Posts Tagged ‘ISA’

Swiss Garden Resort and Spa Kuantan

October 7th, 2007
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We reach Swiss Garden at about 3.30pm, after a slow drive from Maran Temple. The hotel (resort?) is located along Jalan Beserah (linking Kuantan and Kemaman), near a place called Pantai Balok (Balok Beach). The place is quite nice, but unfortunately, I have few complaints. Firstly, our room was near to the pub and the noise was audible till about 1am. Changed to another room the next day, and the management gave a suite (two rooms and two TV) further away from the pub. Guess it pays to look as if you are honeymooning and want much more privacy and quietness. 🙂

The TV was another problem. They advertised that upgraded the channels, which sounded very promising. But when I flipped through it, the upgrade was RTM 1, RTM2, TV3, NTV7, CH9, 8TV, and in-house promotion, plus 2 music channels! Oh my…what happened to CNN, BBC, Star Movies, ESPN etc? No more Astro, but only local free channels? That’s a new definition of upgrade!!!!

Breakfast was nothing much to shout about. In fact, I would say slightly disappointing since there were not many choices.

The beach was inaccessible due to jellyfish threat, so we didn’t venture out to the beach much. We went to Kuantan in the evening. Went to Berjaya Megamall and caught The Brave One at the cinema.

empty Balok Beach

We also took their Ramadan dinner buffet at RM48 each. There were about 60 people at the most, and the food finished very fast. That’s where we meet a familiar face, Thirumila. It was great to meet up an old friend after so long.

The resort had its spa packages under Samsara Spa. We took one of their packages. It was refreshing and really relaxing feeling after the treatment. Plus, their ginger tea was super!

Survey on local authorities by government

September 19th, 2007
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if you are dissastisfied with the services provided by your local authorities (dewan bandaraya, majlis perbandaran, etc), then do your part and take part in the survey. Refer the article below. The link to the survey is:

http://www.gov.my/MyGov/Questionnaire/QuestionnaireInstruction.aspx

And yeah, do forward this to everyone. Its time to voice out your (un)happiness over the services rendered. If you felt like 3rd class citizens or met any little napoleons, this is time for payback.

Do note that the evaluation is not done by independent bodies/companies, thus the results may be biased or glossed over.

Online survey on local authorities

source

PUTRAJAYA: Ratepayers and the public can now assess and provide feedback on the level of services offered by all 144 local authorities in the peninsula to the Prime Minister's Department via an online survey.  

The move, undertaken for the first time by the Government, allows individuals, non-governmental organisations and the business community to evaluate counter services and courtesy of personnel behind the counters, how telephone calls are handled and how public complaints are managed.

Results of the Malaysian Administrative Modernisation and Management Planning Unit (Mampu) survey would be collated and used to further improve the public delivery system of local authorities.

Mampu director-general Datuk Normah Md Yusof said complaints, which needed urgent attention, would be directed to the respective city halls or district or municipal councils for immediate action.

"This feedback will also act as yardstick to assess how effective are the improvements made by the respective local authorities.

"We will also use the feedback to improve the weaknesses, apart from getting a clear and holistic perspective of how much of improvements local authorities have made and whether it is customer-focused."  

"The services of local authorities impact the everyday lives of the public, be it residents or those involved in commercial activities," she said.

Normah said that Mampu, which comes under the Prime Minister's Department, had made the 24 survey questions as simple as possible for the people to provide feedback on their experiences when dealing with local authorities.

She said the survey would cover the areas of office environment, counter service, services provided by the local authority, complaint management, website and telephone call management. The survey would also enable the public to provide suggestions on ways of improving the services of their respective local authorities.

The forms could be assessed via the Government's official portal myGovernment at www.gov.my, under the quick links -local authority feedback.

not poor if own a TV, radio, or car

September 18th, 2007
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like that, can say 90% of people is not poor la!


source

KUALA LUMPUR: Owning a television set, a radio or a car will no longer disqualify the poor from receiving welfare aid. 

Women, Family and Community Development Minister Datuk Seri Shahrizat Abdul Jalil said her ministry was reviewing its criteria for granting aid to poor families for the first time in 30 years. "We have reviewed the amount of aid we give to the poor per month, but the criteria has not been reviewed since the 1970s," she said. In the last decade, the monthly stipend has been raised from RM300 to RM450, and more recently to RM500. Shahrizat said her ministry hoped to introduce the new criteria by January, adding that the review would also take into account whether a possible recipient lived in an urban or rural area. 

She said the changing times prompted the review of the criteria. "For example, in some poor homes if there is a battered old car, then the family does not qualify for aid." 

The review will also look at providing aid to families where one or two people are working. "The reality is that even if one or two are working, it does not mean that they are able to look out for the whole family, especially if there are disabled family members," she said, adding that a television set or a radio did not mean a family was well off.

Shahrizat also said the ministry was looking at extending the review period for those receiving aid. "At present, we review a case every six months, but we are looking to extend the monitoring period."

The ministry, she said, wanted aid to reach as many people as possible and the review was part of the ministry’s plans to improve services to its target group. "We want to provide a stronger and wider safety net for our target group. This is crucial as a lot of these people are out of the safety net." Two years ago, as a pro-active measure to reach out to the needy, the ministry launched the Mayang (Masyarakat Penyayang) outreach programme. Welfare officers were encouraged to go out and look for needy cases. "Our officials were told to go out and engage with community leaders who would be able to lead them to the needy."

And this is what the Star reported:
source

HAVING a television, car or refrigerator will no longer be the yardstick to determine how much aid should go to a poor family, Utusan Malaysia reports. Women, Family and Community Development Minister Datuk Seri Shahrizat Abdul Jalil said beginning January, the Welfare Department would follow a new set of guidelines to ensure that target groups were given aid. 

She said the current definition denied help that a poor family should be getting. “The conditions that are used deny aid to a poor family because it takes factors like having a television, refrigerator and car into consideration. “Now, we have to look at such items as necessities. It does not define the ‘comfort’ of a particular family,” she said after opening a Quran recital event at the Amaniah Mosque in Kepong last Sunday. 

However, Shahrizat said that because Malaysia was not a welfare state, no party could be blamed for using the yardstick which had been in existence for a long time.

Budget 2008 says listed companies must reveal employee composition by race

September 14th, 2007
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heard the budget speech live over the radio that friday evening. At the part where PM read "merangkumi komposisi guna tenaga syarikat dari segi kaum" (refer below) he coughed and paused for a few second. After that he just continued, without repeating. Either he wanted to just skim over it or he was surprised.
 

105. Dalam Bajet 2007, Kerajaan telah mengumumkan bahawa semua syarikat PLC perlu menzahirkan aktiviti CSR sebagai sebahagian daripada laporan kewangan tahunan syarikat. Mulai tahun kewangan 2008, penzahiran penyata CSR perlu juga merangkumi komposisi guna tenaga syarikat dari segi kaum dan gender, serta program untuk membangunkan vendor tempatan dan Bumiputera. Kelebihan Malaysia sebagai sebuah negara berbilang kaum harus dimanfaatkan oleh syarikat swasta dengan mengambil kakitangan dari semua lapisan masyarakat.

source: PM Budget speech available on www.treasury.gov.my in PDF format.

The folllowing piece by AP was picked up by many players – IHT, AOL, MSNBC, Sin Chew, etc.

Malaysia orders companies to reveal recruitment figures by race

source

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: Malaysian executives urged the government Tuesday not to make race a criterion for hiring, reflecting fears that some companies will have to employ more ethnic Malays at the expense of minority Chinese and Indians

Companies listed on Malaysia's stock exchange are generally expected to have a significant number of employees from the Malay majority. The rule — part of affirmative action policies to help Malays — has not been strictly enforced, but most large firms mix Malay staff with Chinese and Indians.

Though Malays are in a majority in the population, ethnic Chinese have long dominated the country's commercial sector..

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi announced Friday that starting next year, publicly listed firms must disclose their employment composition by race as part of efforts to boost corporate social responsibility.

The directive has prompted debate about whether the government might pressure companies to ensure that their racial mix mirrors Malaysia's ethnic makeup more closely.

Puan Chan Cheong, managing director of broadband technology provider Green Packet Bhd., said firms need to hire people who are "the best fit for the job, regardless of race," in order to compete internationally.

"We employ according to merits," Puan told The Associated Press. "Competency is the key consideration, not racial composition."

Gooi Seong Lim, managing director of investment holding company Crescendo Corp. Bhd., said the company sometimes has no choice but to recruit mostly Chinese and Indians for civil engineering works because there are too few Malay candidates.

"I believe the government will be reasonable," he told the AP. "It would be very difficult to conform to a strict racial breakdown."

Malays comprise about 60 percent of Malaysia's 27 million people. Chinese form some 25 percent, Indians nearly 10 percent and the rest belong to other minorities. The ethnic communities have coexisted peacefully since racial riots left at least 200 dead in 1969. They were sparked by Malay frustration over Chinese wealth.

The New Straits Times newspaper quoted Second Finance Minister Nor Mohamed Yakcop as saying the government will not necessarily penalize companies that fail to have employees from all races after the new directive takes effect next year.

"We are not saying we will take action," the Times quoted him as saying. It was not immediately clear how the new directive would be enforced.

Decades-old affirmative action policies — geared toward helping Malays catch up with the Chinese by giving them privileges in areas like education, housing, bank loans and government contracts — are one of Malaysia's most politically sensitive subjects.

This is what MCA Economic Bureau have to say:

MCA unit: Drop race disclosure rule for listed firms
source

PETALING JAYA: The MCA Youth Economic Bureau supports the statement made by Kota Melaka MP Wong Nai Chee that corporate social responsibility in public-listed companies should not be based along racial lines as proposed in the recent Budget 2008. 

In a press statement issued here, the bureau chief Datuk Henry Wong Tat Chee said the business community was unhappy with the proposal that the companies disclose employment composition by race. 

He said programmes undertaken to develop domestic and bumiputra vendors might result in a form of micro-restructuring that could result in loss of income and employment opportunities for non-bumiputras. 

“If such a racially-based quota is imposed, it will affect growth opportunities for fully qualified and merit-based non-bumiputra job applicants or vendors, who will be sidelined in favour of bumiputra recruits and suppliers for (public-listed companies),” he added. 

Nai Chee had said the very idea of corporate social responsibility based along racial lines would run against the spirit and responsibility of contributing towards the betterment of society regardless of ethnicity. 

Tat Chee said the commercial sector had expressed their unhappiness before..  

Two years ago, the Economic Planning Unit hired a foreign consultancy firm to audit all private companies about their racial composition and corporate plans to increase bumiputra composition in the employment and vendor programmes, he added. 

“The private corporations refused to cooperate in this exercise. This itself was a clear indication that the commercial entities were not in favour of such a practice,” said Tat Chee. 

“The private sector relies solely on its own resources to hire personnel who can work most efficiently and productively for the company. 

“This is opposed to the public sector that uses public funds, that should be distributed equally to all races especially for recruitment into the civil service and government procurement and tenders,” he said.

So under the guise of CSR, the companies are now forced to complement and supplement govt's racial discrimination policy. Since govt can't find create more employments in the public sector to satisfy the evergrowing population, it is now imposing rules on the private sector to hire more malays. Sounds a bit like lop-sided socialism where the profit indirectly becomes fund of the states and is seen fit to be used as it likes.

On another hand, when deprived and discriminated citizens turn to private sector for education, medical, cultural, and religious funding among others, they will be turned away since the private sector have to comply with the rules. Looks like the govt won't help and won't let others help as well.

Malaysian files RM14 trillion suit against Britain

September 10th, 2007
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source

WASHINGTON: A Malaysian human rights lawyer has filed a four trillion dollar lawsuit against Britain for alleged atrocities suffered by Indians whose forefathers were brought as indentured laborers to Malaysia during colonial rule.

Seeking £1 million (RM7 million) compensation for each of the currently estimated two million Indian Malaysians, the suit was filed in London last week, Ponnusamy Waytha Moorthy told reporters in Washington on a trip to brief the US Congress and rights groups on the issue.

”The colossal suit reflects the years of pain, suffering, humiliation, discrimination and continuous colonialisation under the current Malaysian government,’’ he said.

”It is also to highlight the negligence and failure of the British in not entrenching the rights of the minority Indians in the constitution when they granted Malaysia independence,’’ he said.

Many Indians were brought to Malaysia from southern India as indentured labor by the British, but their future generations ”were left high and dry’’ when the colonial power left the country, Waytha Moorthy said.

”There has been segregation, discrimination, marginalisation and other abuses of Indian Malaysians,’’ he said.

Ethnic Indians and Chinese are minority groups in Malaysia, whose 26 million population is predominantly Malay. The resource-rich country, which won independence in 1957 from Britain, has blossomed into one of Southeast Asia’s top economies. But Waytha Moorthy said 70% of Indian Malaysians were poor, with many in the middle and upper classes of the community migrating overseas.

Waytha Moorthy is also asking British courts to declare the Malaysian constitution null and void.

He said he had three months to serve notice of the court action on the named defendant, British Foreign Secretary David Miliband, and added that at least one British law firm was considering handling his case on a pro bono basis.

T. Kumar, Amnesty International’s Washington-based Asia-Pacific advocacy director, refused to comment on the legal suit but noted that the British colonial power had taken tens of thousands of Indians as indentured laborers to various parts of the globe. – AFP