Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Salam Aidilfitri!



Wishing everyone a Selamat Hari Raya Aidil Fitri and maaf zahir bathin! Please do travel safely and enjoy the warmth of the Raya spirit as you visit friends and relatives.



Just wanted to include some photos of one of my favourite mosques, the Hagia Sophia(AyaSofia) in Istanbul, which throughout its history has been a Byzantine church and a mosque and whose architecture incorporates both Christian and Muslim icons and details. The design of the Masjid Wilayah Persekutuan in Jalan Duta seems to be very much based on the Hagia Sophia.

I also include here a photo of prayers at the Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta, the largest mosque in Southeast Asia. It's not a beautiful mosque but I like what happens inside. See if you can spot what's unusual about it.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Beware! Scammers on the Loose!


I was quite excited when I got a letter postdated Laos PDR, thinking a friend might have been travelling there and decided to write. Then it turned out to be one of those money-promising scams.

So be warned, if you ever get any of these, it's too good to be true.




(I really wonder how they got my name and address...)

Friday, September 26, 2008

Lawyers Needed to Defend Eggs


Report lodged against Teresa Kok for insulting egg

KUALA LUMPUR (Sept 24, 2008) :
The Seputeh Umno Youth division lodged a police report today against Seputeh MP Teresa Kok, claiming she had insulted the Royal Malaysian Police and the egg, which is an essential food of the underprivileged.

The division’s deputy head Alawi Dahalin and several other members lodged the report at the Brickfields police station.

Alawi said he had heard Kok complain about the food she was given while detained under the ISA, at a press conference at the DAP headquarters in Petaling Jaya, shown on the night news on TV on Sept 20, a day after she was released from custody.

He said Kok had said the food she was served was "fit only for dogs".

"By saying this, she had insulted the police and the poor. Eggs are an important food for low-income earners and the poor. As an elected representative of the people she should not have said that," he said.


Updated: 11:19PM Wed, 24 Sep 2008

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Glad that Alawi is such a defender of low-income earners and their nutrition. Does insulting the egg also come under the Sedition Act? (Err...do dogs eat eggs?)

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Do Malaysians Hate Blacks?

Victims of hate

By Teoh El Sen and Aizat Sharif September 23, 2008 Malay Mail

African undergraduate Abdel Aziz Hassan Abdraman, 22, will never again see his eight-month-old daughter and 19-year-old wife because he was the “victim of a hate crime” that claimed his life.

Abdel Aziz had planned to return home to Chad for Aidilfitri this week and his friends said he was overjoyed at going back to be with his family.

Sunday’s mob attack on 10 African undergraduates in Wangsa Maju caused his death and injured the rest, the victims claimed yesterday.

They said they had been harassed and mocked by the same youths for four consecutive days before the attack.

They further claimed that some youths had even gone up to their Tar Villa apartment and demanded money and cigarettes.


Police confirmed that the victims had been regularly ridiculed by the youths who expressed their displeasure at the increasing presence of Africans in the neighbourhood.

In one incident, a student was also kicked at an Internet café.

Residents and traders have claimed that the number of Africans and other foreigners, mainly students from institutions of higher learning, was growing steadily and that their large number was intimidating.

In Sunday’s incident, HELP University College business studies undergraduate Abdel Aziz was murdered. He sustained stab wounds to the right abdomen and died in the ambulance on the way to Kuala Lumpur Hospital.

Several other students, also from Chad, were injured when they were attacked by some 20 youths wielding metal rods, sticks and knives near the Wangsa Maju LRT station.

Sentul district police chief Assistant Commissioner Zakaria Pagan told Malay Mail that initial investigations revealed that the attack stemmed from the uneasiness of the residents over the behaviour of the Africans.

“We believe the youths who attacked the Africans wanted to teach them a lesson to behave themselves in public.” (And attacking people with metal rods, sticks and knives is GOOD behaviour in public?)

Police have detained three men, in their 20s, from Wangsa Maju to assist in investigations. They will be under remand until Saturday.

Police are also examining closed-circuit television camera (CCTV) images near the LRT station to ascertain the events leading to the attack.

Malay Mail learnt the drama unfolded when three undergraduates were on the way to board the LRT to perform terawih prayers at a nearby mosque at 8.30pm.

They were confronted by some 20 youths who were believed to have hurled abuse at them and demanded money.

When the trio ignored them and walked away, the youths, carrying switch blades, pursued them and struck one of them on the head.

The students took refuge at the LRT station and sought assistance from their African friends living nearby.

Seven of their friends, including Abdel Aziz, went to their aid and together they went back to where the trio was attacked.

Abdel Aziz’s cousin, Abdraman Moussa Mohamat, 23, said: “We asked the youths who were seated at the stalls why they had attacked our friends but they came for us suddenly without saying a word.

“We ran for our lives when they began swinging metal rods, sticks and knives at us. In the fracas, Abdel Aziz was stabbed from the back.”

The mob fled after Abdel Aziz collapsed by the roadside some 15 metres from the stalls.

Lamine Moustapha Ahmat, 22, a Rima College student, said he carried the victim while his friends tried in vain to stop a taxi. Many taxis waiting to pick up LRT commuters refused to budge. A passerby then called for an ambulance.

Note: Abdel Aziz first enrolled with the International Islamic University of Malaysia before switching to HELP University College.

His father, who runs a palm oil import-export business, was informed about the tragedy on Sunday night and his brother will arrive today to claim the remains.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We should be ashamed of ourselves. We want to attract students to study in this country, yet we treat them so badly for simply being different from us. We don't try to understand them or welcome them but we are hostile for no reason other than because we are 'uneasy with their presence'. What exactly causes that unease?

I hope the police come down hard on the perpetrators since they actually have suspects in hand.

But we also need to do more to educate our people that racism towards anyone is not OK. There has to be some way of peacefully settling conflicts. We cannot complain of racism when we travel abroad if we treat foreigners the same way here.

Someone has proposed a Race Relations Act. But does that cover non-Malaysians as well? Why don't we have an Anti-Racism Act instead? In Australia, there is the Commonwealth Racial Hatred Act 1995.

The UK used to have the Commission for Racial Equality, now called the Equality and Human Rights Commission. There is also the Institute of Race Relations, which investigates such areas as racism and the press, police racism, exclusions from school, deaths in custody, the plight of asylum seekers, anti-Muslim racism, the impact of anti-terrorist legislation and attacks on multiculturalism, and the Runnymede Trust which is a think-tank on ethnicity and cultural diversity.

Maybe it's time for us to establish something like this as well, even within the Constitutional context that we have.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Since When Has RPK Been a Security Threat?

The Star Online > Nation
Tuesday September 23, 2008 MYT 4:48:45 PM

Raja Petra to be detained 2yrs under ISA (update 2)

By M. MAGESWARI

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia Today editor Raja Petra Kamarudin was served with an order Monday night that would see him detained in Kamunting for two years under the Internal Security Act (ISA).

Raja Petra will be held without trial under Section 8(1) of the ISA, reporters were told by his lawyers, who were at the High Court hear to argue their habeas corpus application on Tuesday. The detention order was signed by Home Minister Datuk Seri Syed Hamid Albar on Monday night.



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Presumably a security threat to the nation would make the public nervous? But we see people going about their lives normally, albeit unhappily. How could one man's article be considered a threat to peace?

I send Kak Marina and family my support. I don't always agree with RPK on politics but I agree with his views on how we Muslims conduct ourselves and I'm never insulted by what he says. He doesn't deserve this.

And for Dr Bakri Musa's take on this:

Pak Lah Desecrating Ramadan

M. Bakri Musa

(www.bakrimusa.com)


When President Nixon ordered the bombing of Hanoi during Christmas of 1972, I knew then that his fate was sealed. I am not a Christian, but living in the West I am very much aware of the spiritual significance of Christmas. As such I found Nixon’s action, coming from a self-professed Christian who regularly had Billy Graham pray with him in the White House, abominable beyond comprehension.

A Just God would not let such a barbaric action go unpunished. Sure enough, a few months later the Watergate scandal broke out that would ultimately lead to Nixon’s resigning under threat of impeachment. This was less than two years after he won a landslide re-election victory.

As a Muslim I feel profoundly the spirituality of Ramadan. It was the month that Allah first revealed the Quran to His Last Messenger, Prophet Muhammad, s.a.w. That was a measure of His generosity upon us. It is said that the gates to Heaven are wide open, and to Hell closed shut, during this season, again reflecting His mercifulness during this blessed month.

We are expected to reciprocate this divine gift by being generous to our fellow beings. Ramadan is thus a season to be charitable, to be forgiving of each other and the seeking of forgiveness from others. All faiths have such a special period in their calendar when their followers are expected to be extra generous to and tolerant of their fellow human beings.

Imagine my horror, shared by many, when Prime Minister Abdullah, the self-declared Imam of Islam Hadhari, chose this particular month to incarcerate Raja Petra Kamarudin and others under the draconian Internal Security Act that allows for detention without trial, or even the filing of charges.

I would have expected the reverse. That is, during Ramadan the Prime Minister would grant amnesty to deserving prisoners as a gesture of the government’s generosity and charity of spirit.

I have yet to see this happen in Malaysia, or any other Muslim country for that matter. Instead we have the odious act of the police bundling up Raja Petra and others into prison, right in front of their families. Where in the Quran or the sunnah of our Prophet Muhammad, s.a.w., did Imam Abdullah find the justification for such a cruel act? Where is the spirit of generosity or sense of forgiveness demanded from each of us by our faith during this holy month?

As a Muslim Abdullah will be paying his zakat fitr (tithe) this Ramadan, and come Hari Raya he will be generous with his duit raya to the children calling upon the gates of Sri Perdana. That is the extent of his understanding of the concept of charity and generosity called for in our faith: simplistic, ritualistic, and materialistic. Those he jailed under the ISA or the millions made miserable through escalating living costs as a consequence of his economic policies never enter his heart.


ISA Unjust


Like Nixon before, I also expect Abdullah’s latest inhuman act would also seal his fate. I do not know or care what or when his comeuppance would be but I do know that whenever I see an injustice being perpetrated, I am duty bound by my faith to respond.

I do not wish to sermonize and outdo our Imam of Islam Hadhari (he is already good at that and does it all too frequently), but I do know this. As per the teachings of our Prophet, s.a.w., when we see an injustice, we are to do whatever in our capacity to stop it. If we are unable to do so with our hands (that is, physically), then we are to use our tongue (voice our disapproval). Failing that, then at least acknowledge in our heart that we disapprove of it, though that would be the option least pleasing to Allah.

Incarcerating Raja Petra and others without affording them their due process is the height of injustice; and to do it during Ramadan is both cruel and vindictive. It is also an affront to our religious sensibility; the very act desecrates our holy month.

I do not recommend anyone attempting to physically stop the police as that would risk your being arrested too, or worse. We have to caution ourselves that where injustice or lawlessness is institutionalized, then the just and the lawful become victims.

There is something well within our ability to do, that is, voice our disapproval of the brutal ways of our government. Many have already done so last March and again last month at the ballot box. Unfortunately our leaders are slow learners, or refuse to learn the lesson. We have to keep teaching them.

There is now a petition circulating in cyberspace seeking the release of all those detained under the ISA. I urge all to sign it, as my family and I did. Writing this commentary is also my way of condemning Abdullah’s brutish ways.

Last week with opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim threatening to bring down the administration through coaxing its members to cross over, Abdullah threw a veiled threat of resorting to the ISA to silence Anwar. Local and international pressures made Abdullah back off.

If we can believe him, Home Minister Syed Hamid was not at all involved in the process. He proudly asserted that he did not “interfere” with the “professional” work of the police. To think that the precious freedom of our citizens could hinge on the judgment if not fancy of some functionary in the police department is truly shocking. For a minister to admit that he does not know what is going on in his department goes beyond incredulity; it is utter incompetence and gross dereliction of duty.

Today (September 22), just hours before the habeas corpus application by Raja Petra, Syed Hamid signed off on the detention of Raja Petra, thus making a mockery of the minister’s earlier denial.

No man is perfect enough to be entrusted with the liberty and dignity of others, asserted the Sudanese reformist Mahmoud Mohamad Taha. I certainly would not entrust my freedom to others, least of all characters like Abdullah and Syed Hamid. We need due process.

Raja Petra was held for supposedly “insulting Islam.” Those police officers either have not read his articles, or if they did, could not understand them.

As Mufti of Perlis Datuk Asri Zainal Abidin so wisely noted, even Allah on the Day of Judgment would have us answer for our deeds before rendering judgment. Here we have a mere mortal in the person of the Imam of Islam Hadhari passing judgment on fellow citizens without first hearing their side.

Law professor Azmi Sharom said it best. “The arrest of Raja Petra, Kok and Tan shows that the law is so open to abuse that we have no other choice but to get rid of it. …. There can be no room for amendments. The ISA must go.” Amen!

God works in mysterious ways, so says our Quran. Nixon had his Watergate; Abdullah too will have his comeuppance. Whenever that comes, I pray that Allah would be merciful. There is no anger in me for Abdullah, only sadness for what he has done to our nation.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Give Peace A Chance


Today is International Peace Day. I'm actually out of the country because I was invited to speak at a peace event. Don't know of any peace events back home and certainly did not get invited to any.

But with all the violence around the world (my condolences to those who lost loved ones at the Marriott blast in Islamabad last night), more than ever we need to pause and think of how we can generate peace. In our hearts, in our families, in our communities, our countries and between countries.

As John Lennon used to say, "All We Are Saying is Give Peace A Chance."

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Selamat Hari Malaysia 2008


A friend suggested that this be the theme song for Hari Malaysia:

Tanah Pusaka
Music by Ahmad Merican, Lyrics by Wan Ahamd Kamal/Dol Ramli, 1963

Sungguh gemilang negeri ku (Truly glorious is my country)
Yang ku puja oh tanah Malaysia (That I adore, oh land of Malaysia)
Di merata dunia (Throughout the world)
Harum semerbak nama mu oh Malaysia (Your fame has spread, oh Malaysia)

Aman makmur kaya raya (Peaceful, prosperous and affluent)
Selama-lama hidup maju jaya (Forever striving to march forward)
Oh tanah pusaka (Oh my motherland)
Negaraku yang berdaulat dan merdeka (My country that stands sovereign and free)

Tanah pusaka bertuah (My blessed motherland)
Berbagai bangsa di dalam nya (Home to people of all creeds)
Hidup aman dan bersama (Living together in harmony)
Bersatu kerja untuk Malaysia (Working together for Malaysia)

Musoh melanggar ku gempor (Foes that invade I shall resist)
Sungguh rela ku gugur kerana (Ever ready am I to die for)
Kau Tanah Pusaka (You my motherland)
Biar putih tulang, jangan putih mata. (Far better to die, than to live in fear.)

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It's a lovely tune (Sean Ghazi does a great version).

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Does He Think We're Dunces?


No more arrests: Syed Hamid (updated)

JOHOR BARU: Home Minister Datuk Seri Syed Hamid Albar said no more arrests are expected under the Internal Security Act (ISA) but it would depend on the situation of public order.

”We are not making arrests just for the sake of arrests. ( but why release Tan Hoon Cheng after only 24 hours? Made a mistake, did we?)

”We will not make any more arrests under ISA as long as there is no more disturbance to peace and public order,” he said.

He also appealed to all newspapers to cooperate with the Government and not incite negative feelings or sentiment. (Can he tell that to Utusan too, please?)

Speaking on the one-day arrest of Sin Chew Daily News reporter Tan Hoon Cheng, who was arrested under the ISA, he said Tan was detained under Section 73(1) of the Act in order to ensure her safety. (then just take her into protective custody...)

He added that police intelligence indicated that there were threats to her life after she reported on Bukit Bendera division Umno chairman Datuk Ahmad Ismail’s allegedly racist remarks.

We have no intention of holding a reporter as after all she was just taking notes of the comments made by a certain party that led to a public debate." (then...?)

Asked on the detention of Selangor senior executive councillor Teresa Kok, Syed Hamid said she was arrested due to her comments on mosques and the Azan recently. (What exactly did she say?)

”Her comments have created public disorder and problems,” he said. (Really? What problems?)

Asked whether Kok would be released soon, he said it was up to the police, as they have to access (sic) the situation before taking any further action.



Let Us Not be Fooled....

In case any of you didn't see this yesterday:

PAS MP Lodges Report Against Khir Toyo

By: Maria J.Dass (Thu, 11 Sep 2008)


SHAH ALAM (Sept 11, 2008): Kota Raja Member of Parliament Dr Siti Mariah Mahmud has lodged a police report against former Selangor Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Mohd Khir Toyo and website pembelamelayu.com for spreading malicious slander and lies about certain quarters pressuring the state authorities to tone down the call to prayer at mosque and surau in the state.

When contacted, Siti Mariah, who is also PAS central committee member, said the police must investigate and act on this immediately as malicious lies can ruin racial and religious harmony.

Pembelamelayu.com quoting Mohd Khir in his blog said Seputeh MP and Puchong Assemblyman Theresa Kok had supported a petition by the Chinese in Kinrara against the azan (call to morning prayer) in their area.

The website also alleged that Seri Serdang assemblyman Satim Diman had raised the issue at the state assembly but did not get a response.

In her report lodged at the Dang Wangi police headquarters today, Siti Mariah said Mohd Khir’s statement, published in Utusan Malaysia on Tuesday, was “malicious and aimed at raising the anger and anxiety of Malay Muslims”.

“This action by Khir, the blog and Utusan Malaysia is an obvious attempt to manipulate the sentiments of the Malay and Muslim people,” Siti Mariah said.

She said newspapers should verify the facts before publishing such reports.
(The Utusan Malaysia report quoted Khir, but Kok's name was not mentioned.)

"As a Muslim, I was upset when I read the article, but upon checking with Teresa, I found out that she had not been involved in the petition at all.”

She added that she obtained a copy of the state assembly Hansard from the Speaker’s office and found that allegations that Satim was ordered to remain seated when he brought up the issue at the state assembly was unfounded.

She said it is understood that committees of the mosques involved have also lodged reports with the police against the unfounded allegations.

When contacted, Mohd Khir said: “Let the police to investigate the allegations.”

Asked if he stood by the statements made, Mohd Khir said: “A report has been lodged, so I don’t want to say anything more on the matter.”

On Wednesday, Kok, referring to the article published on PembelaMelayu.com, denied even receiving such a complaint from residents and said she personally had no problems with the prayer calls.

Kok had also demanded a retraction and apology from Mohd Khir, Utusan Malaysia, its writer Zaini Hassan and Satim.

--- end ---


Updates:


SIS calls for the Immediate Release of Raja Petra Kamaruddin, MP Teresa Kok and Ms Tan Hoon Cheng from the ISA Detention

12 September 2008


Sisters in Islam (SIS) calls upon the Malaysian government for the immediate release of Raja Petra Kamaruddin, MP Teresa Kok and Ms Tan Hoon Cheng who are currently detained under the draconian Internal Security Act (ISA).

As a member of the Abolish ISA Movement, SIS reiterates our strong opposition against the use of ISA under any circumstances. This draconian law that allows a citizen to be detained without trial not only violates a person's fundamental rights, but is also against the basic principle of democracy upheld in Malaysia.

As a member of the United Nations Human Rights Council, the Malaysian government should in fact ensure for all its citizens to be able to exercise their basic right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty, the right to legal counsel and for them to exercise their citizens' basic right for a fair trial in an open court.



Sms I received last night: Hi everyone, here's a message from our frens in Sin Chew to wear black clothes and yellow ribbons as a sign of protest against the detention of their colleague Tan Hoon Cheng under the ISA. Apologies for the late hour.

Original Post:

Let us Not Fall into the Trap....

We must stand in solidarity with each other and with RPK, Tan Hoon Cheng and Teresa Kok.

We must not provide excuses for them to do even more harm to this country of ours.

Peaceful resistance, yes. Violence, no.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Tailing MPs in Taiwan


5 PKR members leave for Taiwan

KUALA LUMPUR: Five PKR members flew to Taipei, Taiwan, on Friday. Following close on the heels of the Barisan Nasional backbenchers, the PKR leaders have been sent to Taiwan 'to see how agricultural progress can be made.'

Election bureau deputy head Fuziah Salleh (Kuantan MP) flew off on Friday morning, while information chief Tian Chua (Batu MP), strategic director Saifuddin Nasution (Machang MP), supreme council member Low Chee Cheong and Elizabeth Wong (Selangor state executive councillors) are flying off at 2.20pm.

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Well, nice to know PKR can be equally as silly as their BN counterparts. Sounds like a slapstick movie, one group of people chasing the other all over Taiwan.

And they'd better have packed their umbrellas and wellies because:

Taiwan Braces For Sinlaku

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwan is bracing for Typhoon Sinlaku as the storm gains strength while approaching the island.

The Central Weather Bureau says that at 8 a.m. local time Friday, Sinlaku's center was about 200 miles southeast of Hualien, in eastern Taiwan.

It says the typhoon is packing winds of 115 mph, up from 109 mph. The storm is moving northeast at a speed of 5 mph.

The bureau says that if Sinlaku stays on its current course, it will brush past Taiwan's eastern coast Saturday.

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Don't you think the name 'Sinlaku' is rather appropriate???

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Voices of Reason

I've been looking for a voice of reason somewhere in these awful turbulent times when people seem to spout off whatever they want off the top of their heads, and then defend it no matter how stupid.

Then a friend alerted me to this from a fellow blogger, Syed Imran. Another fellow blogger Walski wrote something similar here. So who says bloggers are unthinking people only up to no good?

And this lovely and wistful article makes you long for a different time when people were civilised.

I'd like to ask everyone, especially those categorised as 'Malays', to list their family histories. And see how many of us can really go back further than three generations born in this land. I know I can't.

And can we, the people, think of positive and effective things we can do to counter divisiveness such as we see coming out of politicians these days? Let's not play the blame game. Let's think of ways, practical and effective, to counter conflict and restore harmony.

Other people have done it in even more difficult situations. One example is Seeds of Peace. Why can't we do the same?

Saturday, September 6, 2008

They All Not Shy Ah?


BBC chief: 48 MPs have said aye to trip

PUTRAJAYA: Forty-eight Government MPs have responded to the Barisan Backbenchers Club (BBC) suggestion for a study trip overseas, probably to China or Taiwan.

Its chairman Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing said the response was 'not bad' and that a few more MPs would give their confirmation today.

"They want to see if they can complete in time all the activities they have planned previously for their constituency for the puasa month.

"The other 48 MPs have confirmed that they are going and they include those from peninsular Malaysia, Sabah and Sarawak. We are opening the trip to everybody," he said here yesterday. (Can we have their names please?)

Tiong was responding to reports that response from the MPs for the study trip, scheduled for Sept 7 to 19, had been lukewarm.

Barisan Nasional MPs had been asked to submit their passports for an overseas study trip ahead of Sept 16, the date which is being bandied about for supposed defections to take place.

The trip was supposedly for MPs to update themselves with the latest information about agriculture and high-tech food production so that they could debate better on the Budget when Parliament sits again in October. (You think they're going to take off their shoes and get into a wet padi field? Can we have photos of them on their trip please?)

Asked if it was true that the MPs were headed to Australia as was reported on some websites, Tiong said he had met with the sub-committee in the club arranging the trip.

"However, we have yet to decide whether we should go to China or Taiwan. We have to weigh the pros and cons of these two destinations because for China, we will need to apply for visas." ( Getting late, isn't it?)

In Kota Kinabalu, BBC deputy chairman Datuk Bung Moktar Radin, who revealed that he would be going on the trip, said he expected about 70% of the 78 members to do so.

The Kinabatangan MP said: "It has nothing to do with the Sept 16 issue. This is just an educational agricultural field trip." (I like seeing MPs get educated.)

Some MPs, when contacted, said that they were not going. Among them were Datuk Anifah Aman (Kimanis), Datuk Abdul Ghafur Salleh (Kalabakan), Datuk Eric Enchin Majimbun (Sepanggar) and Datuk Dr Chua Soon Bui (Tawau).

Some felt it was not the right time for them to go as they were busy with programmes with their constituents for the fasting month..

Many Sabah MPs said that the Opposition's claim of Sept 16 was a non-event as there did not
appear to be any real sign of defections.

Some MPs pointed out that it did not matter where an MP was as he could announce his crossover from anywhere. (Announcing from the middle of a Taiwanese padi field would be appropriate...)

"It is not like the 1960s or even the 1980s when you took a group of MPs and holed them up overseas," said a Sabah MP who declined to be named and felt that the certain groups within Barisan were overreacting to the Sept 16 talk. (Aha...)

Sabah Umno assistant secretary Datuk Masidi Manjun said that Sept 16 was just a political 'psy-war' by the Opposition and Sabah Barisan members were mature enough to read the situation.

Gelang Patah MP Tan Ah Eng said in Johor Baru that she received an SMS on Wednesday inviting her for the trip and that she was considering going even though she did not know the destination. (Whatever, a holiday's a holiday...)

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If I were a Sabah MP, I'd start becoming very irritated, not to mention insulted, at these constant attempts to make sure I stay loyal. If I'm loyal, I'm loyal lah. Otherwise there's no way you are going to know what I'm thinking inside. (And insulting me doesn't help...)

However, it's very unusual to travel during Ramadhan especially if you're a Muslim, unless it's pressing business. So unless they only mean for the non-Muslims to learn more about new agricultural techniques, then this invitation is very unseemly indeed.

But obviously offers such as these are made because there are MPs who are quite susceptible to a free holiday anywhere, no matter what else is happening. And I want to know something: who's paying for this trip? Us?


Friday, September 5, 2008

Pak Samad 1924-2008


Tan Sri Abdul Samad Ismail passed away yesterday after a short illness. I can't say I really knew him although he was Editorial Adviser at the NST when I was a very junior feature writer at Berita Publishing, then under the NST group. But by all accounts, he was a huge personality. Everyone seems to have remembered him for his colourful use of language....

By chance, I happened upon this citation when he was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Journalism, Literature and Creative Communication Arts in 1994. The Ramon Magsaysay Award is the Asian equivalent of the Nobel Prize. Can't imagine any of our current journalists receiving this award these days.

My condolences to Nuraina, Kak Maria and all the family. Al-fatihah.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

365 days later...


Pembaca-pembaca sekalian, hari ini genap setahun sejak pembedahan jantung ayah saya. Kami sekeluarga sentiasa bersyukur kepada Allah SWT atas kejayaan pembedahan itu dan kesembuhan ayah saya sejak itu. Hari ini, alhamdulillah, ayah saya amat sihat dan cergas, masih sibuk bekerja dan menulis dalam blognya yang sekarang menerima lebih daripada enam juta 'hits'. Semoga Allah SWT sentiasa mengurniakan kesihatan yang baik dan umur yang panjang kepada ayah saya.

Disini saya juga ingin mengucapkan terima kasih sekali lagi kepada semua doktor-doktor dan pakar-pakar lain di IJN dan dari hospital-hospital lain yang telah menjayakan pembedahan dan kesembuhan ayah saya semasa itu. Kami sekeluarga tidak akan lupa dedikasi dan komitmen anda semua sambil menjaga ayah kami.

Juga saya ingin mengucapkan terima kasih kepada semua pembaca blog ini yang telah menghantar doa-doa, ucapan cepat sembuh serta kad-kad dan email pada masa itu. Ucapan-ucapan anda telah membantu memberi semangat kepada kami semua dalam saat-saat yang sukar itu.

Malam ini kami akan mengadakan majlis buka puasa, doa selamat dan sembahyang terawih di Yayasan Kepimpinan Perdana di Putrajaya. Maaf kerana tidak dapat menjemput semua ke majlis itu.

Disini juga saya ingin meminta supaya doa-doa juga ditujukan kepada ayah kawan saya dan blogger Nuraina Samad iaitu Tan Sri Samad Ismail yang sedang sakit tenat di hospital Pantai. InsyaAllah, dia akan cepat sembuh.

Folks, today is exactly one year since Dad's bypass at IJN. My family are eternally thankful to God for the success of that operation and his recovery afterwards. Today he is as healthy and active as ever, giving talks, travelling everywhere and as you know, writing in his blog which, with six million plus hits, is leaving everyone else in the dust. God willing, he remains always healthy enough to enjoy a long life.

Here, I'd like to once again thank all the folks at IJN and from other hospitals who did everything to make a success of Dad's two operations and recovery. We won't easily forget their dedication and commitment during his stay in hospital and the care afterwards that helped on his road back to good health.

I'd also like to once again thank all you blog readers who sent in your prayers, get-well wishes as well as cards and emails during that trying time. All your love and support helped us get through that difficult time much more easily.

Talking about prayers, may I ask for some to be dedicated to my friend and fellow-blogger Nuraina Samad's Dad, Tan Sri Samad Ismail who is currently very ill in Pantai Hospital? God willing, he will recover well soon too.

Tonight, we will be having a buka puasa/ doa selamat/ sembahyang terawih at the Perdana Leadership Foundation to give thanks for the past one year. Sorry, we can't invite everyone. But who would have thought this time last year that Dad would still be an active participant in Malaysian life today? Syukur Alhamdulillah.

By the way, I have a book coming out soon ( InsyaAllah!) covering Dad's 50 days in IJN last year. It's essentially the blogposts I did during that time plus some additional commentary on the other events that happened at the time as well as the odd relationship between my blog and the mainstream media then! Watch out for it!

(Photo by Tara Sosrowardoyo, taken on Oct 11, 2007)

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

More nonsense...




Children made into 'devils' at Merdeka do

SOME children as young as two were made into 'junior devils' by their parents and guardians at the Merdeka celebrations in Shah Alam on Sunday, claimed a Malay daily.

Harian Metro said the parents bought the children 'hair clips' in the shape of the Devil's horns, which cost some RM8 apiece.

The daily said many parents seemed happy watching their children wearing these 'hair clips', which came with light ornaments.

Selangor Islamic Religious Department (Jais) director Datuk Khusrin Munawai urged Muslims to stop buying the hair clips or better yet, to destroy them.

"These hair clips are haram (illegal)," he said.

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How do our JAIS people know what devils look like in the first place? Where does it say that hair clips ( I would call them hair bands) with horns are haram?

And they say in Islam, all that is haram are very big things, not tiny little boobytraps that are constantly being invented to turn us all into little devils. And yes, yes, I know Harian Metro needs to sell itself and it has the highest circulation of all our newspapers. Which just shows the thirst for nonsense that exists in this country of ours.

Monday, September 1, 2008

Communing over Cupcakes

(Wondermilk's delicious cupcakes with Bunga Raya and mini-Jalur Gemilangs on them)

Hi folks, I meant to write something for Merdeka yesterday but my Merdeka Day wasn't very free so I never found the time. Today however, being the first day of Ramadhan and a public holiday, leaves some room for reflection and thoughts.

I started off my Aug 31 by sending out some smses to friends wishing them 'independence in mind and spirit'. I have to say that this year I wasn't inspired to send out many greetings at all. But I did decide to once again have my annual neighbourhood Merdeka tea party at home. Found some great Merdeka-themed cupcakes at Wondermilk in Damansara Uptown, fried some cempedak goreng and keropok lekor and that was more than enough to set the scene.

I live in a small cul-de-sac with only eight houses. Some of my neighbours have lived here all their lives while some are much newer. I have been here 14 years myself. This tea started last year for our 50th anniversary and I thought it was a new tradition well worth keeping. Besides, the string of flags I put up last year haven't come down yet!

My neighbours comprise four Indian families, one Chinese one and us, the sole Malay one. The other two houses are rented out and are currently empty or just rented out to people we haven't met yet. I can't say that we are a close-knit neighbourhood but since the tea last year (and another one on New Year's Day), we have gotten to know one another , which is nice.

At tea we chat about every day things, about our neighbourhood, about our kids and, being Malaysians after all, about food. It's lovely and friendly and makes me nostalgic for my childhood in Alor Setar when we knew our mixed neighbourhood as well.

One thing that always comes up is education. My neighbours have put their kids in national schools because they reasoned that if they survived it themselves, then their children can as well. But they have to put up with some ridiculous things.

My neighbour's son's school, for instance, insists on stereotyping their pupils by race when it comes to sports. So only Malays can play football while Punjabis must play hockey and Chinese play badminton. Even if the kids have no talent or interest for any of these games, those are the ones they have to play. One Punjabi child loved chess but was forced to play hockey!!! It somehow makes you understand a little better why we don't do well in sports internationally, if we insist on forcing square people into round holes they can't fit into.

The school must obviously be one that doesn't make sports a priority. Instead it's all about making sure that they get as many children scoring 5As in the UPSR as possible. With the exams a little more than a week away, children are given all sorts of Kelas Tambahan both in the afternoon and at night. The night ones can extend way past children's bedtimes, and it's not as if there is no homework to do as well. Some of the wiser parents have told their kids to relax and not stress themselves out too much but sometimes the kids put pressure on themselves to constantly be at their books, even having nightmares about their exams.

I really have to admire parents who have maintained their children in the national schools, especially when they are not Malays. My daughter spent eight months in a national school before we had to pull her out. We had become increasingly alarmed at the type of racial-toned language she had started to use. Obviously she was being indoctrinated every day with the idea of racial superiority of only one community, hers. We felt we could not counter this effectively ourselves so eventually transfered her to a private school. It's not perfect and we were very sad to have to do it but we really didn't want her to grow up in that toxic environment.

What is interesting is that I met the parents of one of her former schoolmates and they said that she loved the school. Thinking about it, I realised that perhaps in our schools today, Muslim kids and non-Muslim kids are having very different experiences. The Muslim kids were constantly subject to endless religious classes as well as constant talk about the difference ( and yes, the superiority) between them and their non-Muslim schoolmates. While non-Muslim kids generally have a more 'normal' school life where they are pretty much left alone to pursue all regular school activities so they like school better.

Lately I have become nostalgic for the 'normal times'. I'm not sure how to define that except to say that those were the times when we Malaysians hung out with each other without things like race and religion constantly hanging over our heads. When we weren't leaden with 'sensitivities' so much that they stifled normal relationships. I had no qualms in my childhood of going to play in my Chinese neighbour's home and eating whatever was on offer as long as it wasn't pork. But these days, people even hesitate to enter a non-Muslim home as if the air in it will somehow shake their faith. My Chinese and Indian friends knew what I could or could not eat and would simply point out what was Ok and what was not on the buffet table. I simply trusted their hospitality. I don't understand the constant air of suspicion that arises these days, especially among the young.

I read this in the papers today:


Religious leaders suggest lessons at an early age to promote unity

PETALING JAYA: Religious leaders have commended Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi’s proposal to hold annual National Day interfaith gatherings but believe that efforts to promote unity should start at an early age.

The leaders, who were present at the inaugural religious gathering organised by the Unity, Culture, Arts and Heritage Ministry on Saturday, described the event as a good gesture but agreed it was rather segregated as each religious group sat at their individual tables and could not mingle around freely.

Buddhist Chief High Priest of Malaysia Venerable K. Sri Dhammaratana Maha Nayaka Thera said that ties between the different races and religions should be cultivated at a young age, as cultural identities would separate Malaysians as they matured.

“In kindergarten, we see children doing everything together but the feelings of friendship just fades away when they grow up and start identifying themselves by their backgrounds,” he said.

“The Education Ministry should help foster closer relations by organising activities where children can mix together and not be segregated,” said Sri Dhammaratana, who also suggested that teachers should treat all students equally as though they were their own children.

Allied Coordinating Committee of Islamic NGOs (Accin) chairman Sabariah Abdullah said language classes should be held during the school holidays to enable children of all races to learn more about one another.

“With these programmes, the young can at least learn different standard greetings and foster stronger relationships,” said Sabariah, who proposed this idea to Minister Datuk Seri Shafie Apdal.

National Evangelical Christian Fellowship Malaysia executive adviser Rev Wong Kim Kong said schools played an important part in integrating the various races.

“The Government should take advantage of the school atmosphere and create programmes which enable students to interact freely and naturally,” he said.

Wong added that schools could create “stay in” programmes where children of different races and faiths could live together for a few days, as it would provide a lot of cultural exposure compared to events which lasted for only a few hours.