Kes RM60 juta: MB Pahang wajar letak jawatan

Source Harakah
KUANTAN, 21 Sept (Hrkh) - Dewan Pemuda PAS Pahang menyifatkan keangkuhan Menteri Besar menjadi punca kerajaan negeri terpaksa membayar berganda (RM60 juta) kepada Syarikat Pembalakan Seruan Gemiliang Makmur (SGM) atas arahan mahkamah dan wajar bertanggungjawab dengan meletakkan jawatan.
Ketuanya Suhaimi Md Saad berkata,sikap 'bodoh sombong' pemimpin berkenaan yang enggan berunding serta memperlekehkan SGM akhirnya membawa padah kepada kerajaan dan rakyat.
Difahamkan SGM tidak berkeras untuk menyelesaikan masalahnya dengan kerajaan negeri malah syarikat itu telah beberapa kali memohon untuk mengadakan perbincangan tetapi tidak mendapat layanan, membawa kes ke mahkamah adalah tindakan terakhir yang diambil syarikat itu setelah semua usaha untuk mengadakan rundingan gagal.
Kerajaan negeri, pada awal kes berkenaan dibicarakan di mahkamah langsung tidak menghantar peguamnya sehinggalah kerajaan negeri terdesak.
Suhaimi berkata, tindak tanduk Menteri Besar dalam mengendalikan kes berkenaan jelas sekali tidak bijak dan angkuh yang akhirnya membawa padah kepada kerajaan negeri.
"Mungkin pemimpin berkenaan menyangka tiada apa yang boleh dilakukan terhadapnya kerajaan yang berkuasa, sedangkan tindakanya jelas merugikan rakyat," katanya.
Mahkamah Persekutuan baru-baru ini menolak permohonan kerajaan negeri Pahang dan Pengarah Jabatan Perhutanan Negeri (defenden) untuk membenarkan rayuan terhadap keputusan Mahkamah Tinggi Kuantan yang mengarahkan defenden membayar RM37 juta kepada SGM.
SGM memfailkan saman terhadap defenden bersabit satu kawasan pembalakan di atas tanah milik Umno, di mukim Bebar, Pekan.
Suhaimi berkata, sepatutnya pemimpin berkenaan segera melepaskan jawatan sebagai Menteri Besar kerana bertanggungjawab di atas kes berkaitan.
"Melihat kepada cara pemimpin berkenaan mengendalikan isu saman SGM jelas beliau tidak mempunyai kelayakan sewajarnya untuk terus memimpin negeri Pahang.
"Semua pihak di dalam Umno wajar mendesak supaya menteri besar berkenaan diganti segera demi memulihkan imej kerajaan negeri," katanya.
Sementara itu, Pengarah SGM, Syed Ali Badruddin Othman berkata, pihaknya sedang mengkaji untuk mengemukakan saman kepada Menteri Besar dan kerajaan negeri kerana gagal menjelaskan bayaran sebagaimana telah diputuskan oleh Mahkamah.
Katanya, sehingga kini pihaknya tidak menerima apa-apa 'respon' daripada kerajaan negeri sama ada dalam bentuk bayaran atau memanggilnya untuk berunding mengenai cara-cara pembayaran.
Difaham tempoh kerajaan negeri menyelesaikan pembayaran kepada SGM telah luput pada 6 April lalu.

Western powers deplore 'disgraceful' Pakistan hotel bombing

Source TheAge-AP

Western powers condemned the "disgraceful" attack today on an Islamabad hotel that killed at least 60 people, voicing their resolve to support Pakistan in the fight against violent extremism.

- At least 60 dead

- International condemnation

- Foreigners targeted

Swift condemnation came from Washington, where the White House said the attack in Pakistan was yet another wake-up call about the global threat from extremism.

"This is a reminder of the threat we all face," said national security council spokesman Gordon Johndroe.

"The United States will stand with Pakistan's democratically elected government as they confront this challenge."

British foreign secretary David Miliband said: "This latest bombing attack in Islamabad is yet another shocking and disgraceful attack without justification." It should be deplored by the entire international community, he added.

Britain stood "shoulder-to-shoulder with the government of Pakistan against the violent extremists who have no answers but only offer death and mayhem", said Miliband.

Police in Pakistan said a suicide bomber detonated a truck packed with explosives, killing at least 60 people and injuring about 200 others, at the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.

The attack came just hours after the country's new president, Asif Ali Zardari, delivered his first address to parliament, only a few hundred metres (yards) away.

After the attack, Zardari vowed that the country would "continue to fight terrorism and extremism in all its forms and manifestations and such dastardly acts cannot dent the government's commitment to fight this menace."

The president is due to meet US president George W Bush in New York next week.

The European Union joined in expressing support for Pakistan, which has long grappled with extremism from al-Qaeda and Taliban militants, especially in the tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan.

"At this difficult time, the Presidency of the Council of the European Union addresses a message of solidarity to the Pakistani authorities, and stands more than ever with them in their fight against terrorism," the presidency, currently held by France, said from Brussels.

Spain and Italy also issued statements.

Spanish prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero extended his "deepest condolences to the families of the victims of this bloody attack", said the foreign ministry.

He expressed his solidarity "in these difficult moments" with the Pakistani people and their government, it said.

Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini "firmly condemned" the attack.

It underlined the need to "reinforce international collaboration, in particular with the countries of the region," to "wipe out terrorism", he said.

Democratic White House hopeful Barack Obama said the attack "demonstrates the grave and urgent threat that al-Qaeda and its affiliates pose to the United States, to Pakistan, and to the security of all nations.

"As the attack earlier this week on our embassy in Yemen shows, over seven years after 9/11, the terrorist threat knows no borders, and the terrorists threaten innocent civilians of all religions and regions," Obama said.

His Republican rival John McCain described the attack as an outrageous act of violence" that "must serve to deepen the resolve of Americans and Pakistanis alike to aggressively confront those terrorist groups that seek our destruction".

The attack "also serves as one more demonstration of the need for the next president to work closely with our partners and allies in order to counter the dangers posed by radical Islamic extremism," he said.

No Australians are thought to have been killed or injured in the terror attack, Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard says.

Ms Gillard said that according to Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade reports no Australians had been killed or injured in the blast.

"We are unaware of any Australians being involved,'' Ms Gillard told Sky News.

"Obviously, these are always difficult circumstances.

"We're working there on the ground to get the best possible information. But at the moment we are not advised of an Australian being involved,'' she said.

Oh is Penang Gerakan Youth chief, Ng retains Wanita post

Source NST

GEORGE TOWN: State Gerakan Youth secretary Oh Teong Keong defeated Youth committee member Dr Thor Teong Ghee to secure the Youth chief post here last night.
Oh's win was expected as he had been helping outgoing state party Youth chief Huan Cheng Guan to carry out his duties over the past year when Huan was away on official trips.
Oh said his immediate task was to unite all Youth members following the party's dismal performance in the March 8 general election.
"I will get Dr Thor to help me as our friendship goes back a long way," he said at the state Gerakan headquarters here.Dr Thor said he would leave it to the new leadership to see if his services were needed.
"This contest is based on the satu hati (one heart) spirit. Oh and I will close ranks to fight together for the party's interest."
Oh polled 140 votes while Dr Thor garnered 63 votes.
Earlier, speaking at the state Gerakan Wanita and Youth delegates conference, acting party president Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu Koon said the contest for the various positions in the party showed the strong fighting spirit among members although they knew there would not be any government post waiting for them, unlike previously when Gerakan was in power.
"We should continue to strengthen our commitment and organisation without which we have nothing to leverage on." Koh said the party would map out its future direction soon as it required thinking and strategy and was not based solely on sentiments.
Ng Siew Lai won the state Gerakan Wanita chief post unopposed. She has held the position since 2000.Both the Wanita and Youth wings also passed a resolution calling for the review of the Internal Security Act.
They also called on the government to take stern action against those responsible for inciting hatred and creating racial disharmony

Indonesians divided over catch-all anti-porn bill

Source TheAge
By Mark Forbes, Jakarta

A CONTENTIOUS anti-pornography bill is shaping as a litmus test for Indonesia's social direction.

The bill is sparking fervent opposition from the liberal Balinese, with claims that major parties are adopting a conservative Islamic stance ahead of next year's elections.

Indonesia's biggest party, Golkar, is backing the bill, which would legitimise action by community groups to prevent the making, distribution and use of pornography.

Golkar's support almost guarantees passage of the bill, which has a broad definition of pornography as any material that can "arouse lust".

The law was set to be passed on Thursday, but complaints from women, artists and the Balinese postponed the vote, allowing time to narrow the description of pornography and clarify what action anti-porn vigilantes could take.

The bill generated an outcry when proposed two years ago, and was put aside, but Islamic parties have gathered support for the bill and vow it will become law this year.

Only one major party, the PDIP of former president Megawati Sukarnoputri, openly opposes the bill. PDIP's representative on the pornography bill committee, Eva Sundari, believes the law will victimise women. "It's so ambiguous," she said. "The definition is too big, it says things that arouse desire are pornography. What about wearing a tight shirt but a long one?

"I think the social cost will be huge if they force it to be enacted into law. This is truly political."
Golkar's support for the bill showed it was becoming more right-wing and Islamic, she said.

A Golkar representative on the committee, Irsjad Sudiro, said a revised bill would be ready for a vote next month. Revisions would include the definition of pornography and a description of sexuality, he said. "Basically, it is only about words."

Although the bill would encourage public monitoring of pornography, that "does not mean that anyone can take the law into his hands as he likes", he said.

Yesterday, Bali's parliament formally objected, saying the bill could criminalise traditional customs and damage the island's lucrative tourism industry.

Bali Governor Made Mangku Pastika said the bill failed to consider Indonesia's cultural diversity. "It should provide sufficient space to accommodate the prevailing local wisdom in different communities across the nation," he said. "Many people in Papua still live naked or half-naked. Are we going to arrest them all?"

The bill's main proponent is the Islamic Prosperous Justice Party, a rising force in politics.
University of Indonesia political analyst Arbi Sanit said legislators knew the bill could increase their support ahead of the elections, particularly from a large number of Muslim voters. (Indonesia, with 200 million people, has the world's largest Islamic population.)

"The bill is not intended to solve problems with pornography, but merely to win elections," he said.

Asia casts nervous eye on US

Source StraitsTimes

SEOUL - MR HAN Seung Woo is casting a wary eye on the financial crisis erupting halfway around the world on Wall Street.
From garment makers in southern China to real estate agents in India, businesses across Asia are worried that the turmoil will filter through to them.
'I'm watching nervously,' said Mr Han, the president of Sam-A Techno Solution, a technology services company in Seoul with 10 employees and annual sales of 3 billion won (S$3.85 million).
Even before the past week's dramatic events, the economic slowdowns in the US and Europe were dragging on Asia's biggest economies in Japan, China and South Korea. Now, the worry is it could get worse.
The fears highlight the growing realisation that Asian economies have not 'decoupled' as much from their longtime dependence on the US market as some had previously thought or hoped.
'Right now people somehow conclude that decoupling is a myth,' said Citibank Korea economist Oh Suk Tae.
Lending has tightened around the world as Western banks stagger under the weight of billions of dollars in bad loans and mortgages that have accumulated from the wave of US home foreclosures.
Those woes led to one of the most unforgettable weeks in financial history: major US investment bank Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, Bank of America bought Merrill Lynch, and the Federal Reserve bailed out troubled insurer American International Group - sending shock waves through global markets and fanning fears of a worldwide financial meltdown.
World markets rallied on Friday on news of a US government plan to rescue banks from billions of dollars in bad debt.
Mr Han, the South Korean businessman, said if the bailout plan stabilises the US economy and exchange rates, that would obviously be positive.
But whether the worst is over remains to be seen, and the economic outlook is still plenty murky for businesses across Asia, especially smaller ones that lack the financial resources of larger corporations.
'We're OK until the end of the year, but I have no idea what 2009 will look like,' said Mr Christopher Fussner, president of Singapore-based electronic equipment distributor TransTechnology, which has 165 employees in nine Asian countries. 'My clients are trying to digest what's going on.'
Volatile markets also could undermine consumption and investment in Asia. Already, corporate borrowing costs are rising as investors demand a greater premium on corporate bonds, creating a drag on investment in the region.
'We have a perfect storm in the making,' said Mr Ifzal Ali, chief economist at the Asian Development Bank in Manila.
He predicts the Wall Street meltdown means US economic weakness will last longer than thought, at least through 2009, seriously hurting exports from Asia, particularly China.
Shrinking demand for India's information technology companies and the withdrawal of global financial services companies from India will weaken property values and hit the outsourcing industry hard, predicts Mr Anuj Puri, India country head of Jones Lang Lasalle, a real estate company.
'The IT sector is going to take a beating,' he said, adding that he is going to shift his strategy to focusing more on domestic clients instead of foreign ones.
The pandemonium on Wall Street has added to anxiety for Chinese exporters that already have seen demand in key American markets decline.
'When we first heard the news, we were like, 'Oh, my! Why is the economy doing this again?' You know everyone is waiting for an opportunity to breathe, to recover,' said Tianji Leisure Products trade manager Lu Lingru.
The 110-employee company in Zhejiang province in China's southeastern export belt sells gazebos, garden umbrellas and outdoor furniture and depends on the United States for all its sales.
The company will be fortunate to equal last year's sales of 150 million yuan (S$31.4 million), Mr Lu said, and is trying to persuade customers not to demand price cuts.
Likewise, in southern China's Guangdong province, garment exporter Zhongshan Maochang Garment has already been under pressure from higher labour and material costs.
'Now, it's not easy to get orders from other countries because of the worldwide economic crisis,' said foreign trade sales manager Duan Zhihui. 'On the other hand, when you do have orders, profits are shrinking,' she said.
Not all think the situation for Asia is dire.
Mr Subir Gokarn, chief economist for Standard & Poor's in New Delhi, says the region might not have decoupled but trends in recent years have insulated it from shocks in the U.S. economy.
'There will be an impact but there are forces within the region - domestic demand in India and China and the ability of other countries to tap into that growth - that will partially offset global developments,' he said.
Exactly how Asia will ride out the current economic threat remains unclear, but some are bracing for a tough go.
'You have to stay flexible,' said Mr Kenneth Yu of Hong Kong. The 55-year-old businessman matches foreign investors with mainland companies looking for funding, an endeavor he says has become harder since the credit crunch began last year.
'I have to respond to different problems and crises ... otherwise you cannot survive,' said Mr Yu, who has engaged in various businesses in China.
'But surviving is becoming more and more difficult than before.'

Malaysia to resort to nuclear energy by 2023 -- report

KUALA LUMPUR -- Malaysia will turn to nuclear energy to generate electricity by 2023 as supplies of fossil fuel eventually run out, a minister said according to Saturday news reports.
Energy, Water and Communications Minister Shaziman Mansor said the use of nuclear energy was also an alternative to counter high global oil prices, the Star newspaper reported.
"I will be briefing the cabinet in a fortnight. We have no choice but to start the ball rolling," he was quoted as saying.
"You cannot say you want to use nuclear power in the next few months, and expect everything to be in place," the minister said.
Malaysia in June raised electricity tariffs after coal prices surged but Shaziman said the price of coal was now much higher than the government's estimate of about $75 per ton.
"The increase in coal prices had been exceptional and we need to act now," Shaziman said.
State utility Tenaga has said it could construct the country's first 1,000 MW nuclear power plant at a cost of 3.1 billion dollars after being asked by the government to look at the option amid surging global oil prices and the country's limited supply of oil and natural gas.
Currently, half of Malaysia's power plants run on gas. Other sources include coal and hydropower.
The government last year said it would build Southeast Asia's first nuclear monitoring laboratory to allow scientists to check the safety of atomic energy programs in the region.

Abdullah should convene 929 Emergency Parliament unless his days as PM are numbered after Umno’s “918

Source MP KitSiang
The Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi should reconsider his rejection of the request by the Parliamentary Opposition Leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim for an emergency session of Parliament to debate a “no confidence” motion latest by Tuesday, September 23.
He should table Anwar’s request at the Cabinet meeting on Wednesday to secure Cabinet approval to convene an emergency Parliament to end the six-month political impasse – resulting in the deepening and aggravation of the multiple crisis of confidence whether political, economic, nation-building, international competitiveness or good governance – by getting the country moving forward again with a clear-cut parliamentary vote as to who has the parliamentary majority to govern Malaysia.
Abdullah has said that Anwar’s ”916” plan to secure the support of the majority of the 222 MPs to move the country forward to address and overcome the manifold crisis and challenges confronting Malaysia is “a mirage” and “a lie”.
But the actions of the Barisan Nasional government belie these claims, whether it be the sodomy II charge against Anwar, the last-minute panicky “blur blur” agricultural study tour to Taiwan to sequester some 50 MPs from any possible defection, the spate of ISA arrests particularly against DAP MP for Seputeh Teresa Kok – all point to a government unsure of its parliamentary majority and even raising the question whether it is a government in its last throes?
If Abdullah is convinced and confident that he still has the support of the majority of the 222 MPs, why is he running away from the opportunity to prove Anwar wrong by convening the emergency Parliament session for a clear-cut vote to be taken on Anwar’s “no confidence” motion?
If Abdullah has the support of the majority of the 222 MPs, Pakatan Rakyat will accept the outcome of the Parliamentary vote and Abdullah can end the drift and the total lack of direction in the past six months to decide on what legacy he is going to leave behind as the fifth Prime Minister of Malaysia.
If Anwar succeeds in demonstrating that he has the support of the majority of the 222 MPs, Abdullah should accept the verdict and gracefully, peacefully, orderly and democratically effect a transition of power to usher in a new Pakatan Rakyat Federal Government - creating new political history in the nation’s 51-year history.
As the Cabinet would only meet on Wednesday, 24th September 2008, a suitable date for the emergency Parliament session to decide whether Barisan Nasional or Pakatan Rakyat commands the support of the majority of the 222 MPs would be Monday, September 29 – which will end the political impasse before the Hari Raya Puasa holidays!
It is in the national interest that the political impasse, the national drift and the deepening multiple crisis of confidence afflicting Malaysia for over half a year is immediately ended with a definitive confidence vote in Parliament, as they do not permit any further procrastination such as waiting for Parliament to be reconvened on October 13.
Let Parliament be recalled in emergency session on Sept. 29 for probably its most important vote in the nation’s 51-year history!
Why is Abdullah shying away from the historic opportunity that is presented by Anwar to prove that he is still Prime Minister with majority parliamentary support, especially if he is convinced that “916” is just Anwar’s “mirage”?
Could it be that Abdullah is not absolutely certain and confident that he could command the support of a majority of 222 MPs in Parliament if a no confidence motion is put to a vote?
Or could it be that Abdullah felt that no purpose would be served in securing a ringing endorsement of parliamentary majority support when his days as Prime Minister are numbered?
It is open secret that at the “918” Umno Supreme Council meeting two days ago, Abdullah came under intense pressure that he should step down as Prime Minister much earlier than the June 2010 timeline he envisaged in his power transition plan.
The pressures for Abdullah to bring forward his transition plan was spearheaded by Datuk Seri Shafie Apdal and had the support of UMNO heavyweights like Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin and Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein. Wanita Chief Tan Sri Rafidah Aziz even said that Abdullah would not be able to secure the minimum 58 nominations required to defend his presidency when the UMNO Division nomination process begins on October 9.
Have the Umno war-lords shortened Abdullah’s tenure as Prime Minister to October 9 – a matter of less than three weeks?
If so, what is going to happen to Khairy Jamaluddin?
Abdullah’s “magic” when he became Prime Minister five years ago and which created the greatest Barisan Nasional electoral victory in the 2004 general election, winning over 91 per cent parliamentary seats, have turned to ashes in a matter of less than five years.
Five years ago, there was nothing wrong Abdullah could do. Today, there is nothing right the Prime Minister could do.
Has he become a lame-duck Prime Minister, Umno President and Barisan Nasional chairman?

Abdullah batalkan hasrat berundur??

Source Harakah
KUALA LUMPUR, 21 Sept (Hrkh) - Perdana Menteri, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi membatalkan hasratnya untuk meletak jawatan Oktober ini, kata blogger Umno, Amin Yatim.
Malah, menurut maklumat yang beliau terima, Abdullah akan mempertahankan jawatannya dalam pemilihan Umno Disember ini.
Menurut Amin, walaupun selepas mesyuarat Majlis Tertinggi Umno (MT) 18 September lalu Abdullah dikatakan akan meletak jawatan sebelum 9 Oktober, namun desakan menantunya Khairy Jamaluddin, Pegawai Khasnya Datuk Ahmad Zaki Zahid dan Setiausaha Politiknya yang juga Adun Kok Lanas, Datuk Md Alwi Che Ahmad menjadi punca perubahan ini.
Mereka meyakinkan Abdullah bahawa terdapat 100 bahagian akan menyokong pencalonan Abdullah sebagai Presiden Umno, kata blogger itu.
Isu perubahan kepimpinan bertiup kencang semula selepas Pilihan Raya Kecil Permatang Pauh. Menurut Amin, Bekas Perdana Menteri,Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad dikatakan menemui dua orang pemimpin kanan Umno iaitu, Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin dan Datuk Seri Dr Mohamad Khir Toyo.
Dr. Mohamad Khir, katanya, dikatakan memainkan peranan penting dalam percaturan belakang tabir yang menimbulkan kegemparan dalam mesyuarat Majlis Tertinggi Umno Khamis lalu.
Antaranya, katanya lagi, termasuklah menerbitkan satu catatan berjudul "Krisis Kepimpinan: Pisau dan Mentimun Di Tangan Kita." yang dikatakan menjadi pencetus "kepanasan" mesyuarat MT Khamis lalu.
"Menurut sumber Malaysia Airline System (MAS), Dr. Khir telah menukar tiket kapal terbang untuk mengerjakan umrahnya dari 18 September ke 19 September pada petang Isnin lalu.
"Pada pagi hari yang sama Dr. Mohamad Khir dilihat keluar dari pejabat salah seorang pemimpin tertinggi Umno," kata Amin dalam blognya itu
Dr. Mohamad Khir juga, katanhya, dikatakan menemui Dr. Mahathir sebanyak dua kali sejak dua minggu lalu.
Bagaimanapun, kata Amin, beliau difahamkan bahawa Dr. Mohamad Khir tidak sempat bercakap dalam mesyuarat MT tersebut kerana Timbalan Perdana Menteri yang juga Timbalan Presiden Umno, Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak telah pun "memotong sesi menghentam" Abdullah yang dimulakan oleh Ahli MT yang juga Menteri Kebudayaan Kesenian dan Warisan, Datuk Shafie Afdal diikuti oleh Naib Presiden parti itu yang juga Menteri Perdagangan Antarabangsa dan Industr Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yasin dan Ketua Wanita Umno, Tan Sri Rafidah Aziz.
Menurut Amin, Abdullah dikatakan memberitahu Setiausaha Agong Umno, Datuk Seri Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor selepas mesyuarat tersebut bahawa beliau akan melepaskan jawatannya dalam jangka masa yang terdekat.
"Namun mesyuarat bersama para pegawai dan menantunya semalam telah mengubah senario. Pak Lah dilaporkan telah diminta terus mempertahankan jawatannya. Desakan paling kuat dikatakan datang dari Khairy, Md Alwi dan Ahmad Zaki," kata blogger Umno itu.
Ketua Penerangan Umno yang juga Menteri Kemajuan Luar Bandar dan Wilayah, Tan Sri Muhammad Muhd Taib dikatakan cuba mendapat sokongan Badan Perhubungan Umno Selangor kepada Abdullah yang bermesyuarat pagi Jumaat lalu, katanya.
Namun, katanya lagi, 19 daripada 22 Umno bahagian di Selangor telah memutuskan untuk mencalonkan calon lain bagi jawatan Presiden Umno.
Sementara itu, Utusan Malaysia melaporkan, Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi semalammengadakan pertemuan tertutup dengan pemimpin-pemimpin Umno Perak dari peringkat bahagian, pergerakan Wanita, Pemuda dan Puteri di Bangunan Ibu pejabat Umno Perak di Ipoh.
Abdullah yang tiba kira-kira pukul 6.30 petang, disambut oleh Pengerusi Badan Perhubungan Umno Perak Datuk Seri Tajol Rosli Ghazali serta pemimpin Umno negeri yang lain.
Selepas pertemuan itu, Abdullah yang juga Presiden Umno berbuka puasa bersama pemimpin Umno negeri sebelum menunaikan solat Maghrib, Isyak dan Tarawih berjemaah.
Abdullah kemudiannya berlepas pulang ke ibu negara.
Hadir sama Menteri di Jabatan Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi dan Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz

Mexico combats police corruption with mortgages

Source IndependentMail

MORELIA, Mexico (AP) -- Mexican police are testing a new weapon against widespread corruption in their ranks: home ownership.
Officers and prison guards in Michoacan state can now get special deals on houses and financing through a pilot program designed to keep them out of the pockets of organized crime. The strategy is part of Mexico's desperate push to professionalize local law enforcement, infamous for extorting bribes at bogus traffic stops and providing security for drug lords.
Through a partnership between a private homebuilder and the state, more than 4,000 police and prison guards who normally wouldn't qualify are eligible for mortgages on brand new homes under construction outside Morelia, the state capital. The state provides the land and gets refunded from the mortgage payments. The homeowners must pass background checks and forfeit the property if convicted of a crime.
The program fulfills a dream deferred for some police officers.
"It's the first time they've given us the opportunity and that anyone has cared about us," said Fabian Arreola, 33, a Michoacan highway patrolman and army veteran who grew up on a small ranch with a dirt floor. He supports a wife and three boys on about $9,600 a year.
"This is a dream for all of us who never had our own home," said Michoacan SWAT team officer Luis Alberto Cruz, a mortgage applicant who grew up in a one-bedroom apartment with seven siblings. He relies on hazard pay to make ends meet.
The program so far is exclusive to Michoacan, but the homebuilder, Real Estate for the Promotion of Housing with Dignity, is courting other Mexican states that cannot afford to build police housing. As it pours the first foundations on land provided by the state, the company says it could eventually crack an untapped mortgage market for 750,000 state and local police across Mexico.
It's a market with inherent risks. Most Mexican police officers earn less than $10,000 a year. And they are considered bigger credit risks than even street vendors or handicraft makers because of the chances of corruption or that they will get killed, said Jesus Perez, president of the development company, also known as INPROVIDI.
Also, corrupt officers fired from one police force often show up for work in other states.
"There's a high percentage of police who go jumping from state to state, from city to city because they don't do their job," Perez said. "Once a police officer understands that it means more to have a home, to set down roots, than to receive a bribe - albeit three times his salary - they're going to think twice about being corrupt."
Mexican President Felipe Calderon considers many police forces so corrupt and incompetent that he has sent 20,000 soldiers to fight gangs in drug-trafficking hot spots, starting with Michoacan, his home state. His administration also is raising federal police salaries, improving training and using soldiers to clean up corruption in local forces.
Last year, Tijuana police were stripped of their guns for weeks while soldiers checked to see if the weapons had been used in crimes. Police carried slingshots in protest.
Officers who remain clean become targets of intimidation and assassination. The war with organized crime has killed more than 450 law enforcement officials in the 18 months since Calderon took office.
Some analysts have doubts that a new home - and the prospect of losing it by committing a crime - will make Mexico's police walk the line.
"The police are incurably corrupt, and I don't see any way around it," said George Grayson, a Mexico expert at the College of William & Mary in Virginia.
Rights groups that monitor police corruption see potential in the new approach.
"It's quite an innovative way of doing business," said Jose Miguel Vivanco, executive director of the Americas for Human Rights Watch. But he also warned that more credible sanctions are needed, or else corrupt officers will have access to cheap mortgages.
Most homes in Mexico are still either inherited or built by hand. But government housing credits and a new generation of entrepreneurial nonbank lenders have spurred a housing boom over the past decade by reaching out to legions of Mexicans with no formal credit history. Developer INPROVIDI is partnering with at least two such private mortgage lenders to finance the Michoacan program.
More than half the 4,196 houses under construction in the parched hills outside Morelia are reserved for police and prison guards. About 2,100 police and guards have applied for loans on the houses, and 600 have been approved.
Those who pass criminal background checks can qualify for houses averaging about $32,000. They range from two-bedrooms and 410 square feet to two stories and 1,300 square feet.
Buyers will spend between 25 percent and 30 percent of their monthly income on mortgage payments, said Kristian Frich, INPROVIDI vice president. The annual fixed interest rate is about 13 percent - considered competitive in Mexico.
To minimize the risk of default, the lender pays for a financial adviser to help buyers with month-to-month planning. The police officers will also pay into an association to finance the upkeep of the development and retain home values.
Officers on the Michoacan force said homeownership will bring more dignity to a risky, poorly paid profession.
"I understand that corruption won't end," said Efrain Barrera, a 48-year-old deputy director of traffic and highways, whose says his mortgage application was accepted. "By bringing a little dignity to the police and elevating their living situation, it's an incentive for them. It also brings self-respect to their families."
Cruz, the SWAT officer, applied for a mortgage in June, eager to move out of a home owned by his in-laws. He's still awaiting approval.
He says mortgages may help attract better qualified officers. But housing probably won't make much of a dent in corruption, which he said usually starts with top commanders.
Meanwhile, Cruz is not too concerned about living in a subdivision full of police, who often are threatened by organized crime.
"It's going to be a safe subdivision because it's going to be full of police out there," he said. "I don't owe anyone anything. So why be scared?"

Ramadan fast means hard times for smokers

RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) -- It's the fasting month of Ramadan, and fear of God keeps taxi driver Abdel Karim Romaneh from reaching for the pack of cigarettes next to his gearshift during the day, despite his pounding head and frazzled nerves.
But once the sun sets and the call of "Allahu Akbar" from Ramallah's mosques ends the daytime ban on food, drink and cigarettes, Romaneh indulges in his favorite vice.
"I don't want to quit smoking," said Romaneh, 42, who lights one Gauloise Light with another, inhaling deeply in between sips from a glass of thick Arabic coffee. "Smoking is a joy."
Like Romaneh in this West Bank Palestinian city, millions of Muslim smokers get on a nicotine roller coaster during Ramadan, which ends this year in late September. But health campaigners are increasingly trying to get them to quit altogether, using Ramadan as a springboard for anti-smoking drives.
A London mosque runs a "Stop smoking for Ramadan, stop smoking for life" appeal on its Web site, and a Saudi volunteer network is trying to bring that message to 10 million Arab Internet users.
Aurangzaib Amirat of Britain's National Health Service has toured more than a dozen Manchester mosques this Ramadan, handing out nicotine patches and lozenges to help the faithful quit for good. He said it's a good time to make the pitch. "They are fasting anyway," said Amirat, a Muslim.
Clerics are also coming under pressure to declare smoking "haram," meaning forbidden by Islam.
"Clerics and imams will be instrumental in getting the message out ... in saying smoking is bad for your body," said Shiraz Malik, executive director of the Islamic Medical Association of North America, which sponsors an annual anti-smoking campaign during Ramadan.
Islam does not specifically ban smoking as it does alcohol, because cigarettes weren't around during the Prophet Muhammad's time in the 7th century. And many Muslims feel smoking is their only permitted vice and might resist new rules, Malik said.
Those favoring a ban quote the prophet as saying that believers must abstain from anything harmful. "Muslims shouldn't be addicted to anything," said Fadel Soliman, a former Muslim chaplain at the American University in Washington.
In a 2006 religious ruling, or fatwa, Lebanon's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Fadlallah, ordered his followers to stop smoking. However, the leading Muslim cleric in the Palestinian territories, Mufti Mohammed Hussein, says smoking, while "reprehensible," is not haram. And Gamal al-Bana, a maverick Egyptian scholar, says smoking is even allowed during the Ramadan fast because it's not explicitly banned in the Quran, the Muslim holy book, or by Muhammad.
Nate Salem, 25, of Kansas City, Mo., who observes the Ramadan fast, said he won't give up his pack-a-day habit for good unless he gets a clear ruling. "Until this moment, the scholars didn't decide 100 percent about it," he said during a visit to his native Ramallah, sitting in a cloud of smoke in a local coffee shop one evening last week.
Clerics might be reluctant to issue a fatwa that forces Muslims to choose between faith and addiction.
"(Even) if you say 'haram,' people will keep smoking because they are addicted," said Imam B. Prasodjo, a sociologist in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, where almost two-thirds of men smoke. Prasodjo is trying to persuade Muslim leaders to at least impose a ban on cigarette advertising.
Smoking is embedded in the culture of many Muslim countries. About 63 percent of men smoke in Jordan; 49 percent in Tunisia; 42 percent in Syria; 38 percent in the Palestinian territories and 28 percent each in Lebanon and Morocco. Few women smoke because of cultural taboos.
Cigarette packs in Egypt carry graphic images such as a dying man in an oxygen mask. In Jordan, billboards warn about the risks. In Lebanon, many restaurants have no-smoking zones.
But it remains a battle, even - and perhaps especially - during Ramadan. Across the region, Muslims crowd restaurants and special tents after the "iftar," the meal that breaks the day's fast, and smoke, sometimes all night.
Smokers develop coping routines.
Saudi banker Tamer Aziz, 30, keeps busy, but says cigarettes are always on his mind. After sundown, he eats a date, drinks water and then lights up. Ahmed al-Saeed, 40, a shopkeeper in Amman, Jordan, dulls the urge by sleeping in the afternoon.
And some give up. In Tehran, Iranian civil servant Hamid Amiri, 43, sneaks into the bathroom for a smoke two or three times a day.
Romaneh, the Ramallah taxi driver, says fear of smoking-related illness is nothing compared to the fear of eternal damnation for violating Ramadan.
"This cigarette is burning me alive," he said. "I don't want it to be the reason for me burning in the afterlife."

'Offered millions' to jump ship

Petaling Jaya - The offers to jump ship came over the phone, accompanied by promises of millions of dollars and Cabinet posts.
Some of the callers were well-known local businessmen, some anonymous. Their goal: to win faithfuls from the ruling coalition Barisan Nasional (BN) over to the opposition Pakatan Rakyat.
For several BN state assemblymen and MPs, they were tempting offers indeed.
Some state assemblymen said they were offered several million ringgit to switch political allegiance, while the rate offered to MPs was much higher. Some phone calls, said BN members, would lead to meetings, sometimes with opposition leaders.
Such tactics were revealed by the chairman of the Barisan Backbenchers Club, Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing, local media reported yesterday. Two MPs, he said, told him they got the phone calls from a businessman and a lawyer two weeks ago.
'I know who the businessman and the lawyer are but I cannot reveal the names as well as the amount they offered,' he told The Star daily.
The reports emerged as opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim continues to claim that he has won over enough BN MPs to form the next government. Datuk Seri Anwar now needs 29 BN MPs to defect.
But so far, it appears the BN MPs have turned down the offers.
'We have signed petitions and pledged our loyalty to BN,' said Kota Belud MP Rahman Dahlan, who had also received offers to defect.
'But he (Anwar) will go on claiming that our names including mine are on the list...at the end of the day, when it doesn't happen, he will claim that we changed our minds.'
Some of the callers, MPs said, were well-known. One was reportedly a former politician-turned-businessman who was convicted of a white-collar crime in the late 1990s while another was known for his links to artistes, royalty and investors.
The constant talk of defections has angered backbenchers, many of whom said the rumours marred their reputation.
Mr Tiong's words yesterday drew a sharp reply from opposition Parti Keadilan Rakyat information chief Tian Chua, who demanded proof of the allegations.
'Pakatan has a firm principle and there is no way we will offer any MP money to cross over,' The Star quoted him as saying.

Call for cautious review

Source Bernama

KUALA KLAWANG - FOREIGN Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim on Saturday called for a cautious review of the Internal Security Act (ISA), saying that calling for the abolition of the act was merely a political opinion which should not be expressed.
He said he agreed that the ISA was not 100 per cent perfect and that the sections which did not allegedly meet humanitarian aspects could be reviewed.
'I agree with this. In fact, this is the principle we have been subscribing to all along,' he told reporters here.
Dr Rais, who is the Member of Parliament for Jelebu, said a review was started some time ago but it took time because of the changing conditions in the country in terms of security and public interest.
'When the time is right, there should be a review and it will not be contrary to any law,' he said. -- BERNAMA

Minister: Kok not a threat to public order

Source TheStar
PUTRAJAYA: Police released Seputeh MP Teresa Kok from the Internal Security Act (ISA) detention as they were satisfied she was not a threat to public order.
Home Minister Datuk Seri Syed Hamid Albar said her release from detention was not because police could not build up a case against her but because they were satisfied that she did not threaten national security.
“That was the principle behind her arrest and I believe that is also the reason why police have decided to release Kok,” he told reporters yesterday after presenting Hari Raya goodies to 289 ministry staff.
Kok, 44, who is also Kinrara assemblyman was released at 1pm yesterday after being detained for one week. Last Friday, Kok, Malaysia Today editor Raja Petra Kamarudin and Sin Chew Daily reporter Tan Hoon Cheng were arrested under the ISA.
Tan was released 18 hours later but Raja Petra remains under detention.
Asked if he was informed by the police over the decision to release Kok, Syed Hamid said he was told about it after it took place.
“They need not consult the Home Minister before releasing the person and in this case, they did not consult me.”
On a statement by the United States that detaining members of opposition parties under the ISA was viewed as infringing human rights and values, Syed Hamid said the Government was protecting the interest of its people.
“There are also many complaints about how the US handles certain issues including discrimination but we leave it to them to sort it out,” he said.
He said while Malaysia maintained good bilateral relations with the US, it did not mean that the country needed to seek their consent or approval.
He also said he had yet to read the replies submitted by Sin Chew Daily, The Sun and Suara Keadilan, to show cause letters issued to them for breaching publication guidelines.

Cracks widening in SAPP

Source TheStar
KOTA KINABALU: Cracks are widening in the Sabah Progressive Party’s east coast bastion of Sandakan with branches folding up following the party’s decision to quit Barisan Nasional on Wednesday.
Fifteen out of 17 branches with hundreds of members in the Tanjong Papat state constituency of Deputy Chief Minister Datuk Raymond Tan closed down with branch chiefs unanimously wanting to remain within the Barisan bloc.
Tan, who quit SAPP after party chief Datuk Yong Teck Lee announced the party’s pulling out of the Barisan, held meetings with the “dissenting” branch leaders.
The 49-year-old founder member of SAPP who declared himself a “Barisan independent” after quitting the party, said the branch leaders did not support the supreme council’s decision to withdraw from Barisan.
“I am now thinking of forming Barisan independent branches until we decide our next move,” Tan said, saying that forming a new party remained an option.
He expressed surprise over news reports that he intended to take over Parti Setia.
“I don’t even know who the Parti Setia president is and I don’t think he knows me,” he said in response to news reports that he and former Liberal Democratic Party assemblyman Datuk Liew Yun Fah were consulting each other in taking over or forming a new party.
Liew, a former minister, quit the LDP after he was dropped as a candidate in the March 2008 general election.
Tan claimed he was still getting feedback from the grassroots who were confused over the supreme council decision.
He is scheduled to meet Chief Minister Datuk Musa Aman on Monday when he will personally tender his resignation from the state Cabinet following the SAPP pullout.
Another Sandakan SAPP leader Au Kam Wah, the Elopura assemblyman, has quit the party and has decided to stay as a Barisan independent with no immediate plans to join Tan or any other party.

PKR challenges Tiong to lodge ACA report

Source TheStar
PETALING JAYA: PKR vice-president R. Sivarasa challenged Barisan Backbenchers Club chairman Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing to report to the Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA) if he believed Pakatan Rakyat offered bribes to Barisan Nasional MPs to jump ship.
“We invite Tiong to lodge a report. Let’s see what the investigation shows,” Sivarasa said.
He also welcomed any Barisan MP alleging that Pakatan was giving out bribes to report to the ACA as the party would also like to find out who was offering the money.
“Pakatan has a firm principle and there is no way we will offer any MP money to cross over,” he said, calling Tiong’s statement “not true.”
In response to Tiong’s allegation that the Barian MPs were also offered Cabinet positions, Sivarasa said negotiating posts was a normal procedure in any political framework.
“Even when we negotiated to join each other (to form Pakatan), we also discussed who would head certain positions in the party.
“There is nothing wrong or immoral about it,” he told reporters at a press conference here on Saturday.

Bar Council: Abolish ISA, free all detainees

Source TheStar
By FLORENCE A. SAMY
KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysian Bar has unanimously passed a resolution calling for the abolition of the Internal Security Act (ISA) and the immediate and unconditional release of all detainees, including Malaysia Today editor Raja Petra Kamarudin and the “Hindraf Five.”
Its president Datuk Ambiga Sreenevasan said the Malaysian Bar also strongly condemned the issuance of the three show-cause letters to Sin Chew Daily, theSun and Suara Keadilan and said they should be immediately withdrawn.
The resolution would be handed to the Prime Minister on Monday, she told reporters on Saturday after a closed-door extraordinary general meeting (EGM).
The six-point resolution was passed at the EGM that was attended by more than 730 members. It was also supported by four past presidents.
Ambiga said the Malaysian Bar also strongly condemned the Sept 12 arrests of Raja Petra, Sin Chew Daily reporter Tan Hoon Cheng and Seputeh MP Teresa Kok.
Tan was released after 18 hours and Kok after seven days in detention.
“Raja Petra and the other detainees should be released. They should be charged in court if they (are suspected of being) guilty of any offence.
“We unanimously and strongly call on the Government to immediately repeal the ISA and all other laws that allow for the detention of persons without trial, such as the Emergency (Public Order and Prevention of Crime) Ordinance 1969 and the Dangerous Drugs (Special Preventive Measures) Act 1985,” she said.
The Government, the resolution stated, should uphold its pledges to the United Nations Human Rights Council to promote and protect human rights and fundamental freedoms and to promote a free media, including in cyberspace, and to uphold the rule of law.
At the EGM, Kok, S. Pushpa, the wife of detained Hindraf (Hindu Rights Action Force) lawyer M. Manoharan and a woman known as Laila whose husband had been detained for more than six years under ISA, shared their experiences with those present.
“We are happy that Kok has been released but she should not have been detained in the first place.
“We are deeply troubled by what they shared and by the abuse of ISA which can be termed as a state of terrorism. Family lives have been destroyed and children are affected,” Ambiga added.
Former president Sulaiman Abdullah was quoted by national news agency Bernama as saying that the Government should take into consideration the challenges and trauma faced by family members of these detainees.
Some of their loved ones had been away for more than six years, he said.
“It’s about time the Government repeals ISA since it can be abused against those opposing the Government,” he said, according to Bernama.
Another ex-president, Kuthubul Zaman Bukhari, said this was not the first time that the Malaysian Bar called for the ISA to be repealed and added the law was no longer relevant to contemporary society.

Malaysia frees blogger held for suspected sedition

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA (AP) - Malaysian police on Saturday freed a prominent political blogger who was arrested for suspected sedition after he launched an online protest against Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's embattled government.
The case underscores the government's struggle to tackle increasing public dissent amid a threat by the opposition to topple Abdullah's administration through parliamentary defections.
The blogger, Syed Azidi Syed Aziz, drew the government's ire last month when he posted a picture of Malaysia's national flag upside down on his popular blog and urged other Internet bloggers to follow suit to protest the country's political and economic problems.
Authorities arrested Syed Azidi on Wednesday, saying he was being investigated for sedition, which is punishable by up to three years in prison.
Syed Azidi said in a statement posted on his "Kickdefella" blog that he was released Saturday. He said police treated him "well and most of the time, beyond the call of duty."
Police officials familiar with Syed Azidi's case could not immediately be contacted, and it was not clear whether he would face formal charges later.
Ahead of Syed Azidi's arrest, authorities detained another political blogger, an opposition lawmaker and a journalist last week under a separate law that allows detention without trial.
The politician and the journalist have since been freed following a public outcry, including by the law minister, who resigned in protest.
Public pressure on the government mounted Saturday as the Malaysian Bar, the main lawyers' group, held an emergency meeting to denounce the arrests under the Internal Security Act, which is used against suspects deemed to be threats to national security.
The lawyers issued a resolution calling for the Internal Security Act to be abolished and for the government "to immediately and unconditionally release all persons presently detained without trial."
Activists estimate there are about 60 such detainees.

Race Relations Act - Will it enable Barack Obama phenomenon in Malaysia?

Sources MP KitSiang
When the Home Minister, Datuk Seri Hamid Albar announced yesterday that the Cabinet has approved the proposed Race Relations Act to strengthen ties among the different races in the country, I immediately thought of two matters.
The first is the “penumpang” controversy set off by the Bukit Bendera Umno division chairman, Datuk Ahmad Ismail as part of Umno’s most racist and inflammatory campaign in the Permatang Pauh by-election, which was decisively rejected by the voters from all racial groups uniting as a pioneering Bangsa Malaysia to give a thumping victory to Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim to return to Parliament in triumph after an enforced absence of a decade.
The real fall-out from the “penumpang” controversy was after the Permatang Pauh by-election, where for two weeks, Ahmad was allowed to assume “hero” status among extremists and communalists for his provocative, inflammatory, insensitive and racist reference because of the abdication and bankruptcy of the moral and political authority of the Cabinet and the Barisan Nasional leadership in failing to take immediate action to strike down such divisive and destructive outbursts.
Ahmad’s grandparents migrated to this country from India. Why should a Malaysian who is a second-generation locally born in the country be so irresponsible, provocative and racist as to question the loyalty of a Malaysian Chinese like seventh locally-born generation Tan Siok Choo, daughter to Tun Tan Siew Sin and grand-daughter to Tun Tan Cheng Lock – whose ancestors came to Malacca 237 years ago in 1771?
Even up to now, Ahmad is totally unrepentant and immune from any police prosecution for his incendiary utterance – while the Sin Chew reporter Tan Hoon Cheng who had professionally reported Ahmad’s speech was detained under the draconian Internal Security Act but saved from the full iniquity of the ISA because of instantaneous nation-wide and international outrage.
What is the use of a Race Relations Act in Malaysia if the Ahmad Ismails enjoy immunity from the law being able to get away scot-free for their inflammatory, offensive, insensitive and racist utterances without fear of having to face criminal reprisals from the police and the Attorney-General’s Chambers for their seditious utterances?
The second matter that comes immediately to mind is about political developments the other side of the globe – Barack Obama’s presidential candidature in the United States.
Only 220 years ago, the Negroes were slaves in America, totally deprived of all political, economic, social and human rights. Today, an American black is one of the two contenders for the American Presidency in November – marking a historic breakthrough in race relations in the United States.
What has Malaysia to show in race relations in similar field after 51 years of nation-building?
When we achieved Independence in 1957, the Merdeka social contract and the Malaysian Constitution is unambiguous in providing equal citizenship status for all Malaysians, as in stipulating that any Malaysian, regardless of race, religion or class, can aspire to the highest political office in the land to become the Prime Minister.
The only condition for anyone to be Prime Minister is that he commands the confidence of the majority of the Members of Parliament.
During the first premiership of Tunku Abdul Rahman from 1957 to 1969, nobody would raise an eyebrow at the assertion that any Malaysian, whether Malay, Chinese, Indian, Kadazan, Iban and regardless of whether Muslim, Chrisitian, Buddhist, Hindu or Taoist, can become Prime Minister of Malaysia.
Half a century later, under the fifth Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, anyone who makes the assertion in public place that any Malaysian, regardless of whether Malay, Chinese, Indian, Kadazan or Iban, and regardless of religion, whether Muslim, Christian, Buddhist, Hindu or Taoist, would be looked askance and even deemed to have made a most“insensitive” statement.
There would even be groups in the country who would feel justified to be “provoked” by such a straightforward statement to launch vociferous protests up and down the country.
Why is this so, despite the Vision 2020 objective of creating a Bangsa Malaysia out of the diverse races in the country, which was proclaimed 17 years ago in 1991?
Will the proposed Race Relations Act resolve these knotty problems of Malaysian nation-building, or is its purpose to further institutionalize racial segregation and discrimination which have surreptitiously crept into various aspects of Malaysian life and taken deep and subversive root?
Will the proposed Race Relations Act open the way to enable and empower a major breakthrough like the Barack Obama phenomenon to take place in Malaysia or the reverse?
[Speech at the DAP Cheras SSS (Support, Sympathy and Solidarity) Dinner for Teresa Kok at Hee Lai Ton Restaurant, Kuala Lumpur on Friday, 19th September 2008 at 9 pm]

Frantic week for AIA agents

By Melissa Sim & April Chong
THIS time last week, it was business as usual. But by Monday, everything had changed for 4,000 AIA agents here.
One recounts getting an early morning phone call from a girlfriend in the banking industry to warn him that all was not well with the insurer's parent company, American International Group (AIG).
After that, the phone calls did not stop. Day and night flew by while he persuaded anxious clients that their policies were still sound. Meanwhile, Wall Street was in turmoil and customers besieged the AIA office in Finlayson Green to end their policies.
'Many clients were worried, but they were still financially sensible. They knew it was at their disadvantage to surrender their policies,' said the agent, who wanted to be known only as Mr Lee, 29.
He was one of 25 AIA agents who spoke about their frantic week.
'You have to be contactable. How would you feel if even your agent seems to have run away?' said agent Michael Lee, 39.
AIA is a member of the world's largest insurer, AIG, which has incurred US$18billion (S$26 billion) in losses over the past three quarters from guarantees it wrote on mortgage derivatives.
Of the 25, just two said they had clients who surrendered their policies.
Things began looking up on Wednesday, when the United States government extended an US$85billion loan to AIG.
Then another blow came on Thursday: Mr Mark O'Dell, AIA Singapore's executive vice-president and general manager had quit. Agents hardly knew what to think.
Said Mr Michael Lim, who is in his 40s and has been with AIA for eight years: 'If it's an individual decision, it's very selfish... If it's a corporate decision, the top management is very inconsiderate.'
With so much effort concentrated on keeping the peace, only a few agents managed to close deals this week.
More optimistic agents felt the storm would blow over in two weeks, but others saw a lull of at least six months. Said one agent: 'Confidence is everything in insurance. For the longest time, we had used the name of AIG to sell. But now... what has happened will be a mark that is there forever.'

Central banks redouble efforts to keep financial system alive

FRANKFURT (AFP) - Central banks redoubled efforts Friday to get the global financial system through the worst financial crisis in decades, raising the volume of injections this week close to around 800 billion dollars.

With stock markets boosted by news that Washington is trying to cobble together a US debt clearance mechanism, the Bank of Japan led the way, making two fresh injections totalling three trillion yen (28.3 billion dollars).

The BoJ has made emergency injections twice daily for the past four days, and the latest brings the total to 11 trillion yen since Tuesday.

The European Central Bank (ECB) meanwhile freed up 40 billion dollars and the Bank of England offered 40 billion dollars (28 billion euros) to financial institutions struggling to obtain funds amid a worldwide squeeze on credit.

The US Treasury said meanwhile it would guarantee US money market funds up to an amount of 50 billion dollars in order to ensure their solvency in another move to shore up the financial sector.

"Money market funds play an important role as a savings and investment vehicle for many Americans," the Treasury said in statement.

"They are also a fundamental source of financing for our capital markets and financial institutions. Maintaining confidence in the money market fund industry is critical to protecting the integrity and stability of the global financial system," the statement said.

It added that the guarantee "should enhance market confidence and alleviate investors' concerns about the ability for money market mutual funds to absorb a loss."

Since the credit crunch began 14 months ago, distrust about the quality of assets being offered as collateral has spread through the money markets where banks obtain short-term funds.

The resulting drying up of liquidity became a drought this week with the demise of Lehman Brothers and the last-minute rescue of fellow Wall Street titan Merrill Lynch and the de-facto nationalisation of insurance giant AIG.

As a result, central banks have had to step up to the plate and fulfill their traditional role as the lender of last resort, making billions available for banks to borrow.

On Thursday the US Federal Reserve made 180 billion dollars of liquidity available to the central banks of the eurozone, Japan, Britain, Canada and Switzerland to help ease the pressures.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission said meanwhile Friday it had followed authorities in Britain, Switzerland and Ireland to ban so-called short selling of shares, widely blamed for the crippling falls in stock prices of banks this week.

Short-selling occurs when investors sell stock they do not yet own in order to profit later from an anticipated fall in prices -- often contributing to the price fall.

The London stock market jumped 6.88 percent, Paris 5.40 percent, Frankfurt 3.87, Tokyo 3.76, Hong Kong 9.6 percent and Shanghai nearly 9.5 percent, and Russian shares roared up 15.5 percent after several trading suspensions.

The dollar surged in London, where the euro fell to 1.4197 dollars from 1.4348 here late Thursday.

And the timeless barometer of confidence, gold, signalled a fall in the fear level, dropping to 855.5 dollars an ounce in Hong Kong from 875.5 dollars Thursday.

Karpal sues Utusan for RM10m

KUALA LUMPUR: Bukit Gelugor Member of Parliament Karpal Singh has filed an RM10mil suit against Utusan Melayu (M) Sdn Bhd over a defamatory article in its Malay daily Utusan Malaysia regarding his purported comments on Islam.
The writ of summons was filed at the Civil High Court registry in the Jalan Duta Court Complex today through his law firm, Karpal Singh & Co.
In his statement of claim, Karpal, who is also a lawyer, claimed the article entitled DAP diingat jangan bakar perasaan Melayu (DAP reminded not to inflame sentiments of Malays) published on Aug 25, had stated that he made the comments on Islam in his welcoming speech at the 15th DAP National Congress held on the previous day.
He claimed the defamatory words were understood to mean, among others, that Karpal was a politician bent on creating ill-will among the different communities in the country, was absolutely false and malicious and were intended to destroy his professional and political careers.
The DAP national chairman said he had consistently maintained in his public speeches and during his membership of Parliament in the Dewan Rakyat for the last 26 years that Islam was the official religion of the country as provided under Article 3 (1) of the Federal Constitution.
Karpal said he gave notice to Utusan for retraction and apology without prejudice to his right to commence legal proceedings against the Bahasa Malaysia daily newspaper.
He stated that it would be in Utusan’s best interests to comply with his demand for mitigation purposes on damages which could ultimately be ordered against the newspaper by the court.
He said Utusan complied with his demand and had published an article entitled Ralat on Aug 26, retracting and giving its unconditional apology to him and accepted that the words complained of, had no basis.
Karpal noted that the publication of the defamatory words by Utusan on the eve of the polling day of the Permatang Pauh by-election parliamentary seat was to defame him in his capacity as a Pakatan Rakyat coalition leader, with a view to ensure that de facto Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) adviser Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim lost in the by-election.
He sought RM10mil in general damages, aggravated damages, exemplary damages, interest, costs and any relief deemed proper by the court. -- Bernama
Source TheStar

Najib delays MidEast trip

KUALA LUMPUR - MALAYSIA'S deputy leader abruptly scrapped a trip to the Middle East on Friday amid deepening political uncertainty sparked by opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim's attempt to seize power.
Also on Friday, police released an opposition lawmaker who was detained last week along with two other people under a law allowing indefinite detention. The arrests had intensified the climate of political restlessness in the country.
An aide to Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak denied he was postponing his overseas tour because of politics, saying Mr Najib wants to remain in Malaysia over the next week to tackle his new job as finance minister.
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi relinquished his finance ministry portfolio to Mr Najib on Wednesday as part of a protracted power hand-over.
Mr Abdullah has promised to step down before 2010 amid escalating demands from his ruling party for his swift retirement.
Mr Najib had been slated to leave Malaysia on Friday to visit Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and New York, but he canceled the Middle East leg and will only head for New York on Sept 24 for the UN General Assembly meeting, said an aide who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to make public statements.
'There are no political ramifications,' the aide said. 'He just felt that because of the current (global) economic climate, he should hit the ground running since he has just been appointed as the finance minister.'
Mr Najib's decision came a day after the ruling party's top officials held a meeting in which Mr Abdullah was apparently urged to speed up his exit.
International Trade Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said the officials gave 'no specific date' for Mr Abdullah to hand over power, but presented 'our views and that of the grass roots who want it to be done as soon as possible'.
Mr Abdullah's support has slumped since he led the National Front governing coalition to its worst electoral results ever in March national polls, when Anwar's opposition alliance captured one-third of Parliament and took control of five of Malaysia's 13 states.
Anwar's People's Alliance now has 82 seats in the 222-member Parliament, compared to the National Front's 138.
Anwar claims he has pledges of loyalty from enough government lawmakers to topple the coalition that has led Malaysia since 1957.
Anwar has called for an emergency Parliament session on Tuesday to hold a vote of no confidence in the government.
Mr Abdullah has rejected the call saying Anwar can wait until Oct. 13 when Parliament ends its recess.
Meanwhile, police released Teresa Kok, a representative of the Democratic Action Party, after one week in detention without charges, said lawyer Sankara Nair.
Ms Kok was arrested Sept. 12 under the Internal Security Act, which provides for indefinite detention without trial, after she was accused by a newspaper of complaining about the noise of morning prayers from a mosque. She has denied making such complaints.
Police arrested Ms Kok and two journalists on the same day, but one of the journalists was later released. Malaysia's law minister resigned this week after protesting the arrests.

UK's "youngest terrorist" jailed

Source Reuters
LONDON (Reuters) - A schoolboy, said by prosecutors to be the youngest Briton to be convicted of a terrorism offence, was jailed for two years on Friday for his part in what prosecutors called a worldwide plot to target non-Muslims.
Hammaad Munshi, 18, was found guilty last month of being part of a cell that spread extremist propaganda and provided practical guides on how to make poisons and suicide vests.
Detectives said Munshi, an IT expert who was just 16 when he was arrested at his home in Dewsbury, northern England, as he returned from school, was dedicated to al Qaeda's cause.
He used the Internet to circulate material including technical documents on how to make napalm and homemade explosives, and discussed how to smuggle a sword through airport security.
Al Qaeda propaganda promoting "murder and destruction" was stored on his computer and notes on martyrdom were hidden under his bed, London's Old Bailey court heard.
The teenager, who was convicted of making a record of information likely to be useful in terrorism, was sentenced on Friday to two years in a young offenders' institution.
Prosecutors said Munshi was part of a cell that provided information on terrorist techniques, training, weapons and explosives. The men were involved in a global conspiracy to "wipe out" non-Muslims, the court heard.
They said his co-accused Aabid Hussain Khan had recruited Munshi when he was just 15.
Khan was jailed for 12 years last month while the cell's other member Sultan Muhammad was given a 10-year term.
Judge Timothy Pontius said Munshi, the grandson of Islamic scholar Sheikh Yakub Munshi, president of the Islamic Research Institute of Great Britain at the Markazi Mosque in Dewsbury, had brought shame to his family and religion.
However he had been given a lighter sentence because he had fallen "under the spell of fanatical extremists" who took advantage of his naivety.
But the judge added: "There is no doubt that you knew what you were doing."

SAPP duo pledge to continue voicing Sabah's grievances

Kota Kinabalu: The two Sabah Progressive Party (SAPP) Members of Parliament said they will continue to speak up on behalf of the Sabah people even though the party is no longer in Barisan Nasional (BN).
Tawau MP Datuk Dr Chua Soon Bui said her decision to support SAPP's decision to leave the BN on Wednesday was based on the response she received from her constituency.
"They begged me for a change; it is the voice of the people.
"So we will continue to play our duties and listen to their needs," she told reporters after attending the party's supreme council meeting.
On the possibility that she might be urged to resign, Dr Chua said, "I'm an elected representative and I will serve my term."
Meanwhile, Sepanggar MP Datuk Eric Enchin Majimbun said there had to be changes for the party and the people.
"We have been in the BN but whenever we speak up, it was as if they didn't hear us," he said when asked whether SAPP could play a better role had it remained in the coalition.
On whether he had received any offer to join the Pakatan Rakyat, Majimbun said even if he had, he would not take it because it had nothing to do with the real reason for the party's pullout from BN.

The effect is not little, says Dompok

Kota Kinabalu: United Pasokmomogun Kadazandusun Murut Organisation (Upko) President Tan Sri Bernard Dompok said the party respects Sabah Progressive Party's (SAPP) decision to leave the Barisan Nasional (BN).
Dompok, who is Minister in the Prime Minister's Department, said this showed democracy was very much alive in the country.
"It is democracy in action... people are free to form a party or form an association. SAPP chose to be out of BN and what is happening is an exercise of this democratic right.
"It is SAPP's right to do what they want to do," he said here, Thursday.
Asked whether the SAPP's decision would affect the BN's strength, Dompok said, "Well I am not going to be arrogant to say that we are not affected at all when any member of our family ditches us".
"As far as we are concerned, the effect is not 'little'," he said.
On the statement by certain leaders in BN that SAPP was just a nuisance, Dompok said, "If people follow blindly what big component parties dictate, it is not good, not only for the BN but also for the country".

DAP gives SAPP pat on the back

Kota Kinabalu: Sabah DAP on Thursday welcomed the Sabah Progressive Party (SAPP) to be a partner in upholding the rights of Sabah and its people.
Hailing SAPP's decision to leave Barisan Nasional (BN) as "courageous", its Kota Kinabalu MP Dr Hiew King Cheu (pic) said Sabahans should stand united to seek better treatment from Federal.
"Sabahans are simply asking to be respected and given fair treatment for what we deserve under the partnership," he said in a statement.
He said as the State is among the biggest contributors to the country's revenue, it deserved more from the national share. "What good is the RM3 billion to Sabah in 2009? It should be RM13 billion for Sabah," he said.
He claimed that Sabah has been neglected by the Federal administration in the past and present, which could be seen through the lack of amenities, economic development and a high hard core poor rate, among others.
Hiew said the failures of the BN government, both at State and Federal-level, to bring progress to the State was due to its failure to observe as well as practise the principles of good governance, namely, credibility, accountability and transparency.

Raymond Tan leaves his fate to CM

Kota Kinabalu: Sabah Progressive Party (SAPP) Deputy President Datuk Raymond Tan does not see why he should tender his resignation from the party, since it is the party that does not want him.
"Why should I tender my resignation?. It is not that I don't want to be with the SAPP. It is the SAPP which does not want me," he said. However, he said if the party required him to send in a resignation letter, he has it ready.
Describing himself as an "independent BN Assemblyman", Tan said he would be meeting Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman on Monday to tender his resignation as State Deputy Chief Minister and Minister of Infrastructure Development.
Among those resigned from the Government were Assistant Finance Minister Melanie Chia who is also SAPP wanita chief, Vice President and Likas Assemblyman Datuk Liew Teck Chan who was Deputy Chairman of Sabah Economic Development Corporation (Sedco) as well as those holding the post of councillors and People's Development leaders, among others.
"I will be tendering my resignation from the State Cabinet as a matter of principle considering the position I'm now in following SAPP's decision to pull our from the BN," he said.
Tan said he would be leaving it to Musa to decide on his resignation as the appointment of ministers is the prerogative of the CM.
Tan said he has been unfairly treated by SAPP since registering his objection to the party's decision to move a vote of no-confidence against the Prime Minister at its Supreme Council meeting on June 18.
He cited being removed for no apparent reason as the party's Tanjung Papat Central Liaison Committee and Sandakan zone Chairman.
"After the party made a stand that it had lost confidence in the Prime Minister in June, which I opposed, I was treated like an outsider although I am a senior leader of the party," he said.
Giving another example, he said when he arrived 15 minutes late for the party's Supreme Council meeting on Sept. 17, he had no place to sit as the chair usually reserved for him as Deputy President was occupied by someone else. "My seat and name was not there. I had to ask for a place to sit. I was late before but my chair, file and name tag on the table were always there," he said, adding that it may sound petty but it demonstrated the kind of treatment the party had accorded him.
"You (SAPP President Datuk Seri Yong Teck Lee) said you were badly treated by the BN but look at how you have been treating your colleague in the party," he said.
Tan said despite feeling unwanted and his differences with Yong, he remained loyal to the party and was even prepared to suffer the consequences of its confrontational stance towards the BN and Federal leadership.
He said his stand not to tender his resignation was similar to the party's supreme Council decision on Sept. 17 that it was not necessary for it to officially inform the BN of its decision to quit the coalition" as the BN has already abandoned it."
Meanwhile SAPP Vice President Jimmy Wong Chee Khiong and Youth Chief Au Kam Wah have resigned from all party posts.
Both said they could no longer tolerate or subscribe the way in which SAPP is now being run.
"We continue to believe and subscribe in the BN struggle for the betterment of the people of Sabah as we believe that under the BN concept whatever differences could be resolved through discussions," Wong said.
He said what SAPP is doing now went against the grains of the BN concept, beliefs and the principles. Wong, who is political secretary to the Chief Minister and a Charted Accountant, has been a member since the party was formed in 1994.
He stressed that recent motion of no-confidence against the PM did not enjoy the support of all SAPP members. He also said the decision by top BN leadership to issue SAPP a show cause letter and then withholding any decision showed its understanding towards members.
"But it appears these overtures did not appease some segment of the SAPP leadership until it decided to burn the bridge and leave the BN, its struggles and concept."
On the SAPP's eight-point declaration on seeking a better deal for Sabah, he saw no reason to harp on the issue, adding all should be working together to fulfil the mandate given by the people in the March 8 election.
He added the current global economic situation of high fuel price, soaring food prices and other daily expenses and the efforts by the BN Government to address these issues were commendable.
However, success could only be achieved by working together instead of taking advantage of the situation.
Wong said he would get views from the supporters before deciding on the next course of action.
On his position as Datuk Seri Musa Aman's political secretary, Wong said he would leave it to the Chief Minister.
Meanwhile, Au who is Elopura Assemblyman, said he submitted his resignation letter to the SAPP Supreme Council through a friend in Kota Kinabalu at 1pm yesterday (Thursday).
"I am now a free man and am not bound to any party. The time now is for me to go back to Elopura to focus on serving my supporters and the people," he said.
"Since the March 8 elections, our country has been in political turmoil.
Many of our leaders have been distractedÉthey have lost focus on what is more important, which is to bring development," said Au at a press conference in his Sandakan office.
Au, who has also been a SAPP founding member since Feb. 21, 1994, said he had no plans at this moment to join any party. He said he received many offers to join other parties, including the opposition.
On the situation in SAPP, he said, "as a representative of the people, I do not feel I should involve myself in such a situation".
"I decided not to attend the (SAPP) meeting after repeatedly seeing at the Supreme Council meeting that the majority supported his (Yong's) decisions," said Au.

Weird times in Thailand, Malaysia – but democracy is working

by Marcus Gee
In Thailand, a court orders the prime minister to step down because he appeared on a TV cooking show. In Malaysia, an opposition leader threatening to bring down the government is accused, for a second time, of sodomy.
These are weird times in Asian politics. The wave of democratization that swept through the region in the 1980s and 1990s has given way to eddies of confusion and turmoil.
From Bangkok to Kuala Lumpur, besieged governments and angry citizens are the order of the day. It is tempting to conclude that Asians simply aren't ready for "Western-style" democracy.
A popular school of thought argues that traditional "Asian values" - a Confucian deference to authority, love of order and preference for consensus over open dispute - make Asians unwilling players of the competitive gamesmanship of democratic politics.
Recent events show the opposite. Asians, it turns out, take to democracy like birds to sky. The uproar of recent months is proof not that Asian democracy is failing but that Asians are embracing it as their own. A democracy is often a noisy, messy thing. In Asia these days, you can feel the sound and fury.
In Thailand, political conflict has been raging for three years. Twice elected prime minister, flamboyant businessman Thaksin Shinawatra was overthrown by the Thai military in 2006 amid allegations of tax evasion, authoritarianism and human-rights abuses. He went into exile in England, returned, then fled again to escape corruption charges.
His party won the largest number of votes in an election last December after the end of military rule. A pro-Thaksin government took office under Samak Sundaravej. He was forced to resign last week when a court said he had accepted payments for appearing on a cooking show, breaking a law against taking other paid work while holding office. In the latest twist, parliament has elected a new PM: none other than Mr. Thaksin's brother-in-law, Somchai Wongsawat.
That means more conflict for Thailand. Anti-Thaksin protesters have been occupying the government compound in Bangkok for weeks. Composed partly of liberals upset over Mr. Thaksin's high-handed rule, they are led by a cabal of generals, royalists and businessmen who want to turn back the clock and establish a managed democracy where the king and the army could step in to check the abuses of a populist such as Mr. Thaksin.
That is not likely to happen. Thailand's latest experiment with military rule was ineffective. Mr. Thaksin and his supporters have the backing of Thailand's rural poor, who appreciate him for introducing cheap health care and credit. So Thailand's democracy is troubled, but it's likely no more than growing pains - the result of a system, less than two decades old, where the institutions of democratic rule are still taking root.
Malaysian democracy is also a work in progress. One party has ruled continuously since independence from Britain in 1957. Now a popular politician, Anwar Ibrahim, is threatening to upset the mango cart. Once deputy prime minister, Mr. Anwar was clapped in irons in 1998 on charges of corruption and sodomy (still a crime in officially Islamic Malaysia). He spent six years behind bars.
Now back in politics, he is trying to topple the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition by luring government legislators to his flag. If he succeeds, it will be a historic moment for Malaysia, an evolution from one-party rule to a system where parties alternate in power.
Mr. Anwar has promised to abolish the system of special economic breaks for the country's biggest ethnic group, the Malays; to free all political prisoners; and to abolish the notorious Internal Security Act.
The government of Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is lashing back, using the security act to detain a reporter, a blogger and an opposition legislator. Meantime, Mr. Anwar has again been accused of sodomy, this time based on accusations by a young aide who, by coincidence, happened to meet Mr. Badawi's second-in-command. Polls show most people think the charges are just mudslinging.
The events in Thailand and Malaysia are unsettling, and things could get worse before they get better. But the current tumult clearly doesn't spring from an incompatibility between Asians and democracy. Given a chance, Asians adopt it as readily as anyone. They just need time to get it right.