Posts Tagged ‘MIC’

Up to Pandithan to merge IPF with MIC

May 13th, 2007
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SAMY: Up to Pandithan to merge IPF with MIC BERNAMA
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Sunday/NewsBreak/20070513175236/Article/index_html
KUALA LUMPUR, SUN:
MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said today it is up to Indian Progressive Front (IPF) president Datuk M.G. Pandithan to merge his party with the MIC.
Samy Vellu said he had told Pandithan that he was open to any proposal in the interest of the Indian community.
“It’s up to him to do…I told him earlier, no objection to any proposal,” he told reporters after the first session of the 61st MIC general assembly debate at the Putra World Trade Centre (PWTC) here today.
About 1,400 delegates attended the two-day assembly which ended today.
Yesterday, Pandithan attended the assembly after almost 20 years. The enmity between Samy Vellu and Pandithan began in 1988 when Pandithan, then MIC vice-president, was issued a show-cause letter for allegedly practising caste-oriented politics.
In August 1990, Pandithan formed the IPF. Previously, IPF applied to join Barisan Nasional (BN) but was unsuccessful due to MIC’s objection.
Both leaders met again at the Ijok by-election campaign last month after many years and they promised to work together in the larger interest of the Indian community.

Pandithan is back after two decades

May 13th, 2007
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Pandithan is back after two decades
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/5/13/nation/17715532&sec=nation
KUALA LUMPUR: The last time Datuk M.G. Pandithan attended the MIC general assembly was 20 years ago.
But it seems that much water has passed under the bridge for the 67-year-old Indian Progressive Front (IPF) president and his arch-enemy, MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu.
Pandithan attended the MIC general assembly at the Putra World Trade Centre here yesterday and was accorded VIP status as he sat on the stage among leaders of Barisan Nasional component parties.
He later told reporters that he has a surprise announcement that he would make next month.
Pandithan said he attended the assembly at the invitation of Samy Vellu.
“I remember attending the MIC general assembly as a vice-president when it was held in Malacca and now I am here as an invited guest,” he said, adding that he felt “normal but happy” about attending the assembly.
In his speech, Samy Vellu acknowledged Pandithan’s presence saying “my good friend Pandithan is here”.
“His presence here has in fact made me younger. This heralds a new era,” he said.
Their relationship turned bitter after Pandithan was sacked for bringing a “coffin” to the MIC headquarters in 1981.

MIC Assembly – 28,000 microbusiness by Indians are blacklisted

May 13th, 2007
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61st MIC General Assembly: Party to help Indian traders By : Shamini Darshni, Ranjeetha Pakiam and R. Yasothai
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Sunday/National/20070513074901/Article/index_html
A WHOPPING 70 per cent or 28,000 of micro-businesses owned by Indians have been blacklisted.
MIC vice-president Tan Sri Dr K. S. Nijhar said there were 400,000 micro-businesses in the country and of this, 40,000 were run by Indians.
“Of the 12,000 who were not blacklisted, 4,000 do not have a single document — no registration, premises, licence or bank account. If I told the banks this, these businesses would not have got one sen,” he told delegates.
Nijhar was called up by MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu to explain how many did not settle outstanding loans, especially from a RM40 million loan that MIC signed for.
Nijhar seems to have an idea now because the party’s economic bureau, which he heads, is negotiating with several banks for a loan. “Although negotiations are still on-going, they (the banks) have agreed to set aside RM100 million to help 4,000 eligible businesses.”
“A total of RM2 million has been approved for micro-credit businesses located in Perlis, Penang, Subang and elsewhere,” he said.
The bureau, he added, was also discussing with the banks to set up “infancy accounts” for the “infant businesses”.
Nijhar said “infancy accounts” would be a method of solving the problem because even those who were not eligible for loans could be tested.

Indians urged to pool resources

May 13th, 2007
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issues – provide opportunity to own house, and improve spm/stpm results. also, get professionals and other NGOs to work with MIC to improve community.
Indians urged to pool resources
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/5/13/nation/17710249&sec=nation
KUALA LUMPUR: The Indian community needs to group its resources through self-help and self-reliance to compete with the other races in the economic sector.
MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said the many qualified professionals and voluntary organisations should play an effective role to benefit the community.
“We must build effective linkages, foster closer partnerships and collaborative ventures to create awareness on human potential, promote creativity and social change,” he said in his speech at the MIC general assembly yesterday.
Samy Vellu said the party appreciated the efforts of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi in creating more Indian businessmen.
“His efforts will help the Indian community improve its economic position and be able to compete with the other races,” he said.
Samy Vellu urged MIC leaders to go to the ground and identify those in need of housing and ensure that low-income families had access to basic housing facilities.
“I call this a house-owning democracy which enables each family to own at least one house. Awareness about access to housing loans and schemes will definitely assist the community to increase its wealth through property ownership,” he said.
He said MIC representatives in the local authorities must play an effective role in addressing the needs and concerns of the Indian community.
“These representatives must encourage the local authorities to enable Indian entrepreneurs to participate in economic activities through business licences, service contracts and projects.
“They must also lobby within the local authorities for adequate facilities such as community halls and recreational centres,” he said.
On education, Samy Vellu said the performance of Indian students, especially in the SPM, has not been encouraging, with 50% of them unable to get credits in Bahasa Melayu and English.
“We have also found that only 25% of the Indian students who complete SPM continue into STPM and, of that, only 14% get CPGA3.0 and above.
“We need more Indian students to be successful in the SPM and STPM to see a marked change in their employment and income,” he said.
Samy Vellu said Malaysian Indian families must encourage their children to strive hard and ensure that at least two of their children pursue higher education.

National Plan on Unity and Integration – What’s Missing

May 13th, 2007
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Below are the important points in the Plan launched yesterday. Let’s see what’s missing?
– places of worship for the second class citizens not mentioned – plan to implemented by ministries and govt agencies – which are 90% of one race. How can it be successful when the implementors are not well balanced in terms of racial composition? Should be implemented by independent commission. – most programs are already in place for long time, so nothing new.
Positive inputs: – addition of Sabah/Sarawak culture and elements. more integration with them – proposal of teaching of language of major race groups in school
anything to add?

Spotlight: Breaking down the barriers By : ELIZABETH JOHN, TAN CHOE CHOE and R. YASOTHAI
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Sunday/National/20070513075342/Article/index_html
Malaysians have got their work cut out for them when it comes to making the National Unity and Integration Action Plan happen, write ELIZABETH JOHN, TAN CHOE CHOE and R. YASOTHAI
Something sweeter than an ice-cream is in the offing. The plan is an attempt to break down barriers between races and close the divide among regions in Malaysia.
FROM classroom to concert hall, there will be a single recurring theme over the next four years — national unity.
It will appear in schools, in subjects about Malaysia’s many cultures and customs. It will be clear in the look and content of television and radio programmes.
And it will be fostered through the efforts of 18 ministries, state governments and 22 public agencies up to the year 2010. This is the National Unity and Integration Action Plan, which took effect after the cabinet approved it in May last year.
The ambitious plan is an attempt to break down the barriers between races, Malaysians in the penisula and Sabah and Sarawak, and close the divide among regions in the peninsula It recommends almost 200 strategies and lists hundreds of activities that agencies could implement.
The most commonly recommended activities for all ministries and agencies are old favourites — talks, forums and campaigns.
These are employed for every purpose from creating a better understanding of cultures to stressing the importance of national unity.
Much of the plan’s focus is on increasing the public’s knowledge and appreciation of cultures and customs, the federal constitution and the Rukun Negara.
Many of the programmes, like the Social Action Master Plan and Local Agenda 21, have been in place for years.
The action plan now expects agencies to get serious about making them work and bring people together.
Some like the Human Resources Ministry will basically continue doing what they have been all the while, which is creating a workforce responsive to changes and helping to maintain harmonious relations between employers and employees.
But many new ideas have also been put forward and they include inter-faith dialogues, social impact assessments of government policies and educating parents and teachers on multi-racialism.
The lead agency — the National Unity and Integration Department — bears the biggest burden under the plan.
It will have to realise a vastly diverse set of programmes ranging from food festivals to creating role models in society.
Some of its work will overlap with those of the Education, Higher Education, Information and Culture, Arts and Heritage ministries.
Where it differs the most from other agencies is in its focus on fostering neighbourliness.
It will set up a task force to identify local issues and find solutions, hold direct dialogue with communities and launch a “My Neighbour, My Family” campaign.
The department will expand and increase volunteer neighbourhood patrol schemes to help fight crime in housing areas nationwide.
All these are aspects of the 2006-2010 Rukun Tetangga Action Plan meant to complement the unity plan. Under the action plan that will ring up a bill of RM257 million over five years, the department proposes to:
• Triple the number of volunteer patrol schemes, from 498 last August, to 1,700 in 2010.
• Increase the number of Rukun Tetangga (RT) areas by 200 a year. Till last August, there were 3,272 RT areas in the country.
• Raise the allocation for each RT to RM10,200 — close to double of what it has been given so far.
• Equip community and RT leaders with mediation skills to help them resolve problems.
• Get communities to share information and grow closer by expanding the RT Net programme.
• Set up new economic opportunities at the RT level.
• Get RTs to host exchange students from other states.
• Build new activity centres, unity complexes and RT centres.
The plan also recommends practical strategies like setting up more federal government agency branches in districts and standardising the administration system in the Peninsular Malaysia and Sabah and Sarawak.
Ministries are also expected to focus development in margi-nalised districts and increase the income sources for those in the rural areas to close the income gap.
It has several agencies working on an early detection system for conflicts and discourages the setting up of organisations that champion only one race or religion to the detriment of national unity.
Some actions have also been proposed to ensure companies’ policies and programmes contain elements of national unity and all races are employed in every field of work.