Posts Tagged ‘Politicians’

Murugiah sacked

May 16th, 2009
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The PPP supreme council sacked Deputy Minister T. Murugiah and six others today.

defaulters owe MIED RM60 million!

May 14th, 2009
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In July 2007, it was RM30 million. At that time, the plan was to issue legal notice to defaulters.

March last year, it was announced that only 34% of the RM86 million (about Rm23 million) has been collected back and about 2000 people were served with legal notices.

In February this year, MIEd said it will sue some 4000 borrowers to reclaim some money.

Yesterday, the default amount has ballooned to RM60 million!

Education loan defaulters owe the MIC about RM60mil and the party-owned Maju Institute of Educational Development (MIED) will come down hard on defaulters.

According to MIC president and MIED chairman Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu, only RM34,907,357.83 has been repaid from loans amounting to around RM90mil.

“Legal action will be taken against the defaulters and the guarantors,” he said during the MIED’s second cheque presentation ceremony of the year at Dynasty Hotel yesterday.

“Their names will be blacklisted to prevent them from obtaining other loans and they will also be slapped with travel bans.”

Samy Vellu added that around 95% of students tried to avoid repayment and some even went to the extent of changing their addresses after completing their studies.

MIED, the educational arm of MIC, has disbursed around RM90mil through 12,500 study loans for around 9,500 students since its inception in 1984.

The MIED stopped approving loans of RM40,000 and above in March last year as many borrowers had difficulty repaying them.

Loans amounting to RM1,171,270 were handed out to 143 varsity students yesterday.

Medical students took the lion’s share totalling RM692,000, followed by dentistry students at RM106,500, while engineering students were given RM75,000.

This is one of those cases where MIC is let down by the community instead of the other way around. Shameful indeed that we have so many people who are evading paying back the money which can be used for other students.

addressing…

May 14th, 2009
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addressing means the work is not complete. Its in progress. No deadlines, no KPIs, no evaluation. So, the work can continue in perpetuity. So, is it a good news when MIC chief Samy Vellu says government is addressing Indian woes?

Let’s look at the level of addressing done so far:

Many thorny issues that has swayed the Indian community from supporting the Barisan Nasional in the last general election are being addressed by the current administration of Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak, says MIC president S Samy Vellu.

MCPX

He said among the issues were the poor condition of Tamil schools and its status; location and allocation for Hindu temples, job opportunities in the civil service, higher intake into local public universities, share allocations, educational and business loan facilities and more business opportunities/government contracts. [this indicates 7 areas of concentration – 7 KPIs that can be used to evaluate MIC]

He said for Tamil schools, the government has agreed to convert all partially-aided schools into fully-aided schools, while a whopping RM130 million allocation has been set aside for the next two years to rebuild many of the schools. [the actual words were something that said “agreed in principle” to look into conversion of partially-aided schools into fully aided ones. The RM130 million is not for the purpose of conversion, but for repair work. One incident that took place recently comes to my mind – 70 over years old SJKT Ladang Kinrara which was always flooded and being planned to relocate to cemetery area. Readers would remember this case. When DPM Muhyiddin went there on his walkabout, he announced that the school will be relocated to a new .3 ha area (which was actually the cemetery area!). It sounded like something good. But then, what can you build on a 0.3ha area which is next to cemetery? You want students to see  and smell funeral daily or study in class? Where would  the field be?  Currently, there are 93 students there, and the new building expected to cater for 200 students. But in such a small place? The parents are totally unhappy but we see a “caring” DPM announcing a “good news” which was immediately praised by the MIC. So, in my opinion, one has to be careful when receiving good news, because it may not be good at all].

“As for Hindu temples, we have requested the government to increase the annual allocation for temples from the present RM1 million,” he said in a statement. [ increase how much? For which temples? How many temples? Either the journalist didn’t ask or Samy didn’t tell. Note the key word -” requested”. How about the reply? Successful or not? If just request, anyone can send in request la]

On job opportunities in the civil service, the government has set a quota of 7.4 percent for Indians, equal to the number of their population in the country. The intake is being monitored by (Human Resources Minister) Dr S Subramaniam,” Samy Vellu said. [this is more agreeable as there is a target – 7.4% and its being monitored. Can we see the results of the monitoring every 2 or 3 months? What kind of jobs are being offered? Across the board or in selected sector only?]

The government has also set a quota of 7.4 percentage for Indians to enter public universities annually, he said, adding that he met Higher Education Minister Khaled Nordin yesterday to seek for more places for Indians to do professional courses in several public universities namely Universiti Malaya. [Back to quota system for Indians. When was the quota set? This year or last year? We have to wait till IPTA intake analysis is done – by course, by uni, by location etc. Intake results for SPM students are out but STPM-leavers not yet. Anyway, this is another KPI that can be used]

Stop complaining and help

Through the effort of the MIC, the government had also recently allocated 15 percent of the recently-launched 3.33 billion units of the Amanah Saham Malaysia shares for Indians worth almost RM500 million. [ Again, a good move, but lacking in implementation, perhaps MIC did not anticipate that many Indians are actually without money in hand to invest. So, having big cars and good jobs doesn’t mean have enough money. Our expenses are more than the privileged community who have many loopholes – avoiding tax, discount on houses, lower loan interest, and higher returns in ASB etc. Both the ASM and ASW is still available, meaning the community has no funds or there’s big gap between the haves and have-nots. So, next we have to see how long until a solution is found and implemented to allow community to invest in the schemes.]

He said MIC had proposed that the government assist the Indians by providing a partial grant or loan to buy the shares through any of its agencies or financial institutions.

“We are also currently discussing with the government to allocate at least 20 to 30 percent of the free Amanah Saham Wawasan shares for Indians,” he said. [Note the word ” currently discussing”. Guess we have to wait till the discussion ends.]

He also said MIC has secured more Public Service Department scholarships for Indian students and was discussing with the government to increase the numbers. [The question arises – why do we need to beg every year? last year 70-odd students got it on own effort before MIC people intervened. This year, will be same story. Next year same story. Not bored ah? If the competition is really tough, then just admit it that Indian students are not good enough. Can we justify giving PSD scholarship to 8A1s Indian student when his 11A1s scoring Chinese friend doesn’t get it? Doesn’t it make us just like the privileged community – 5As also can get scholarship or matriculation place? Our concern should be clear – do we want a quota for scholarship, or we want selection to based on merit/merit+financial/merit+financial+location ? ]

“The government has also introduced many business loan schemes to assist small and medium industries run by Indians and MIC has sought more and bigger amount for Indian entrepreneurs,” he said. [This is good move but misleading. There’s no “schemes”, only scheme as in the TEKUN one which is handled by MIC arm – YSS.  Secondly, where’s the statistics? How many “schemes”, how many applied, how many successful, how many rejected and why rejected. How many require some “recommendation” from MIC people? Another key word – “sought”. Get or not? How much is “more and bigger” amount? ]

He chided certain quarters who kept harping that the government has neglected the Indians and that they were being sidelined while the other races were progressing. [ Well, that’s the reality on the ground. Why is a school being relocated next to cemetery? Why temples only get RM1 million allocation per year? Why Pendidikan Moral is not usable for any course application in university unlike religious subjects which can even be used to apply for IT diploma course? Why we don’t have something like zakat? Why ASM/ASW offer less than ASB? Why got 7% discount for houses even though its a posh semi-dee? Why no ban on samsu and toddy?  Why no news on SJKT Simpang Lima new building until the parents raised funds to build it? Why government can get IOI donate land to relocate Chinese school from Perak to Puchong but Tamil school  on IOI-owned land (in Negeri Sembilan) where sons and daughters of its own employees study is in deplorable condition? So many whys….. And to top it all, Samy Vellu himself admited that the government have not done much in the past. Look at what he saying now. Is this credibility?]

“Instead on harping and bad mouthing the government day in, day out without realising what the government is doing, they should assist the Indians to plug into the system made available by the government and channel their grouses to the proper authority,” he added. [Some of the problems is raised by those who are part of the system. They realise how hard it is to “plug in”. But now, as we can see, the community is daring to come forward and voice out the unfair treatment they get. That’s why there are more issues being raised everyday in papers – from medical negligence to discrimination in schools, everyone got a story to tell.]

I don’t mind if the truth is told, even though it may be painful to hear. Call a spade a spade. Put up the number, don’t just gloss over with ambiguous words. Follow up the talk with proof. Then people can try to believe.

Footnote: One year since last elections, we only had two meetings by the cabinet committee on Indian community. It was supposed to once every few months, ended up once every 6 months. So, what progress did the committee achieve?

wiping out the only indian settlement in KL

May 13th, 2009
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Tomorrow is the dreaded day for Kampung Pandan Indian Settlement community. As written in the Star Metro section today, the 70-odd year old settlement is on the brink of demolition by the ever efficient DBKL. The DBKL is so efficient that it could erase the existence of such place from its own KL City Plan 2020. Is this some sort of subtle ethnic cleansing? Do note that the term “ethnic cleansing” covers a wide definition and not just limited to phsyical attacks or killings.  On one end of the scale it also encompasses discriminatory policies.  Yes, the authorities say that the residents will get a place to stay after the development of road is completed.  But looking at past track record, only the very brave will have trust in these promises.

You can search this blog for previous articles on Kg Pandan Indian settlement case. The residents are not being helped to resettle properly – they are offered temporary location at Puchong which is 20KM away. With many of them having minimal wages, relocation is not easy. Schooling will be a problem. What will happen to the Tamil school there? As usual – not even sound of flatulence from MIC. After all over, the politician will come and make some noise, and act out some scenes.

The residents are right in not trusting DBKL. These guy can even wipe out existence from map, what worth is their Aku Janji form? Who can they trust? Promises after promises, but empty ones. So, in the end, have to take it up themselves. Don’t be surprised if these folks file a suit against DBKL.

THE endless talk, empty promises, even treacherous betrayal, and their own desperation and helplessness have turned the gentle residents of Kuala Lumpur’s remaining Indian Settlement into tormented cynics.

After all sorts of empty promises by the Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL), the MIC and the Public Complaints Bureau in the Prime Minister’s Department, the residents of the 70-year-old Kampung Pandan Indian settlement have decided that enough is enough.

The unpretentious humble residents have now resorted to do research themselves on the laws concerning the land and their fundamental and constitutional rights for a legal battle to safeguard their homes.

Take the sweet natured Beatrice Leelawathi Maniam as an example. The 67-year-old is making a determined effort to learn about the laws of the land that she was born and bred in.

Since last year, Beatrice and some of her friends have been reading books on laws and rules of the land code to better understand their rights.

“God only helps those who help themselves and I have decided that in order to save the land of my forefathers, I have to do it myself,” she said.

Beatrice, holding a copy of the thick Volume 2 of the draft Kuala Lumpur City Plan 2020 (KLCP2020), told StarMetro that the plan, the blue print of the future developments of Kuala Lumpur, had inadvertently wiped out the entire existence of the Kampung Pandan Indian settlement.

There is no mention of our village and Lorong Delapan Kampung Pandan, where the 50-year-old Tamil school is located, is also missing,” she said while pointing to the map marked orange.

“So can you blame us for not trusting the government? Can you blame us if we say: no thank you, DBKL, we are not moving because we don’t believe you,” she said.

Why the distrust?

The story of these 250-odd pioneer settlers of KL is simple. After living and toiling on the land for 70 years, they were told to vacate the area as the DBKL wants to build an access road connecting Taman Maluri and Ampang. The villagers were asked to uproot from their homes, work places and children’s school to move 20km away to Kampung Muhhibbah in Puchong.

A team: Children studying together at a house in Kg Pandan Indian settlement.

They were promised low-cost units in two to three years when they would be relocated back to the site, but residents do not believe that this would ever happen.

In line with the government’s zero-squatter policy, the DBKL has been speeding up its squatter eradication exercise to meet the year-end deadline. Since January, eviction notices have been issued to various squatter settlements in the city.

What makes the Kampung Pandan residents special, compared with the squatters elsewhere in KL who have been relocated?

“We are not asking for special treatment. What we are asking is for the DBKL to practise some common sense,” Kampung Pandan Indian Settlment Action Council head Suresh Kumar said.

“Most of our people are cleaners, dish washers, baby sitters and labourers. So, how much do you think their average income is?” he asked.

“Our children attend the Kampung Pandan Tamil School nearby. If we move, their schooling would be disrupted and we will not be able make ends meet,” Suresh said.

The residents had sought help from Public Complaints Bureau head T. Murugiah to be relocated to the public housing programme (PPR) flats in Seri Alam in Sungai Besi, 4km away.

However, the DBKL said the project by the Housing and Local Government Ministry had not been handed over to it and so it could not allocate the units to the residents.

According to a source from the Federal Territories Ministry, all 920 units have already been allocated but the source was reluctant to reveal who have been given the units.

Indra Rani, 44, who works as a baby-sitter in the village, asked why the residents of the Kampung Pandan Indian settlement were being sidelined?

I recently read that Federal Territories Minister Raja Datuk Nong Chik Zainal Abidin is helping 355 squatter families in Bukit B at Kampung Kerinchi move to the Seri Cempaka flats, only a short distance from their place. Why can’t he help us and why the double standard? Indra asked.

Housewife Kalaichelvi Paraman, 49, is worried about the whole situation as her husband S. Nagalingam, 49, is a dialysis patient and requires treatment three times a week at a dialysis centre in Cheras.

“We have two schoolgoing children and it is going to be difficult for us if we were to move to Puchong” Kalaichelvi said in between sobs.

Aminah Talib, 73, who has been living in Kampung Pandan since her marriage 30 years ago, said she now lived there with her son.

“I depend on my neighbours and we have shared many good memories in this simple house,” she said. A. Navanitham, 42, has been living in Kampung Pandan for the past 25 years and has five children who are studying and working in the area.

“My wife is diabetic and needs constant medical treatment and we go to the Kampung Pandan clinic nearby,” he said.

“If we move to Puchong, it will be a big financial burden for us,” he said.

Navanitham said his work place was now just five minutes away from his home and if he moved he would not be able to keep his job.

Is there a way out?

According to residents, they have been given until Thursday to move out on their own, or the DBKL enforcement team will demolish their homes after that deadline.

“The DBKL has promised to give us Surat Aku Janji (pledge letters) pledging to give us units in the current location once the low-cost housing project is complete. But the DBKL will only give us the pledge letter after we have moved to Puchong,” Suresh said.

How can we trust the DBKL now when all the while it has never once kept its promise,” he said.

According to Suresh, the Settlement Action Committee has been studying the KLCP2020 in detail and has identified two plots of land in the settlement which belongs to the DBKL and has been zoned as open space.

The residents have suggested that the land be used to build units for them to live in as they await for their low cost-houses to be built.

“It’s the best solution for all parties and only fair,” Suresh said, adding that he hoped the DBKL would hear them out.

Let’s see what other residents say:

THEY have until Thursday to leave their homes in Kampung Pandan and move to a government housing scheme in Puchong. Yet, about 160 residents in the Kampung Pandan Indian Settlement hope that their reasons for refusing to move to the flats offered by City Hall will be looked into seriously. After many street protests by residents of the settlement over the past year, they still feel that their reasons for refusing to move have not been considered by City Hall.

According to resident K. Ramamoorthy, 44, the residents were hoping to be placed in PPR units around Kampung Pandan or the surrounding area. He said there were PPR units around Jalan Cochrane, Sungai Besi, Jalan Peel and even Setapak that the residents would not mind moving to. “We do not mind living in different PPR flats nearby as it would not severely affect our daily lives.

But please, do not ask us to move 20km away. “It is not that we are refusing to move, as we know they have plans to develop the area. But the authorities just don’t seem to want to understand our predicament. “They want us to move to Puchong. We are currently in Kampung Pandan. Fifty children attend SJK Tamil Kampung Pandan which is walking distance from home.

Over 30 people work at the Royal Selangor Golf and Country Club, which is half a kilometre away. There are also many who work in factories and offices in the area. Also, we have those who are sick depending on medication from Kuala Lumpur Hospital. And, there are several others who are jobless,” Ramamoorthy said.

He conceded that there was a Tamil school in Kinrara Puchong, about 3km from the PPR Kampung Muhibbah units that City Hall is offering, but that would mean the children would have to rely on school buses and this would mean having to bear extra costs. Around 100 residents held a peaceful protest in the settlement yesterday, which was attended by Titiwangsa MP Dr Lo’ Lo’ Mohd Ghazali and Subang MP R. Sivarasa.

It was reported yesterday that Deputy Federal Territories Minister Datuk M. Saravanan said his ministry was concerned about the plight of the residents and pledged to look into resolving the matter. It was also reported that the residents were asked to submit an appeal letter citing reasons for their refusal to relocate. Saravanan was also quoted as saying that so far, only 29 of the 196 families had accepted City Hall’s offer to relocate.

The residents even went to DPM Muhyiddin’s house  last month to submit their protests:

ABOUT 30 residents from the Kg Pandan Indian settlement turned up at the home of Deputy Prime Minister and Education Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin at Bukit Damansara last night asking for help to save their settlement from being demolished.

“We have asked for help from many different parties but we have yet to be given land in place of (the land) where we were born and grew up. We hope the government will be able to give us a fair solution,” said S. Rama, 58, a resident.

Kampung Pandan

PLEA: Temple president Sri Maha Kaliamman Sevai Nilayam (left) hand the memo to the Deputy Prime Minister’s home security officer at Bukit Damansara

Last night about 11pm, residents from Kg Pandan planned to hand over a memorandum directly to the Deputy Prime Minister.

Unfortunately he was outstation and the residents handed it instead to a representative from the DPM’s home security team.

The residents wanted to know how the relocation will affect the SRJK (T) Kg Pandan Indian Settlement, the Hindu temple as well as the Islamic madrasah which have served the residents well for many decades.

Residents were also concerned about their children’s attendance at their school in Kg Pandan.

“If we move to the low-cost flats in Taman Muhibbah, Puchong, we will also have to change our children’s school and this will be troublesome.

“We are hoping that we can be moved to the Seri Alam flats in Sungai Besi, which is only 15 minutes away from their school. It is also convenient for many of the residents who work in the city,” added Rama.

City Hall plans to relocate the squatters to make way for an access road connecting Taman Maluri and Ampang.

They will be allowed to return to Kampung Pandan once the public housing flats are completed. Earlier this year, the residents also sought help from Public Complaints Bureau chief Senator T. Murugiah. He supported the residents’ call to be allowed to move to the flats in Sungai Besi.

The Kampung Pandan Indian settlement traces its beginnings to the resettlement programmes of the British colonial authorities during the Emergency period.

The folks at DBKL have been very hardworking, visiting the site everyday:

According to residents, DBKL enforcement officers have put up stickers at various parts of the village informing residents to move out.

“Their officers have been coming every day and asking us whether we have taken the keys to PPR Kg Muhibbah and reminding us that May 14 is our last day,” said Beatrice Leelawathi Maniam, 67.

“They have been persistent and diligent in getting us to move,’’ Beatrice said.

The residents have not ruled out court case:

“We are determined to stay put,’’ said Kampung Pandan Indian Settlement Action Council head Suresh Kumar.

“We have agreed go to court as a last resort if we are forced to move to Puchong,” he said.

“We have no choice but to take our plight to the courts as this not only concerns our future but our children’s as well,” he said.

Suresh said they would engage lawyers recommended by PKR vice-president R. Sivarasah who is acting as their legal adviser.

“Since they have left us out in the Draft Kuala Lumpur City Plan 2020 (DKLCP2020), we have no choice but to challenge it,” he said.

Deputy FT Minister meanwhile spins some story on the issues being unrelated. Well, the same plan will be used in future to reject later requests as “its not in the plan”. Everyone knows how things work. Will the deputy minister accept the Aku Janji if it was his house that was affected? Tepuk dada tanya selera.

Meanwhile, in response to why the Kampung Pandan Indian settlement had been left out of the DKLCP2020, Deputy Federal Territories Minister Datuk M. Saravanan said: “The relocation of the residents and gazetting of the land are two unrelated issues. The gazetting has to be done at the Cabinet level. Moreover, the DBKL has already agreed to provide the “Surat Aku Janji” which is a black and white proof of their pledge,” Saravanan said.

When asked to comment on the legality of the “Surat Aku Janji”, Sivarasah said: “It has zero value. In fact, verbal agreements and letters of pledges have no value legally.”

“In other words, it is useless. You must get a signed Sale and Pur­chase agreement. That is a legal guarantee that you will be given a house,” Sivarasah said after attend­ing a peaceful demonstration in Kampung Pandan on Sunday to protest against the reloca­tion of the residents to Puchong.

According to Sivarasah, it is normal in any relocation exercise for the local authority to issue pledge letters.

“Later, when there is a change in administration, their usual excuse will be that the letter is no longer valid,” he said.

Sivarasah also said DBKL’s notices to residents to move out was illegal since it did not spell out that they planned to demolish the houses.

It doesn’t help that the opposition (or is it the ruling coalition in KL) is helping out the residents. Any solution will be viewed with a political stance.  It will be “us against them” mentality. The residents may lose out because bringing their problem to their MPs who are incidentally from opposing camp. But if not to MP, then rely on who? FT Ministry? DBKL? Thus, residents are caught in a dilemma.

So, will it be the end of the settlement? Two years down the lane, will we see more broken families, single parents, troublesome youths, and increased crime rates due to the actions taken today? Are the families to take risk and rely on words of the DBKL, ministers and authorities? Would you do that if it happens to you?

murugiah faces kayveas, macc, bullets

May 12th, 2009
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Poor guys has a lot to chew on the last few days. His party is about to sack him, leaving him partyless. His position as Deputy Minister will be questioned. He can jump to another party, but Samy said no, thank you. Left with Gerakan or UMNO (if Murugiah converts).

I would very much prefer if Murugiah stays in his own party. It’s better for him to talk to his president and settle this amicably,” Samy Vellu told reporters at the Maju Institute of Educational Development Buku Latihan UPSR 2009 launch yesterday.

He said Murugiah had never been a MIC member as alleged by PPP president Datuk M. Kayveas.

His position as supreme council member is in real danger as president Kayveas will be removing him as the appointment of supreme council members was his prerogative, as stated in the party constitution.

“After he disqualified himself to be the youth head, I immediately appointed him to the supreme council.

“But, since he has no interest in supreme council meetings and has to take care of the 27 million Malaysians, I will relieve him of his position as a supreme council member.

“I will send the letter once I get back to office,” he said during the NSTLive chat at Balai Berita.

Kayveas also had some choice words for Murugiah. Really stunning!:

Commenting on Murugiah’s popularity, Kayveas said, “perhaps to be popular in politics, I should visit the morgue, some clogged drains or some Bangladeshis under the bridge.

Or call huge gatherings of the Indian community and promise them the world. And be prepared to be bashed after 10 years because that’s how long it takes for the public to realise that they are being misled.”

He said despite many attempts to mend fences with Murugiah, the latter never had time for a PPP member or even Kayveas.

He even refused to come to the headquarters or attend supreme council meetings. Unless you want me to make an appointment with his office and go and see him in Putrajaya.

But, even then it looks like he won’t give me an appointment because he does not have any intention of meeting me because he wants to meet the prime minister.”

Kayveas claimed that in the 11 months since Murugiah became a deputy minister, he has only visited the PPP headquarters only three times. “Probably, after visiting the morgue, he doesn’t know the way to the PPP HQ. But, then again, he can always get the help of a GPS,” he added sarcastically.

Asked about Murugiah’s future should he be sacked from the party, Kayveas said, “I don’t care if he joins another party. He will join even a tea party if he is offered a position there.

He said Murugiah was in MIC before he joined PPP from which he resigned in 2000 over the polygamy issue and subsequently rejoined.

“I’m not afraid of being challenged. He does not even qualify to challenge me in the first place,” he said adding that Murugiah was getting “too big for his shoes”.

When he was appointed, I told him that he is a known devil, publicity and power crazy.

“I warned him that if he doesn’t behave after having a position, we won’t hesitate to take action against him.”

Kayveas kept his words and got MACC into the picture. The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission has been furnished with the details of Murugiah’s alleged involvement in money politics. However it may backfire on Kayveas if he does not coperate with MACC:

People’s Progressive Party president Datuk M. Kayveas said MACC officers came to the party’s headquarters yesterday to get the details and a statement from him.

“I refused to give a report because I am not the one who complained. So I gave them the names and contact number of members who had,” he said during NSTLive yesterday.

He said as the president, he was merely bringing up the allegations.

An MACC officer in Putrajaya said Kayveas must provide the details to the commission. Otherwise, he would be charged because it was an offence not to report graft.

“Kayveas had repeatedly said that Murugiah committed money politics but to the MACC, money politics is still corruption. The MACC views the allegation seriously and will record his statement.”

Murugiah met PM Najib, but I guess he have to brace himself for the worst.

People’s Progressive Party supreme council member Datuk T. Murugiah yesterday met Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak for about 30 minutes but left the Prime Minister’s Office without saying anything.

Murugiah, who is also deputy minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, also kept mum over his present position after he was expelled from the party’s supreme council line-up.

Murugiah, who arrived at the PMO at 11.20am, was accompanied by his officers. Efforts to call him proved futile.

However, a source said Murugiah had been advised not to make any statement to the media to “cool down” the “hot” situation between him and PPP president, Datuk M. Kayveas.

The dramatic part of the story comes in the form of two bullets (why two? is there any significance?) casings and a threatening note which delivered in a package to Murugiah’s office.

Two bullet casings and a threatening note were found in a package addressed to Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk T. Murugiah in Putrajaya yesterday.

According to Murugiah’s senior private secretary R. Rajendran, one of his staff members found a parcel at about 2.30pm after returning from the toilet.

Seeing that the package was addressed to Murugiah, he gave it to Murugiah, who was having lunch inside his office.

“One of the officers opened the package and was shocked to discover the note and the bullet casings,” Rajendran said.

“The note warned him not to challenge PPP president Datuk M. Kayveas or stand for any post in the party. It also said ‘Don’t be a hero, I will finish you’.”

Rajendran said the police rushed to Murugiah’s office on receiving a call.

They conducted a search before interviewing his staff and Murugiah for more than one hour.

“Murugiah was taken aback by the note. We believe that the note and bullet casings were connected to political happenings in the PPP,” he added.

Kayveas immediately dismissed it as a ploy by Murugiah himself and even blamed Badawi for this fiasco.

PPP president M Kayveas, whose briny relationship with Murugiah has been widely publicised, however, claimed that the latter was fabricating stories to attract sympathy.

Bullet is his own story, he is a dramatist. I know him very well. It is his own story. It is his own creation,” he told reporter at a function in the Putra World Trade Centre last night.

You see, he needs sympathy, everyday he needs to be on TV, paper and other media,” he added.

“We (have) stopped talking. So now, he brings the bullet because he knows I have to reply. He wants to be popular and famous but he chose the wrong method,” said Kayveas.

“The supreme council has recommended a sacking which I have said is not fair but I think I will accept the recommendation and in the next meeting, we will sack him.”

… “We found out actually that he did not renew his membership and if it is confirmed that his membership was not renewed then no action needs to be taken… his membership will not be renewed automatically. End of the story,” he added.

Kayveas, who formerly helmed the deputy minister’s post in the Prime Minister’s Department, also slammed former premier Abdullah Ahmad Badawi for the tension in the party.

It was probably because Kayveas was not given a post in the cabinet after he lost the Taiping parliamentary seat to DAP’s Nga Kor Ming.

Instead Murugiah, who is the party’s supreme council member was conferred a senatorship and was appointed as deputy minister.

We had requested (Pak Lah) to put the most senior member in the party (in the cabinet) but when you put a junior member, this is what happens,” he added.

The end is nigh for Murugiah if he can dodge the problems soon.