Posts Tagged ‘Perak’

Resolving problems peacefully – MHS

April 18th, 2007
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good to hear that MHS does something – recently meeting the IGP, having joint press statement regarding subashini case, organising prayers at klang, and so on.
 
 
 

Resolving problems peacefully

THE Malaysia Hindu Sangam will not resort to demonstrations to resolve problems relating to the religion, Tamil Nesan reported. 

It quoted MHS president Datuk A. Vaithilingam as saying that they would hold discussions with the relevant parties or take action in accordance with the laws of the country. 

He said there several issues that touched on the religion had cropped up but they were being resolved through peaceful means. 

Speaking at the MHS Perak branch annual general meeting in Sungai Siput, Vaithilingam said state branches should take proactive measures to provide religious education to Hindus. 

Perak MHS chairman A. Egambaram said they had been working closely with the Perak MIC to overcome problems affecting the community.  

RM100m in micro-credit for Indians

April 9th, 2007
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RM100m in micro-credit for Indians http://www.nst.com.my/NST/Article/vArt?did=20070409075324
2007/04/09
SUNGAI SIPUT: A micro-credit scheme to create “a new community of Malaysian Indian entrepreneurs” is in the pipeline, MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said yesterday.
The party is in discussion with the government to set up a RM100 million fund which will be used to provide financial assistance to at least 4,000 Indians to start small businesses.
Samy Vellu said feedback received from meetings held between the party’s representatives and the Indian community in at least 12 states showed that a large number of Indians were interested in becoming entrepreneurs.
“Some of them already have business experience while others are just starting. But, they don’t have access to low-interest capital to allow them to expand their businesses,” he said after opening the 61st Perak MIC convention here.
He said many had gone into business by borrowing from private sources but failed to nurture their ventures as they had to pay high interest on their loans.
He said businesses which had been identified for eligibility under the special micro-credit scheme included food, transportation, tailoring, laundry, catering and vendor.
Samy Vellu, however, added that a special monitoring committee would be set up to check on the progress of the entrepreneurs provided with loans.
“In this way, the party hopes to assist the entrepreneurs to raise their sales figure to RM250,000 per year or about RM20,000 per month compared to about RM50,000 per year they are earning annually now,” he said.
In the previous micro-credit scheme launched by the government which was disbursed through Bank Pertanian Malaysia and Bank Simpanan Nasional, Samy Vellu said 4,000 Indians were given loans totalling RM40 million.

NEWS:Muhunthan brings home the homeless, elderly

April 9th, 2007
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Perhaps our members/friends in Johor can do something – spend time, provide assistance in registering association for him. For more info, you have to contact NST via email news@nst.com.my or call them (http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/corpcontact.htm)
Muhunthan brings home the homeless, elderly http://www.nst.com.my/NST/Article/vArt?did=20070409074348 E-mail : news@nst.com.my By : Lau Meisan
2007/04/09 Muhunthan chatting with one of the people he brought home. Over the years, he has brought home 14 people.
JOHOR BARU: When her husband died, M. Vengammah came here from Perak to look for her son.
But he cast her off, she said. With nowhere else to go, the 76-year-old woman slept at night on the five-foot way of a shoplot in Jalan Skudai.
Lorry driver S. Muhunthan found her and took her in.
Over the last three years, Muh- unthan has brought home with him 14 elderly and homeless people.
Some, like Vengammah, he found living on the streets of Johor Baru. Others were patients deserted in hospitals by their families. Now they all live in a small single-storey terrace house in Taman Johor Jaya, a mostly blue-collar area, looked after by Muhunthan’s wife, V Radamanai.
“I don’t mind having a few extra mouths to feed,” said Muhunthan, 34.
His words understate the size of the commitment he has made.
He spends about half of his RM5,000 monthly income feeding and clothing them, and gets help from friends to meet expenses such as the RM600 rent for the house.
Muhunthan owns and drives a two-tonne lorry. He has four young children, and his 68-year-old father, L. Subramaniam, lives with them in another house in Plentong.
In the living room of the Taman Johor Jaya house, there is space for nine people to sleep. Seven of his homeless dependents sleep on camp beds, while his wife and a six-year-old son occupy double bunk beds in a corner.
The rest sleep in the other two rooms in the house. The dining table is placed in the porch, where they have their meals together.
The keeper of a nearby Chinese temple in the neighbourhood tries to help, bringing a little food whenever he can.
“You don’t see many people like Muhunthan around,” said the man, who gave his name only as Ah Choy.
Muhunthan said: “I will do this for as long as I can afford it. I don’t want to go to the Welfare Department for help because I can still pay for their meals and expenses.
“I don’t need any financial help.
“If you want, you can provide food and spend some time with them but please don’t donate money.
“I don’t want others to say that I am making use of these people for financial gain,” he said.
It began three years ago, when a friend who worked in a charity home in Kajang, Selangor, asked him for help.
The home was too crowded and needed someone to take care of some of the homeless people living there.
After a lengthy discussion with his wife, his children and his father, the family agreed to take in three elderly people.
“I told my friend, as long as they didn’t mind eating what we eat and sleeping in makeshift beds, I would be more than willing to take them in.”
He did it partly because both his father and his wife were born lame.
“Taking care of the less fortunate and less able-bodied is part of my daily life,” he said.
He has even tried finding family members of the homeless by highlighting their plight in the Tamil newspapers.
So far, none has come forward for these dependents, aged between 52 and 83.
For the future, Muhunthan is thinking of getting some land in Plentong to build a proper charity home, and is applying for a licence from the Welfare Department.
Johor Baru Welfare Department officer Manayi Ibrahim urged him to register his home as a non-profit organisation.

“He can also try and get a grant from the government to lighten his financial burden,” Manayi said.
Johor Jaya state assemblyman Tan Cher Pok, who paid a visit to the home yesterday, urged Muhunthan to set up an association to better manage the home and register it with the Welfare Department.

NEWS:4.9mil yet to register as voters

April 2nd, 2007
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wonder who will be shitting in their pants? bn, dap or pas?
 
selangor, sarawak and perak – high number of non-muslims as compared to other states’ number of non-muslims. more concentration in town areas especially in selangor.
 
johor – umno heartland.
 
also, most are in the age bracket of 21-35, where education and getting a job is priority, which was mentioned in the survey.
 
 
 

4.9mil yet to register as voters

http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/2/nation/17322941&sec=nation

KUALA LUMPUR: There are 4.9 million eligible Malaysians who have not registered as voters. 

Election Commission (EC) deputy chairman Datuk Wan Ahmad Wan Omar said these people were denying themselves the right to elect their leaders. 

“Malaysians like to do things at the last minute – even for registering as voters. But they forget that there is a three-month period for their names to be validated into the electoral roll.  

“When their names are not in the electoral roll in time for an election, they will blame the EC for not providing enough facilities and venues for them to register themselves. 

“This happens every election,” he said during the launch of the nationwide campaign by the Malaysia National Sikh Movement (Gerak Sikh) to register voters. 

Wan Ahmad said the EC had done everything to make it easy for people to register as voters, including establishing over 640 counters at post offices nationwide.  

“They can walk in and register in 15 minutes. But while people donÂ’t mind queuing up to buy stamps, they complain of having to queue up at the EC counters,” he said. 

There are 10.3 million registered Malaysian voters. 

As at December 2006, Selangor had the highest number of eligible people yet to register as voters, followed by Sarawak (450,000), Johor (400,000) and Perak (375,000). 

Seventy per cent of these people are between the ages of 21 and 35.  

Wan Ahmad said the campaign by GerakSikh was the first time a non-governmental organisation was working with the EC to mobilise people to register as voters.  

Under the campaign, GerakSikh would organise the registration of voters at various venues, with the EC providing mobile units.

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.