Protest over surau while MP gets punched in Desa Mentari

/* July 20th, 2008 by poobalan | View blog reactions 12 comments »
 Subscribe in a reader | Subscribe to poobalan.com by Email


I guess all Malaysians already know that MP for Kelana Jaya, Loh Gwo Burne got punched in the corner of his eye by the aide of fellow PKR state assemblyman, Nik Nazmi (currently overseas). As reported in Malaysiakini, Loh says he has forgiven the attacker, Mior Azam Shah Mior Yahya and had talked to him later. Loh made a police report, nonetheless, and police has taken statement from Azam. Says Loh:

I do not hold any grudges against Azam. I still do not fully understand why he hit me but I am not angry at him. When he saw me at the police station, he apologised. He made a mistake.

However, Loh stated that he will not retract his police report because it was necessary to send out the right message.

I will not retract the police report. If I do so, that sends out a message that anybody can whack me and I don’t want that.
I only hope there will be no serious consequences against him. I don’t want him to go to jail.

The reports in NST and Star did not mention details except saying that its over a place of worship, but Malaysiakini had more details, for example mentioning that the place of worship is actually a surau!

According to my sources, the area in Desa Mentari already has 3 surau. The large Indian community there were upset when plans to put up fourth one came up as it will cause more noise. They were expecting a playground instead.

The Star version:

The alleged incident occurred during the ground-breaking ceremony for a place of worship at Desa Mentari here at about 3pm. It seems residents living in the area had protested against the construction of the building there and Loh, who was present, had approached them.
After speaking to the group, Loh approached the organisers of the function to discuss with them the protesters’ concern when he was allegedly punched by Azam. Loh said he went to the scene after being informed about the protest.He said he was surprised because the matter was supposed to have been resolved on Thursday. He said the problem started two weeks ago when residents complained about construction of the building and he was unable to find out who was responsible for the construction.
“When I arrived there today, I kept on asking him (the aide), ‘Who was responsible for this?’ I must have asked him about 10 times and pointed at him saying that, ‘You as a PA should know’. That was when he punched me in the face above my right eye,” he said.The crowd then stopped the individual, he said.“I do not think I provoked him,” Loh said.He added that the party should do something “comprehensive” against his alleged assailant.

Malaysiakini version:

The parliamentarian went to see what was going on after learning there was a protest by residents living in the area against the construction of the surau. He said the problem started two weeks ago when residents complained about the construction of a surau but he could not find out who was responsible for the construction.
He also noted that the structure has no permit from the local council and the residents disagree with the structure. “The residents wanted a playground for the children, not another surau. “I am not opposed to anything that people want to build as long the
residents are properly consulted and have agreed to it,” he stated.
After speaking to the protesters, Loh approached the organisers of the function to discuss with them the residents’ concern and was suddenly punched in the face by Azam. “I kept asking (Azam), ‘Who was responsible for this?’ for about 10 times and pointed at him saying, ‘You as a PA should know’. That was when he punched me in the face above my right eye,” he said.
Immediately after the incident, the police controlled the crowd who tried to reprimand Azam themselves.

Loh then said that the people behind this construction had decided to halt the project as they await further consultation with about 6,000 of the residents there.

Selangor MB, Khalid Ibrahim said that the assault issue has been resolved after apologies were exchanged by the two persons involved. He claims that incident is due to “young PKR leaders eager to bring forward their respective opinions as representatives of the local people”. Does he mean that there are gangsters in PKR? In The Star, the MB is quoted as saying this issue is an internal dispute.

It’s among the young ones of PKR. We see it as an internal dispute that has been solved between both individuals. Both men have apologised and it’s a neighbourhood issue that will be resolved in an amicable manner with the help of Kelana Jaya division chairman Syed Shahir Syed Mohamud.

Khalid said no disciplinary action would be taken on either individual as it was just a difference of opinion.

The young ones are eager to do their best for the people, express the people’s views but it has to be done through constructive
consultation and must not get physical at any moment of time.

One good thing that has come out of this is the high level of transparency, accountability and the presence of the people’s representatives in the neighbourhoods to solve issues.

Asked how it could be an internal dispute when the incident occurred in public, Khalid once again played the matter down by saying that it was all right as it shows that the party members are very much involved in the field and are with the people.

Differences of opinion take place but we encourage constructive consultation and views shared. It also fosters a better understanding among the leaders and its people in a particular neighbourhood.

Khalid said to avoid future misunderstandings; construction of all places of worship must obtain approval from the respective local authorities. But isn’t this ALREADY a rule for non-muslim places of worship???

By the way, UMNO’s Muhammad Muhammad Taib took this opportunity to tell some lies. Read this:

During Barisan Nasional’s administration, since 1957, there were never incidences about fighting over places of worship. “We
usually resolved everything through a consensus. We allowed churches, temples, mosques and all … but now they have to get physical about it

Does he think we forgot about Padang Jawa?

Question now will arise on how Pakatan Rakyat goverment will solve this problem. Will they allow building of a unapproved place of worship? Will rules be bent to get the plans approved? Does the surau actually have an approval? Were residents’ view taken into consideration before construction? What if the residents continue protesting? What is Hindraf’s stand on this? Will MIC say something?

Hmm… so many questions arising.

PAS interferes in other religions

/* July 20th, 2008 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
 Subscribe in a reader | Subscribe to poobalan.com by Email


This is most embarrassing, a criminal act. If the PAS authorities are so worried about the muslims being attracted by sexily clad female performers, they should just limit themselves by putting some officers there to arrest such people. It is clear to all that the function is a private program held inside the Taoist temple compound. What business do these muslims have over there. Instead of catching the offenders, the authorities go and harass the organisers. Where go fair?

The organisers were asked to cover up the show – a two-day concert with male and female artistes. The event, to celebrate the birthday of the Gods, was held with an
outdoor community concert organised by members of the Tao Tin Hu Keng
Association.

The Takiyuddin fellow from PAS said that guidelines on outdoor performances clearly stated that female artistes
were barred from performing. He said that although the concert was
within the temple compound, it was held in an open space where others
could watch. He said any permit given by the local authorities were subjected to the same bylaws and should be respected by all.

I think these guys should be more tolerant and understanding instead of enforcing such rules on others. Have some common sense and educate your own people first, instead of going around asking people to cover up their programmes.

MIC should ask for relocation not merging of Tamil schools

/* July 20th, 2008 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
 Subscribe in a reader | Subscribe to poobalan.com by Email


While MIC is in 7th heaven over the proposed plans to improve the Indian community, I read with interest the news about a Chinese school being relocated from an under-enrolled location in Perak to a very urban Damansara, next January. The school, SJK (C) Chung Hua Ladang Serapoh, located in Parit, will be set up at the original location of SJK (C) Damansara in Section 17, itself a contentious issue since the school was relocated to Tropicana, Damansara in 2001. About 50 over students did not move to the new school, but instead studied in a temporary school in a temple nearby. Well, my focus is not on the Chinese schools issues, but the outcome – a school was relocated from another state due to under-enrollment. End result – number of Chinese schools not reduced.

I think this is the line that MIC and the community to should follow. Rather than accepting meekly the idea to merge schools (repeated in the MIC general assembly as well), MIC and the Education Ministry must do a study and identify areas that lack such schools. Then, relocate the schools to those places. With such move, a newer building will attract parents to send their kids to Tamil schools, since those that are around now usually leaves much to be desired.

By the way, while many of the changes in 9th Malaysian Plan review had figures provided, the part on Indian community were not. Not allocation was mentioned, so we still have to wait for a while.

No school because no birth certificate

/* July 18th, 2008 by poobalan | View blog reactions 2 comments »
 Subscribe in a reader | Subscribe to poobalan.com by Email


The announcement that children with birth certificates can be enrolled in schools came in February. It was announced by Hishamuddin (and repeated by Deputy Prime Minister Najib) following cabinet decision:

I have instructed all schools to accept these children. I have asked the headmasters and teachers to put themselves in an accomodative position. “I do not want to hear any headmaster blocking or rejecting such applications

Students just have to get letter from village head or Village committee chairman, for example to get enrolled.

But, today’s Star highlights a case in Ipoh where children from a welfare home (note: registration status unknown) who are unable to attend school due to lack of birth certificate.

n_pg35tharsini.jpg
Caught in a bind: (From left) Tharsini, 10, N. Pandian, seven, S. Velan, 11, N. Roja, five and N. Dineshkumar, six, posing for journalists in Ipoh Thursday.

Her guardian (note: legal or not?) Babaji Indhu Adigalar (of the Arutperum Jothi Children’s Welfare Home) said that besides Tharsini, his four other charges aged between five and 11 years were also facing the same problem.

“I have been trying to enrol them into primary schools since 2004 but the children were turned away because they do not have birth certificates,” said the 60-year-old, adding that he had documents (note: acceptable documents?) proving the children were born in Malaysia.

Speaking to reporters from their home in Buntong here yesterday, Babaji said he thought his problems were over when the ministry made the announcement.

However, the children and I were again left disappointed when the schools that I approached refused to admit them as they claimed there had been no circular on the matter.

Babaji, who sought the assistance of Perak MIC (note: Why not Pakatan?), said the five children had been abandoned by their parents.

“Because of that, I face difficulty in getting them birth certificates,” he said, adding that attempts to get in touch with the children’s next-of-kin had failed. As a result, the children have only attended kindergarten.

State MIC chairman Datuk G. Rajoo said a check with the Education Department on Monday confirmed that such a circular had not been issued. “I urge the Ministry to do so fast as the children’s future is at stake,” he added.

Issue here: Outcome of decision made in February is not available. Delay of nearly 5 months.

different case but same blood

/* July 18th, 2008 by poobalan | View blog reactions 19 comments »
 Subscribe in a reader | Subscribe to poobalan.com by Email


I’m not an expert in medical, genetic, or forensics (though I follow all 3 CSI series ardently). But something that the Deputy IGP said in NST today sounds very interesting regarding Anwar Ibrahim’s DNA tug of war:

That was the previous case. It is a different case now.

At a press conference in Bukit Aman yesterday, Ismail was asked if police could use the blood sample take in the 1998 case.

The deputy police chief shrugged off the suggestion, saying that they were looking at obtaining a court order instead to compel Anwar to give his blood sample for DNA tests. “We are studying various laws,” he said, without elaborating.

We either:

(i) have very outdated laws that forbids such reuse
(ii) lost/used/contaminated the earlier blood sample
(iii) have a blood sample that cannot last 10 years (but the DNA record should)
(iv) have no sample being actually collected 10 years ago
(v) have Anwar’s twin or a clone running around the last time (but DNA should be same)
(vi) know that DNA can change in space of 10 years (can ah ???)
(vii) have a uncomfortable Deputy IGP
(viii) think that fresh blood yields fresh DNA 🙂

Care to add more?