Posts Tagged ‘Politicians’

Hindraf denies affiliation to any political party

November 28th, 2007
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Hindraf denies affiliation to any political party

source

By DHARMENDER SINGH

KLANG: The Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) has denied that it has any political motives or ambitions in its fight for the rights of the Indians in the country. Its secretary V. K. Regu said its sole objective was to express the grassroots’ grievances and unhappiness over the current status of the Indians in Malaysia. “We are not aligned or affiliated to any political party but welcome any support for our efforts, regardless of whether it is from the ruling party or the Opposition,” he told a press conference yesterday.

Regu said Hindraf also urged all parties, including the Government, not to turn the mass gathering on Sunday into a racial issue and provoke the public further as Hindraf harboured no ill feeling towards the other races. “The races in Malaysia are like a family and like a member of this family who is not getting enough food, we are asking for more. It should not break the family,” he said. 

He also said that it was wrongfully claimed that the gathering on Sunday was a Hindraf-organised rally as it never sent out any form of invitation for a gathering and even the SMS messages calling for a mass gathering did not originate from the movement. He said the publicity actually came from statements by the police and the Government against Hindraf’s decision to hand over the memorandum. 

Regu said Hindraf also wanted to make it clear that it resorted to handing over the memorandum to the British High Commission after getting no response from all the avenues it explored here to highlight the plight of the Indians, including the Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. 

He said it was a peaceful gathering that turned ugly when police provoked those gathered by firing tear gas and chemical-laced water at the crowd. He claimed thugs were also planted at Batu Caves to disrupt the gathering there. 

“I also ask the local media to be more responsible and mature in its coverage of the events on Sunday by also reporting how many visitors got injured and not just how many cops were hurt,” he said. He said Hindraf also urged the parties involved to stop unwarranted accusations of the mass gathering and instead look seriously at finding solutions to the plight of Indians without attaching racial connotations to it. 

On why the memorandum was eventually not handed over, he said police already had a court injunction barring them from going to the high commission, and they viewed this as a trap to arrest Hindraf’s leaders. 

india PM urged to act after hindraf rally

November 28th, 2007
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Act against 'sufferings' in M'sia, Indian PM told
http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/75382
Nov 28, 07 2:08pm

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has been urged to take immediate action concerning the state of the Indians in Malaysia.

The premier’s intervention was sought by Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M Karunanidhi and other politicians in the state following the mass rally held on Nov 25 in Kuala Lumpur.

newspaper, Karunanidhi wrote to Manmohan on Tuesday asking him to employ the necessary measures regarding the “sufferings and bad treatment” of Tamils in Malaysia.

Karunanidhi said the people of Tamil Nadu were disturbed over the happenings in Kuala Lumpur.

The daily reported that he also conveyed their concern over the treatment being meted out to the Tamils living in Malaysia for a very long period of time.

On Sunday, some 30,000 Indian Malaysians took to the streets in a protest organised by the Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf).

The rally was held to support a lawsuit by Hindraf against Britain for bringing Indians to Malaysia as indentured labourers and exploiting them for 150 years.

The suit sought a declaration that the Reid Commission Report 1957 failed to incorporate the rights of the Indian community when Malaya was granted independence and this had allegedly resulted in discrimination and marginalisation to this day.

Police used tear gas and chemical-laced water to break-up the rally, which also saw scores of people being arrested.

'Treated like slaves'

Meanwhile, another Tamil Nadu politician and popular actor Vijayakant also called on the Indian prime minister to act on this issue.

In a news report, Vijayakant, who is the founder leader of the DMDK party, said: "The Tamils were taken there 200 years ago by the then British rulers to work in the plantation fields but the way police dispersed them by firing tear gas showed that the Malaysian government is still treating them as slaves.

He alleged that Malaysia was "becoming a Sri Lanka" where the government "sidelined Tamils from all government departments".

He warned that ignorance by India to intervene in this issue could create a situation similar to that of Sri Lanka, which is gripped by ethnic strife. "What started as a spark, is now burning all over Sri Lanka," he said.

The Nov 25 rally received widespread coverage in the Indian as well as international media. The event was reported, among others, in the UK, US, China, Taiwan, Australia and the Philippines.

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's warning that the government could invoke the Internal Security Act (ISA) against the protestors has also received wide media coverage.

PM warns against spreading the memorandum by hindraf

November 28th, 2007
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We will use Act against street protestors if we have to, says PM

source

By JANE RITIKOS

PETALING JAYA: The Government will use the Internal Security Act (ISA) against street demonstrators who threaten national security and disrupt racial harmony if necessary, warned the Prime Minister. “If there are reasons for us to use it, we will use it,” Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi stressed. He was commenting on illegal street demonstrations held in Kuala Lumpur recently, including the latest by the Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf), which claims to be fighting for the Hindus in Malaysia. Abdullah said using the law, which allows for detention without trial, would be preventive action to spare the country untoward incidents that could affect its peace and national security.  “The ISA is there, if the situation warrants it, it will be used,” he told reporters at the RMAF air base in Subang here upon his return from Cairo yesterday. On calls by certain quarters for the ISA to be invoked against illegal street demonstrators, Abdullah said: “I am very surprised that people want the ISA. I thought they never wanted it.”  The police, he said, would decide on the appropriate action to be taken. 

On rallies being planned for next month, he said he would leave it to the police to assess whether they would be a threat to national security. The annual Human Rights March organised by the Bar Council human rights committee is planned for next month. 

Abdullah also warned that action would be taken against those who download and distribute the memorandum signed by Hindraf legal adviser lawyer P. Uthayakumar addressed to British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, which had been published in the Internet. The memorandum alleges persecution of Malaysian Indians. He said the Government acknowledged freedom of the Internet but action could be taken against those who misuse it to spread allegations against the Government.  The memorandum appeals to Britain to refer Malaysia to the World Court for crimes against ethnic Indians. It also claimed that “100 over Indians were slashed and killed by the Umno-controlled Malaysian government in the Kampung Medan mini genocide”. To this, Abdullah said that if Hindraf had indeed made such claim, Umno would act. “We want to know what proof they have (to support their claim). This is a serious accusation because they say it was Umno,” he said. 

On Hindraf’s action, he said: “They want to kiss the orang putih (British). They want the orang putih to take action because they are not satisfied with us”. Abdullah said Hindraf got support from the Indian community who thought they would each get RM1mil in compensation from its class-action suit filed against the British Government for bringing Indians into Malaya to work as labourers. The Prime Minister also said that everyone must realise that accusations against the Government were made because certain people thought that the election was around the corner, and this was the case in every elections. “But we hear what they say. Some of the demands are in the process of being addressed while some have been addressed but they are still harping on it,” he said. 

On Cameron Highlands MP S.K. Devamany’s comment in Parliament that the Hindraf demonstration showed there was frustration at the lower levels in the community, Abdullah said the Government must be fair to all. “If we focus on the interest of one group, others will be jealous, others will complain,” he said. 

mic damage control claim 16000 graduates since 1979

November 28th, 2007
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source

Malaysia Nanban quoted MIC president and Works Minister Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu as saying that the party had always looked into the interests of the Indian community to ensure they achieved success in various fields. 

He said since 1979, there had been 16,000 Indian graduates and currently thousands more from the Indian community are pursuing degree courses in local and foreign universities. 

Speaking at a “meet the people” session in Sabak Bernam, Selangor, on Monday, he said there were now about 300 students pursuing medical studies in Indonesia, 900 in Ukraine, 400 in Russia and another 50 in India.

hindraf rally gets indian govt attention

November 28th, 2007
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thanks to Bavani for highlighting this:

Search result in Google News:

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