Posts Tagged ‘Politicians’

Samy urges estates to set up study centres

June 19th, 2007
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Set up study centres for children, estates urged

Other News & Views
Compiled by TAN SIN CHOW, A. RAMAN AND KENNETH LEE
 

ESTATES should set up study centres, as in some estate homes schoolchildren are unable to study at night due to family circumstances. 

Tamil Nesan reported that MIC president and Works Minister Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu made this call after officially opening the study centre in Sungai Rela estate, Sungai Siput, last Sunday. 

He said the establishment of study centres in the estates would give children the opportunity to gather and discuss their school education.  

They would also be able to study in a peaceful environment.

MTUC plans to hold pickets

June 19th, 2007
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i was passing by JPM yesterday morning when loads of people converged there. Some came in chartered buses, while others drove. There were easily 300 people at that time. Lots of Indians.
 
poobalan
 
 
MTUC plans to hold pickets
 

PUTRAJAYA: The Malaysian Trades Union Congress (MTUC) plans to stage pickets at various places in the country if the Government does not respond positively to its request for a minimum wage and cost of living allowance (cola) for private sector employees. 

It has given the Government a one-week ultimatum to respond. 

It plans to picket simultaneously in Kuala Lumpur, Petaling Jaya, Bangi, Shah Alam, Klang, Johor, Kuching and Penang next Monday between 5pm and 6.30pm. 

It is seeking legislation to fix a minimum wage of RM900 as well as cola at RM300.  

MTUC president Syed Shahir Syed Mohamud and secretary-general G. Rajasekaran were among nine people who presented a five-page memorandum to the Prime Minister’s senior private secretary, Ahmad Yaakob, at 11.30am yesterday. 

Syed Shahir said he was told that Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is in Russia and would be returning only next week. 

“The picket will go on as scheduled,” he said. 

Syed Shahir told reporters that 40% of the 10 million workforce in the private sector were earning salaries below the poverty income level of RM691 per month and that it was timely for their request to be fulfilled now that the civil service had been given a pay rise and increased cola. 

“The minimum salary in the civil service should be a benchmark for the private sector to follow,” he said, citing an example of a hospital attendant who had initially earned RM490 and was now earning RM600 salary and RM300 cola, amounting to RM900.

Samy is VIP of IPF assembly!

June 18th, 2007
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Samy to open IPF meet

By A. LETCHUMANAN
 

KUALA LUMPUR: Indian Progressive Front (IPF) president Tan Sri M.G. Pandithan shocked many when he announced that his long-time arch rival MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu would be the guest-of-honour at IPF's general assembly on July 1. 

Many were taken aback when they found out that Samy Vellu would be opening IPF's assembly as the two parties had been bitter rivals for so long. 

“Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi was for it when I informed him of my intention,” Pandithan said in an interview. 

The 66-year-old frail-looking Pandithan said the time had come for the Indian-based parties to be united and work for the betterment of the community. 

“There is still lot of unsolved problems affecting the community. There is no point in quarrelling or finding faults with each other. It will not do any good,” he said. 

He started to reflect on his 20-year enmity with Samy Vellu after the latter visited him several times while he was at the Kuala Lumpur Hospital last year. 

Pandithan, who was then recuperating from an ailment at the hospital, said: “I had decided to forget the past and think of the future. He (Samy Vellu) has also magnanimously accepted my friendship without any condition.” 

Both leaders had been inseparable in the MIC but Pandithan, then a vice-president, was sacked after he brought a coffin to the MIC headquarters in 1981 to embark on a “fast to death” effort to prove that he was not guilty of the charges of inciting violence and unrest in the party.  

On the calls by a small group of dissidents that he was planning to dissolve the party, Pandithan, a former journalist, said the decision on the future of the party lies with the members.  

Allocate land for temples

June 14th, 2007
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Samy: Allocate land for temples
 

LAND should be allocated for the building of Indian temples in all future development projects, said Tamil Nesan

MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu said a request to this effect had been submitted to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. 

He said he had brought to the Prime Minister’s attention that unwanted problems would arise if Indians built temples on private land and the owners later took back possession. 

He was speaking to reporters after opening the 25th annual delegates conference of Malaysian Hindu Dharma Mamandram, which was held at Batu Caves on Sunday.

IPF veterans meet over rumours of merger with MIC

June 14th, 2007
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IPF veterans meet over rumours of merger with MIC

source

 
Pandithan says he will answer all questions on the rumours of a merger with MIC at the IPF national conference on July 1.
Pandithan says he will answer all questions on the rumours of a merger with MIC at the IPF national conference on July 1.

KUALA LUMPUR: A group of Indian Progressive Front veterans and former members met on Sunday in what was billed as an effort to save the party.

The meeting came in the wake of rumours that its president Tan Sri M.G. Pandithan was planning a merger with the Malaysian Indian Congress.

Pandithan was sacked as the MIC vice-president by party president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu about 20 years ago.

He went on to set up the IPF, but the two men appeared to have left that episode behind.

His presence at the MIC general assembly recently has exacerbated the concerns of some of his followers.
About 50 of them, including party loyalists and some of those who were sacked from the MIC together with Pandithan in 1988, passed a resolution at the Sunday meeting calling on him to leave the party.

The IPF’s former secretary-general K. Panjamurti said it would be unfair if the party was to be dissolved because of Pandithan’s personal interest and asked him to leave gracefully if he wanted to join the MIC.

Panjamurti said he had confronted Pandithan, but the latter had denied he was planning anything.

"We are still concerned and worried," Panjamurti said.

"Many branches have been closed down. All the 57 branches in Perak have been dissolved as a result of Pandithan’s failure to submit their accounts for years. Now we don’t know how many branches are still registered."

Panjamurti was one of the 13 supporters of Pandithan who was sacked from the MIC.

M. Kanagasabai, who said he was the founding president of the party in 1990, said almost 90 per cent of the people who originally supported Pandithan had left the party over the years as they were unhappy with his leadership and administration.

"The last straw came when he became friendly with Samy Vellu. He wants to patch up and ditch us, which is okay, but to dissolve the party is terrible. We will not accept it," he said.

Sunday’s meeting also asked Panjamurti to lead the party.

"We will announce this at our annual general meeting on June 24," Panjamurti said.

Pandithan dismissed the allegations against him.

"Anyone can say anything. I cannot be responding to everything they say. Furthermore, these people are no longer in the party. They left 10 to 15 years ago," he said.

Asked about the possibility of the IPF being dissolved and a merger with MIC, Pandithan laughed and said he would announce his decision at the party’s national conference on July 1.

"I will answer all questions there."