SJKT Ladang Escot gets piped water after 50 years!

/* May 4th, 2010 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
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This is happening in the most developed state in the country.

Interesting to note how the executive chairman of a utilities company says that its to reciprocate support given by people during the by-election. So, in other words, the utilities company works not based on public need, but on whim and fancies?

Anyway, good to see the project successful within a month, and at such big cost of RM600,000.

With just 60 students, won’t be long before this school faces extinction or relocation to better populated areas.

HULU SELANGOR, May 3 — After more than 50 years depending on spring water, Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan Tamil (SJK) Ladang Escot here finally received piped water today.

SJK Tamil Ladang Escot has an enrolment of 60 pupils, who are mainly children of oil palm estate workers, and 11 teaching staff.

Syarikat Bekalan Air Selangor (Syabas) executive chairman Tan Sri Rozali Ismail said the utility swung into action on learning of the predicament the school was facing during the just-concluded Hulu Selangor by-election.

“This is to reciprocate the support given by the people in Barisan Nasional’s win in the by-election. As a government-linked company, we will support the government’s aspirations,” he told reporters after checking on the pipe-laying work to supply water to the school today.

He added that the job entailed a 1.5km pipeline with the overall cost of the water supply project to the school totalling RM600,000.

Also present was the newly-elected MP for the constituency, P. Kamalanathan. — Bernama

new newspaper Uthaya Surian hits the streets

/* May 4th, 2010 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
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Well, I try look on the bright side and have this to say: at least we have more pages to read, if we want to.

KUALA LUMPUR, May 2 – A new Tamil daily, started purportedly with the blessing of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, hit the streets yesterday, making the small Tamil readership field crowded with four dailies, each having its own distinctive political interest, with the exception of the middle-of-the-road Malaysian Nanban daily.

The Uthaya Surian (Rising Sun), despite its name, is an afternoon paper and available in the central region on the same day of publication and nationally on the next day.

The publishing licence is believed to be held by Indian Muslim businessman A. Tajuddin and was obtained during the time of former Prime Minister Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.

Its editor is Tamilmani @ P. Veerasamy, a controversial editor who went to jail in his decade-long crusade against MIC president Datuk S. Samy Vellu and the alleged hijacking of the nine million Telekom Malaysia shares.

After gaining notoriety as an anti-Samy Vellu editor, Tamilmani worked with various weeklies, none of which succeeded.

He also flirted with the Pakatan Rakyat (PR), publishing various anti-Barisan Nasional (BN) monthlies, none of which took off in a big way.

More recently Tamilmani joined forces with his former nemesis Samy Vellu who continues to cling on to power although the MIC fared disastrously under his stewardship in the 2008 general elections.

Tamilmani is also executive editor of Samy Vellu’s Tamil Nesan daily, the oldest in the country and first published in 1924.

He is wearing two hats as editor of Uthaya Surian and his provocative writing style and argumentative politics is reflected in both dailies, readers and observers said.

“In fact Uthaya Surian is really Tamil Nesan 2,” said a hardcore support of Datuk S Subramaniam, whose inner circle controls the Makkal Osai daily which is rabidly anti-Samy Vellu.

The circulation of the Tamil Nesan plunged to about 5,000 from a high of 9,000 in the 1980s, MIC insiders said, suggesting that the drop was due to it being used as a unvarnished mouth piece of the Samy Vellu family and his interests.

“A great newspaper that was helmed by giants of Tamil journalism has gone down the drain because of cheap politics,” said a Tamil lawyer who follows local Indian politics keenly.

“Tamil Nesan had great editors like Murugu Subramaniam,” he said, referring to the member of the famed Chettiar family which owned and managed the daily before Samy Vellu bought it over on becoming MIC president in 1979.

Uthaya Surian is closely linked to Samy Vellu and his faction in the MIC. Not only does it have the same editors but also the same staff and premises.

The Tamil Nesan (M) Sdn Bhd prints the Uthaya Surian daily and both operate from the same premises. They even have the same telephone and fax numbers.

Tamilmani introduced himself in the inaugural May 1 edition as the Uthaya Surian editor with a page two editorial under the title “Uthaya Surian will shine new light in people’s hearts”.

It had a front page story with a photo montage of Samy Vellu and MIC deputy president Datuk G. Palanivel face to face and nearly embracing under the headline “MIC leadership transition only in 2012”.

Tamil Nesan and other mainstream national dailies and Internet news websites might have written off Samy Vellu but in the MIC, the new mantra is 2012.

Samy Vellu and his coterie, Palanivel included, are pushing the idea that “newspapers have no business” to tell Samy Vellu to quit.

“Samy should complete his term right up to 2012. I will surely support it,” Palanivel is quoted as saying in the inaugural edition.

The MIC was roiled after the Utusan Malaysia quoted Palanivel as saying, in the aftermath of the Hulu Selangor by-election victory, that he was ready to take over but that Samy Vellu had to make way.

The story sparked speculation that Palanivel was about to unseat Samy Vellu by mobilising grassroots support, something that Subramaniam’s supporters are hoping for so that they can wade in and pick up the pieces after the battle.

In fact the Makkal Osai daily under their control has been publishing provocative stories which, allegedly, attempt to pit Palanivel and Samy Vellu against each other.

Palanivel quickly moved to dampen the strategy and assure Samy Vellu’s supporters by giving nearly identical exclusive interviews to both Tamil Nesan and the new Uthaya Surian dailies pledging “undying” loyalty to Samy Vellu.

“We are together… we cannot be separated. Our relationship will continue,” the dailies quoted Palanivel as saying.

The talk among the reading public is that the new paper seeks to exploit the journalistic skills of Tamilmani to win a readership and then gradually eclipse, and possibly replace, the Tamil Nesan daily.

In a front page foreword Najib wrote that he was confident the new daily would reflect the aspirations of the Indian community with skill and responsibility and give voice to the desire of all citizens to come under his 1 Malaysia umbrella.

Interview with head of inter faith panel

/* May 4th, 2010 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
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The interview by Malaysian Insider via email is below. The last line is quite interesting.

KUALA LUMPUR, May 4 — Inter-faith dialogue in Malaysia has for years ended in a shallow cul-de-sac, until last month, when the Najib administration set up a Cabinet committee to firmly address growing religious conflicts.

The inclusion of senior bureaucrats from the powerful Department of Islamic Development (Jakim) and the influential national Institute of Islamic Understanding (Ikim) together with elected leaders of the various religions from the Malaysian Consultative Council for Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism (MCCBCHST) showed the government was serious in dealing with the long-standing conflicts.

But little is known about the workings of this committee, and less still about its handpicked coordinator, Datuk Ilani Isahak, which has inadvertently put the fledgling committee in limbo.

The only known facts are that she had been an MP for Kota Bharu and is now a member of the National Unity and Integration Department (NUID) reporting to its minister Tan Sri Koh Tsu Koon and has been keeping very late hours these past few days.

The mystery woman recently agreed to an e-mail interview with The Malaysian Insider, which is as follows.

Q: What are you expected to do as coordinator to this special committee on inter-religious understanding and harmony?

A: My role is to facilitate the members from the various religions to achieve the objectives of the Committee as set out in its Terms of Reference. I would also ensure discussions are held in a conducive environment where everyone is respectful of each other. I also foresee playing an active role to encourage friendship between members which requires social interaction and activities outside meetings and formal events.

Q: What targets have you set for yourself so far?

A: I would like to see the working committees set up getting down to work before the Committee meets again in June. Although I am not setting any time frame to achieve certain outcomes yet I would be monitoring the momentum to ensure smooth progress .

Q: Tell us more about yourself. Why do you think you were picked by Cabinet for this role?

A: I believe my experience in chairing the Working Committee on Inter-Religious Relations set up under the National Unity Advisory Panel in 2004 – 2008. Whilst in that capacity I had worked hard at establishing good relationship with several leaders from various religions. Perhaps my track record for reliability and delivery. My background includes being a senior lawyer, an ex-vice president of Malaysian Youth Council (a multi-cultural and multi-religious orgaisation), ex-Member of Parliament of Kota Bharu which has a multi-ethnic and multi-religious population and I studied comparative religion whilst doing my Diploma in Islamic Studies.

Q: What was your immediate response when you found out you were chosen?

A: Certainly, I was very pleased to once again be given the privilege and honour to serve the nation in the challenging field of inter-religious relations. I was also happy to continue and strive to complete the unfinished work. The previous Committee succeeded in initiating the process of interactions between leaders of various faiths and enhanced their willingness to work together. Although several closed-door dialogues were held yet they had not been able to progress to problem-solving mode due to time constraint as their work had to stop abruptly when the Committee’s mandate expired on December 31, 2008 and there was no renewal in 2009.

Q: What challenges are you bracing yourself to face?

A: The challenges include getting the leaders of the various religions to focus on getting our job done and not be sidetracked by extraneous issues. I also anticipate having to be very patient and allow for a cooling time whenever situations arise which lead to some members feeling aggrieved.

Q: Issues on religion are thorny. How do you plan to deal with them?

A: “When there is a will, there is a way”, so the saying goes, and I believe nothing is impossible. Religious issues require sensitive handling and a sincere commitment on the part of all members to find solutions mutually acceptable to them. The Committee has set up several Working Committees to handle a variety of matters and issues which approach allow for a greater number of experts to be involved and make possible for a speedier resolution.

Q: So far, how have the religious representatives responded to you?

A: Their responses have been motivating. They are truly sincere and I am optimistic we will be able to achieve our agreed objectives.

Q: In the past, there have been all kinds of objections from various religious groups just to sitting down together to talk about dealing with the problems affecting members of their communities. What do you think has changed to finally move the religious representatives to sit down at the same table?

A: Based on my past experience from 2004 – 2008, when they perceive there is mutual respect the religious representatives would readily cooperate to solve problems together .

Q: Malay rights group Perkasa has raised the gender issue as well when it questioned your qualifications to chair the committee, despite your appointment by Cabinet. They seem to imply that heading the committee is a man’s job. How do you feel about that?

A: The role of the chairperson in the Committee is to facilitate and does not involve making Islamic pronouncement. So their objection is untenable as the chair’s gender should not be an issue. The only major consideration ought to be the capabilities of the person to handle sensitive situations being part and parcel of inter religious work as well as secure the respect and cooperation of the members.

Q: How are you coping with the knee-jerk reactions from the various factions pitting the Muslim group against the non-Muslim group? The MCCBCHST has vowed to boycott talks with their Muslim counterparts following the DPM’s tactless remark and Perkasa and the Perak Fatwa Council have strongly objected to and rejected the validity of this Cabinet committee. Do you still have confidence in promoting any understanding among Malaysia’s diverse religions at this point?

A: I have great faith in MCCBCHST’s appreciation that the work of the Committee would largely benefit them and that the earlier we get down to work the quicker they get to enjoy the desired outcomes.

Which RM130 million is it for Tamil schools?

/* May 3rd, 2010 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
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This is an interesting news release by Bernama. There’s no mention of when the allocation was approved or whether its an repeat news. As we know, the previous allocation were insufficient due to increase in construction material costs.  Its this kind of half-baked news that cause people to question or look down on the authorities.  I guess we are expected to be thankful/grateful/be-a-fool for this allocation (average of RM1.625 million per school) . Maybe should sing praises and kowtow as well, is it?

KUALA LUMPUR, May 1 — The government has allocated RM130 million to repair and upgrade 80 Tamil schools nationwide, Deputy Federal Territories and Urban Wellbeing Minister Datuk M. Saravanan said.

He said the projects were in various stages of implementation and expected to be completed within two years.

“I believe that with the allocation, infrastructure problems faced by Tamil schools can be overcome,” he told reporters after opening the SRJK (T) Jalan Fletcher’s sports carnival here today.

Saravanan, a former student of the school, said there were 15 Tamil schools in Kuala Lumpur and except for one, which is under a church management in Sentul, there was no problem channelling assistance to the other schools.

He said Tamil schools needed the government’s assistance especially in providing the infrastructure to ensure a conducive teaching and learning atmosphere in line with the vision to create quality human capital.

Saravanan said he was confident that under the leadership of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, there would be changes to 523 Tamil schools in the country. — Bernama

What next, Dato Palanivel?

/* May 3rd, 2010 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
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So, as expected, Dato’ G Palanivel, the MIC deputy president and president-in-waiting became a senator today. I wonder what post he will be given: minister or deputy minister. I think deputy ministership since he had served a short while as deputy minister before this. If there’s a cabinet reshuffle, it should be after June when ministerial KPIs are evaluated by PM Najib and Idris Jala. Wonder if MIC can get two minister position, maybe give one to Devamany?