagiri Gogelavani for mental anguish and trauma that they are going through.

We sincerely hope Your Excellency will solve this matter swiftly and diligently. We on our part will forward a copy of this Memorandum to our Foreign Affairs Ministry, Prime Minister’s Department and Prime Minister’s Office of India for their action as this involves Malaysian citizen and the High Commission of India.

Yours truly,

_______________
S.SUBRAMANIAM (019-351 7474)
Chairman
Social and Welfare Bureau
National MIC Youth

So, what’s next? Call for massive protest in front of the embassy? Burn Indian flag? Demand that the high commissioner is sent back to India? Ask big money compensation? Organise campaign to boycott products from India? Fix some thugs to bash the guards and officials? Hmm…so many creative thoughts….

The area inside the perimeter is considered off-limits to local police, if I’m not mistaken. So, one who is patient will wait till the bird leaves the nest. It then becomes fair game.

Actually, if the guard insist on using scanner, the only the husband could have gone in while the wife stayed outside. Maybe they didn’t give the couple a chance to change their mind? Or the husband said some unsavoury words which agitated the guards? Or maybe the guards and officials are actually having mental problems and violent tendencies- which in turn highlights a possible security threat for the High Commissioner himself.