Posts Tagged ‘MIC’

MIC Saravanan asks for PSD scholarship quota

June 4th, 2008
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Before I go into Saravanan’s proposal, lets look at the statistics – only 34 Indians got the scholarship first, before being increased to 78. There are 180 appeals pending.

Now, why would PSD want to provide quota for the Indian community? Then, others like the Orang Asli, Kadazan, Bajau, Baba Nyonya, etc. will start demanding their part from the “bumiputra” category. This will erode the portion and break up the quota further, and may deprive more Malays of their previously easily obtained scholarships.

Secondly, there should some basis for asking 250 places for the community. Is there any proof that we have 250 top achievers year after year that should be getting scholarship? Is 250 derived from some sort of formula based on Einstenian calculation?

However I agree that interview component of the scholarship award is highly subjective and may be subject to manipulation.

Instead of asking for quota, Saravanan should ask for transparency, a well represented board of interviewers, an increase in scholarship amount or a more stringent criteria.


KUALA LUMPUR: The government must not lump Indians in the non-Bumiputera category, but fix the number of Public Service Department (PSD) scholarships for the community, MIC information chief Datuk M. Saravanan said yesterday.
He said under the present system, of the 2,000 PSD scholarships awarded annually, 55 per cent was allocated for Bumiputeras and the remaining 45 per cent for non-Bumiputeras.”Out of the 900 PSD scholarships for non-Bumiputeras, Indians initially received only 34, which was then increased to 70. We are now awaiting the results of about 180 appeal cases.”The Indians are already backward in terms of education, but yet we have to compete with all the other non-Bumis. The government should allocate, on an annual basis, 250 PSD scholarships for Indians,” Saravanan, who is also Federal Territories Deputy Minister, said.

“The current selection system is also flawed. The exam results constitute 70 per cent of the eligibility marks for the PSD scholarships. The rest is made up of the interview and such, which is very subjective.
“The people want transparency. If a student is the best, then he or she must be eligible for the scholarship. Now, we have students who have scored excellent marks but turned down by the PSD on the pretext that they failed in the interview.

“That half-an-hour interview decides a student’s fate. It might have taken students five years or more to obtain excellent results. Is that fair? It is not a level playing field.” – Bernama

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Giat Mara and Insken Indian grads urged to apply TEKUN loan

June 4th, 2008
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Its a bad statistic indeed if only 10 out of 300 students (3.3%) applied for the loan scheme. What could be the reasons?

– not interested?

– don’t know how/where/when/why?

– loan rules too strict/rigid?

MIC can’t be faulted here unless they did not provide awareness or proper information to the students.

RM3 million / 300 students is averaging  RM10000 per graduate, which is quite a substantial amount to start small business like food stall or similar business that require less capital and investment in machineries/tools.


Only 10 of the 300 Indian students who graduated from the Giat Mara centres and National Entrepreneurship Institute (Insken) last year have applied for business loans under the Young Indian Entrepreneurs Loan Scheme run by Tekun Foundation, says MIC President Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu.
He urged the remaining 290 students to apply for the loan from Tekun or the National Foundation for Economic Fund Group under the Entrepreneur and Cooperative Development Ministry.

“Yayasan Tekun has allocated RM3 million to be disbursed as business loans for graduates of Pusat Giat Mara and Insken,” he said in a statement today.

He said the Tekun Foundation decided to issue business loans to Indian students from Giat Mara centres and Insken following discussions between the foundation and the Social Strategic Foundation (YSS), MICs social arm, last year.

Samy Vellu said although the Tekun Foundation was meant for Bumiputera entrepreneurs, its management decided to open its business loans for Indians through the help of the then Entrepreneur Development Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz.
He said qualified Indians engaged in small-and medium-scale businesses can apply for the loan to start or to sustain and expand their businesses, ranging from small cottage to modern technological industries, food, agriculture, manufacturing and handicraft for domestic and foreign markets.

Enterprising young Indian entrepreneurs can contact YSS at Level 5, Menara Manickavasagam, at No 1, Jalan Rahmat, 50350 Kuala Lumpur, telephone (03) 4041-5958 or Fax (03) 4041-5681.

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Samy fires first salvo via show cause letter to challenger

June 3rd, 2008
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Looks like no time is wasted after Alex announced his intention to stand for presidency. Alex is issued with the show cause letter. Let the battle begin!


KLANG: Barely a day after he announced that he plans to run for the MIC presidency, Klang division chief Alex Thiagarasan received a show-cause letter for acting in a manner detrimental to the party yesterday. Thiagarasan said he had 14 days to explain to the party disciplinary committee why action should not be taken against him. He said at least seven branch chairmen had also received show-cause letters asking them to explain their reasons for supporting him.
The letter from the committee stated that a complaint had been received about an article in a Tamil daily on May 25, in which Thiagarasan had said party president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu had misappropriated Telekom shares allocated by the government, as well as government funds allocated for Tafe College and the Asian Institute of Medicine, Science and Technology.

The letter also noted that in an article in the New Straits Times, Thiagarasan had said Samy Vellu was not an asset to the MIC or Barisan Nasional. The committee also said it had received a complaint that Thiagarasan had not remitted all of the funds collected by the division for the new MIC headquarters building fund.

“This is typical of Samy Vellu. He gets rid of anyone who is a threat to his leadership,” Thiagarasan said. “This proves that nothing has changed in the MIC, despite its so-called re-branding exercise.”

On the money for the building fund, Thiagarasan said the division had unanimously agreed during its annual general meeting last month that it would be returned to all branch chairmen. So far RM30,000 of the RM37,000 collected had been returned. » Read more: Samy fires first salvo via show cause letter to challenger

Fight for presidency

June 2nd, 2008
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After condemning his boss, and subsequently making a police report on Samy, Alex ups the ante by openly declaring his intention to challenge the president for the throne.

However, history has shown that challengers disappear from politics, except Dato Subra and Jumbo Maniam who are still around. Alex will try to run on the anti-Samy wave and hope to cause an upset. Or possibly try to get Subra to come out and go for it. I don’t forsee any non-elected MPs bar Dato Subra having a sliver of chance against Samy.


KUALA LUMPUR: The race for the MIC party president has begun with MIC Klang division chief’s decision to contest.
P. Thiagarasan, 54, or better known as Alex Thiagarasan, told the New Straits Times yesterday that he was vying for the post held for the past 29 years by Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu.

“I think that I’m worthy of the president’s post. But, if there is a better candidate, then I would make way for the person. I will instead vie for the deputy or vice-president’s post,” he said.

Thiagarasan, who unsuccessfully contested a vice-president’s post in the last party election, also called for abolishing the quota system of getting nominations from at least 300 branch chiefs to make a bid for the party’s presidency.

He said there must be a concerted attempt to unseat Samy Vellu if he had not gone by the next election, which was not due until next March.
Thiagarasan, who was formerly a People’s Progressive Party Selangor chief in 1997, left with nearly 24,000 members and joined the MIC two years later following a dispute with PPP president Datuk M. Kayveas.

Among those who have contested against Samy Vellu for the party’s presidency include Y. Thomas, former MIC deputy president Datuk S. Subramaniam, Kapar division chairman S. Subramaniam, better known as Jumbo Maniam and former Lobak branch chairman R. Vellasamy.

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Many young people eager to join MIC

June 2nd, 2008
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This is indeed surprising! Seldom people will joining a losing group. I mean, let’s face it. No matter how we cut it, MIC lost big time. Everyone admits it – MIC leaders, partymen, members, man in the street, opposition fellas, media, political experts and teh tarik seller as well. So, something must be seriously off-tangent if people are eager to join the party. What are the pull factors that attract these young people (definition of young according to Samy / MIC ?) or the push factors that cause them to inch towards MIC?

If its true, then good for MIC. Its rebranding may seem to be working. However, if it is not (and we would be foolish to trust Samy the politicians’s words), hmmm…who bothers anyway? Well, unless this is a ploy to create phantom members, fill up the defunct branches,and proclaim that MIC has the support of the community. Not so difficult to pull off. If many Indians are still members of MIC Teluk Kemang, surely Sothinathan would have lost by a slimmer margin, right? 🙂

Which brings us to the point – you can have 5 million members, but it does not guarantee you electoral wins.  First, your members must be registered as voters. MIC did mention that about 10% of members only were registered as voters. Secondly, those voters must be convinced to vote for the coalition. People can jump ship as easy as flipping through Astro channel nowadays. Party loyalism has gone down the drain, especially when the party actually doesn’t seem to do much.


BUTTERWORTH: MIC will revive between 300 and 400 branches nationwide to increase its membership.
Its president, Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu, said new leaders would take over these branches.”The leadership of the closed branches will not be given to the old chairmen as they have not done anything to revive them.

“Our plan is to recruit about 50,000 new members, especially the young, before the end of this year,” he said before opening the state MIC’s 62nd annual delegates convention at Dewan Sree Mariamman here yesterday.

He said his tour around the country to attend state delegates’ conventions showed more young people were interested in joining the party.  Their coming in will give us a new lease of life.”

With its rebranding, he said, the party would introduce a rating system for branches where programmes carried out by branches and their chairmen would be evaluated to determine whether their performances lived up to the aspirations of the party.

“We will have several categories under the system: the extraordinary branches, the performing branches, the below average performing branches and the inactive branches.

“We will determine the parameters and criteria of the system,” he said.

He added the party would also introduce a people’s satisfaction index to gather feedback from the grassroots on the rebranding exercise.

He said the rebranding would begin right after the party’s general assembly in Kuala Lumpur on July 12. More than 1,600 delegates will attend the assembly.

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BUTTERWORTH: MIC branches nationwide will soon be accorded performance ratings under the party’s rebranding exercise, says party president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu.

He said there were four categories in the rating system to evaluate the effectiveness of each branch in delivering the party’s aspirations and promises.

“The system will help the branches improve their performance and delivery to the people,” he told reporters at the Penang MIC convention held at Dewan Sree Mariamman yesterday.

The four categories are P1: Extraordinary; P2: Performing; P3: Below-average and P4: Inactive.

In addition to the rating system, a “People Satisfaction Index” (PSI) will be introduced in July to help gather feedback from the grassroots.  “The index will help us gauge people’s reaction and satisfaction towards our rebranding exercise.

“The PSI can also be used to evaluate the performance of branch leaders and branches. A form will be distributed to the public, especially MIC members, to gather feedback,” he explained, adding that feedback would be evaluated every six months.

Part of the re-branding effort would also see 3,600 branch leaders being sent for 36 courses, to update themselves.  “They will be briefed on the party’s new style, and how to increase delivery to the people and make the party more dynamic.

“MIC is now reviving between 300 and 400 defunct branches with new leaders,” he said.

Samy Vellu added that the party aimed to recruit 50,000 youth members this year as part of efforts to inject new blood into the party.  When queried, Samy Vellu said many young people were eager to join the party.   “I am very happy to note that many of them want to work (for the party) but I’ve told them to hold on and let us finish with the rebranding exercise first,” he said.

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