Archive for the ‘Indian’ category

NEWS:Parthiban tipped to contest in Ijok

April 16th, 2007
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Parthiban tipped to contest in Ijok
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/16/nation/17450195&sec=nation
By A. LETCHUMANAN
KUALA LUMPUR: Tanjung Karang MIC division secretary K. Parthiban is tipped to be named the candidate for the Ijok state seat which fell vacant following the death of Datuk K. Sivalingam on April 4.
Sources said Parthiban, 38, who was an officer in the Kuala Selangor education department, had tendered his resignation on Friday.
Though MIC officials refused to confirm this, it is believed that Parthiban was chosen as he was born in the Raja Moosa Estate in Kuala Selangor.
A week ago, during a meeting with Selangor MIC chairman Datuk G. Palanivel, the component parties had indicated that they wanted a local to be the candidate.
Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Mohd Khir Toyo is scheduled to announce the Barisan candidate today.
Parthiban, who previously taught in schools in Kuala Selangor and Tanjung Karang, was also the special assistant to Deputy Education Minister Datuk Noh Omar, who is also Tanjung Karang MP.
MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu, who met the Kuala Selangor MIC branch leaders late on Saturday, said the person chosen as the candidate would be someone who is able to work with all the Barisan component parties and the people.
He said that the party had nominated two lawyers and a teacher to be considered as the candidate and one of them had been chosen for the seat.
Samy Vellu had said that 23 people had submitted applications to be considered for the seat but the one chosen was not among them

NEWS:WhatÂ’s Lina JoyÂ’s status? and more cases revealed

April 11th, 2007
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wonder how many more people have suffered or lost out due the inconsistencies. and how many more people and their families will suffer before we malaysian get to see some justice?
poobalan
http://www.poobalan.com/blog www.friendster.com/mpoobalan
What’s Lina Joy’s status?
KUALA LUMPUR: DAP national chairman Karpal Singh has called for the Chief Justice to look seriously into the case of Lina Joy, who converted from Islam to Christianity and is seeking to restate her religious status in her identity card.
“The Federal Court should explain why the case of Lina Joy is taking so long,” he told a press conference at the Parliament lobby here yesterday.
Earlier, Bukit Mertajam MP Chong Eng and Opposition Leader Lim Kit Siang highlighted two cases similar to Lina Joy’s at the press conference.
Chong said she and 11 other DAP MPs would send a letter to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to look into the case of Siti Fatimah, 29, who had been separated from her 15-month-old baby.
She said Siti Fatimah was an Indian Muslim who was brought up as a Hindu by her grandmother and had never practised the teachings of Islam.
After she married a Hindu man and gave birth to a baby girl, the Malacca Islamic Department ordered Siti to surrender her baby to the department.
Chong said the baby was with the department while Siti had been sent to the Religious Rehabilitation Centre in Ulu Yam, Selangor, by the Syariah Court for 100 days until April 18.
Lim highlighted the case of 81-year-old Tang Siew Ying in Johor. Tang died on Monday but her family was not allowed to take her body from the Segamat Hospital in Johor.
He said the hospital had claimed that Tang’s identity card showed that she had a Muslim name, which was Tang Siew Ying@Azizah Abdullah.

NEWS:Commission to study religious- sensitive cases

April 11th, 2007
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Commission to study religious- sensitive cases http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/11/nation/17403972&sec=nation
By FLORENCE A. SAMY
KUALA LUMPUR: The Attorney-General’s Chambers is mulling over the setting up of a special commission to study religious-sensitive cases like the Lina Joy matter, said Datuk Seri Nazri Abdul Aziz.
The Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department said that in his opinion, the commission, if approved, should comprise the heads of various religions.
»In my opinion, the question of conversion should be settled in an ‘extra legal manner,’ especially when children are involved,« – DATUK SERI NAZRI ABDUL AZIZ Aziz. Nazri said the proposal would be submitted to the Cabinet once it was finalised.
“In my opinion, the question of conversion should be settled in an ‘extra legal manner,’ especially when children are involved,” he said.
Replying to Karpal Singh’s (DAP – Bukit Gelugor) query on why a decision had yet to be reached in the Lina Joy case, Nazri said:
“The decision is difficult to make as it is very sensitive and we have to consider the consequences. Even if it is made in the right decree, the acceptance may be difficult,” he said at the Dewan Rakyat when winding up the debate on the motion of thanks on the royal address.
Expressing hope that such a commission would find a resolution to sensitive cases, Nazri noted that the setting up of a Federal Constitutional Court was not the answer to such cases.
“Even with the Federal Constitutional Court, the judge will be of a certain faith and if he makes a decision favouring that faith, he may be labelled biased,” he said.
The Government, Nazri said, had ordered the A-G’s Chambers to study in detail issues pertaining to cases such as that of M. Moorthy and A. Rayappan, including gathering input from all sides.
“It cannot be denied that such cases have raised a lot of sensitive questions that need a deeper understanding between the races if they are to be solved permanently,” he said.
Although the Moorthy and Rayappan cases involved the conversion of a non-Muslim to Muslim, Article 121 (A) will not be amended. Nazri also said the civil court cannot interfere on matters under the jurisdiction of the Syariah Court.
He also said Syariah laws would not be forced upon non-Muslims and the A-G’s Chamber’s had been ordered to study matters arising from divorce case of a non-Muslim couple when one party converted to Islam.
The family of A. Rayappan, 71, were involved in a legal tussle with the Selangor Islamic Religious Council (Mais) on the right to claim his body following his death on Nov 29, last year.
The former van driver converted to Islam in 1990 but left the religion and returned to Catholicism in 1999. Mais eventually withdrew its claims to the body and stated that evidence pointed to Rayappan being a non-Muslim.
He was finally cremated according to Christian rites on Dec 8.
A controversy was triggered following the death of Mount Everest climber Sjn M. Moorthy alias Muhammad Abdullah on Dec 20, 2005.
His widow, S. Kaliammal, and the Federal Territory Islamic Religious Council were embroiled in a legal tussle over the right to bury him when it was discovered that he had converted to Islam the previous year.
His widow, however, sought a declaration in the civil court that Moorthy lived a Hindu life.
On Dec 28, 2005, the High Court ruled that it would not disturb the declaration that Moorthy was a Muslim because the latter was under the purview of the Syariah Court system and he was eventually buried according to Muslim rites.
Lina Joy, born a Muslim, is claiming that she had converted to Christianity and is seeking to restate her religious status in her MyKad. A court decision is pending.

Medical Students in Bali all sponsored by MIC, says Najib

April 10th, 2007
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ALOR GAJAH, April 9 (Bernama) — The position of the Indian community in the country has been improving under the Barisan Nasional (BN) government which looks after the interest of all races, said Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak.
The Deputy Prime Minister said that based on his observation and visits abroad, many students from the community were endeavouring to improve their position and becoming professionals, thus bringing benefits to the country.
“I had met with Malaysian students in Bali and 80 per cent of them were medical students who were of Indian origin. It was also the same in Sulawesi and the University of Crimea in Ukraine.
“They were all sponsored by the MIC. The position of the Indian community is improving from time to time,” he said at a gathering of the leader with the people during the campaign for the by-election for the Machap state seat in Tebong, near here tonight.
Najib said although some of the Indian community were satying in the estates, they could be developed through the education system provided by the government to improve their standard of living.
“Thus, the (Indian) community must continue to vote for the candidate who would always champion their cause, namely Lai Meng Chong from the Barisan Nasional and not the candidate who only knows how to speak but cannot provide any assistance,” he said.
Najib, who is also the BN deputy chairman, believed that the Indian community, right from the days of the Alliance up to the BN, had given their undivided support to the ruling party.
“Can people like Nallakaruppan (who is now a leader of the opposition Parti Keadilan Rakyat) help us? Let us not listen to issues which have nothing to do with us,” he said.
The Deputy Prime Minister said any problem should be referred to the elected representative, and subsequently to the state government, and then to the federal government or himself to be resolved.
There are about 1,403 Indian voters in the Machap state constituency with the majority of them living in Tebong, in the oil palm plantation.

NEWS:MIC has 23 potential candidates for Ijok by-election

April 10th, 2007
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MIC has 23 potential candidates for Ijok by-election http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/10/nation/20070410191200&sec=nation
MALACCA: The MIC has a record 23 potential candidates for the Ijok by-election, said its president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu.
“All of them are very good candidates. I find it very difficult to select one.
“If the candidate is too young, people will say they act like babies,” he said adding that it was the first time that he had received so many applications, welcoming it as a “very healthy” development.
He said the three main criteria for selection were political experience, a young age and the ability to serve all communities.
Asked whether the candidate would be a local (Ijok) boy, Samy Vellu, who was visiting SRK (T) Alor Gajah, said:
“We are all local boys (in this country). If we only want the candidate who is born there, then Samy Vellu cannot stand in Sungai Siput and (Datuk G.) Palanivel cannot be in Hulu Selangor.”
Samy Vellu said many people had showed interest to stand and many had forwarded their particulars via the short messaging service.
“Some have sent me warnings saying that if he is not being given the seat, we will lose in the by-election.
“Let him say what he wants to say. We know what are our strengths in Ijok,” he said, adding that he had yet to shortlist the candidates.
The Ijok seat fell vacant after incumbent Datuk K. Sivalingam died of a heart attack. The MIC’s other state seats in Selangor are Sri Andalas and Batu Caves.
Asked when he would retire as his good friend and former Gerakan president Datuk Seri Dr Lim Keng Yaik had earlier urged him to do so, Samy jokingly replied:
“I can retire from today. I request Lim Keng Yaik to set a date for me to retire.”
Dr Lim retired as party president on Sunday.