Posts Tagged ‘Perak’

kavyeas – statement misinterpreted

July 30th, 2007
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In Taiping, Kayveas said he had not issued any ultimatum to anybody “let alone to the Barisan Nasional” on the allocation of seats.  

He said his statement was “misinterpreted and misunderstood.”  

“I know when to speak my mind and when to mind my speech and I don’t simply give statements and ultimatums.  

“I think we are not in the position to give any ultimatum to anybody but I must say that it is just a struggle for PPP which has been a very strong party and which has been in the opposition.  

“We were close to forming a government in Perak before we joined the Barisan in the early 1970s. 

“We are a founder member, a very senior member in Barisan Nasional,” he said after handing over financial aid to needy students yesterday.

PPP creates more problem in BN

July 29th, 2007
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PPP gives ultimatum
By : Sheridan Mahavera

JOHOR BARU: The People’s Progressive Party will leave the Barisan Nasional if it is not allowed to contest seats it held three decades ago in the general election.

The ultimatum was given by its president Datuk M. Kayveas on the eve of the party’s 54th anniversary.

Kayveas, who is the Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, was referring to the clutch of seats it had held in its stronghold of Perak in the 1960s before it joined the coalition.

"All that we are asking for is the return of those seats to us.

"They are four parliamentary seats, 12 state assembly seats, 79 local council seats and the post of the Datuk Bandar of Ipoh.
"These were once held by the PPP," he said.

Today, his parliamentary seat of Taiping is the party’s only seat.

In the past, Kayveas had continually appealed to the BN for a bigger allocation of seats as the seats the PPP had once held were taken away during the party’s turbulent period.

Kayveas, who has helmed the party for 14 years and is credited with bringing it back from the brink of de-registration, said on Friday that he had a hard time responding to calls from his 500,000 members for more seats.

"We do not want to be treated like a step-child in the BN. But this is our stand that must be communicated to the BN leadership.

"We are asking for four parliamentary and 12 state seats. We are willing to settle for less as long as there are additional seats."

 
And Najib replies…
 
Don’t fuss over seat allocation, Najib tells BN components
BERNAMA
source
PEKAN, SUN:
Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak today asked BN component parties not to make a fuss over seat distribution for the next general election as the issue will be discussed only at the right time.

The Deputy Prime Minister said the Barisan leadership did not make decisions according to component parties’ demands.
“When it comes to seat allocation, we will negotiate when the time is ripe,” he said when responding to the ultimatum by the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) that it would leave the Barisan if it was not allowed to contest seats it held three decades ago in the general election.
PPP president Datuk M. Kayveas, who issued the ultimatum, was referring to the clutch of seats the party had held in its stronghold in Perak in the 1960s before it joined the coalition.
The party is asking for four parliamentary seats, 12 state seats, 79 local council seats and the post of the Batuk Bandar of Ipoh.
Najib said decisions on seat distribution are made based on consensus in the Barisan power-sharing spirit and principle.
“This is not the time to make a big fuss over the issue…we actually decide on seat allocation based on consensus, we don’t have additional seats.
“We have to make do with the existing constituencies. Hence, if there are changes to seats that have been allocated to component parties, it must be negotiated among the parties,” said Najib, who is also Barisan deputy chairman.
“We don’t make decisions according to requests of each component party. We decide based on the Barisan principle and spirit,” he said.
On the ultimatum by Kayveas that PPP would leave the Barisan if its request was not met, Najib said: “I don’t think PPP will leave the Barisan.”
Earlier, Najib opened the Pekan Umno delegates conference.

 
So does Ali Rustam…
 
ALI RUSTAM: PPP's threat to leave Barisan tantamounts to insulting coalition

BERNAMA

PENANG, SUN:

Umno vice-president Datuk Seri Mohd Ali Rustam said he had no objection if PPP wants to leave the Barisan. The Melaka Chief Minister said PPP’s ultimatum to leave the Barisan tantamounts to insulting the 14-member coalition.

By issuing the ultimatum, PPP had ignored the spirit and principle of comradeship among Barisan component parties, he said.

“It is akin to an act of sabotage that is unacceptable to the BN.

Component parties can ask for more seats but not by issuing a threat or an ultimatum… you give more seats or not we will leave.

“This is an ultimatum insulting the Barisan. I feel if PPP wants to leave the coalition, I’ve no objection.
“The Taiping seat contested by Kayveas in the last election we can give it to Umno, MCA, Gerakan or any other component party, no problem,” he told reporters after opening the Bayan Baru Umno delegates conference.

 
and  muhyiddin chips in as well…

source

Umno VP asks Kayveas to retract his ultimatum

KUALA LUMPUR: Umno Vice-President Muhyiddin Yassin has told the Peoples' Progress Party (PPP) chief M. Kayveas to retract his ultimatum that the party be allowed to contest its seats or or it will quit the Barisan Nasional.

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 

Report errant reps, panel urges people

July 26th, 2007
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source

KUALA LUMPUR: People who think their elected representatives lack integrity or are involved in dubious practices are advised to take this up with the Parliamentary Select Committee on Integrity.
“I have always wondered about this aspect of MPs and state assemblymen. Is our performance so good that we are no longer worthy of complaint?” asked the newly appointed chairman of the committee, Datuk Dr Wan Hashim Wan Teh, yesterday.

He said the public could complain to the committee about the performance or “anything which they felt was not right” about MPs or assemblymen.

“If the MP is not accessible, then they can bring it up with the committee,” added Hashim, who is the MP for Grik.

He said MPs and assemblymen were part of the leadership and they were required to be accountable in the way they conducted themselves.

The select committee was formed to come up with proposals and help translate the National Integrity Plan into action.

Hashim said the public could take their complaints to public hearings to be conducted by the Integrity Committee or write in with their complaints.

The hearings are in Johor on Aug 8, Malacca (Aug 9), Terengganu (Aug 12), Perak (Aug 15) and Kedah (Aug 16).

Hashim chaired his first meeting yesterday after taking over from Tan Sri Bernard Dompok, who had resigned over differences on how the committee should carry out its job.

Two reasons why Umno gave Tapah to MIC

July 22nd, 2007
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TAPAH: The concept of power sharing and social contract are the reasons why Barisan Nasional gave up the Malay-majority Tapah parliamentary seat to the MIC. 

Responding to a resolution by Tapah Umno division for the constituency to be returned to Umno, Perak Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Mohamad Tajol Rosli Ghazali said he had expected the topic to be hotly debated by delegates of the division. 

“Personally, I can understand the feelings of the division members especially when there are far more Malay voters in the constituency,” he said when opening the Tapah Umno division meeting here yesterday. 

“But it is inappropriate for me to put aside the concept of power sharing and the social contract agreed to by the various races.” 

He said it was not wrong for the division to raise the matter but it was up to Barisan chairman Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to make a decision. 

Tajol Rosli noted that although the MIC did not have an Indian majority seat, there were constituencies that Barisan could lose if it did not obtain the support of the MIC. 

MIC vice-president Datuk S. Veerasingam is currently the MP for Tapah.