Posts Tagged ‘MIC’

NEWS:Acquire knowledge and embrace change, Indian youths advised

April 2nd, 2007
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Acquire knowledge and embrace change, Indian youths advised

http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/2/nation/17323685&sec=nation

MENTAKAB: MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu has advised Indian youths to give their undivided support to activities carried out by the party which are aimed at building a better future for the community. 

He said the Indians had been in Malaysia for more than 140 years and, during that period, had become skilled labourers in estates as well as workers in road construction. 

“But if youths do not think rationally and find it hard to embrace physical and mental change, then the aspirations of the Government and the MIC to help them will fail,” he said at a religious festival at the Sri Marathandavar Temple here yesterday. 

Hence, the Works Minister called on Indian youths to emphasise efforts to give added value to their life by acquiring knowledge to improve themselves. 

“The MIC always gives high commitment to education as can be seen from the various initiatives taken by the party,” he added. 

He said they included the establishment of the Asian Institute of Medicine, Science and Technology (AIMST) in Semeling, Kedah, which is capable of training 150 medical and dental doctors every year; and the Tafe College in Seremban, Negri Sembilan, which had so far produced more than 22,000 graduates. – Bernama  

Set up Constitutional Court for religious issues

April 2nd, 2007
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ppp, mic, mca tarak cakap apa-apa kah?
 
saw the interview in tv3 news yesterday. the gerakan leader said that since about 40% of malaysian are not muslims, the stand taken by the courts is a cause for concern. he said that “we demand rather we request”! strong words indeed…
 
 
 

Gerakan: Set up Constitutional Court for religious issues

http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/2/nation/17322497&sec=nation

KUALA LUMPUR: Gerakan has called for the setting up of a special Constitutional Court to deal with “various grey issues.” 

It said this was in view of the increasing number of cases affecting the religious, family and basic human rights of non-Muslims. 

This was one the resolutions passed by the Federal Territory Gerakan convention yesterday. 

FT Gerakan chairman Datuk Dr Tan Kee Kwong, who also heads the partyÂ’s religious bureau at the national level, said many non-Muslims now felt that their rights were gradually being eroded, “so something must be done to correct this.” 

“The problem exists. Everybody knows that,” he said. 

Dr Tan, who is the Segambut MP, said non-Muslims should never be subjected to the Syariah Court, adding that this was never the original intention of the Islamic court. 

He said the special Constitutional Court could be a way to finding a permanent solution to inter-religious problems which were bound to crop up from time to time. 

“The Government must be brave enough to tackle this problem now before things get worse,” he said. 

There was also a resolution calling for the removal of Datuk Seri Harussani Zakaria as the Perak Mufti over the spreading a baseless SMS (alleging that Datuk Azhar Mansor had converted out of Islam) some months ago. 

Gerakan secretary-general Datuk Seri Chia Kwang Chye, who was also at the press conference, said that there should be understanding by all parties when dealing with religious issues. 

He noted that while the country was not on the brink of a crisis on inter-religious issues, “we should resolve them before they do.” 

The proposed special Constitutional Court, he said, could be an institutional solution in dealing with such problems. 

In any case, such a court would take a year or two to set up, he said, adding that it was good for any Government with forward planning to consider any suggestion.

1st Malaysian Indian IT Conference 2007 – review

March 29th, 2007
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Hi all,

As you all may know, MIC and MDEC jointly organised the 1st Malaysian Indian IT Conference yesterday, 26th March 2007 at PWTC. The event also marked the launch of MIC’s Malaysian Indian Technology and Innovation Bureau (MITIB – www.mitib.net).

Registration began at about 8.15am. There were few booths set up outside the hall for the sponsors – Murawa, Celcom, Aptech, Nestle. The event began slightly late, I think at 9.20am. By then, there were about 1000 participants, nearly double the earlier estimates. Many students/youths were there, as was businessmen, IT professionals, those interested in IT, MIC members, and even insurance agents :). Dato Veerasingam as organising chairman gave the opening speech followed by Datuk Seri Samy Vellu, and then keynote address by Dato Sri Jamaluddin Jarjis (MOSTI Minister). The Minister held an impromptu Q and A session, before he launched MITIB and the conference. One of the hot question was why “bumiputra status” was needed when want to register company. The minister managed to evade by citing that competition is now at global level and so on. Then there was a surprise birthday cake presentation from him to Datuk Seri Samy Vellu. The participant sang “Happy Birthday” while Datuk Seri cut the cake. Following that there were 3 MoU exchanged between various local IT companies and Mimos. Tea break and press conference were next.

The conference continued after tea break with 2 keynote speakers. Sadly, about 10% of the crowd had dissappeared when Dato Seri Samy Vellu left, probably MIC members. The first speaker was Mr Badlisham – CEO of MDEC. He spoke on the role of MDEC, the various grants available, and how MDEC can help IT ventures. This was followed by, (in my opinion, the best part of the conference), a speech by Mohandas Pai of Infosys India. His topic was the IT Revolution in India and how Malaysia (and Malaysian Indians) can learn, adapt and use the strategy implemented by the Indians. His speech was full of facts and figures, and he captivated the audience well. However, those not fluent in English would have had some problem understanding. Among the points mentioned were establishing excellent education centers, introducing meritocracy, allowing tax breaks, inviting MNC to set-up in Malaysia, provide role models in IT for Indian.

By the way, there was one question from the floor about why ATM machines does not have Tamil language option. As expected, Dato Veerasingam declined to answer.

After lunch, the event continued with speeches by the persons below. About 50% of the participants were still around.

– Azlin Alias (MTDC) – focused on types of funds available at MTDC and its role

– Ms Janice (MSC) – focused on funds available at MSC Technopreneur Development Programs

– Anand Sudarshan (Manipal) – Manipal’s role in education

– Mr Vignesh (Jobstreet) – current job situation, problems getting employment, what employers want etc.

– Mr Kumaran (CISCO) – his rise in IT industry, background on Cisco, Cisco certification

– Mr David Kuchommen (InSyncro) – problems with starting a own business and hurdles of being entrepreneur

– Mr Leo (Scicom) – opportunities in BPO, Call Centers

– Mr Jacques de Villiers (QuickTrak) – new technology using DSS (radio frequency) communication

One common theme was advice to students to master English, improve on people and communication skills, and to get employed even if salary is low so that can gain experience.

Finally, Dato Vijay Eswaran of QI international – known for Questnet (and gold coin?) and other businesses came on to the stage followed by another 30 plus entourage. He was personally introduced by Dato Veerasingam. We had a video on him before he began his speech. Dato Vijay talked about Information Technology, relating to ancient India. He covered a little his experiences, his business and so on.

The event ended with a closing remarks by Dato Veerasingam in which he mentioned that MIC will come out with a book that highlights Indian ICT giants to be a role model to current young generation. The books will be distributed to schools and hopes that the student will emulate the successful ICT entrepreneurs.

The event ended with tea at about 5.45pm.

Overall, I feel it was a good effort, being a first for the newly launched MITIB. However, the conference covered too wide an area – entrepreneurs, students, employees etc. Perhaps they should run parallel sessions in the future. I did not hear much about emerging technologies, and the coverage on the funds was vague, with the speakers keep on repeating about “it is all on the website”. Personally, I enjoyed the talk by Mr Mohandas, Mr Kumaran, Mr David, and Mr Leo. Others were average. There were some problems with lighting syncronisation, video projection etc, which indicates lack of rehearsal or miscommunication between the organising team members.

NEWS:Incentive for Tamil schools with many top scorers

February 12th, 2007
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Good incentive indeed. What worries is the tendency to focus on A scorers to the extent that the under achievers and near-illiterates are often demoted to be invisible in the school.

Poobalan @ Starbucks The Mall

Incentive for Tamil schools with many top scorers

KUALA LUMPUR: Tamil schools with more than 10 pupils scoring 7As in the UPSR examination this year will get RM500 per pupil as an incentive to produce more high scorers.

This incentive is for the school and is separate from the RM500 given directly to each pupil who scores 7As in the UPSR every year, said MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu after presenting the cash to 580 pupils who scored 7As last year.

He said the MIC-owned Maju Institute of Educational Development (MIED) would give out the incentive for the schools.

He said a school which had 10 pupils scoring 7As would get RM5,000, which could be used to buy additional revision books for those sitting for the UPSR in the future.

Previously, only the three schools with the highest number of excellent pupils were given monetary reward, but from next year the incentive would be extended to all schools with more than 10 excellent scorers

.

For excellent results: Samy Vellu handing over a trophy to one of the top pupils, Darshini Thevi, as MIED chief executive Chitrakala Vasu looks on in Kuala Lumpur on Sunday.

Five chosen as best pupils – N. Darshini Thevi (SJKT Ladang Semenyih, Selangor), M. Divya Darsiny (SJKT Taman Tun Aminah, Johor), S. Rajeswary (SJKT St Theresa Convent, Taiping, Perak), A. Thenmoli (SJKT Kroh, Perak) and G. Shanmugan (SJKT Mentakab, Pahang) – received RM1,000 each.

The three best schools, all from Johor, were SJKT Ladang Kulai Besar (24 pupils), SJKT Taman Tun Aminah, Skudai, (23) and SJKT Jalan Haji Manan (21).