Posts Tagged ‘PPP’

mosquito party starts again

December 3rd, 2007
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Have two Ministers

source

THE PEOPLE’S Progressive Party has suggested that the Cabinet appoint two ministers to look into the affairs of the Indian community, Makkal Osai reported. 

PPP Youth chief T. Murugiah said there was now only one minister claiming to represent the community and all issues related to the Indians were brought to him for discussion in the Cabinet. 

“It is not easy for only one minister to handle problems faced by two million people in the country,” he said. 

students in Egypt angry Hindraf ignored King

November 30th, 2007
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hmmm…so, they should have submitted memo to King, instead of high commission. No problem, hindraf can arrange another gathering. december looks to be full with 3 rallies scheduled.  maybe january will do. 🙂

BERNAMA
source

CAIRO, Thu.:

Malaysian students in Egypt are angry with the Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) for ignoring the Yang di-Pertuan Agong in highlighting the problems faced by the Indian community in Malaysia.

Information Minister Datuk Seri Zainuddin Maidin said several groups of students who met him expressed their anger over Hindraf leaders' move to ask Britain's Queen Elizabeth II to intervene in Malaysia's internal affairs.

Their action was tantamount to challenging and showing disrespect to Malaysia's Constitutional Monarchy system and to Malaysians who are loyal to the country, he told reporters after meeting Egyptian Information Minister Anas Ahmed Nabeeh El-Feky here yesterday.

Zainuddin said: "In my view, by turning to Queen Elizabeth for help, Hindraf have portrayed themselves to be still under the British colonial rule and not as citizens of an independent and sovereign Malaysia.

"They have belittled the Yang di-Pertuan Agong in a subtle and a clever way, sidelining Malaysia's democratic system," he said.

youths not bothered to register to vote

November 30th, 2007
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one benefit of rallies like bersih and hindraf is that youths may be attracted to register as voters and get to know about local politics.

Spot Light: Youth apathetic and lazy when it comes to votingsource
By : Dharshini Balan

ONE-THIRD of Malaysians aged 20 to 35 have not registered as voters according to a recent opinion poll. And around half of the young voters feel there is little they can do to hold the government accountable between elections.

Thirty-six per cent of the 1,508 respondents in the National Youth Survey 2007 had not registered, saying they have no time to vote, or they are not interested or too lazy.

Others said voting is not important, and some said they do not know where to vote.

A few said their votes would not make any difference to the outcome of the upcoming election.

The telephone survey was conducted by the Merdeka Center with the support of the Asia Foundation. The respondents were randomly selected from all over the country.

Merdeka Center director Ibrahim Suffian said these figures show a lack of awareness among the youth of the importance of exercising their right to vote, and a strong tendency to leave any problems to the government to solve.

Some 39 per cent of those not registered as voters cited lack of time, and 17 per cent said they were uninterested or lazy. Seven per cent didn't know where to vote.

"The youth are disconnected from what is happening, even though they are concerned by the impact of the economy or social problems," said Ibrahim, adding that this lackadaisical attitude was becoming a culture.

"Some expressed that their freedom of speech is stifled due to many restrictions set by certain organisations," he said.

While the majority of young voters feel that voting is important, 52 per cent thought there is little they could do to hold the government accountable between elections.

Asked how much of a difference their votes made in influencing the government, 45 per cent of the respondents who are registered voters felt it made a lot of difference. Thirty-six per cent thought it made some difference, while 11 per cent said little difference.

Some five per cent of the respondents thought it did not make any difference at all. The remaining four per cent either did not know or had no response."There is an apparent gap between youth and the government as the youth do not have keen interest in politics," said Ibrahim.

Despite many programmes organised by the government to encourage youth to be more wholesome individuals, there was a lack of chemistry between the youth and the government, creating a void that must be addressed soon, he said. Ibrahim commented that these figures were likely to change after recent events like the Bersih and Hindraf rallies.

jeyaraj receives citizenship

November 28th, 2007
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Finally, I belong here, says Jeyaraj

By Sonia Ramachandran

PETALING JAYA: Sept 24, 2007 will be etched forever in David Jeyaraj's memory. 

It was the day he received his MyKad and citizenship. "From having no nation, I now feel I belong to this country. I'm also more confident and more secure. I have also opened a bank account and applied for a passport, things which I could only dream about before. "I can now also board a plane for the first time in my life," said Jeyaraj.

His newfound status is due mainly to Era Consumer, a non-governmental agency.

He also owes his citizenship to New Straits Times reader P. Ambika who was touched by his plight and took up his case.

Jeyaraj used to roam the streets with a picture of a woman holding a baby, asking everyone if they had seen her. The picture was that of his biological mother, Anbaiakie Muthan. After Jeyaraj was born on Aug 10, 1982, Anbaiakie went in search of her mother in Kulim, Kedah, only to find out that she had died. She then moved in with her mother's  neighbours. Not long after that, Anbaiakie signed a consent of adoption order and left Jeyaraj behind. On the order, her name was spelt Anbaiakie Muthan but Jeyaraj's birth certificate showed his mother's name as Anbaiakie Moton. The identity card number and name of his father were not mentioned in the certificate.

When Jeyaraj was 12, he was issued a renewable green IC (a temporary resident identification card) but the government stopped issuing temporary identity cards in 2003. The National Registration Department (NRD) told him his biological mother had to come forward before he could be given citizenship. Using Anbaiakie's IC number on the adoption order, Jeyaraj, along with Era Consumer, managed to trace her to a shelter in Kuala Lumpur. He discovered that Anbaiakie had also given birth to two daughters. He managed to get a photograph of Anbaiakie from the shelter's administrator.

Era Consumer raised his plight with the NST which ran an article about him. Ambika who volunteers at the Lighthouse Drop-In Centre, which provides food for the poor and homeless, recognised Anbaiakie from the photograph in the NST article and called up. Arrangements were made for them to meet at the Lighthouse Drop-In Centre on June 18.

"Jeyaraj stood at one side and just observed his mother. I could see tears in his eyes. After dinner was over, we called Anbaiakie to meet Jeyaraj. She said she had been looking for her son for 10 years and was so happy to finally find him," she said.

Jeyaraj said the MyKad was among his most treasured possessions. "I now have something that I never thought I would have — my own MyKad. I can now finally get on with my life," he said. He thanked Era Consumer director Nanthini Ramalo for not giving up on the search for his mother.

minister azmi says many indians studying medicine as proof community is well off

November 27th, 2007
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'Indians are not marginalised'
source
BERNAMA

KUALA LUMPUR, Tue.:

The Indians in Malaysia are not marginalised as claimed by the Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf), the organiser of Sunday’s illegal assembly, a cabinet minister said today.

Pointing out that the rally was evidently politically-motivated, Natural Resources and Environment Minister Datuk Seri Azmi Khalid said the Indians were given ample opportunities including advancing themselves in education.

Azmi said that during his visits to universities in Indonesia, the Caribbean countries and Russia, most of the Malaysian students studying medicine were Indians.

“Why must they talk about being neglected? We have more Malaysian Indians studying medicine in Indonesian universities compared with the Malays and other races.

“So from where the money came from? Definitely they got it from the opportunities to earn money in this country,” he told reporters after opening a conference on Forestry and Forest Products Research.

Illegal rallies would jeopardise foreign investments to the country which would in turn harm the nation’s economy and the people’s well-being, he added.

Thousands of Hindraf supporters gathered in the heart of Kuala Lumpur last Sunday to support the handing over of a petition to the British High Commission asking Queen Elizabeth II to appoint a Queen’s Counsel to represent the Indian community in a class action suit against the British Government for bringing Indians as indentured labourers to the then Malaya and exploiting them.

Hindraf has filed a US$4 trillion (RM13.5 trillion) suit in London claiming that the British were to blame for the marginalisation of Indians in Malaysia.