Posts Tagged ‘Politicians’

Nazri’s statements shocking, says Lim

April 12th, 2007
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let this be a wake-up call for all malaysians. when nearly 40% of the population can be brushed aside and ministers can says whatever they like, as if they represent all malaysian, this is the outcome.
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Nazri’s statements shocking, says Lim
http://www.sun2surf.com/article.cfm?id=17594
B.Suresh Ram KUALA LUMPUR (April 11, 2007): Opposition Leader Lim Kit Siang described as “astounding” the statements by Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz on the proposed Inter-Faith Commission (IFC). “What was he saying? You mean to tell me if the Malays do not want to participate, the Federal Constitution cannot be upheld?” Lim asked.
Nazri had said in Parliament yesterday the IFC can only be formed with participation from all communities of different faiths and amendments to Article 121(A) of the Constitution.
“He said my arguments were valid but there is no way the Barisan Nasional (BN) government would agree because there is no way to convince and persuade Malays, who constitute the majority of the electorate, to support such a constitutional amendment,” Lim told reporters in Parliament lobby today.
“His arguments are unacceptable … it’s setting a dangerous precedent for the erosion of the constitutional guarantees in the Merdeka Social Contract of Malaysia as a democratic, tolerant, multi-religious and secular nation with Islam as the official religion but not an Islamic state.”
Lim said he had stressed that the amendments of Article 121(1A) of the Constitution in 1988 was to provide to Muslims the constitutional protection for their rights to be adjudicated in Syariah courts without detracting the rights of non-Muslims.
“In the past few years, particularly after the Ô929 Declaration’ of Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad that Malaysia is an Islamic state, non-Muslims here have seen their religious and constitutional sensitivities and rights adjudicated in civil courts and Syariah courts eroded.
“The time has come for an amendment to the Constitution to make it clear that Article 121(1A) does not derogate the rights of non-Muslim Malaysians which they had enjoyed without challenge before the 1988 Constitutional amendments,” he said.
On corruption, Lim said the time has come for Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to summon a special meeting of the Cabinet to exclusively address the worst corruption crisis in the country’s history.
This, he said, was to demonstrate the political will to arrest, prosecute and jail top political government leaders for corruption.
Updated: 08:42PM Wed, 11 Apr 2007

NEWS:WhatÂ’s Lina JoyÂ’s status? and more cases revealed

April 11th, 2007
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wonder how many more people have suffered or lost out due the inconsistencies. and how many more people and their families will suffer before we malaysian get to see some justice?
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What’s Lina Joy’s status?
KUALA LUMPUR: DAP national chairman Karpal Singh has called for the Chief Justice to look seriously into the case of Lina Joy, who converted from Islam to Christianity and is seeking to restate her religious status in her identity card.
“The Federal Court should explain why the case of Lina Joy is taking so long,” he told a press conference at the Parliament lobby here yesterday.
Earlier, Bukit Mertajam MP Chong Eng and Opposition Leader Lim Kit Siang highlighted two cases similar to Lina Joy’s at the press conference.
Chong said she and 11 other DAP MPs would send a letter to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to look into the case of Siti Fatimah, 29, who had been separated from her 15-month-old baby.
She said Siti Fatimah was an Indian Muslim who was brought up as a Hindu by her grandmother and had never practised the teachings of Islam.
After she married a Hindu man and gave birth to a baby girl, the Malacca Islamic Department ordered Siti to surrender her baby to the department.
Chong said the baby was with the department while Siti had been sent to the Religious Rehabilitation Centre in Ulu Yam, Selangor, by the Syariah Court for 100 days until April 18.
Lim highlighted the case of 81-year-old Tang Siew Ying in Johor. Tang died on Monday but her family was not allowed to take her body from the Segamat Hospital in Johor.
He said the hospital had claimed that Tang’s identity card showed that she had a Muslim name, which was Tang Siew Ying@Azizah Abdullah.

Saravanan hotly tipped

April 10th, 2007
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Saravanan hotly tipped http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/10/nation/17392718&sec=nation
By WANI MUTHIAH
KLANG: Speculation is rife as to who will be selected to contest in the up-coming Ijok by-election, triggered by the sudden death of the state assemblyman MIC’s Datuk K. Sivalingam 59, in Chennai, India last Wednesday.
However, party president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu’s recent statement that “even Selangor citizens staying in Federal Territory were eligible to be considered” has placed MIC information chief M. Saravanan as a front-runner.
“Saravanan was born in Kuala Kubu Baru but stays in Kuala Lumpur and is the Federal Territory MIC chairman,” said a veteran party member who declined to be named.
He said that Saravanan, a Samy Vellu loyalist, had finished his second term as a senator, was ready to handle bigger responsibilities and was an excellent speaker in Tamil.
“Ijok has a huge Indian electorate and this factor is crucial. At 39, Saravanan is also young and has the stamina to carry out extensive fieldwork to win over the Indian voters,” he added.
As for Sivalingam’s replacement in the state exco, the party insider said Sri Andalas assemblyman Kamala Ganapathy was the likely candidate as she had been “assigned to assist the late Sivalingam.”
Kamala’s good relationship with Selangor Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Mohd Khir Toyo, who would be the one selecting Sivalingam’s replacement, would also be a deciding factor, he added.
When contacted, Saravanan said he had no idea if he would be chosen to stand in Ijok.
“It has not even crossed my mind. I am now too busy working for the Machap by-election,” he added.

NEWS:MIC has 23 potential candidates for Ijok by-election

April 10th, 2007
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MIC has 23 potential candidates for Ijok by-election http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/4/10/nation/20070410191200&sec=nation
MALACCA: The MIC has a record 23 potential candidates for the Ijok by-election, said its president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu.
“All of them are very good candidates. I find it very difficult to select one.
“If the candidate is too young, people will say they act like babies,” he said adding that it was the first time that he had received so many applications, welcoming it as a “very healthy” development.
He said the three main criteria for selection were political experience, a young age and the ability to serve all communities.
Asked whether the candidate would be a local (Ijok) boy, Samy Vellu, who was visiting SRK (T) Alor Gajah, said:
“We are all local boys (in this country). If we only want the candidate who is born there, then Samy Vellu cannot stand in Sungai Siput and (Datuk G.) Palanivel cannot be in Hulu Selangor.”
Samy Vellu said many people had showed interest to stand and many had forwarded their particulars via the short messaging service.
“Some have sent me warnings saying that if he is not being given the seat, we will lose in the by-election.
“Let him say what he wants to say. We know what are our strengths in Ijok,” he said, adding that he had yet to shortlist the candidates.
The Ijok seat fell vacant after incumbent Datuk K. Sivalingam died of a heart attack. The MIC’s other state seats in Selangor are Sri Andalas and Batu Caves.
Asked when he would retire as his good friend and former Gerakan president Datuk Seri Dr Lim Keng Yaik had earlier urged him to do so, Samy jokingly replied:
“I can retire from today. I request Lim Keng Yaik to set a date for me to retire.”
Dr Lim retired as party president on Sunday.

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.