Archive for the ‘BornInMalaysia’ category

Mum ‘missing link’ to citizenship

June 11th, 2007
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Mum ‘missing link’ to citizenship
By : Sonia Ramachandran

source

PETALING JAYA: He roams the streets with a picture of a woman holding a baby, asking everyone he meets if they have seen her.

Meet David Jeyaraj, who is desperately looking for his mother, Anbaiakie Muthan.

The 25-year-old is stateless, and unless he can find her he will remain so.

Anbaiakie delivered Jeyaraj at the Klang General Hospital (now the Tengku Ampuan Rahimah Hospital) on Aug 10, 1982.

She was a resident of the Bethany Home in Perak. After he was born, Anbaiakie took him in search of her mother in Kulim, Kedah, only to find she had died.
She then moved in with her mother’s neighbours, Govindarajoo Veerasamy and Letchumi Vegadasam.

After a while, Anbaiakie signed a consent of adoption order and left Jeyaraj behind. On the order, her name is spelt Anbaiakie Muthan but Jeyaraj’s birth certificate shows his mother’s name as Anbaiakie Moton.

The columns for identification card numbers and the name of his father state "no information available".

That is the root of Jeyaraj’s problems. When he was 12 he was issued a renewable green IC (a temporary resident identification card), but the government stopped issuing temporary identity cards in 2003.

"I went to the National Registration Department (NRD) in Alor Star, and they told me to go to Putrajaya. In Putrajaya they told me to bring my biological mother. They said she has to come and say, ‘this is my son’."

Since then, Jeyaraj, who obtained 6 As in the PMR examination and has a diploma in computers, has been placing advertisements in Tamil newspapers and on the Internet, but to no avail.

Although his birth certificate did not state Anbaiakie’s IC number, the adoption order did. With that, Jeyaraj, along with Era Consumer, managed to trace Anbaiakie to a shelter in Kuala Lumpur, but she had left.

He also discovered that Anbaiakie had given birth to two daughters.

From the shelter’s administrator he got a photograph of Anbaiakie, and with that picture Jeyaraj has been roaming the streets looking for his mother.

Jeyaraj said he has followed all the NRD’s instructions, including doing a search on his mother, getting letters from the hospital where he was born and the shelter his mother was in, as well as a letter from the director of Bethany at that time, but they still refused to give him a Malaysian IC.

"I was born here and I haven’t done anything wrong, yet I’m stateless in my own country."

Era Consumer director Nanthini Ramalo, who has been handling Jeyaraj’s case, said the NRD should give a person citizenship if he can provide evidence that he was born in the country.

The Second Schedule of the Federal Constitution provides for citizenship by operation of law for those who are born here and are not a citizen of any other country.

Deputy Home Affairs Minister Datuk Tan Chai Ho said Jeyaraj needs to appeal to NRD director-general Datuk Abdul Halim Muhammad to get his matter resolved.

"He has to submit all his documents and call forward all his witnesses and the NRD will investigate. After the investigation an NRD committee will look into his status," he said.

Asked what would be the first thing he would do if he were to get an IC, Jeyaraj said: "I will cry."

Alleycats Loga’s Demise

June 7th, 2007
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Website to keep Loga’s memory, songs alive

By NIK KHUSAIRI IBRAHIM
 

PENANG: Fans of Alleycats came from as far as Singapore to join hundreds of mourners in paying their last respects to Loganathan Arumugam. 

Final rites: Vigneshwaran saying prayers as the coffin bearing his father's remains is pushed into the incinerator at the Batu Lanchang crematorium in Penang yesterday.

A. Prakash and his friend rushed to Penang from Singapore on Monday on learning that Loga, as he was popularly known, had died of lung cancer. 

“We have been here for three days to pay our respects to a legend. We are proud of his achievements.  

“We will set up a website to keep his memory and songs alive,” said Prakash, 35. 

Loga was cremated at the Batu Lanchang crematorium at 11am yesterday. 

Fans and well-wishers were at the family house in Jalan Azyze in Tanjung Bungah as early as 8.30am. 

Also present were popular singer Datuk D.J. Dave, former Miss Malaysia and radio deejay Yasmin Yusoff and comedian Accapan. 

Loga’s only son Vigneshwaran and relatives led the funeral ceremony according to Hindu rites at 10.15am. Loga, 54, also left behind wife Susan and daughter Priyadashini. 

Mega Fortune Bikers Club convoy of big bikers escorted the cortege to the crematorium. 

Persatuan Karyawan president Freddie Fernandez said Loga was among the very few Indians who had become a national icon. 

“Loga was not only active in music. He was also very active in Karyawan,” he said. 

PBA Holdings Bhd chief executive officer Jaseni Maidinsa said he had known Loga since the 1960s. 

“I was 13 years old then. We became close friends. Love for music bound us together,” he said, adding that Loga was the brains behind Alleycats. 

“Alleycats started singing at Carmens,” he said. 

“After Tan Sri P. Ramlee, I can't think of other big names in the entertainment industry who could bridge the racial barrier except Alleycats,” he said. 

Last journey: Priyadashini carrying a clay pot during Loga’s funeral yesterday. With her is her mother Susan (right).

PM view on Lina Joy case

June 1st, 2007
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Nazri: “What is the point of keeping a person a Muslim if they no longer believed in the faith and made that publicly known?”
 
PM: No pressure exerted on judges in Lina Joy case

source

By SHAHANAAZ HABIB

KUALA LUMPUR: It was not a political decision – that was what Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said about the Lina Joy decision by the Federal Court. 

The Prime Minister said the Government did not exert any pressure on the judges. 

When asked about critics who said the decision was political, he replied: “They must have a hole in their heads if they say it’s a political decision.”  

He said no one had hoped for or pressured the court into making any political decision. 

“That is emotions (talking). If people allow themselves to be influenced by emotions, they will think of all sorts of things and suspect this and that and make themselves uneasy,” he told reporters after chairing the Umno supreme council meeting yesterday. 

On Wednesday, the Federal Court rejected Lina’s appeal to compel the National Registration Department (NRD) to remove the word “Islam” from her identity card. 

Lina, 42, was born Azlina Jailani to Malay parents and brought up as a Muslim but later converted to Christianity. She managed to get her name changed but was denied a change in her religious status. 

On whether the decision gave non-Muslims the wrong perception, Abdullah said: “If they have the wrong perception, what can we do? The court made a decision and I don’t question that. There are many decisions the court had made which many of us are not happy with.” 

Abdullah said he did not think there was a widening religious divide in the country of late. 

“Discussions on religion have become more widespread but this does not represent a divide,” he said.  

On a foreign report that said the Lina Joy verdict showed that Malaysia rejected Christianity, Abdullah said that if this was the case there would be no Christians and no churches in the country. 

He said the report was probably done out of ignorance “but if they know our country and said that, then that is being naughty.” 

On non-Muslims having problems in their dealings with the Syariah Court, he said such cases would have to be dealt with. 

Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz, who is the de facto law minister, urged everyone to respect the decision and not to speculate that Lina would not stand a chance in the Syariah Court. 

“What is the point of keeping a person a Muslim if they no longer believed in the faith and made that publicly known?” he asked. 

In Kota Baru, PAS deputy president Nasruddin Mat Isa welcomed the decision, saying that it had removed any ambiguity regarding the role of the Syariah Court on matters of Islamic faith and belief.  

PM view on Lina Joy case – Malay papers

June 1st, 2007
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PM affirms that Constitution is the highest authority.
 
Kes Lina Joy: PM minta usah ikut emosi
 
 
Oleh Anwar Hussin, Saufi Hamzah dan Rohaniza Idris

KUALA LUMPUR: Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi berkata, semua pihak perlu menerima keputusan Mahkamah Persekutuan berhubung kes Azlina Jailani atau Lina Joy, dengan terbuka dan tidak membenarkan diri mereka dipengaruhi emosi.
 
Perdana Menteri menegaskan, kerajaan tidak pernah mempengaruhi mahkamah untuk membuat sebarang keputusan, termasuk berhubung kes Lina Joy yang merayu di Mahkamah Persekutuan untuk menggugurkan perkataan Islam dalam kad pengenalannya

“Kalau kita membenarkan emosi mempengaruhi kita, kita akan fikir macam-macam… syak itu dan ini,” katanya pada sidang media selepas mempengerusikan mesyuarat Majlis Tertinggi (MT) Umno di sini, petang semalam.

Abdullah yang juga Presiden Umno diminta mengulas mengenai reaksi pelbagai pihak berikutan keputusan Mahkamah Persekutuan kelmarin yang menolak rayuan Lina Joy yang mengaku murtad sejak 17 tahun lalu untuk menggugurkan perkataan Islam dalam kad pengenalannya.

Mahkamah menegaskan Azlina, 42, atau nama Kristiannya, Lina Joy perlu mendapatkan perakuan bahawa dia sudah murtad daripada Mahkamah Syariah sebelum Jabatan Pendaftaran Negara (JPN) boleh menggugurkan perkataan Islam dalam kad pengenalannya.

Ditanya sama ada keputusan Mahkamah Persekutuan itu melebarkan jurang perbezaan agama di negara ini, Abdullah berkata: “Saya tidak fikir ada jurang perbezaan yang luas walaupun perbincangan berhubung agama semakin meluas”.

Sementara itu, Abdullah menyifatkan media Barat yang memburukkan Malaysia dengan mendakwa tidak mempraktikkan kebebasan agama selepas tidak berpuas hati dengan keputusan Mahkamah Persekutuan itu sebagai jahil mengenai negara ini.

“Mereka mempunyai persepsi salah mengenai apa yang kita boleh lakukan. Ini adalah keputusan mahkamah, saya tidak mempersoalkannya. Ada banyak keputusan yang dilakukan mahkamah dan (kadangkala) kita tidak berpuas hati tetapi apa yang boleh kita buat,” katanya.

Perdana Menteri berkata, Malaysia juga tidak pernah menolak kebebasan beragama dan perkara itu jelas terbukti kerana jika tidak, sudah tentu tiada penganut Kristian atau gereja untuk mereka di negara ini.

Beliau turut menyangkal dakwaan media asing kononnya undang-undang Islam kini mengatasi Perlembagaan Persekutuan.
 

Terima keputusan Lina Joy – PM

source

Oleh: HAMDEN RAMLI

KUALA LUMPUR 31 Mei – Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi meminta rakyat supaya menerima keputusan Mahkamah Persekutuan dalam kes Azlina Jailani atau Lina Joy dengan terbuka dan tidak membenarkan diri mereka dipengaruhi emosi.

Perdana Menteri berkata, sekiranya masyarakat menerima keputusan itu dengan emosi dikhuatiri ia boleh menimbulkan pelbagai syak wasangka.

“Kalau kita membenarkan emosi mempengaruhi kita, kita fikir macam-macam, syak itu, syak ini,” katanya pada sidang akhbar selepas mempengerusikan mesyuarat Majlis Tertinggi UMNO di Pusat Dagangan Dunia Putra di sini, hari ini.

Perdana Menteri berkata demikian ketika diminta mengulas keputusan Mahkamah Persekutuan semalam menolak permohonan Lina Joy yang mengaku murtad sejak 17 tahun lalu untuk menggugurkan perkataan Islam dalam kad pengenalannya dengan penghakiman secara majoriti 2-1.

Mahkamah menegaskan Azlina, 42, yang menukar namanya kepada Lina Joy perlu mendapatkan perakuan daripada Mahkamah Syariah bahawa dia telah murtad sebelum Jabatan Pendaftaran Negara (JPN) boleh menggugurkan perkataan Islam dalam kad pengenalannya.

Menurut Abdullah, kerajaan tidak pernah mempengaruhi mahkamah dalam membuat sesuatu keputusan.

“Tiada campur tangan politik. Ini keputusan mahkamah dan saya percaya hakim yang membuat keputusan ini telah mengambil kira semua aspek,” tegas beliau.

Dengan keputusan itu juga, kata Perdana Menteri, ia tidak bermakna Malaysia menolak agama Kristian seperti yang dilaporkan BBC yang bertajuk Malaysia Reject Christianity.

“Jika Malaysia menolak agama Kristian, tidak adalah agama itu di negara ini. Tidak adalah gereja-gereja,” katanya.

Ditanya sama ada keputusan Mahkamah Persekutuan itu akan melebarkan jurang perbezaan agama di negara ini, Abdullah berkata: “Saya tidak fikir ada jurang perbezaan yang luas walaupun perbincangan berhubung agama semakin meluas.”

Mengenai persepsi buruk masyarakat antarabangsa terhadap negara berikutan penyiaran meluas keputusan kes berkenaan, Perdana Menteri berkata, tidak banyak yang boleh dilakukan kerana ia adalah keputusan mahkamah

“Ada banyak keputusan yang telah dibuat oleh mahkamah dan banyak juga yang tidak menggembirakan sesetengah pihak, apa yang kita boleh buat,” ujarnya.

Pada masa yang sama, Abdullah turut menyangkal dakwaan seorang wartawan media asing bahawa undang-undang Islam kini mengatasi Perlembagaan Persekutuan negara ini.

“Tak ada perkara macam itu (undang-undang Islam mengatasi Perlembagaan Persekutuan). Perlembagaan Persekutuan ialah Perlembagaan Persekutuan. Ada satu set undang-undang yang perlu kita patuhi. Ia merupakan sesuatu yang perlu kita patuhi, itu sahaja,” katanya.

Dalam penghakiman semalam, Ketua Hakim Negara, Tun Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim dan Hakim Mahkamah Persekutuan, Datuk Alauddin Mohd Sherif menolak rayuan tersebut, manakala Hakim Besar Sabah dan Sarawak, Datuk Richard Malanjum membenarkan permohonan itu.

Hakim Ahmad Fairuz berkata, JPN berhak mengenakan syarat kepada Lina Joy supaya mengemukakan sijil atau deklarasi atau perintah Mahkamah Syariah untuk mengesahkan dia murtad sebelum boleh menggugurkan perkataan ‘Islam’ daripada kad pengenalannya itu.

Hakim Malanjum pula berpendapat arahan JPN supaya Lina Joy mengemukakan sijil murtad dari Mahkamah Syariah Wilayah Persekutuan tidak munasabah kerana walaupun jabatan tersebut tidak melakukan apa-apa kesalahan undang-undang, namun adalah mustahil bagi syarat itu dipatuhi.

Federal Constitution must remain supreme

June 1st, 2007
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Bar Council: Federal Constitution must remain supreme

PETALING JAYA: The Bar Council supports the minority judgment of Chief Judge of Sabah and Sarawak Richard Malanjum that no court or authority should be easily allowed to have implied powers to curtail rights that are constitutionally granted. 

Its president S. Ambiga said the Federal Constitution “is and must remain in law, supreme.” 

“In an event of any inconsistency or conflict between the provisions of State Enactments and of the Federal Constitution, the latter must prevail,” she said in a statement yesterday. 

On Wednesday, the Federal Court rejected Lina JoyÂ’s appeal to compel the National Registration Department (NRD) to remove the word “Islam” from her identity card. 

Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim and Federal Court Justice Alauddin Mohd Sheriff voted against her appeal and said conversion issues should be dealt with by the Syariah Court. 

In his dissenting judgement, Justice Malanjum described the NRD’s insistence that Lina Joy obtain a certificate of apostasy from the Federal Territory Syariah Court or any Islamic authority as illegal and unreasonable. 

Ambiga said: “We are mindful that issues relating to religion will inevitably draw emotive responses in a multireligious society. 

“Malaysians must be prepared to confront these issues maturely and dispassionately within the framework of our Federal Constitution as the supreme law of the land.” 

Council of Churches of Malaysia general-secretary Rev Dr Herman Shastri said it viewed the Federal Court’s decision with regret and concern. 

“We believe that the constitutional provision in Article 11 of the Federal Constitution which guarantees freedom of religion in our country has been severely violated,” he said. 

He said the majority judgement had denied the individual the right to freedom of conscience and choice of religion.  

“It is, therefore, vital that the necessary legislation be enacted to ensure that no citizen would be penalised when he or she exercises the individual right to choose a faith and to practice it in freedom,” he said.