Archive for the ‘BornInMalaysia’ category
No Joy for Lina
May 30th, 2007
UPDATE – Lina Joy loses case
May 30th, 2007Lina Joy loses appeal
PUTRAJAYA: Lina Joy has lost her appeal against an Appeals Court majority ruling two years ago that the National Registration Department (NRD) was right in not allowing her application to delete the word “Islam” from her identity card.
The Federal Court ruled against her appeal in a 2-1 decision on Wednesday.
Lina, 42, was born Azlina Jailani to Malay parents. She was brought up as a Muslim but at the age of 26 decided to become a Christian.
In 1999, she changed the name in her identity card to Lina Joy but her religion remained as Islam.
On April 23, 2001, the High Court refused to decide on her application to renounce Islam as her religion on grounds that the Syariah Court should decide the issue.
It also dismissed her application for an order to direct the department to drop the word “Islam” from her identity card.
We spent 53 billion last year!
May 30th, 2007
And that does not include purchases of cars and houses. The spending spree is expected to continue this year with total sales projected to hit a whopping RM64,000,000,000…
MALAYSIANS, it appears, are big spenders. And tourists are not too far behind. They splurged close to RM60 billion last year on a variety of goods, sending retail sales nationwide up to the highest level in six years.
Among their favourite purchases were clothes, jewellery, gift sets, electronic goods, foodstuff and sports equipment.
Consumers cited the good economic situation and the holding of mega sales as the main reason for the bigger spending, while retailers said shopping had become a stress reliever for many consumers.
And the shopping frenzy is likely to steam on further this year, according to the Retail Group Malaysia which tabulates quarterly retail data for the Malaysia Retailers Association.
RGM predicts retail sales will grow by eight per cent this year, with the total sales value of goods surpassing RM64 billion.
Last year, improved consumer confidence and better economic sentiment spurred retail sales by 8.4 per cent to RM59.5 billion. In 2005, the spending amounted to RM54.9 billion.
"The mega sales carnival and discounts offered on a larger number of items helped attract consumers who were otherwise holding back on their expenses following the fuel price increase in February last year," RGM managing director Tan Hai Hsin said.
"Despite the haze in October and the severe floods in Johor in December, retailers managed to stimulate consumer spending with heavy price discounts and attractive promotional activities.
"The strong performance in Malaysia’s stock market at the end of the year, to a certain extent, did boost retail spending. The recent pay rise of more than one million civil servants may stimulate, to some extent, retail spending during the year," Tan said.
Except for retailers located at tourist zones, retailers in Malaysia are generally dependent on the domestic market for sales growth, as the locals account for up to 90 per cent of total revenue.
However, there is likely to be a shift in this trend this year, as a higher contribution is anticipated from tourists.
Tourism Malaysia has projected that Malaysia will receive at least three million more tourists this year in conjunction with the Visit Malaysia Year 2007.
Last year, tourists spent RM36.2 billion in Malaysia. This year, about 20.1 million tourists are expected to spend RM44.5 billion. Of this, some RM9 billion is expected to go into shopping alone.
In the Klang Valley, shops located in the Golden Triangle, Jalan Masjid India and Petaling Street are the usual beneficiaries of the tourists’ shopping dollar.
In the past, tourists were more likely to visit retailers located in shopping complexes such as Sungai Wang Plaza/Bukit Bintang Plaza and Suria KLCC.
According to the Malaysia Retail Industry Report released yesterday, all retail sub-sectors recorded positive growth with the speciality store category (including jewellery, gifts, toys, fitness equipment, golf equipment) performing the best, recording a 13.4 per cent jump in sales this year.
The supermarket and hypermarket category, such as Giant and Carrefour, saw sales increase by 9.5 per cent.
However, the department store category (which includes retailers such as Parkson and Metrojaya) only grew 1.9 per cent last year.
The fourth quarter report revealed that performance in the October 2006 to December 2006 period was better than expected, improving 7.8 per cent as major festivities and the school holiday, drove sales.
In the first quarter of this year, MRA members estimate that the retail business grew by an average 9.5 per cent, supported largely by the supermarket and hypermarket category (up 16.4 per cent), furniture and electrical and electronics (up 7.2 per cent) and department store cum supermarket (up 6.4 per cent).
Data showed that retailers tend to do at least two per cent better than gross domestic product growth of any given year. GDP, the barometer used to gauge the health of the economy, is expected to grow by about six per cent this year.
The biggest beneficiary of ‘retail therapy’
KUALA LUMPUR: Last year started out financially tough for Wong Siew Lee.
She struggled until a few stock market investments paid off. By Christmas, the 30-year-old office administrator and mother of two found she had a little extra to splurge on.
She bought a RM1,000 Playstation Portable game console for her 8-year-old son.
"It was hard to adjust to the higher cost of living at first but the bull run last year really made up for it."
Last year, consumers nationwide like Wong went on a shopping spree and helped the retail sector to register a 8.4 per cent growth in sales.
Software engineer Dev Subramaniam, a self-professed avid shopper, said: "I love shopping for clothes, shoes and tech gadgets. That’s why the annual sales really help. It helps make branded or more expensive items affordable at least once a year."
Accountant Joy Lim said the good fiscal year was a reason for her spending spree.
"Last year was good for my company and the increments and bonuses were higher than expected," said Lim, who considers clothes, shoes and fashion accessories as her main expenditure.
Meanwhile, retailers attribute the spending growth to "retail therapy".
"Shopping has become a form of stress release for consumers and that, coupled with good customer service, are reasons why our business is doing well," said Adeline Lim, general manager of Blook Sdn Bhd, a fashion boutique line.
Kevin Tan, general manager (marketing and leasing) of Sunway Pyramid, said people no longer shopped out of necessity.
"People no longer shop just for a shirt. They shop for shirts to match their shoes. It’s about making fashion statements now."
The Malaysia Retailers Association also forecasts a bigger growth for the retail sector by the end of this year.
"Last year was good for retailers. We have allocated RM500 million this year to expand our complex so we can accommodate more shops," said Tan, who was referring to the Sunway Pyramid 2 project.
Jusco department stores, which is managed by Aeon Co (M) Bhd, recorded RM1.76 billion in revenue last year from its 18 outlets.
Its general manager (finance), Poh Ying Loo, said the strong support from loyal customers had helped boost retail sales.
Poh said two more Jusco stores would be open for business in Bandar Sunway and Bukit Tinggi by the end of the year.
Crucial decision in Lina Joy case
May 30th, 2007By SHAILA KOSHY
KUALA LUMPUR: The Federal Court judgment today on the Lina Joy appeal will be a historic one with legal and social repercussions, whichever way the decision goes.
This decision by the apex court will affect one’s constitutional freedom to choose one’s religion as well as who one can marry, especially for those who want to renounce Islam and for people who convert to Islam but later want to revert to their former religion.
The judgment, which was reserved on July 4 last year, will clarify whether conversion is a religious matter or a constitutional matter.
Lina Joy, 42, who was born to a Malay Muslim couple, became a Christian when she was 26.
The sales assistant has taken her case all the way to the Federal Court because unless the government recognises her conversion, she cannot get married under civil law.
While Lina managed – the second time around – to get the National Registration Department to change her name from Azlina Jailani in 1999, accepting that she had renounced Islam, it refused to remove the word “Islam” from her MyKad.
The NRD said it could not do so without a syariah court order certifying she had renounced Islam.
As long as the word “Islam” remains on her identity card, Lina cannot marry her Christian boyfriend, a cook, under the Law Reform (Marriage and Divorce) Act 1976.
In 2001, she took her case against the NRD director-general, the Government and the Federal Territory Religious Council to the High Court.
She lost – Justice Faiza Tamby Chik held that Malays could not renounce Islam because a Malay was defined in the Constitution as “a person who professes the religion of Islam,” adding it was the syariah court that had the jurisdiction in matters related to apostasy.
Lina appealed to the Court of Appeal and lost again, this time in a majority decision – Justices Abdul Aziz Mohamed and Arifin Zakaria upheld the decision of the NRD but Justice Gopal Sri Ram said it was null and void.
In 2006, she got leave to appeal to the Federal Court and asked the panel comprising Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim, Chief Judge of Sabah and Sarawak Richard Malanjum and Federal Court Justice Alauddin Mohd Sheriff these questions:
While Datuk Cyrus Das appeared for Lina Joy, Senior Federal Counsel Datuk Umi Khaltum Jamid appeared for the NRD director-general and the Government and Sulaiman Abdullah appeared for the religious council.
MCA Selangor MPs go online
May 29th, 2007THE Selangor MCA has made its MPs, assemblymen and local councillors more accessible to the people by adding their e-mail contacts on its website www.mca-selangor.-org.my .
Residents need only visit the website and click on the list for MPs, assemblymen or local councillors for their particular area to see a link to the respective representatives.
The state MCA has also issued a stern warning to its representatives that they would face serious action if they fail to respond to queries or issues raised by the people via e-mail.
Selangor MCA secretary Datuk Ch’ng Toh Eng said the list of all the representatives in the state had been available on the website since it was set up about six years ago.
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»We are trying to get more involvement from the people, especially the younger generation, to help us with our decisions and policies« DATUK CH'NG TOH ENG
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“But we only listed the names and positions of the representatives, and there have been many calls from the people to list their contacts as well,” he said during a press conference on Friday.
Ch’ng said the e-mail addresses listed on the website were those that the representatives used regularly and many were personal e-mail accounts that representatives checked daily.
He said with the wide usage of internet in the state and its capability to allow photographs and documents to be sent, the state MCA decided that the e-mail would be the best way for the people to contact their representatives.
He said the new facility to contact representatives was aimed at getting the younger generation to contact leaders and highlight problems.
“We are trying to get more involvement from the people, especially the younger generation, to help us with our decisions and policies,” he said.
Ch’ng said the Selangor MCA had launched several internet polls on its website concerning various issues on which feedback was sought from the people but response had been slow.
“It is probably because many are not aware that there are several interactive features on our website aimed at helping us serve the people better and also for them to raise their concerns,” he said, adding that he believed response would gradually pick up as more people became aware of the internet facilities that were available.
Delivering the judgment to a packed gallery this morning in Putrajaya, Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim ruled that jurisdiction remains with the Syariah court.