Posts Tagged ‘MIC’

BN parties just doing their job

May 13th, 2007
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BN parties just doing their job
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/5/13/nation/17715895&sec=nation
By A. LETCHUMANAN, JANE RITIKOS and PARVEEN KAUR GILL newsdesk@thestar.com.my
KUALA LUMPUR: There can be “friendly competition” among Barisan Nasional component parties in looking after the interests of their own communities as long as they consider the aspirations of others and are not selfish and extremists.
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said he was sincerely happy that party leaders took care of their own race’s interests, as it was the Government’s aim to ensure that no race lagged behind.
“I believe they are afraid of lagging behind, that their interests are not considered and they are sidelined, so they take steps to strengthen their communities.
“It would appear as if there is a competition among us, as if we only want to develop our own race. There may be those who are worried and wonder what is going to happen if all are just interested in their own race, that may be the view of outsiders,” he told delegates at the MIC 61st general assembly here yesterday.
Abdullah, however, said that people should not be worried if leaders strived to look after the interests of their communities but were conscious they had a common destiny and struggle for the nation’s future.
“In my good relationship with the party leaders, listening to them and looking at their attitude when we discuss racial, inter-racial and religious matters in the Cabinet, I assure you that we all discuss them responsibly to ensure that harmony and mutual respect among the people are maintained,” he said.
He said Malaysia and its people had always been safe because all races advanced together in the pursuit for progress.
“It is a friendly competition to do the best and offer the best that we can, like what we wish for our children. This competition will bring good progress for everyone. But don’t be selfish or extremist in the ways we do things, in the policies we pursue and strategies we develop.
“Think of others too because we don’t live just for ourselves,” he said.
“We are all in the same ship and if the ship leaks, we will all sink,” he said, adding that this must be taught to the younger generation who are full of ideas and idealism.
“We don’t want people who are clever but extreme in their thinking, who act without considering others or have religious or racial extremism,” he added.
Abdullah said there was an important lesson to be drawn from the recent Ijok by-election. He said that while many of the electorates had complained about the past state assemblyman, they still voted for the MIC candidate.
This was because they were confident of the party, Barisan and the candidate’s capabilities.

61st MIC General Assembly – NST version

May 13th, 2007
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61st MIC General Assembly: Helping Indians get ahead is MIC’s prime concern By : Shamini Darshni, Ranjeetha Pakiam and R. Yasothai
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Sunday/National/20070513074724/Article/index_html
THE poor track record of Indian students in national examinations must be looked into quickly. They must be encouraged to continue their studies in technical institutions where they can learn saleable skills.
MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said they should be encouraged to take certificate or diploma courses in professional fields like healthcare and education or join the police force after the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia.
“They can be turned into skilled workers,” he said.
About half the Indian students who sit the SPM do not get credits in Bahasa Melayu or English. Only a quarter of those go on to take the Sijil Tinggi Persekolahan Malaysia (STPM).
“We must change this trend. We need more Indian students to perform better in the SPM and STPM in order to see a change in occupation and income trends,” he said. Speaking at the 61st MIC general assembly at the Putra World Trade Centre in Kuala Lumpur yesterday, he outlined strategies to address issues in the Indian community over the next 50 years.
He said more attention must be given to pre-school s, primary and secondary schools.
He also said, without elaborating, that over the next few years, MIC would send the brightest Indian youths to top universities such as Oxford and Cambridge in Britain, and Harvard or Yale in the United States.
Institutions initiated by the MIC, like Maju Institute of Educational Development, TAFE College and the Asian Institute of Medicine, Science and Technology, must become globally competitive, he added.
On economic development, Samy Vellu said Indian businesses should be encouraged to become public-listed entities and venture into global markets.
“As a political party, we can create the policy framework and provide access to assistance but ultimately it must be people themselves who take up the challenges.”
He also said the party was on the lookout for young and capable leaders who could overcome racial politics and act as effective ambassadors in the Barisan Nasional spirit.
“This is our challenge in guiding the younger generation of politicians, that they will truly be able to recognise and appreciate the strength of the different races.
“For the next 50 years, the leaders we seek must be brave enough to make changes and have goals not only in political thinking but also in political doing,” he said.
MIC leaders must go to the ground and identify those in need of homes and ensure that low-income families have access to basic but good housing, he said.
“I call this ‘house owning democracy’ as it enables each family to own at least one house.
“Awareness of access to housing loans and housing schemes will definitely assist the Indian community to increase their wealth through property ownership,” he said.
MIC representatives, he said, must lobby their local authorities for adequate facilities, such as community halls and recreational facilities.
The local representatives could also network with government agencies to organise and fund services to strengthen community cohesion and reduce crime and anti-social behaviour, he added.
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, who delivered the official address, remarked that Samy Vellu’s speech was different from the previous years as it contained concrete strategies to address issues plaguing the Indian community.
The general assembly also took the time to honour Datin Paduka Jaya Parthiban for her contributions to the party. She received a party medal from the prime minister. She also received the yellow shawl of honour.
On allegations that some state assemblymen had been applying for land under the MIC banner but ended up using the land for their own purposes, Samy Vellu said state assemblymen found guilty of misusing their position to get land would not be allowed to stand in the next general election.

MIC will get rid of land-grabbing reps

May 13th, 2007
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MIC will get rid of land-grabbing reps
KUALA LUMPUR: MIC state assemblymen found to have applied for government land for themselves will be sacked.
MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said such errant assemblymen can also say goodbye to a re-nomination for the general election.
“I don’t want to hear state assemblymen applying for land and sub-dividing it for their relatives,” he warned delegates at the MIC general assembly yesterday.
“They should identify vacant government land and propose to the state government to provide housing for the poor in their areas.”
Samy Vellu said he was committed to streamlining the party to ensure that the problems of the community were addressed in a proper manner.
“For some, life will be hard. I want to do many things within a short period. In fact, I am now fighting for time,” he said.
He said he would focus on changing the leadership at the branches first before going to the divisions, state leadership and the Central Working Committee.
“We will become an effective party, with everyone working on the dot, if the changes are put in place,” he said.
Samy Vellu said the party already had RM28mil in the coffers for the construction of a 26-storey building in Damansara Utama which would house its headquarters.
A bridge linking the headquarters with the North-South Expressway would also be built.
“A well-wisher has promised to donate RM10mil,” he said.
In jest, Samy Vellu said the money for the building came from the three million shares which the Opposition alleged he had taken in the 1990s.
Former deputy prime minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim and a local Tamil daily had alleged that Samy Vellu grabbed the shares meant for the Indian community.

Review decision on conference – Council of Churches

May 12th, 2007
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Review decision on conference
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/5/12/nation/17707568&sec=nation
By SHAILA KOSHY koshy@thestar.com.my
KUALA LUMPUR: The Council of Churches Malaysia (CCM) has appealed to the Government to review the withdrawal of its support for the Building Bridges seminar that had been scheduled for this week.
Its general secretary Rev Dr Hermen Shastri said the organisers at the London office of the Archbishop of Canterbury had not been given any reason.
“They received formal word from the authorities here that support had been withdrawn, barely three weeks before the scheduled dates (May 7-11).
“In respect to the Government, the organisers felt it wise to cancel the seminar,” he said in urging the Government to offer an alternative date for holding the conference here.
The seminar was to coincide with the first visit of the Archbishop, Dr Rowan Williams, to the Anglican Church here recently.
Responding to a May 10 report on the cancellation of the seminar in the Times of London, Rev Shastri said the Archbishop’s office for Interfaith Relations had received a warm reception from the Prime Minister’s office and other Islamic institutions during preparations a year ago.
“The London office received a formal letter welcoming such a seminar which would have brought together over 30 world renowned Islamic and Christian scholars and theologians to deliberate under the theme Humanity in Context: Christian and Muslim Perspectives on Being Human.”
In his statement yesterday, Rev Shastri said the CCM and other Islamic institutions had been approached to host mini-seminars in which Muslim and Christian participants could interact with locals on the deliberations of the seminar.
Building Bridges seminars have been held in London, New York, Qatar and Sarajevo, and the organisers were excited at meeting in Malaysia, as the context would provide the international scholars exposure to the achievements of Malaysia in encouraging inter-faith dialogue at the national and international levels, he said.
He said the CCM had hoped that such a seminar would go a long way in pursuing the path of respectful dialogue and strengthening Malaysia’s claim of being a viable venue to host such global inter-faith dialogues.

Maybank should always be fair and just to all

May 12th, 2007
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“Fair and Just” as in universal type or slanted type? So what will cabinet do?
UMNO and those sticking to prevent equal opportunity are asking Maybank to enforce equity which will benefit Malays (well, no proof all bumis benefit, the original bumis are still deprived of development) and for all those with mixed parentage who cling on to the bumi status as a means of unfair competitive advantage. A blatant misuse of the status, i would say. And what equity? any tom dick and harry can calculate as he/she likes and say equity is 5%, 10%, 20%, 42%, or even 100%. Can we just believe it?
The rest of malaysia says Maybank’s action is wrong.
Cabinet can:
1. continue its stand – and suffer from selfish Malays’ condemnation 2. Revoke and allow maybank to do as it like – which is slap in the face and insult to all right thinking and mature malaysians. 3. maintain status quo, but maybank will enforce the ruling silently with support from UMNO and others.
Why this equity anyway? So that the chinese/indian/others can work hard and the selected few get free money? If you are good, business will come to you. if you are not, well… you need a tongkat, of course…to hide the weakness and inability.
Better if Maybank just say that will allow only 100% Malay law firms. Let’s see how many firms will get selected. You want to select your cronies, “give chance”, “share the economic pie”, and suffer possible loss due to legal incompetence? What would the shareholders say? We as shareholders only want the highest returns and not some flimsy rules which hinder from hiring the best.
From all the replies in the malay dailies, not a single comment touched on the excellent capabilities of their lawyers. Why? Maybe such things don’t exist? So, you want companies to pay for substandard service?


PM: Maybank must be fair to all
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/5/12/nation/17708737&sec=nation
KUALA LUMPUR: Maybank should always be “fair and just” to all, said Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.
The Prime Minister said the bank’s requirement that legal firms dealing with them must have a bumiputra partner with at least a 50% stake was never a government directive.
“It was their own internal administrative policy,” he said.
Following criticisms, the country’s biggest bank reversed this internal guideline and said it would elect its panel of lawyers based on efficiency, performance and merit, and not ethnic composition.
However, a Malay newspaper reported yesterday that Malay intellectuals were asking for Maybank to retain the 50% bumiputra stake requirement.
Asked about this, Abdullah, who is also Finance Minister, said there was “no need to ask Maybank to do this and that.”
“They know what is needed,” he added.
On Wednesday, the Cabinet directed Maybank, which is the country’s largest financial group, to withdraw its requirement following criticism from various groups including the MCA, Bar Council and the Associated Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
The groups had said the guidelines were discriminatory and that selection of law firms should be on merit and not ethnic composition.
MCA president Datuk Seri Ong Ka Ting said the Cabinet discussed the issue and considered the matter resolved.
On Thursday, Umno Youth chief Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein Onn said the Maybank issue should be a lesson to all Malaysians as the country was a multiracial one where a small thing could become sensitive.
Meanwhile, AmBank Group announced that all letters sent out to legal firms that stipulated the requirement of bumiputra equity participation had been withdrawn.
“We would also like to apologise for any misunderstanding caused by the letters which were issued over the last few days,” it said.
AmBank was also criticised for sending out letters to law firms requiring them to have a bumiputra partner.
Yesterday, Perak Malay Chamber of Commerce youth chairman Saiful Adli Mohd Arshad said the chamber fully supported Maybank’s requirement because it would help increase bumiputra equity, especially among professionals.
Catrade Sdn Bhd chief executive officer Datuk IIyas Mohamed said the Cabinet directive appeared to be inconsistent with its own policy of assisting Malays in getting their share in the distribution of the nation’s wealth.