SJKT Ladang Vallambrosa’s unusable field

/* May 6th, 2011 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
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A problem indeed. Need money, but not sure if can get budget. Maybe some company can do a CSR and build the perimeter wall for the field.

I’ve been to the place and the field is quite bad. Plenty of stones around. Not suitable for games.

SJK(T) Ladang Vallambrosa in Kapar has a large field, but it is of no use to the 637 pupils because of its terrible condition.

If trying to avoid rocks and stones was not perilous enough for the primary school pupils, they also have to dodge cow dung and dog poo when they use the field.

One of the reasons why the field is in such bad shape is because it is not fenced up, unlike other parts of the school.

Herds of cattle from a nearby estate wander into the field in the mornings and afternoons to graze, leaving little grass but plenty of manure behind.

The school parent-teacher association (PTA) is appealing for about RM350,0000 in funds from the Government, politicians, organisations and individuals to help improve the facilities.

Their priority is to build a perimeter wall around the 70-year-old school to keep animals and thieves out.

Thieves have cut the fence of the school to steal copper pipes from the air-conditioner compressors as well as wire from the lightning arrester, PTA chairman A. Balasubramaniam said.

“We want another guard house to be built at the back of the school to improve security,” he added.

Balasubramaniam said the school also needed a tarred road to its new building as well as a covered walkway to shelter teachers and students from the rain.

“There is also a need for a proper car park, as teachers now have to leave their cars by the side of the road outside the school,” he said.

source:  http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/5/2/nation/8591952&sec=nation

 

 

55 seek asylum in UK in 2010

/* May 6th, 2011 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
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I do receive comments from readers asking about converting back to original religion after making hasty/ill-advised decision earlier to convert out. Well, I guess one way is to seek asylum in foreign country, if you got the cash to go there. But if you don’t even have a proper birth certificate or MyKad, can’t use this option.

China Press reported that 55 Malaysians sought asylum in Britain last year, citing reasons which touched on their religion, sexual orientation and political freedom.

Five of them said that they were seeking religious freedom, six said they wanted to escape prosecution for being homosexuals while three sought political asylum.

– from http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/5/6/nation/8615967&sec=nation

 

Cost of living and purchasing power

/* April 28th, 2011 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
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Forget about buying luxury or branded item. Even basic stuff cost has increased.

I used to have breakfast (2 set roti bakar and tea) at small chinese shop near the house for last 3 years. It costs RM2.80 for last 1 year. After Chinese New Year, it costs Rm3.20 (40 sen increase = 14%)

Go to hypermarket or supermarket or the minimarket chain stores, can find prices increased.

Among the prices before and after:

Dutch Lady chocolate drink 6-pack: RM5 to now RM7

5kg Fab: Rm18 to now RM23

Egg (in 12 or 18 pack): 25 t0 30 sen to now 33-40 sen

That’s just 3 products that came to my mind. The list is much longer: chicken, fish, Chipsmore cookies, bread, cooking oil, Maggi mee, tissue paper (!), sardine, Ridsect, and the list can go on. From “branded” name like Maggi, Dutch Lady, Ayam’s, Fab, Premier,  etc. we now have to consider buying in-house brands like Tesco or Jusco products.

I can say that household expenses (groceries and stuff) has increased nearly two-fold.

Forget about KFC, Secret Recipe etc.  Even eating in Indian restaurant costs much more. 10 years ago, a good meal (rice, vege, chicken) can cost about Rm5 to Rm6, now can easily cost RM8 to Rm12.

Of course, price of food increasing due to various factors like global climate, lack of agricultural land, increased consumption and population, increasing cost of raw material, and so on.  But problem is, the income is not increasing in tandem. Rm3000 five years ago is not same as RM3000 now.

Yeah, easy for politicians to say that we have to buckle up, spend smart, be thrifty, buy non-branded products etc. But for how long this strategy can work? Another 5 years? 2 years?

Let’s not even talk about houses and cars.

 

Malaysians who find themselves affording less than their contemporaries overseas have distorted and inefficient markets, lack of competition, low wages and a weak ringgit to thank for their poor purchasing power, which in the case of KL, is only 34 per cent that of New York.

Despite government assurances stating that inflation is under control, Malaysians are becoming increasingly restive over the cost of goods in relation to wages, especially those who are able to compare the corresponding price-to-wage ratios in developed economies.

Malaysians who have experienced working and living abroad often experience sticker shock when they come back and see prices in KL.

“Oh my God, a Tiramisu is RM15!” said Calvin Lee, a Malaysian who has lived in Sydney, Singapore and now London, referring to what cafes in KL are charging for a slice of cake as compared to about GBP5 (RM25) in London.

Aidi Zalman, a consultant who studied in the UK, told The Malaysian Insider that salaries in London could go much further than KL.

He had worked part-time as a waiter in London and noted that a single day’s wages of about GBP50-60 was already enough for him to buy a pair of branded shoes and even a low-end iPod, a concept unthinkable for local waiters.

“GBP100 can feed two apartments of students for a week,” he said. “Here you can spend RM100 and get hardly anything.”

“I hate it when politicians make stupid statements like Malaysia is cheap,” said Edward Seah, an engineer who has previously worked in Singapore and the US. “Prices might seem cheap when you convert it to US dollars yes, but then we should also convert our salaries to US dollars.”

Victor Wong, a Malaysian expat in Sydney, said that Australians get more mileage out of their money.

He gave the example of clothes where he said he can get a good quality shirt for about AUD100 but would need to spend about RM200 to get similar quality in KL.

Wong pointed out that even Asian food could be more affordable for those living in Sydney than KL.

“You pay RM15 for a bowl of soup noodles in KL shopping centres but only AUD10 in Sydney shopping centres,” he said.

The 2010 Prices and Wages report by Swiss bank UBS AG show that residents in KL have only 33.8 per cent the purchasing power of their counterparts in New York, 42 per cent that of London, 33.7 per cent that of Sydney, 32.6 per cent that of Los Angeles and 31.6 per cent that of Zurich.

The same study showed that on average, KL residents have to work 22 minutes to afford a loaf of bread as compared with 18 minutes in Los Angeles, 16 minutes in Sydney, 15 minutes in Tokyo and 12 minutes in Zurich.

The figures grow much worse for imported items. To buy an iPod Nano, a KL worker would have to labour a whopping 52 hours as compared with just 9.5 hours in Los Angeles and Sydney, 12 hours in Tokyo and nine hours in Zurich.

A check on salaries and prices in selected developed country cities by The Malaysian Insidershowed that despite being touted as one of the world’s least expensive cities, KL residents pay as much or even more for chicken, broadband, cars and mobile phones as a percentage of their income.

Communications, for example, is one area where Malaysians are paying notably more than residents in developed countries even after currency conversion.

A 5Mbps broadband package costs RM149 in KL while in London, a 10Mbps package would cost GBP13.50, in Melbourne a 5-8Mbps package costs AUD40 and in New York, a 7Mbps service costs USD41.95.

Those who want to buy an iPhone 4 in KL, meanwhile, would have to pay RM1990 with a basic 24-month contract while in London, residents can get an iPhone 4 for just GBP199 with a basic 24-month contract and in Singapore, it costs just SGD210 with a basic contract.

Maybank Investment Bank chief economist Suhaimi Ilias said that what is important is local perception and not official inflation figures which claimed that the inflation rate in Malaysia was only 1.7 per cent last year.

“I think on the ground, not many people feel we are cheap,” said Suhaimi. “They feel that the cost of living is high regardless of what the inflation figures are.”

He added that inefficiency and lack of competition are contributing to the higher prices in Malaysia.

“I can’t understand why a motorcycle should have to cost RM6,000-7,000 and a car like the Perodua Viva should cost over RM30,000,” he said.

RAM Holdings chief economist Dr Yeah Kim Leng said that cars are one of the sectors where the Malaysian market suffers the heaviest distortion.

A Honda Civic in KL costs about RM115,000, or 20 times the average monthly salary of an auditor.

In Melbourne and London by comparison, a Honda Civic costs AUD25,000 and GBP19,000 respectively, or only about three times the average salary of an auditor in those cities.

The high cost of cars is part of the reason that Malaysians have leveraged themselves to a record 76 per cent of the country’s GDP.

Bank Negara statistics show that at the end of last year, 20 per cent of Malaysian household debt was due to cars, an asset which depreciates over time.

Yeah also said that the ringgit is undervalued and distorts the country’s purchasing power for imported goods.

“We need to ensure prices are right and that there are no market distortions, no subsidies and allow market prices,” he said.

But even if the ringgit is allowed to rise, there is no guarantee that savings would be passed on to consumers. The ringgit is now hovering at RM3.02 to the US dollar but Goldman Sachs predicated yesterday the currency could hit RM2.98 to the US dollar in the next three months.

When The Malaysian Insider contacted the director of wholesale and retail at government think tank Performance Management and Delivery Unit (Pemandu), Ravidran Devagunam about the higher prices Malaysians pay for branded goods, he acknowledged that some retailers will maximise profits on luxury items not readily available in Malaysia but said that the government is “unable” to compel them to discount their prices even after the abolishment of import duties as luxury goods and apparel are not controlled items.

“However, we believe that market forces and consumer education will eventually force a price reduction of these goods over time,” he said.

The Federation of Malaysian Consumers Associations Secretary General Mohd Shaani Abdullah said people should question the prices that they are currently paying.

“Consumer protection will only come about when people make noise,” he told The Malaysian Insider when contacted. “Only then will politicians act.”

 

source: http://themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/malaysians-plagued-by-poor-purchasing-power/

more non-Malays get aid from NS Welfare Dept

/* April 28th, 2011 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
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Hmm…does it mean got lots of poor non-Malays in Negeri Sembilan? BTW, it would have been good to have the breakdown of the allocation and recipients, so that can be more transparent.

Interesting to note that in the span of 7 years, the number of recipients increased 5 fold.

The correct way is to provide without looking at the race or religion. If poor, means poor la. Not poor Malay or poor Indian etc.

I just hope the term hardcore poor, poor and low income is updated. RM450 is not hardcore poor, but worse than that. I think hardcore poor should be upgraded to those household earning RM750 and below while poor should be from RM751 to 1500. Low income should be from Rm1501 to RM3000.

THE number of non-Malays getting financial aid from the Welfare Department in Negri Sembilan is higher than the number of Malays, said Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan.

He said talk that the state government only gave financial aid to needy Malays was not only baseless but is akin to a “hate campaign” against the state leadership.

“There are voices here and there which say that the state government only gave aid to Malays. It is sad that some people are willing to stoop so low and spread lies to discredit the state government,” he said at a meet-the-people session organised by the Rembau MIC at Bandar Seremban Selatan.

Citing an example, Mohamad said when he took over the state leadership in 2004, the number of people receiving monthly aid from the Welfare Department was just above 4,000.

“At the end of December last year, the number of recipients increased to 21,875. The state government spends close to RM5mil a month to give out aid to the needy and non-Malays account for more than half the number,” he said, adding that RM60mil was allocated annually for this purpose.

Mohamad said the number had surged almost five-fold after his government introduced the social security and safety net plan.

“I am proud to say that we do not have hardcore poor in Negri Sembilan today due to our social security and safety policy,” he said.

Under the programme, households with total earnings less than RM450 a month were given aid by the department.

“The people are also given aid by other agencies such as the local councils, Negri Sembilan Foundation as well as by Barisan Nasional assemblymen,” he said adding that the majority of the 1,115 people who received allowances in his constituency were also non-Malays.

Mohamad however, said the Malays also received allowances and aid from the state Islamic Affairs Council and Baitulmal.

The aid is given out from the zakat (tithe) paid by Muslims.

He said any individual, irrespective of race, colour or creed would be given aid as long as he or she was eligible.

“Our agenda is to strengthen unity. Negri Sembilan is a progressive state because we give priority to strengthen unity that has been long built by our forefathers,” he said.

Mohamad said the state received RM5.1bil in investments last year and this showed that foreigners had faith in the country’s system.

In a separate event, Mohamad handed out financial aid amounting to RM40,000 to needy families.

He also presented revision books and monetary rewards to students who did well in their UPSR, PMR, SPM and STPM examinations.

Some 4,000 people, including MIC president Senator Datuk G Palanivel, information chief Datuk V.S. Mogan and former vice-presidents Datuk M. Muthupalaniappan and Datuk S. Sothinathan attended the event.

Earlier, Palanivel received forms from some 600 new members to join the MIC.

Palanivel also gave out loans totalling RM60,000 from Amanah Ikhtiar Malaysia to allow women to venture into business.

source: http://thestar.com.my/metro/story.asp?file=/2011/4/28/central/8557298&sec=central

Padang Jawa temple to be rebuilt

/* April 25th, 2011 by poobalan | View blog reactions No comments »
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Remember this temple?

The controversial Sri Maha Temple in Kampung Rimba Jaya, Padang Jawa which was demolished in November 2007 is set to be rebuilt on 15,000 sq feet of land near the Keretapi Tanah Melayu quarters.

seri maha mariamman temple replacement land pronouncement 210910 01The groundbreaking ceremony took place today at the site in Padang Jawa and was attended by Selangor state excos, community leaders and the Indian settlers from the former Kampung Rimba Jaya.

The temple was ordered to be torn down by the authorities as it stood in the vicinity of the Rimba Jaya squatter settlement. Its controversial demolition by the state government in 2007 had led to many Indians turning their backs on BN.

The Hindu groundbreaking ceremony started at 9.00am with bricks coupled with religious paraphernalia arranged in a four foot-deep hole, which will sit right below the main altar of the soon to be built temple.

Land ceded by developer

According to the Selangor State Health, Plantation Workers, Poverty and Caring Government Committee Chairman, Dr A Xavier Jayakumar, the land was donated by the developer, Ken Rimba Jaya.


“The land was given to state government, and was ceded by the developer. Then we, the state government will decide, whom, and how much of the land will be given,” said Xavier (left) when queried on how the land was allocated to this temple.

He also said that all the land for places of worship in Selangor is gazetted under the state secretary.

Xavier also announced that RM300,000 had been allocated by the Selangor state government for the building fund and the land will be managed by the temple association.

Xavier the ‘temple saviour’

The temple committee and community leaders in Padang Jawa honoured Xavier with garlands and gave him the title “temple saviour”.

According to the temple committee chairperson, Madhu Manogaran, the Selangor state government and Xavier has worked tirelessly to help save temples in Selangor.

“We are very grateful to the state government, Tan Sri Khalid and Xavier for helping us to rebuild this temple, which means a lot to us,” said Madhu during his speech.

Xavier also said that the state government had managed to help around 70 temples by giving them land.

“We are prepared to do more for the Indian community, last year we spent RM2.5 million for Hindu places of worship,” said Xavier in his speech.


The Sri Maha Mariamman Temple, along with the squatter settlement of Rimba Jaya, was demolished in 2007 by the then BN-led state government as part of its Zero Squatter programme.

The demolition of the temple led to a massive protest by Indian groups and helped trigger the historic Hindraf rally on Nov 25 that year.

source: http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/162336