Posts Tagged ‘MIC’

NUPW fights for Jalan Puchong estate workers

July 30th, 2007
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NUPW steps in to help out

By STUART MICHAEL

THE National Union of Plantation Workers (NUPW) has decided to fight for the plight of 33 families of Ladang Bukit Jalil 6 1/5 mile, Jalan Puchong, and help them not be evicted from their homes. 

Overjoyed: The families cheer outside the NUPW office.

The families who lived in houses at Bukit Jalil were formerly plantation workers of Ladang Bukit Jalil 6 1/5 mile, Jalan Puchong, and were given two eviction notices, the first on July 16 and another on July 31 by City Hall. 

»We will contact the relevant authorities to get the matter solved« A. NAVAMUKUNDAN

Thiakarajan Sathasivam, 53, said City Hall had given the eviction notice because it claimed the families are squatters.  

“Our parents and families have been here since 1940 working in the rubber plantations here. 

“Many of the families here are afraid of their water, electricity and telephones being cut off.  

“We have evidence that we have paid the NUPW subscription since 1946. We just want City Hall to give us an entitlement to buy a low-cost house within 3km of Bukit Jalil. 

“We are not asking for it for free but will buy it. If City Hall evicts us, where are we supposed to go?  

“We have been living here for the last 67 years. 

“Deputy Home Affairs Minister Datuk Tan Chai Ho has given a letter to City Hall dated July 25 supporting our plight,” said Thiakarajan. 

Hear us: A resident speaking during the meeting.

NUPW executive secretary A. Navamukundan said that it is obvious that these people are plantation workers and wanted to see a solution to this matter. 

“We will contact City Hall, Datuk Tan Chai Ho and the relevant departments to get the matter solved,” said Navamukundan, who met up with the plantation workers at his office.

Govt approved RM4.3 mil for Indian youths

July 29th, 2007
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RM4.3 mil for Indian youths undergo skills training
BERNAMA
source
KUALA LUMPUR, SUN:
The government has approved a RM4.3 million allocation for Indian youths to undergo skills training programmes at public vocational institutes until end of the year.

MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said that of the total, RM1.16 million was for 200 Indian youths, who failed in last year’s Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) examinations, to undergo six-month skills training at four institutes to be determined later.

“The government will also provide a special loan fund totalling RM3 million through Yayasan Tekun for 500 Indian youths to obtain micro business loans,” he told reporters after opening the Malaysian Indian Youth Council’s 14th general assembly here today.

Samy Vellu, who is Works Minister, said the loan would be given to Indian youths who had completed their six-month skills training courses at Pusat Giat Mara, Industrial Training Institute (ITI) and National Youth Training Institute (NYTI).

“Each trainee can apply for between RM500 and RM10,000,” he said.
 

Puteri MIC shares her thoughts

July 29th, 2007
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Puteri MIC is not just about being pretty

By : Suganthi Suparmaniam

J. Usha Nandhini says mothers and daughters in rural areas thank Puteri MIC for coming to their place and organising activities for them
J. Usha Nandhini says mothers and daughters in rural areas thank Puteri MIC for coming to their place and organising activities for them

KUALA LUMPUR: Meet J. Usha Nandhini, the person charged by the MIC with bringing young Indian women into politics.

The Puteri MIC head has been blazing a trail in this direction since assuming office four years ago.

It has been a rough ride for the lawyer but hard work and determination have yielded results.

"We had nearly 1000 members when we started. Now, we have more than 8,000, half of them graduates and professionals," said Usha who joined the party at 18.

An obstacle in attracting members stems from the fact that politics is often a dirty word in most traditional households.
"In some rural areas, older brothers or fathers wait outside the fence and watch us talk to their womenfolk. Some of the girls said their families objected to them leaving their homes to campaign or to attend conventions.

"The cultural perception that young Indian women should not leave their homes is prevalent in some places and is a barrier in getting them to work with us."

The answer? Get their mothers involved.

"Once the mothers come to know of the activities we do, they realise politics is not a bad thing after all. Many times, these mothers and young girls thank us for coming to their place and organising activities for them. They said their lives were dull as nothing went on after 8pm."

Usha, also a member of the MIC Education Committee and Constitutional Committee, said her interest in politics was because of her mother, R. Alameloo, and MIC chief Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu.

Alameloo, the Kampung Pandan branch Wanita leader, instilled the love of politics in her.

"A lot of political activities happened in our house. It was like a mini MIC headquarters then," said Usha, who has been lecturing law at a private college here for the past seven years.

Usha is peeved by the fact that Puteri MIC is not taken seriously.

"People, even some men in the party, often see us as little girls dressed in pink sarees. Sometimes, the most the girls are asked to do is carry garlands at functions.

"I tell my girls that it is okay to carry garlands or coffee but it should not be their primary role. Their job is not to just look pretty."

On the wing’s relevance to the party, she said it was to fulfil Samy Vellu’s vision of bringing young graduates and professionals into the party.

She said a major project was the legal exchange awareness programme which is running into its second year.

"The lawyers in Puteri visit rural areas, giving free legal advice, including on wills. Our women experience abuse by husbands, domestic violence and divorce."

Her advice to young women?

"Never compromise your tradition, culture and values. These are the only things that separate you from others. "

Usha, who has a classical music and dance background, said her grandfather conducted thevaram (religious) classes while her aunts played the veenai.

She said her mother was her mentor and critic while her guru in politics was Samy Vellu.

Perhaps the hardest moment in her life came three years ago when her husband, K. Madhavan Nair, died of a heart attack at 38.

"It was a big blow to me for he was such a supportive husband.

"Three weeks after he died, the general election was held. Most of the meetings and discussions were held in my house as I could not leave the house then."

Tun Hanif article – Bury those grouses

July 29th, 2007
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Bury those grouses

POINT OF VIEW WITH TUN HANNIF OMAR

When land becomes an increasingly rare commodity in major cities, it’s not just non-Muslims who have difficulty in getting permission for building their places of worship or for burial grounds.

WE went through 18 holes of golf last weekend – and right through I was almost overwhelmed by the deafening sound of silence. Not so long ago, it was the hottest topic in town but last weekend my three playing partners did not utter a single word about the Altantuya murder trial. Why? 

I asked some other friends soon after. Apparently, they are also not so glued to the ongoing trial any more because “we already have the postscript ready and are just waiting for the verdict so that we can append our postscript”.  

What have been more on my non-Malay friends’ mind were the questions of religious freedom and the New Economic Policy. At first, there were the couple of activist friends who would e-mail to me every shred of literature produced by anyone who showed the Muslims and the Malays as being unreasonable on these two issues. Then I started to get direct questions on these issues from friends and even relative strangers with whom I sat down. How do I answer these questions in a plausible way? This time I will stick only to the first issue. 

Article 11 of our Federal Constitution is often brought up and cases like Lina Joy’s are brought up to prove the lack of freedom to profess, practise and propagate one’s religion. My view is that we have as complete a freedom as is envisaged by Article 11 which, by the way, does not give absolute freedom in every sense. Clause 4 of Article 11, for instance, restricts the propagation of any religious belief among Muslims. Thus, adherents of other religions who evangelise, openly or secretly, among Muslims fall foul of this stricture. But what the punishment is for doing so I do not know, as my limited interest in this field in the past has not brought me to discover any Act of Parliament covering this. Perhaps someone knowledgeable will enlighten us in time. 

I am not aware of any lay authority or Muslim religious affairs department interfering with the way Christians, Buddhists, Hindus, etc, practise their religion unless such practices infringe any general law relating to public order, public health or public morality. This limitation under Clause 5, Article 11, equally applies to Muslims! 

So, what is the general grouse about? I discerned that it used to be – and still remains largely so – about the difficulty of getting land or planning permission for churches or temples to be built, and for cemeteries. If we are referring to government land here, I can vouchsafe that it is an increasingly rare commodity in certain cities and towns, and this is felt even by Muslims who want to build their own places of worship or acquire additional government land for burial.  

In Kampung Gajah, Perak, my family donated a piece of inherited land for building the Sultan Azlan Shah mosque. The Hutan Melintang mosque built decades ago on land donated by my grandfather is now able to expand after I donated a further 2 ½ acres land some years back. We must look to the able among our congregation to solve some of these problems.  

But from my knowledge of the feeling of the Muslims in general, they would rather that other places of worship are not built too close to mosques and surau. Ask them why and the answer would probably be that the bells, serunai, tok-tok or cymbals may disturb their concentration during prayers and the idols may jar their sensibilities. I am sure that followers of other religions generally feel the same way that there should be some distance between different religious places of worship as all want to worship in peace.  

Talking about idols reminds me of the building of that towering statue of Kwan Yin in Penang almost three decades ago. A huge outcry welled up from Penang Muslims, both Malay and non-Malay. A compromise was found that didn’t quite please either side but it helped to calm the situation. 

A more recent controversy was the stop-work order on a similar statue in Kudat that, in spite of having received planning permission, was alleged to be too close to a mosque. But two huge statues of the Buddha in Perak and in Kelantan have not elicited objections even from the serambi Mekah (Mecca veranda) state. Why? Perhaps because of the non-competing locations and, who knows, perhaps because a reclining statue, no matter how long, is not “challenging” compared to a towering idol. 

Talking about a towering challenge and noise disturbances, I remember that the London authorities capped the height of the Regent Park Mosque and the loudness of its azan calls before giving it planning permission. 

As for land for cemeteries, it is a problem for all, even Muslims. Gone are the days when Muslims can elect to be buried in any Muslim cemetery. In Kuala Lumpur, he gets buried where he lived if the local cemetery still has vacant plots or his family would have to beg for a place in a faraway cemetery, or take him back to his kampung cemetery. 

Thus the Ampang Road Cemetery is for those living in the Kampung Baru area; and Bukit Kiara is for those in the surrounding areas. Thank God that many non-Muslims find cremation acceptable, otherwise this would be an even bigger problem with each passing day. In Jakarta, they were contemplating burying Muslims on their feet, so to speak, so that they would occupy minimal land.  

Both my parents and three other close family members lie in the same grave, so my family doesn’t occupy much land in death and I have already instructed my grandson to bury me in my second daughter’s grave in the Ampang Road cemetery or to rebury her with me so that someone else can have her space. We have to be practical here or we’ll end up in hysterics. The Prophet Mohammad said the best grave is an unmarked one, indistinguishable from the area around it. 

Faced with their difficulty in getting land for churches, I find that the Christians have opted for practical solutions. They have turned many shophouses, no less than two in my area alone, into places of worship – a solution most Muslim communities in England resort to. 

As long as they can do this, I do not buy the allegation that they are oppressed in this respect. It would be quite different if they are prevented even from having this alternative. I remember when I was in Manila to accompany Tunku Abdul Rahman for the Maphilindo Summit, there was no Muslim burial ground and our Tunku asked President D. Macapagal to reconsider this policy. I remember Tunku telling us that the President said he would have to give serious thought to that as it was bound to be an unpopular suggestion in his staunchly Catholic city. 

But today I discerned that part of the grouse is about the inequality of official treatment between Islam and the other religions. I think it is unreasonable to “demand” equality of official treatment when the Constitution singles out only Islam as “the religion of the Federation”. The Constitution does not even say what the other religions are! This is part of our social contract. If we challenge this, we lay ourselves open to further challenges from all sides that will unravel our national fabric. 

To the Malays in the years of bargaining leading to Merdeka, few things were more important than to preserve the special place that Islam had had in this land from before British colonisation. Thus the question of religion occupies the third Article of the Constitution, immediately after the name and constituent of the federation (Article 1) and the admission of new territories and the inviolability of state boundaries (Article 2). 

In my humble opinion, in this situation a soft sell by the adherents of other religions may go further than a hard sell – or a “demand”. Unless the Constitution is in their favour, political reality, particularly the Umno/PAS rivalry, will make it difficult for the non-Muslims to successfully pressurise the Muslims leaders. 

 Previous articles of Tun Hanif’s Point of View are available at thestar.com.my/columnists 

Federal Court asks Parliment to settle civil and syariah courts problem

July 26th, 2007
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Basically what the Judge is saying is that the court should only apply the law and not create their own version based on interpretations. In essence, it is passing the buck to the parliment. The ball is in their court now. The legistators must clarify the ambiguities and not say that things are already clear, as they are apt to say.

Justice Abdul Hamid said there would be situations where the civil court would be asked to apply Article 121(1A) of the Federal Constitution to exclude the jurisdiction of the civil court.
“The civil court should not be influenced by such an argument. Clause 1(A) of Article 121 was not introduced for the purpose of ousting the jurisdiction of the civil courts. The question to ask is: Are such laws constitutional in the first place?” he said.

Article 121 (1A) states that civil courts “shall have no jurisdiction in respect of any matter within the jurisdiction of the Syariah courts.”

The Star version: Parliament must resolve tussle

source

By RAPHAEL WONG

PUTRAJAYA: Parliament must resolve the jurisdiction tussle between the civil courts and Syariah courts, which has become more serious over the last two decades, the Federal Court said.

Justice Abdul Hamid Mohamad said that after 50 years, these provisions needed to be reviewed and updated to meet the present circumstances, as the courts’ function was to apply the law, not make or amend it.

“These are not matters that the courts can solve as the courts owe their jurisdiction to statutes.

“It is for the legislature to step in, to decide as a matter of policy what should be the solution and legislate accordingly,” he said.

Justice Abdul Hamid made these remarks in his judgment in an inheritance dispute involving Muslims. His judgment was endorsed by the other two Federal Court judges Justices Arifin Zakaria and Augustine Paul.

Justice Abdul Hamid said the problem arose when the public looked to the court to solve the problem of the legislature and judges unwittingly take upon themselves the responsibility to solve it believing that they were compelled to do so.

“That, in my view, is a mistake. Knowing the inadequacy of the law, it is for the legislature to remedy it, by amendment or by making new laws. It is not the court’s function to try to remedy it,” he said.

He said that it was for legislature to tackle the problem of cases in which some of the issues fall within the jurisdiction of both the civil court and the Syariah Court.

“Neither court can assume jurisdiction over matters that it does not have just because it has jurisdiction over some of the matters arising,” he said.

Justice Abdul Hamid also said until the problem was resolved by legislature, the only way out was if in a case in the civil court where an Islamic law issue arose and fell within the jurisdiction of the Syariah Court, the party raising the issue should file a case there for determination of that specific issue.

He said that decision should then be applied by the civil court in determination of the case.

However, he said this would only apply if both parties were Muslims.

Justice Abdul Hamid said the problem would arise if one of the parties was a non-Muslim. Such an application could not be made to the Syariah Court as he or she would not be able to commence or even put up his or her defence.

“Actually, if laws are made by Parliament and the legislatures of the States are in strict compliance with the Federal (Constitution) List and the State (Constitution) List without any misunderstanding, there should not be any situation where both courts have jurisdiction over the same matter or issue,” he said.

Justice Abdul Hamid said there would be situations where the civil court would be asked to apply Article 121(1A) of the Federal Constitution to exclude the jurisdiction of the civil court.

“The civil court should not be influenced by such an argument. Clause 1(A) of Article 121 was not introduced for the purpose of ousting the jurisdiction of the civil courts. The question to ask is: Are such laws constitutional in the first place?” he said.

Article 121 (1A) states that civil courts “shall have no jurisdiction in respect of any matter within the jurisdiction of the Syariah courts.”

In yesterday’s case the Federal Court unanimously dismissed the appeal of Latifah Mat Zin against a Court of Appeal decision which ruled that the issues of gifts (hibah) and inheritances of Muslims are under the jurisdiction of the Syariah Court.

NST Version: ‘Take it to the civil court’
By : V. Anbalagan
source

PUTRAJAYA: The Federal Court has held that disputes between a Muslim and non-Muslim on family and religious matters should be settled in a civil court.

Judge Datuk Abdul Hamid Mohamad said the civil court was the right forum because non-Muslims could not commence action or appear in syariah courts.

“They can’t be present to defend themselves in the syariah courts.”

He said it was also not the function of the civil courts to review laws passed by parliament and state assemblies.

“The function of the court is to apply the law, not make or amend laws that were not made by the legislature,” he said.

Similarly, it was for the legislature to decide which issues fell under the jurisdiction of the civil court and syariah court.

The judge made these remarks in a 54-page judgment in deciding whether the money in two joint accounts of Datuk Sharibun Wahab and Latifah Mat Zin was subject to the Islamic law hibah (gifts).

Latifah, the third wife of the late Sharibun had claimed that the money was entirely hers as it was a gift.

Rosmawati and Roslinawati, daughters of the second wife of the deceased, claimed that the money belonged to the estate of Sharibun.

The High Court had ruled that the Islamic law of hibah did not apply.

On appeal, the Court of Appeal nullified the decision of the lower court and held that the matter should be heard before the syariah court since both parties were Muslims.

Hamid, who sat with judges Datuk Arifin Zakaria and Datuk S. Augustine Paul dismissed the appeal by Latifah.

Their decision was unanimous.

Hamid said both parties should go to the syariah court.

The judge said he was confronted again by the issue of conflict of jurisdiction between civil and syariah courts, a problem that arose and had become more serious over the last two decades.

“Both courts have to grapple with this problem. While a judgment settles the case before the court, it creates other problems in subsequent cases.”

Hamid said he was attempting to take a fresh look at the jurisdiction issue from a broad perspective since the federal constitution was now 50 years old.

The judge also reviewed 46 other judgments from 1970 to last year.

Hamid said there must be laws to vest jurisdiction in the High Court and the syariah court.

“Without enacted laws, there is no jurisdiction by both courts. This is because Article 121 (1A) only applies where there is law enacted to give jurisdiction to the courts.”

Hamid said that the legislative lists — what laws parliament and the state assemblies could pass — in the constitution only set out the areas in which laws could be made.

He said the Federal Court, the Court of Appeal and the High Court were creations of the constitution but that was not the case for syariah courts.

“In fact, the position of the syariah court is similar to the Sessions court and magistrate’s court. The constitution refers to them as inferior courts.”

Hamid said that it was for the state legislature to determine the jurisdiction of the syariah court on matters that had been mentioned in the state list.

“The syariah courts will have no jurisdiction if the the state legislature did not pass an enactment to give them the power,” he said.

Counsel Malik Imtiaz Sarwar, who appeared for Latifah, told reporters later that the judgment was remarkable as the judge clarified many of the ambiguities that caused many controversial cases in the last 10 years.

“It is also a strong statement on the supremacy of the constitution.”
Latifah claimed that the RM3mil held in joint accounts with her late husband Datuk Sharibun Wahab in two banks were intended to be given as hibah (gifts) to her.

Two daughters from a previous marriage, Rosmawati and Roslinawati Sharibun, claimed that they were beneficiaries to their father’s estate in accordance with Syariah law.