Posts Tagged ‘Survey’

Khir Toyo on temple demolition

December 21st, 2007
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Again, the temple demolition is stated as done after Deepavali. Click below to read more on the confusing dates:

http://poobalan.com/blog/borninmalaysia/2007/12/09/khir-toyo-meets-padang-jawa-folks/

Maybe they are talking about the outer structure and temple building itself, while the most important is the deities.

Khir Toyo: I cry for the squatters too
source: http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/76264
Nash Rahman & Beh Lih Yi | Dec 20, 07 2:33pm

Selangor Menteri Besar Dr Mohd Khir Toyo said he had done his best in the handling of a series of emotionally-charged demolitions of squatter houses and temples in the state.

“I saw the pictures (of the demolitions), I feel very sad. I am in a difficult position – to choose between one family and 10 families. Of course, as a leader, I’ve to choose 10.

“If I adopt the minority view, I am not being fair to everybody. I also cried (for them), but I need to choose,” he told Malaysiakini when asked on the controversies in a 90-minute interview at his office in Shah Alam last week.

The menteri besar, who took office in 2000, added that the state government has provided alternatives to the squatters including better housing scheme and financial assistance before asking them to relocate.

“We take action because we need to develop (the area) and fulfill our promise to the 80 percent (who agreed to move),” he said.

He described the 20 percent who refused to budge as a “minority group influenced by opposition parties”.

Open clashes

A visibly upset Mohd Khir also lamented that the minority group should have given in to the rest and not to “refuse everything” that was offered.

He revealed that even one of his relatives was not spared from eviction.

“In Kampung Rimba Jaya, one of them is my uncle’s son who lived there. He came and see me (to ask for help) but I said ‘no’. The land doesn’t belong to the state, (and) if I don’t settle the issue today, it will come up in future,” the 42-year-politician asserted.

Scenes of brutal confrontation emerged during the two most recent demolitions of squatters in Kampung Berembang near Ampang and Kampung Rimba Jaya in Shah Alam.

In both occasions, local authority enforcement officers openly clashed with residents when they forced their way in to the squatter area to demolish the houses – with the aid of tear gas and water cannons – when the residents refused to budge. Dozens of arrests were also made.

Since the demolitions, some of the defiant squatters, including women and children, are living in makeshift tents near their demolished homes.

The spate of squatters demolition done under the name of development is in line with the ‘zero squatter’ policy set by the Selangor state government, which it had targeted to achieve two years ago.

Social activists have criticised the high-handed actions in the demolition of squatter areas. Often the enforcement officers moved in even before the disposal of court cases where the residents had challenged the eviction order.

However, residents in Kampung Berembang – some of whom have lived there since the 1960s – won a minor court victory last week when a high court denied the developer possession of the land and set aside its injunction to prohibit evicted squatters from returning to the area.

Kept changing ‘golf pose’

On the demolition of temples in Selangor which has upset the Indian community, Mohd Khir said the state government had to face the intractable issue of temples being built on private or reserved land.

“If it is private land, we always put a condition that the landowner must provide (another piece of) land to relocate the temple. In fact, we force them to give some compensation to the local temple.

“When we discussed (with the local residents), there is often no problem. However, when outsiders come into picture, there is problem – they make the matter worse,” the menteri besar claimed.

Mohd Khir appeared to brush aside the criticism of MIC president and Works Minister S Samy Vellu who was irked by the demolition of a 100-year-old temple in Kampung Rimba Jaya in late October.

“They created the story of 100-, 200-year-old temple, (which is) not true. We know the oldest temple in the state… I don’t know what happened to him (on why Samy Vellu had reacted the way he did) – we demolished the temple only after Deepavali,” he said.

While the local authorities were stopped from demolishing the temple a few days before Deepavali, they however returned to complete the job soon after the Hindus’ most important festival.

Mohd Khir stressed that the state government’s move to demolish the temple was not made abruptly and they had started discussions and negotiations with the local residents for years.

“They kept on changing their ‘golf pose’ – we followed, but still we can’t do much,” he lamented.

‘No big impact’ on BN chances

Nevertheless, Mohd Khir remained optimistic and was of the view that such controversies would not jeopardise the ruling Barisan Nasional’s chances in Selangor in the next general elections due next year.

“After we give clear explanation, the people will become more reasonable and accept it. The issue turns into a big issue often due to no clear explanation… We are very caring actually,” he emphasised.

But he hoped voters do not cast their votes emotionally in the polls.

“Sometimes we have to make unpopular decision, but that is the reality that we have to face. We don’t want to be a party that promise yang bukan-bukan (something not workable) but can’t fulfill them after the election.

“The opposition knows they can never be the government so they promised macam-macam (all sort of things). They don’t really have commitment,” he argued.

Highlights of the interview

On Kg Berembang and Kg Rimba Jaya

Those in Rimba Jaya and Berembang are a minority group which is not happy. They are less than 20 percent (of the total residents). We have discussed with them at the initial stage until we reached a decision that the majority are satisfied with, only then we act. These squatters are to be moved to a better place and housing rental is being paid by the developer, state government or local authority until their houses are completed.

But there is a small group not happy because they applied for the land to be given to them or they argued the land was developed by them. We have explained that the land is privately-owned, not government-owned. We have many discussions with everybody. Take Rimba Jaya – we started talking about the issue five years back. Berembang was four years back.

On the temple demolition in Shah Alam

They created the story of 100-, 200-year-old temple, (which is) not true. We know the oldest temple in the state. There are about 810 big temples in Selangor and thousand of small temples. I don’t know what happened to him (MIC president S Samy Vellu who was upset over the demolition). We demolished the temple after Deepavali.

Impact on BN’s chances in general elections

Rakyat has to see the performance of the BN government. We are not simply doing something, we are doing it for our future. Sometimes we have to make unpopular decision, but that is the reality we have to face. We don’t want to be a party that promise yang bukan-bukan but can’t fulfill them after the election. The opposition knows they can never be the government, they promised macam-macam. They don’t really have commitment.

Like (PAS-led) Kelantan. Last time, they said they want to push for hudud law, what happen to that now? We don’t want to be a government that cheat the people. We want to be a government with integrity.

On the Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf)

Hindraf is not something new, it has been moving in Selangor for three, four years. They have the agenda to turn the Malays into their enemy. We see it, it has been there for a long time. They questioned why Islam is higher than other religions when we know Islam is the official religion and it was agreed to during the Independence. They also questioned the bumiputeras’ rights.

Criticisms against his leadership

I already have done my best. If people want to criticise, I can’t say anything. So far, Selangor is doing quite well. We have clear direction. We know what to do for the next five years.

buying a laptop

December 17th, 2007
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since my pc is giving problems in the last few weeks, i was scouting around to get a laptop as a secondary computer. the laptop was also to be a gift for Then. my eyes were on products from Dell. Took the opportunity to visit PC fair on 7th Dec at KLCC. We went around most of the laptop dealers booths. my budget was below RM3500 and style was the last thing on my mind 🙂

We surveyed the following brands: Acer, HP, Toshiba, Dell, Sony, Twinhead, Fujitsu, Lenovo, and NEC (did i miss any brands?) among others.

The lady at NEC tried to pull a fast one by showing their tablet PC which does not run on batteries (cannot compare with laptop, right?) when we asked for laptops.

Fujitsu pushed their “made in japan” tagline. their cheapest was about RM4K.

Sony was good at design and bundled softwares, but was pricey.

Oh, right i forgot to mention the specs i wanted:
– core 2 duo 2.0GHz minimum
– 2GB RAM
– 14″ screen
– free delivery/immediately delivered.
– 200GB hard disk
– vista home premium

now, that looked a bit tight for RM3400, but there were three which we felt quite reasonable – Dell, Acer, and HP.

Acer tried to attract by offering free movie pass for a year (buy 1 ticket free another ticket), which Then nearly fell for 🙂 The guy even offered a printer together.

Only problem with HP and Acer was the payment which had a charge of 2.5% for credit cards (i mean who in their right mind will be carrying Rm3000++ in a jam packed hall?). Secondly, it was impossible to upgrade the hard disk from the initial 160GB to 200GB.

That left us with DELL, which for the promotion, offered the Inspiron 1420 for RM24xx. I chose to customize and upgraded to the specs I. The final cost was about RM32xx, which is RM200 below my budget.

Post-purchase there were some problems. i asked to partition the hard disk. actually the sales agent forgot to write the partition request and cost in the initial bill. i called the following monday, and mentioned that the agent did not write on the order. the customer care said they will do so. but the laptop was delivered with any hard disk partition. Now i’m stuck with a 250GB partition 🙂

The laptop seems ok, but the DVD drive is a bit plasticky and looks like may not last long. I also feel that 2GB RAM for Vista Home Premium is the minimum required. The laptop is a tad bit slow at times.

I’m yet to install protection tools in it, hopefully can do it tonight. Plan to use AVAST Antivirus and also ZoneAlarm firewall.

Malaysia’s performance in Global Corruption Barometer 2007

December 8th, 2007
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NST reported about the Transparency International's Global Corruption Barometer 2007 (download PDF copy here). Some of the highlights on Malaysia are listed below:

1. 6-18% of respondents reporting they paid a bribe to obtain a service (Table 1)
2. Malaysia is among the countries who believe government efforts to fight corruption are most effective (Table 3).
3. Number of respondents is 1250.
4. 6% of respondents paid bribe to obtain a service. (Table 4.1 )
5. Police sector is perceived as most affected to corruption (3.7 out of 5), followed by political parties (3.6 out 5). Both are lower than the overall average of 3.6 and 4.0 respectively. Religious bodies are perceived as least affected at 1.9 out 5. (Table 4.2).
6. 63% says in next three years corruption will increase, 18% says decrease, while 19% says it will remain. (Table 4.3)
7. 53% says the government effort to fight corruption is effective, 10% say its neither effective nor ineffective, while 37% says its ineffective. (Table 4.4)

Graft hits poor in Africa, Asia hardest

source

BERLIN: Some of the world's poorest people in Africa and Asia are hardest hit by public corruption — forced to pay bribes for police protection, education and justice — according to a survey released on Thursday.

Anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International's 2007 Global Corruption Barometer showed that as a region, Africa suffered the most public corruption. In the African countries surveyed, 42 per cent of people reported that they had been asked to pay a bribe to obtain a service during the past 12 months. The Asia-Pacific region was next with 22 per cent; the grouping of Russia, Moldova and Ukraine came in next with 21 per cent; Latin America with 13 per cent; southeastern Europe with 12 per cent; the European Union with five per cent; and North America with two per cent.

"This year's Global Corruption Barometer has made it clear that too often, people must part with their hard-earned money to pay for services that should be free," said organisation chairman Huguette Labelle.

The survey of more than 63,199 people in 60 countries, compiled by polling agency Gallup, found that a majority believe corruption in general is on the rise, and they consider politics the most graft-ridden sector. Fifty-four per cent said they expected the level of corruption to increase in the next three years, 26 per cent said it would stay the same, while 20 per cent said it would decrease.

Slightly less than 70 per cent said political parties were the most corrupt institutions, followed by about 55 per cent who said parliament or the country's legislature was the most corrupt, narrowly trailed by just over 50 per cent citing police departments. The figures total more than 100 per cent because people gave multiple answers about where they paid bribes.

Of the countries and territories where interviews were carried out, Cameroon fared the worst, with 79 per cent of respondents saying they had paid a bribe to obtain services. They were followed by 72 per cent of Cambodians, 71 per cent of Albanians, 67 per cent from Kosovo; both Macedonia and Pakistan registered 44 per cent.

Romania registered the highest levels of corruption inside the European Union, with one in three Romanians saying they paid bribes in 2007 — a higher rate than last year, before Romania joined the EU, when one in five said they paid bribes.Canada, Japan, South Korea, Austria, France, Iceland, Sweden and Switzerland fared the best overall, with only one per cent of respondents saying they had paid a bribe. The United States, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Portugal and Britain did slightly worse with two per cent.

The study found that police departments were the most corrupt, with one in four respondents around the world who had contact with police being asked to pay a bribe — and one in six ending up paying. Police departments were followed by the judiciary, permit and registration services, the education system and medical services.

This year's survey was done between June and September. It has been carried out yearly since 2003.

newspapers advised to reduce hindraf coverage

December 5th, 2007
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Ministry clamps down on Hindraf coverage
http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/75671
K Kabilan
Dec 5, 07 1:08pm
Newspapers have been ‘advised’ by the internal security ministry to play down news reports involving activities of the Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf).

Malaysiakini learnt that top editors of all dailies were told at a meeting not to highlight stories and photographs relating to the Hindraf rally on Nov 25 and on all other matters involving the coalition.

The 90-minute meeting was chaired by Publications Control and Al-Quran Texts Unit enforcement head Zailani Hashim. He could not be contacted today for confirmation as he is out of town on duty.

However editors contacted confirmed the gist of the meeting, which took place at the ministry in Putrajaya yesterday afternoon.

‘We were basically told not to give prominence to Hindraf,” said an editor with a vernacular publication, adding that Tamil-language dailies were specifically mentioned for their coverage of the rally.

At the same time, the editors were also told not to publish news that would put the police and the government in a bad light.

“The KDN officer told us that we can report news about Hindraf but we have to give them low coverage,” said another editor who was also at the meeting.

“And we were told not to play up photographs of police being violent at the Nov 25 rally by Hindraf. The message was for us not to blame the police for what happened at the rally.”

He said the ministry appeared worried that the reputation of the police force could be further eroded in the eyes of the public.

On Nov 25, about 30,000 Indian Malaysians brought the busy Jalan Ampang to a standstill for about six hours, as they attempted to march to the British High Commission to submit a petition claiming they have been marginalised since being brought to Malaya as indentured labourers.

The police used tear gas and water cannon to disperse the crowd. Earlier that day, a smaller crowd of about 3,000 was similarly dispersed at the Batu Caves temple. The crowd had gathered there in preparation for the rally in Jalan Ampang.

Some protesters have since been charged with illegal assembly, while 26 others were charged yesterday with the attempted murder of a police officer after allegedly assaulting him with bricks. All the newspapers gave prominent coverage to this today.

The government has condemned the rally as illegal and dismissed claims that the community is marginalised.

Editors were also told not to highlight another rally by the polls reform coalition Bersih, planned for Dec 11 at Parliament House, against a proposed constitutional amendment to extend the retirement age of the Election Commission’s office bearers from 65 to 66. 

A previous rally by Bersih last month was dispersed by the police using water cannon and tear gas, but some 40,000 people managed to break through the cordons to march to the national palace where a memorandum was submitted to an official.

2004 survey shows indians earn more

December 5th, 2007
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perhaps the statistics should be separated to show malays, other bumiputras, chinese, indian, others, and foreigners.

the term bumiputra and malays are at times freely interchanged to suit certain needs and can cause misrepresentation.

Govt study shows Indians earning more

source

THE average household income for the Indian community in 2004 stood at RM3,456 a month. 

In contrast, Bumiputeras only had a monthly average household income of RM2,711, while Chinese RM4,437. "This is a five per cent improvement from 1999, where the monthly average household income for Indians was RM2,702," said Rural and Regional Development Deputy Minister Datuk Zainal Abidin Osman.

In his reply to a supplementary question from Datuk Dr Wan Hashim Wan Teh (BN-Gerik), he said the Hindu Rights Action Front's (Hindraf) claims that the Indians were poor and marginalised in Malaysia were false. Wan Hashim had wanted to know the status of the Indian community to ascertain whether there was any truth to Hindraf's claims of marginalisation.

"Millions of our citizens live comfortably compared to those in Tamil Nadu. In BN's opinion, there is no need for Hindraf to meet the prime minister. Go through the MIC."

Zainal Abidin explained further that in 2004, Indians only registered a poverty rate of 2.9 per cent compared with Bumiputeras at 8.3 per cent, the highest in the country. Poverty rate for the Chinese stood at 0.6 per cent. "The number actually showed an improvement because in 1999, the Indian community's poverty rate was at 3.5 per cent."  He reminded everyone to base their statements on facts and figures, and not allow false stories to affect the wellbeing of all Malaysians.

Earlier, Zainal Abidin told Wan Hashim that the government aimed to reduce the poverty rate from 5.7 per cent in 2004 to 2.85 per cent by 2010, and fully eradicate hardcore poverty by 2010. "Specifically for rural areas, the government aims to reduce poverty from 11.9 per cent to 5.95 per cent by 2010, and at the same time, fully eradicate hardcore poverty," he said.

Deputy minister: Indians better off than Malays
http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/75602
Fauwaz Abdul Aziz
Dec 3, 07 6:31pm
There is lower poverty among the Indians compared to the Malays and the former also enjoy higher household incomes, the Dewan Rakyat was told today.

According to Deputy Rural and Regional Development Minister Zainal Abidin Osman (BN-Nibong Tebal), the monthly household income for Indians in 2004 was RM3,456, while it was RM2,711 for Malay households and RM4,437 for Chinese.

He said this was a five percent improvement for the Indians compared to 1999 when their household income was RM2,702.

He said the poverty rate and hardcore poverty in 2004 among Indians was at 2.9 percent, 8.3 percent among Malays and 0.6 percent among the Chinese.

This was also an improvement for the Indians from 1999, where the rate was 3.5 percent.

"Because of this, we must hold on to the true facts and figures and not allow emotions and tall tales to influence the people," he said.

Explain to Hindraf

Zainal Abidin was replying Dr Wan Hashim Wan Teh (BN-Gerik) who asked for clarification of the per capita income and the incidence of poverty among the various communities.

"Let's explain this issue to (Hindu Rights Action Force) Hindraf in this august House where the ethnic Indians are situated… and the number of professionals (among Indians), isn't their percentage high in comparison with other groups?" asked Wan Hashim.

"Millions are living comfortably (in Malaysia). It is as if they are in Nirvana compared to the circumstances in Tamil Nadu." 


Wan Hashim was referring to claims by Hindraf, a group advocating rights and better treatment of Indians, who they claim have been discriminated, marginalised and exploited.