Musa accuses ex-deputy of politicising statue issue By : Joniston Bangkuai
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Tuesday/National/NST41265928.txt/Article/index_html
KOTA KINABALU: Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman has denied curtailing religious freedom in Sabah.
Explaining his recent actions and the accusations that have been hurled at him over an order to stop work on the Ma Tzu Goddess of the Sea statue in Kudat, Musa said he was not against the building of the statue.
He said the decision to stop work followed objection from other quarters.
During a meeting with 50 Christian, Buddhist and Taoist leaders, Musa said the United Sabah Islamic Association, Angkatan Belia Islam Malaysia, Persatuan Belia Intelek Kudat, Kudat As-Syakirin Mosque committee and Umno Kudat were unhappy with the project site.
They objected because the statue was being built too close to the district mosque, he added. Tan Sri Chong Kah Kiat, the Tanjung Kapur assemblyman, who resigned as deputy chief minister and tourism, culture and environment minister last month had said two days ago that the decision to stop the project prompted him to resign from the state cabinet.
Chong, who mooted the construction of the statue, had implied that state secretary Datuk K. Y. Mustapha issued the order to stop work on the project on Musa’s instruction. He had also said that by resigning, “he was standing up to his principles to defend religious rights and freedom as enshrined in the Constitution”.
Musa said Chong’s comments were a personal attack on him.
“By saying that he resigned to uphold religious freedom, Chong was indirectly accusing me of suppressing religious freedom. I am talking today because I want to put a stop to this character assassination as I too have principles.”
He said the government always took into account the religious and cultural sensitivities of the multi-racial society when making decisions.
Musa said the state government had offered an alternative site for the 27-metre statue and agreed to compensate the cost incurred in building it at the present site.
“I met Chong and made him the offer but he accused me of inciting Umno and the Muslim community in Kudat to oppose the project,” Musa said, adding he was not informed about the project.
He accused Chong of trying to politicise the issue by making comparison to two similar statues built in Tumpat, Kelantan.
“The two statues in Tumpat are within a Siamese resettlement which are predominantly Buddhist and the area has also been gazetted as a place of worship.”
Musa said the original site of the statue had been awarded to a shipping company to put up a building.
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Musa accuses ex-deputy of politicising statue issue
May 8th, 2007
Lim Kit Siang – PM – reprimand and discipline JJ for racist remarks against Malaysian
May 7th, 2007PM – reprimand and discipline JJ for racist remarks against Malaysian Indians in California
PM – reprimand and discipline JJ for racist remarks against Malaysian Indians in California
The Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi should reprimand and discipline the Minister for Science, Technology and Innovation Datuk Seri Dr. Jamaludin Jarjis for his disgraceful conduct in making racist and derogatory remarks about Malaysian Indians when he met Malaysian students in California on Monday (30th April).
During his official visit to California on Monday, Jamaludin met some of the Malaysian students studying in California especially the ones from TPM Academy twinning programme at the Belacan Grill Malaysian Restaurant, Redondo Beach, Ca.
One of the students was Sheena Moorthy, a third-year Biotech Malaysian student in CALYPOLY.
Sheena complained that during the 3 ½ hour session, Jamaludin passed a few racial remarks on her, being one of the two Indians present there.
Sheena has formally written to the Prime Minister to complain against Jamaludin for the “totally uncalled-for racial insults”, citing the following instances:
Incident 1 – Each student had to briefly introduce themselves. When it came to her turn, while speaking he interrupted her and asked if she knew Samy Vellu, because he knows him. She did not see any relevance in that and he mentioned it a few times for no apparent reason.
Incident 2 – He gave a speech regarding how agriculture started in Malaysia. He mentioned how the British invested in Malaysia and made farmers work. Due to the lack of work force, “buruh India” was brought in. While mentioning this, he looked at her saying “that’s how we get Indians in Malaysia”.
Incident 3 – After saying he is going to get MARA to help the Bumiputra students, he looked at her and asked “How many Indians are here?” Sheena did not keep track of number of Indian students so she mentioned that in the room there were two (pointing to another Malaysian Indian friend, who is fair skinned) and Jamaludin looked at him and asked “Oh. You are an Indian? Which means you are an upper class Indian and she is the lower class one” (pointing at her). Jamaludin went on to say that, “Oh, I am not going to help upper class Indians, I only help the lower class ones. They are the ones that need it’.
Sheena left the room feeling very insulted as the Minister had judged her based on her skin colour.
This incident happened in front of a crowd of about 100 people including students, officials from the Malaysian Consulate, TPM, Tourism Malaysia, etc. But everyone is afraid and nobody is prepared to stand up to speak the truth.
I can fully understand Sheena’s hurt feelings at being humiliated and insulted by Jamaluddin in public. All right-thinking Malaysians should support Sheena’s demand for a public apology from Jamaludin.
Sheena’s sister, Dr. Sheela Moorthy, who is currently living in the USA and supporting her sister’s education at CalyPoly, is so incensed that she has written to the media to express her disgust and anger that a Minister of a multi-racial country should be making such racist and derogatory remarks about Malaysian Indians at a function abroad, giving the country a bad image.
Sheena has also written to complain about Jamaluddi’s biased and disgraceful conduct to several Malaysian Ministers, including the MIC President and Works Minister, Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu.
I hope Samy Vellu would raise the Sheena issue at the Cabinet meeting next Wednesday to add his voice to the growing demand for public apology from Jamaludin and to support the Prime Minister to reprimand and take disciplinary action against the Science, Technlogy and Innovation Minister.
Jamaludin is still in the United States as he is currently leading a 300-man Malaysian delegation to the Biotechnology Industry Organisation (BIO) Convention in Boston, Massachussets.
NEWS:Sabah state has no objection to Mazu project
May 4th, 2007Malaysia, Truly Asia?
Sabah state has no objection to Mazu project
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/5/4/nation/17626220&sec=nation
KOTA KINABALU: The state government has no objection over the proposal to build a 10-storey-high statue of Mazu, or Goddess of the Sea – a privately-funded multi-million ringgit project mooted by former deputy chief minister Tan Sri Chong Kah Kiat.
However, Chief Minister Datuk Musa Aman advised that there were “better and more appropriate sites for the statue to be built” other than the proposed venue on the shores of Kudat in northern Sabah.
Local authorities had issued a stop-work order on the 39m statue which, when completed, would be the tallest in the world and another major tourist attraction for Malaysia.
The order has prompted several Chinese groups here to call for work on the project to resume. The groups also appealed to the Prime Minister as well as federal Tourism Minister Tengku Datuk Adnan Tengku Mansor to get the project going again.
In a written statement yesterday, Musa said he had never objected to the construction of the statue. “The application made by the Kudat Thean Hon Charitable Foundation came to my attention due to several objections raised by various organisations to the proposed location of the statue,” he said.
Musa said any decision on the project should be made in the best interest of all communities and maintain the existing harmony.
Datuk Sari Nuar Tan, who is president of the Sabah United Chinese Chamber of Commerce which is among those supporting the statue project, said: “I’m sure Musa never objected to the statue although rumours are circulating that he was against it and Chong resigned because of that.”
Chong, who was also state Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister, abruptly resigned from Musa’s Cabinet on April 13, citing “principles” and has declined to be drawn into further speculation.
The Sabah Taoist Association also hailed the revival of the shelved project. Its president Wong Kok Leong said his group wanted to meet Tengku Adnan in the larger interests of a multi-racial nation and to promote tourism.
Tour agency Popular Express managing director Dewi Chen said tour operators viewed the statue as a new tourism product in Sabah, in addition to the Tip of Borneo landmark in Kudat.
“It’s nothing Taoist, nothing political but purely a tourist attraction. Like the Petronas Twin Towers, it is straightforward and down-to-earth,” Chen said.