Posts Tagged ‘KL’

Veera Muneswarar Temple demolition in Ampang

June 29th, 2009
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Hindraf’s Jayathas issued statement that the temple – Veera Muneswarar temple – in Jalan Yap Kwan Seng was demolished by gangsters associated with MIC. MIC Youth denied this and claimed that they were in the process of finding a solution to the temple issue. The temple is 20 years old, so most likely its on private land that belongs to someone else.

There are few things that I like to note:

1. Vel Paari is right in the sense that just complaining is pointless. HINDRAF is limited to doing just that – protest because they don’t have locus standi to do anything else, save initiate legal proceedings. No one will accept their memorandum or ideas or solutions. They are considered “outlawed” organisation which is not even registered.

2. If I’m not mistaken, Deputy FT  Minister Saravanan did pledge that no more temples will be demolished without proper alternative or solution. Looks like another broken promise for MIC?

3. Where/what is Hindu Sangam’s role in this? No statement yet from them.

4. What is DBKL’s role in this? Where is their committee on temple issues?

5. At least the developer removed the deities before demolishment, unlike the gangsters in local councils and their henchmen.

MIC Youth is unhappy with being blamed for playing a role in the demolition of a 20-year-old Hindu temple in Kuala Lumpur on Sunday.

The temple – Veera Muneswarar Alayam in Jalan Yap Kwan Seng – was demolished by some unidentified people and had prompted both Hindraf and MIC to converge at the scene to help the temple committee save the place of worship.

Hindraf, which for long has been in the forefront when it comes to protesting temple demolitions, issued a press statement immediately after the demolition, putting the blame on MIC, among others, for the demolition.

Hindraf’s S Jayathas bluntly blamed “MIC gangsters who worked with the developer” in demolishing the temple.

He also claimed that the police and Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) had failed to protect the temple and its devotees while allowing others to demolish the temple.

“It is disappointing that the police did not do anything despite the temple committee launching police reports previously against any attempts to demolish the temple,” he said.

But the main plank of his complain was against the MIC.

“Around 35 Indian guys that we suspect were MIC gangsters demolished the 20-year- old temple,” he said in a statement.

MIC Youth was naturally unimpressed with Jayathas’ sweeping accusations.

“This is what he does best – making such clumsy statements and then going away until another temple is demolished,” said MIC Youth wing advisor S Vell Paari.

MIC Youth in talks with developer

Vell Paari added that MIC was not involved in the demolition of the Jalan Yap Kwan Seng temple. On the contrary, he said, the movement was deeply involved in getting the problem solved.

“We have been following up with this temple case from the beginning. We have spoken to the temple committee about three weeks ago and they told us that they wanted to deal directly with the developers.

“And when the demolition took place yesterday, we immediately sent our people over to see what was happening. We contacted DBKL who confirmed that they were not demolishing the temple,” he added.

He said that the demolition was done by the developer who had paid some people to remove the deities from the temple before tearing it down.

“Even then, it was MIC Youth members who helped the temple committee in sorting out the issues. We were there when they lodged a police report after one of them was hurt in the demolition process,” he said.

Vell Paari said that MIC Youth was now working with DBKL and the developer so that some form of arrangement can be made to save or relocate the temple.

“They want to remain in the same place. That will be tough but we are trying to find a best alternative spot for them as well as with adequate compensation from the developer,” he said.

Start finding solutions

He also challenged Jayathas to come up with a proper solution for the Jalan Yap Kwan Seng temple.

“He should not just talk and make wild accusations. Can he sort out the mess for the temple committee? No point in making any noise but without being able to find solutions,” he said.

Temple demolitions have been a thorny issue for the past few years. In 2007, at the height of temple demolitions throughout the country, Hindraf capitalised on the issue by evoking raw emotions among the members of the Indian community.

The anger of the community towards the Barisan Nasional government was apparent when the ruling coalition, including MIC, was roundly routed in the 2008 general election.

Since then MIC had been playing a more proactive role in solving the issues concerning the Indian community.

Kg Pandan Indian Settlement relocation postponed to October

May 14th, 2009
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An update on the Kampung Pandan Indian Settlement issue posted yesterday:

THE 70-year-old Indian settlement in Kampung Pandan is being redeveloped for the residents of the village.

Kuala Lumpur mayor Datuk Ahmad Fuad Ismail said the redevelopment project spelt out in the Draft Kuala Lumpur City Plan 2020 (DKLCP2020) was to build 480 low-cost units for the residents.

“There is not going to be anything else there but this project. Once completed, each unit will measure 700 sq ft — which is 50 sq ft extra compared to the other Public Housing Schemes (PPR) in the city and it is going to be more stylish,” Fuad said.

The mayor stressed however that the Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) would not be able to start building the low-cost housing unless and until the residents moved out.

The mayor was speaking to reporters at the weekly Meet The Press session at the DBKL headquarters yesterday.

Fuad also gave the residents in Kampung Pandan a grace period of until October on a relocation order. They were initially supposed to move out today but the Federal Territories Ministry agreed to postpone their relocation.

The mayor also promised to consider the request from residents who are old and sickly as well as those with large extended families to be moved to closer PPR units.

The residents were told to relocate to PPR Kg Muhibbah in Puchong which is 20km away from their homes.

If there are empty units nearby, we will accommodate them,” he said, adding that residents only need to provide their medical report.

I symphathise with the residents but they must learn to trust the DBKL.

About 255 families are currently residing in the settlement.

When contacted, Kampung Pandan Indian Settlement Action Council head Suresh Kumar said that he was grateful to Fuad and Raja Nong Chik for the extension of the deadline to move but said that the residents want a better guarantee than a “Surat Aku Janji”.

“It is not a legal binding document and we want something more concrete,” Suresh said.

“We also want the DBKL to ensure that priority is given to the Kg Pandan Indian settlement residents to move into the units when completed and this includes those who have already moved out,” he said.

The mayor is asking the residents to trust the DBKL while the residents want a binding blakc and white, not verbal promises or powerless “Aku Janji” forms.  The problem of residents having to relocate far away is still not solved as there’s no info on “available empty unit nearby”.

Still no news about the name being retained or the fate of facilities like tamil school, temple, and madrasah located  there.

wiping out the only indian settlement in KL

May 13th, 2009
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Tomorrow is the dreaded day for Kampung Pandan Indian Settlement community. As written in the Star Metro section today, the 70-odd year old settlement is on the brink of demolition by the ever efficient DBKL. The DBKL is so efficient that it could erase the existence of such place from its own KL City Plan 2020. Is this some sort of subtle ethnic cleansing? Do note that the term “ethnic cleansing” covers a wide definition and not just limited to phsyical attacks or killings.  On one end of the scale it also encompasses discriminatory policies.  Yes, the authorities say that the residents will get a place to stay after the development of road is completed.  But looking at past track record, only the very brave will have trust in these promises.

You can search this blog for previous articles on Kg Pandan Indian settlement case. The residents are not being helped to resettle properly – they are offered temporary location at Puchong which is 20KM away. With many of them having minimal wages, relocation is not easy. Schooling will be a problem. What will happen to the Tamil school there? As usual – not even sound of flatulence from MIC. After all over, the politician will come and make some noise, and act out some scenes.

The residents are right in not trusting DBKL. These guy can even wipe out existence from map, what worth is their Aku Janji form? Who can they trust? Promises after promises, but empty ones. So, in the end, have to take it up themselves. Don’t be surprised if these folks file a suit against DBKL.

THE endless talk, empty promises, even treacherous betrayal, and their own desperation and helplessness have turned the gentle residents of Kuala Lumpur’s remaining Indian Settlement into tormented cynics.

After all sorts of empty promises by the Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL), the MIC and the Public Complaints Bureau in the Prime Minister’s Department, the residents of the 70-year-old Kampung Pandan Indian settlement have decided that enough is enough.

The unpretentious humble residents have now resorted to do research themselves on the laws concerning the land and their fundamental and constitutional rights for a legal battle to safeguard their homes.

Take the sweet natured Beatrice Leelawathi Maniam as an example. The 67-year-old is making a determined effort to learn about the laws of the land that she was born and bred in.

Since last year, Beatrice and some of her friends have been reading books on laws and rules of the land code to better understand their rights.

“God only helps those who help themselves and I have decided that in order to save the land of my forefathers, I have to do it myself,” she said.

Beatrice, holding a copy of the thick Volume 2 of the draft Kuala Lumpur City Plan 2020 (KLCP2020), told StarMetro that the plan, the blue print of the future developments of Kuala Lumpur, had inadvertently wiped out the entire existence of the Kampung Pandan Indian settlement.

There is no mention of our village and Lorong Delapan Kampung Pandan, where the 50-year-old Tamil school is located, is also missing,” she said while pointing to the map marked orange.

“So can you blame us for not trusting the government? Can you blame us if we say: no thank you, DBKL, we are not moving because we don’t believe you,” she said.

Why the distrust?

The story of these 250-odd pioneer settlers of KL is simple. After living and toiling on the land for 70 years, they were told to vacate the area as the DBKL wants to build an access road connecting Taman Maluri and Ampang. The villagers were asked to uproot from their homes, work places and children’s school to move 20km away to Kampung Muhhibbah in Puchong.

A team: Children studying together at a house in Kg Pandan Indian settlement.

They were promised low-cost units in two to three years when they would be relocated back to the site, but residents do not believe that this would ever happen.

In line with the government’s zero-squatter policy, the DBKL has been speeding up its squatter eradication exercise to meet the year-end deadline. Since January, eviction notices have been issued to various squatter settlements in the city.

What makes the Kampung Pandan residents special, compared with the squatters elsewhere in KL who have been relocated?

“We are not asking for special treatment. What we are asking is for the DBKL to practise some common sense,” Kampung Pandan Indian Settlment Action Council head Suresh Kumar said.

“Most of our people are cleaners, dish washers, baby sitters and labourers. So, how much do you think their average income is?” he asked.

“Our children attend the Kampung Pandan Tamil School nearby. If we move, their schooling would be disrupted and we will not be able make ends meet,” Suresh said.

The residents had sought help from Public Complaints Bureau head T. Murugiah to be relocated to the public housing programme (PPR) flats in Seri Alam in Sungai Besi, 4km away.

However, the DBKL said the project by the Housing and Local Government Ministry had not been handed over to it and so it could not allocate the units to the residents.

According to a source from the Federal Territories Ministry, all 920 units have already been allocated but the source was reluctant to reveal who have been given the units.

Indra Rani, 44, who works as a baby-sitter in the village, asked why the residents of the Kampung Pandan Indian settlement were being sidelined?

I recently read that Federal Territories Minister Raja Datuk Nong Chik Zainal Abidin is helping 355 squatter families in Bukit B at Kampung Kerinchi move to the Seri Cempaka flats, only a short distance from their place. Why can’t he help us and why the double standard? Indra asked.

Housewife Kalaichelvi Paraman, 49, is worried about the whole situation as her husband S. Nagalingam, 49, is a dialysis patient and requires treatment three times a week at a dialysis centre in Cheras.

“We have two schoolgoing children and it is going to be difficult for us if we were to move to Puchong” Kalaichelvi said in between sobs.

Aminah Talib, 73, who has been living in Kampung Pandan since her marriage 30 years ago, said she now lived there with her son.

“I depend on my neighbours and we have shared many good memories in this simple house,” she said. A. Navanitham, 42, has been living in Kampung Pandan for the past 25 years and has five children who are studying and working in the area.

“My wife is diabetic and needs constant medical treatment and we go to the Kampung Pandan clinic nearby,” he said.

“If we move to Puchong, it will be a big financial burden for us,” he said.

Navanitham said his work place was now just five minutes away from his home and if he moved he would not be able to keep his job.

Is there a way out?

According to residents, they have been given until Thursday to move out on their own, or the DBKL enforcement team will demolish their homes after that deadline.

“The DBKL has promised to give us Surat Aku Janji (pledge letters) pledging to give us units in the current location once the low-cost housing project is complete. But the DBKL will only give us the pledge letter after we have moved to Puchong,” Suresh said.

How can we trust the DBKL now when all the while it has never once kept its promise,” he said.

According to Suresh, the Settlement Action Committee has been studying the KLCP2020 in detail and has identified two plots of land in the settlement which belongs to the DBKL and has been zoned as open space.

The residents have suggested that the land be used to build units for them to live in as they await for their low cost-houses to be built.

“It’s the best solution for all parties and only fair,” Suresh said, adding that he hoped the DBKL would hear them out.

Let’s see what other residents say:

THEY have until Thursday to leave their homes in Kampung Pandan and move to a government housing scheme in Puchong. Yet, about 160 residents in the Kampung Pandan Indian Settlement hope that their reasons for refusing to move to the flats offered by City Hall will be looked into seriously. After many street protests by residents of the settlement over the past year, they still feel that their reasons for refusing to move have not been considered by City Hall.

According to resident K. Ramamoorthy, 44, the residents were hoping to be placed in PPR units around Kampung Pandan or the surrounding area. He said there were PPR units around Jalan Cochrane, Sungai Besi, Jalan Peel and even Setapak that the residents would not mind moving to. “We do not mind living in different PPR flats nearby as it would not severely affect our daily lives.

But please, do not ask us to move 20km away. “It is not that we are refusing to move, as we know they have plans to develop the area. But the authorities just don’t seem to want to understand our predicament. “They want us to move to Puchong. We are currently in Kampung Pandan. Fifty children attend SJK Tamil Kampung Pandan which is walking distance from home.

Over 30 people work at the Royal Selangor Golf and Country Club, which is half a kilometre away. There are also many who work in factories and offices in the area. Also, we have those who are sick depending on medication from Kuala Lumpur Hospital. And, there are several others who are jobless,” Ramamoorthy said.

He conceded that there was a Tamil school in Kinrara Puchong, about 3km from the PPR Kampung Muhibbah units that City Hall is offering, but that would mean the children would have to rely on school buses and this would mean having to bear extra costs. Around 100 residents held a peaceful protest in the settlement yesterday, which was attended by Titiwangsa MP Dr Lo’ Lo’ Mohd Ghazali and Subang MP R. Sivarasa.

It was reported yesterday that Deputy Federal Territories Minister Datuk M. Saravanan said his ministry was concerned about the plight of the residents and pledged to look into resolving the matter. It was also reported that the residents were asked to submit an appeal letter citing reasons for their refusal to relocate. Saravanan was also quoted as saying that so far, only 29 of the 196 families had accepted City Hall’s offer to relocate.

The residents even went to DPM Muhyiddin’s house  last month to submit their protests:

ABOUT 30 residents from the Kg Pandan Indian settlement turned up at the home of Deputy Prime Minister and Education Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin at Bukit Damansara last night asking for help to save their settlement from being demolished.

“We have asked for help from many different parties but we have yet to be given land in place of (the land) where we were born and grew up. We hope the government will be able to give us a fair solution,” said S. Rama, 58, a resident.

Kampung Pandan

PLEA: Temple president Sri Maha Kaliamman Sevai Nilayam (left) hand the memo to the Deputy Prime Minister’s home security officer at Bukit Damansara

Last night about 11pm, residents from Kg Pandan planned to hand over a memorandum directly to the Deputy Prime Minister.

Unfortunately he was outstation and the residents handed it instead to a representative from the DPM’s home security team.

The residents wanted to know how the relocation will affect the SRJK (T) Kg Pandan Indian Settlement, the Hindu temple as well as the Islamic madrasah which have served the residents well for many decades.

Residents were also concerned about their children’s attendance at their school in Kg Pandan.

“If we move to the low-cost flats in Taman Muhibbah, Puchong, we will also have to change our children’s school and this will be troublesome.

“We are hoping that we can be moved to the Seri Alam flats in Sungai Besi, which is only 15 minutes away from their school. It is also convenient for many of the residents who work in the city,” added Rama.

City Hall plans to relocate the squatters to make way for an access road connecting Taman Maluri and Ampang.

They will be allowed to return to Kampung Pandan once the public housing flats are completed. Earlier this year, the residents also sought help from Public Complaints Bureau chief Senator T. Murugiah. He supported the residents’ call to be allowed to move to the flats in Sungai Besi.

The Kampung Pandan Indian settlement traces its beginnings to the resettlement programmes of the British colonial authorities during the Emergency period.

The folks at DBKL have been very hardworking, visiting the site everyday:

According to residents, DBKL enforcement officers have put up stickers at various parts of the village informing residents to move out.

“Their officers have been coming every day and asking us whether we have taken the keys to PPR Kg Muhibbah and reminding us that May 14 is our last day,” said Beatrice Leelawathi Maniam, 67.

“They have been persistent and diligent in getting us to move,’’ Beatrice said.

The residents have not ruled out court case:

“We are determined to stay put,’’ said Kampung Pandan Indian Settlement Action Council head Suresh Kumar.

“We have agreed go to court as a last resort if we are forced to move to Puchong,” he said.

“We have no choice but to take our plight to the courts as this not only concerns our future but our children’s as well,” he said.

Suresh said they would engage lawyers recommended by PKR vice-president R. Sivarasah who is acting as their legal adviser.

“Since they have left us out in the Draft Kuala Lumpur City Plan 2020 (DKLCP2020), we have no choice but to challenge it,” he said.

Deputy FT Minister meanwhile spins some story on the issues being unrelated. Well, the same plan will be used in future to reject later requests as “its not in the plan”. Everyone knows how things work. Will the deputy minister accept the Aku Janji if it was his house that was affected? Tepuk dada tanya selera.

Meanwhile, in response to why the Kampung Pandan Indian settlement had been left out of the DKLCP2020, Deputy Federal Territories Minister Datuk M. Saravanan said: “The relocation of the residents and gazetting of the land are two unrelated issues. The gazetting has to be done at the Cabinet level. Moreover, the DBKL has already agreed to provide the “Surat Aku Janji” which is a black and white proof of their pledge,” Saravanan said.

When asked to comment on the legality of the “Surat Aku Janji”, Sivarasah said: “It has zero value. In fact, verbal agreements and letters of pledges have no value legally.”

“In other words, it is useless. You must get a signed Sale and Pur­chase agreement. That is a legal guarantee that you will be given a house,” Sivarasah said after attend­ing a peaceful demonstration in Kampung Pandan on Sunday to protest against the reloca­tion of the residents to Puchong.

According to Sivarasah, it is normal in any relocation exercise for the local authority to issue pledge letters.

“Later, when there is a change in administration, their usual excuse will be that the letter is no longer valid,” he said.

Sivarasah also said DBKL’s notices to residents to move out was illegal since it did not spell out that they planned to demolish the houses.

It doesn’t help that the opposition (or is it the ruling coalition in KL) is helping out the residents. Any solution will be viewed with a political stance.  It will be “us against them” mentality. The residents may lose out because bringing their problem to their MPs who are incidentally from opposing camp. But if not to MP, then rely on who? FT Ministry? DBKL? Thus, residents are caught in a dilemma.

So, will it be the end of the settlement? Two years down the lane, will we see more broken families, single parents, troublesome youths, and increased crime rates due to the actions taken today? Are the families to take risk and rely on words of the DBKL, ministers and authorities? Would you do that if it happens to you?

Hindu Temples in KL agree to relocate

April 21st, 2009
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Well, 28 out of 29 agree to relocate, says Deputy FT minister Saravanan:

Twenty-eight out of 29 Hindu temples sitting on disputed land around Kuala Lumpur have agreed to relocate by May.

Deputy Federal Territories Minister Datuk M. Saravanan said all 28 temple caretakers had agreed to relocate to several locations provided by the Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) except for the Sri Muniaswarar Temple in Jalan Air Panas, Setapak, which remained adamant in staying put.

“It is the government’s policy not to demolish any house of worship without first giving it an alternative area to relocate to.

“To those who refuse to relocate, they will be given 30 days and an alternative location, following which we may proceed to demolish the building,“ he told reporters at the Buddha Miao You Temple in Setapak yesterday.

Saravanan said the temples had been given notices to relocate last year but many refused to do so until the DBKL issued the last notice on March 1.

“We did not force them to move out without giving them another place to go; several alternatives had been suggested,” he said.

Its indeed a good news as ugly confrontation leading to demolishment of temples have been avoided. However, it will be better if the list of temples, date of establishment, registration status of the temple committee,  cost of relocation, land status and location of new sites, are also revealed (both offline and online)  so that we don’t find temples end up next to sewerage ponds or water tanks.

And what is the reason for the sole temple not agreeing to relocate?

Bukit Kiara estate resident to be relocated

February 21st, 2009
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I wonder if the cabinet was properly briefed on the situation before PM Badawi announced the place as open space. If not, the fault lies solely with MIC and PPP as the representatives in the Cabinet. Or perhaps their voices were defeated by other stronger arguments. Bukit Kiara to PPR Kg Muhibbah in Puchong is about 20km. Not easy to relocate even for middle class income earners, what more of people within low-income bracket. Perhaps the Cabinet can also issue statement for provision of some allowance such as transport cost and COLA while the families are staying in PPR.

Obviously the claim that they were promised houses at the same location needs supporting documents. Without it, their claims will be brushed aside. Not sure which group made the promise as claimed by the residents.

As for Kg Pandan Indian Settlement residents, looks like they have agreed to temporarily move to the PPR while their houses are being built. They did not get their wish to move to a nearer location. Also the status of the Tamil School and temple is still in question. Will it be relocated “temporarily” to PPR Kg Muhibbah which house a significant number of Malays as well?

THE 100 families residing in the Bukit Kiara estate longhouse will be relocated to the PPR Pantai Permai in Pantai Dalam despite having waited for 27 years for new homes to be built at their current address.

Deputy Federal Territories Minister Datuk M. Saravanan said the decision to earmark the plot of land as open space was made by the Cabinet and announced recently by the Prime Minister.

Meeting the people: Saravanan (right) speaking to some of the PPR Kg Muhibbah residents.

He said the ministry and the Kuala Lumpur City Hall had no jurisdiction to question any decision made by the Cabinet.

“The residents should be receiving relocation notices by the end of this month,” he said during a visit to PPR Kg Muhibbah in Puchong on Thursday.

However, he said both MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu and the MIC Supreme Council were urging the government to delay the move.

He added that Samy Vellu would also discuss the matter with the Deputy Prime Minister, who also chairs the special Cabinet Committee on Indian Affairs.

The residents have been staying at the longhouses as temporary accommodation since the 1980s following the Government’s acquisition of the Bukit Kiara estate.

They claimed that they were promised proper flats at the same site.

The residents had earlier rejected the option to move to PPR Kg Muhibbah as it would be too far for them, as they mostly worked around Bukit Kiara.

Meanwhile, Saravanan said squatters from the Kampung Pandan Indian Settlement would move in to the recently completed new phase of PPR Kg Muhibbah by March and would stay there temporarily until the completion of new flats at the site of the settlement.

“Even though the construction is estimated to take about two years, we are confident that they can return to the old site earlier than they think,” he said.

The 250 squatter families in Kampung Pandan earlier rejected the offer to move to PPR Kg Muhibbah due to concerns over proximity, medical facilities and public transportation.

They later sought Public Complaints Bureau chief Senator T. Murugiah’s help to be relocated to a site in Sungai Besi which is 15 minutes away, but the move caused a brief spat between the two leaders.

Saravanan said the ministry was also looking for appropriate locations within the PPR to set up a worship place and a funeral parlour for the Indian community.

“Those under medical attention can also write in to prove to us that they need to stay near to certain medical institutions. We will assess the cases and facilitate their needs if necessary,” he said.

Asked about public transportation for the PPR dwellers, he said the ministry was working together with the relevant parties to provide the facility for not only Kg Muhibbah, but also other PPR in the city.

PPR Kg Muhibbah houses about 8,000 residents who moved in four years ago. Three of the 12 blocks are still vacant.