Archive for the ‘BornInMalaysia’ category

No plan for special investment fund for Indians

June 18th, 2007
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how did we reach the 3% target figure? It should be 8% at least.
 
 
No plan for special investment fund for Indians
 
BERNAMA
KUALA LUMPUR, MON:
 

THE government has no plan to set up a special investment fund to uplift the economic position of the Indian community, the Dewan Rakyat was told today.

Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Senator Datuk Abdul Rahman Suliman said the government had however used various mechanisms to help raise the economic position of the community and to ensure that the targeted three per cent equity ownership by Indians during the Ninth Malaysia Plan (9MP) period was achieved.

“Various efforts have also been undertaken to widen the participation of Indians in the economy and help uplift their economic status so that they are not left behind in development,” he said.

Abdul Rahman was replying to a question from K. Devamamy (BN-Cameron Highlands) on the mechanisms to enable Indians achieve three per cent equity ownership during the 9MP period.

Abdul Rahman said the mechanisms included the investment schemes of Perbadanan Nasional Berhad, such as Amanah Saham Wawasan 2020, Amanah Saham Nasional, Amanah Saham Gemilang, Amanah Saham Nasional 3, expanding access to financial assistance and training for Indian entrepreneurs as well as providing business licences to encourage them to venture into business.
Replying to a supplementary question, from Datuk Mohd Zaid Ibrahim (BN-Kota Baharu), on the equity targets for other ethnic groups such as the Dayak, Orang Asli and Kadazan, Abdul Rahman said the government would continue to focus on the eradication of poverty among the people regardless of their ethnic groups.

“We want to reduce hardcore poverty, which is at 5.7 per cent, by 2010. This is our most important target.

“Our agenda is to try and ensure that all ethnic groups are able to participate in and benefit from the programme,” he said.

Moorthy Case – Widow wants more judges

June 14th, 2007
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Widow wants more judges

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KUALA LUMPUR: A Hindu widow who is challenging the conversion of her husband to Islam has written to the Court of Appeal asking that a nine-man bench hear her case.

S. Kaliammal said her matter before the appellate court was of public interest as it touched on the constitutional rights of non-Muslims.

In a letter sent by her lawyer M. Manoharan to Court of Appeal Registrar, Hasnah Mohd Hashim, the widow also wanted the appeal date to be brought forward.

The case is scheduled to be heard on Dec 12.

On May 24, parties which met for the case management before Hasnah consented to a year-end hearing as they were waiting for the Federal Court to deliver the Lina Joy judgment.
The apex court delivered its much-awaited ruling on May 30.

Kaliammal’s case received wide media coverage as it involved the religious status of her husband, M. Moorthy, who was a member of the first Malaysian team to scale Mount Everest in 1997.

He is said to have converted to Islam prior to his death on Dec 20, 2005, without informing his family. She sought legal redress at the High Court.

On Dec 29, 2005, the then High Court judge Mohd Raus Sharif ruled that Article 121(1A) of the Federal Constitution stated that the civil court had no jurisdiction on matters pertaining to Islam.

Kaliammal then took her case to the Court of Appeal.

Meanwhile, Manoharan said an enlarged quorum should hear Kaliammal’s appeal as the outcome would have a bearing on two other cases brought by non-Muslim wives against their husbands who had converted to Islam.

The cases are also pending before the Court of Appeal.

Allocate land for temples

June 14th, 2007
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Samy: Allocate land for temples
 

LAND should be allocated for the building of Indian temples in all future development projects, said Tamil Nesan

MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said a request to this effect had been submitted to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. 

He said he had brought to the Prime Minister’s attention that unwanted problems would arise if Indians built temples on private land and the owners later took back possession. 

He was speaking to reporters after opening the 25th annual delegates conference of Malaysian Hindu Dharma Mamandram, which was held at Batu Caves on Sunday.

Alleycats – The immense staying power of sheer talent

June 11th, 2007
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The immense staying power of sheer talent

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The Alleycats line-up during the 1980s.
The Alleycats line-up during the 1980s.

THEY gave us evergreen hits like Sampaikan Salam, Sekuntum Mawar Merah, Hingga Akhir Nanti and a host of other chart-busters.

But they were also loved for their mean covers of favourite pop numbers and rock ballads, ranging from songs by The Beatles and Deep Purple to more recent Robbie Williams and Maroon 5 hits.

This versatility and ability to keep up with the times earned the Alleycats a huge fan base keeping them timeless. Afro-haired brothers David and Loganathan Arumugam were instrumental in the band’s popularity.

David’s first band was called the Super Jets. The six-piece band was a hit with the American soldiers on leave in Penang from the war in Vietnam. About this time, David and Super Jets drummer Albert Choo were also trying to form a new band.

David quit school mid-way through Form 5 and formed the Alleycats with Loga and another brother Shanmugam, who played lead guitar, Khoo Eng An aka Johnson Khoo (rhythm guitar), Silly Hock (bass) and Choo on drums.
But David felt the new band was still not ready to perform in public, and formed another group called The Beads which entered the inaugural 1969 Radio Malaysia Talentime contest.

The Beads won the Talentime for the Penang Zone and went on to compete in the North Zone championship. It clinched that too and went to Kuala Lumpur for the finals.

The Super Jets had disbanded by then and The Beads and Alleycats decided to merge.

The group clicked well, and moved to Kuala Lumpur in 1970 to try their luck there. They managed to secure a three-year contract at the Tin Mine Discotheque at the KL Hilton, which is now the Mutiara Hotel Kuala Lumpur.

In 1973, they started playing in Singapore and for the next three years, the Alleycats shuttled between Penang, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore.

Then they hit Hong Kong, first playing at The Memory Disco and later at The Club Capital. It turned into a nine-year stint.

Their first English album, called Alleycats, released in 1978, did not do so well.

But their first Malay album, Penyanyi, recorded almost the same time, did.

The following year, they recorded another Malay album, called Terima Kasih, and on it was Senandung Semalam, which propelled them to stardom.

They were still in Hong Kong, unaware of their huge popularity back home in Malaysia.

Their watershed year was 1980. Hingga Akhir Nanti from the band’s fifth album became a huge hit.

But it was not until two years later that they performed at their first major concert at Stadium Negara in Kuala Lumpur to thousands of fans.

The rest, as they say, is history. The band went on to record 29 albums. The latest one, Rasa, is yet to be released.

The group had several changes in its line-up. Nevertheless, the two core members of David and Loga stayed on.

With Loga’s death, David is the sole remaining original member of the Alleycats.

Loga – a seeker who will be deeply missed

June 11th, 2007
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A seeker who will be deeply missed
M. Nasir says he and Loga were good friends who spent hours just talking and discussing matters of life
M. Nasir says he and Loga were good friends who spent hours just talking and discussing matters of life

THE Alleycats, famous for its classic pop Malay numbers, contributed much to the development of the local music scene.

Francissca Peters says Loga and the other Alleycats were God-gifted performers for whom she has great respect
Francissca Peters says Loga and the other Alleycats were God-gifted performers for whom she has great respect

So when founding member Loganathan Arumugam died after a year-long battle with lung cancer, other celebrated artistes took a stroll down memory lane.

Singer Francissca Peters said Loga and the rest of the Alleycats were God-gifted performers for whom she had great respect.

"I have known both brothers for almost 25 years now. They were soul-mates. Loga’s loss must have greatly affected David. I have no words to console him.

"Loga was a charming and witty man. Can you imagine what kind of man he was with that deadly combination?
"If he had been younger, girls would have gone ga-ga over him."

He was a highly-talented, gifted and intellectual man, a combination that she said only a few artistes today possessed.

"Beneath his quietness, there was this great sense of humour and warmth that many people did not realise."

Composer M. Nasir said he had known Loga for almost 30 years; they were good friends who spent hours just talking and discussing matters of life.

"He was a beautiful person, in a poetic sense.

"I think of him as a ‘pencari’, someone who was always searching for something in life. I will miss him deeply."

Nasir co-produced the Alleycats first Malay album, Terima Kasih, in 1978.

Musician Ramli M.S. said he knew Loga for almost a decade.

He described his friend as "a good man", a happy-go-lucky person to whom people could easily relate and whose Afro hairdo was the first thing that came to mind when anyone mentioned his name.

"The Alleycats must go on, it should not stop here. David is still here," he said.

The vocalist and flute player died smiling as he listened to early Alleycats songs on a portable disc player placed by his bedside at Mount Miriam Hospital, Penang.