Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Selling Our Culture Down the Melaka River


RM1b Arab boost for Malacca

MALACCA: The state’s tourism industry will get a boost following plans by Arab investors to pump in more than more RM1bil in investment to develop several tourist-related projects over the next three years.

Chief Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Ali Rustam said the investments were to develop two Arab City projects on Pulau Melaka and Klebang.

Middle Eastern lure: Mohd Ali and Salleh Hadi Al Mansor, president of Golden Corporate Heritage, exchanging documents at the Arab City project groundbreaking ceremony in Malacca yesterday.

The project on Pulau Melaka covers about 1.7ha and involves about RM400mil while the Klebang one, which covers an area of about 4ha, would see an investment of RM700mil, he told reporters after opening the Arab City project on Pulau Melaka here yesterday.

He said the projects would allow the state to better attract Middle Eastern tourists and give locals a chance to experience Arabic culture.

The Arab investors, Golden Corporate Heritage (CGH), will carry out joint projects with the state-owned Chief Minister Incorporated (CMI).

Arab City on Pulau Melaka involves the development of a three-storey shopping complex including an Arabian bazaar, Middle Eastern restaurants and cafes and a unisex Arabic health and beauty spa.

The Klebang project involves the construction of a five-star hotel, a water theme park, an aquarium and a floating restaurant.

GCH managing director Hesham Eldin Fath Mohamed Khalil said the company was also looking at developing an Arab Village in Kampung Jawa.

Arab City on Pulau Melaka is expected to be completed by the end of next year and the one in Klebang in 2012.



Monday, April 27, 2009

Awwww....

Hi folks, thought I'd share this with you to start your week off on a good note. Warning for the soft-hearted: get your hankies out!!!

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Uh Oh, Here Come the Youthies!

Umno Youth members urged to join NGOs

KUANTAN, April 26 - Umno Youth members have been urged to join at least one non-governmental organisation (NGO) in an effort to get closer to the people.

Deputy chief Datuk Razali Ibrahim said this would make them understand the problems and wants of people in their respective areas.

"Youth members must not only move in their political circle but must also be involved in social activities to get closer to the people," he said at an autism awareness programme here today.

Razali who is also Deputy Youth and Sports Minister said the proposal would be discussed at a course for youth leaders at Janda Baik, Bentong, next week.

He said although Umno youth members had been involved with NGOs, their presence was not that evident. - Bernama

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Hmmm.....which NGOs I wonder? Pink Triangle Foundation? National Cancer Society? PS The Children? Suaram?

Or more like Persatuan Pengguna Islam Malaysia and suchlike?

And do they come in and say "Hi, I'm from UMNO Youth! Make me your President!"?

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Huddling in Bogor to Deliver a Bouncing 'Baby'

I've just spent three days holed up in a resort in Bogor, about an hour from Jakarta ( in good traffic, which isn't often) putting together, along with almost 40 other colleagues, the next AIDS conference in Bali. We've been sifting through hundreds and hundreds of abstracts, the brief descriptions of studies and projects which potential speakers send in, to construct the programme of the conference. Some abstracts are very good cutting-edge stuff, some are the same-old, same-old. Some are very well-written and methodical, especially those by academics and very experienced conference people. Some are more raw and unformed but contain the gems of real-life experience; these are often by community people, those most affected by the epidemic all over Asia, and of course those living with the virus itself. (If you want to know more about the conference, please take a look at the 9th ICAAP website.)

I must admit to one disappointment; there really aren't many submissions from Malaysia. I don't know whether it's because few people do any research in Malaysia or, few people submit their abstracts, or the quality of those submitted were just too low to be accepted. But what is clear is that there will indeed be very few Malaysians who will be presenting their work or experience in Bali this August.

I've been working on these conferences for ten years now. In 1999, the 5th ICAAP was held in KL and I had the honour of chairing it. At that time, there was an economic crisis and Malaysia was only just beginning to talk about AIDS openly. But we pulled it off; 3400 delegates came from all over Asia and the Pacific.

But more importantly, there were two important outcomes of that conference. One was that it gave rise to the first ASEAN leaders' special session on HIV/AIDS in Brunei in 2001 which was the first time that all the heads of ASEAN governments discussed the epidemic and pledged to work together to manage it. And secondly, it led to Malaysia looking at our trade agreements to see if we could do compulsory licensing of the antiretroviral drugs in order to make treatment cheaper for Malaysians living with HIV. Today the Malaysian government provides free first-line antiretroviral treatment to its citizens living with HIV through our public hospitals.

Since then, the ICAAP has taken place in Melbourne in 2001, in Kobe, Japan in 2005, in Colombo in 2007 and this year in Bali. I've worked on all of them, mostly on behalf of the AIDS Society of Asia and the Pacific which is the convenor of the Conference. Despite the many difficulties that come up when trying to organise these conferences -- 9/11 in the case of Melbourne, SARS in the case of Kobe and potential civil war in the case of Colombo --they have been able to bring together everyone working in or interested in HIV/AIDS in our part of the world to share new knowledge, discuss issues, network and provide support to one another while working in this very difficult field. I have to add that some of the people I worked with in these conferences are no longer around, having succumbed to the various diseases associated with AIDS.

Not that these conferences are ever depressing. On the contrary, they are often joyous, energising and empowering get-togethers. We get to hear about many successful campaigns and take heart from them. We get to listen to wonderful speakers who inspire us to continue our work and strive to do better. We get to meet a wide variety of people who we might not have ever imagined meeting and finding things in common with. I have sometimes told newbies to the ICAAP that going to this conference is a bit like entering the bar in the first Star Wars movie. It's full of wierd and wonderful creatures but if you can get past the strangeness, you'll find plenty in common.

So as the days get nearer to the day the conference opens on August 9, life will get busier and busier. But it's a bit like having a baby. After a while, you can't turn back and just have to carry on til you deliver a bouncing baby you'll be proud of. So you'll have to excuse me if sometimes I go quiet for a while; it just means I'm huddled with the Local Organising Committee in Jakarta and Bali working to put a great conference together. Watch this space for more news to come!



Meanwhile, just before I left for Bogor, I went to a special event. My fellow blogger, Raden Galoh aka Dalilah Tamrin has a wonderful blog called OneBreastBouncing. Dalilah is a cancer survivor, yet there could not be a cheerier person. Her blog is one great read as she describes what it's like to live with breast cancer and have a family and a career as well. Last Monday, Dalilah's book, Kanser Payudara Ku – Perjuangan & Kesedaran (Tinta Publications), was launched at the KL Book Fair. It describes her journey with the disease and also has many tips for other breast cancer survivors on how to cope with living with it. Dalilah is another of those inspiring people, ever willing to share her experience with others if it helps them.

OK folks, home tomorrow. Will catch up with everything again soon!

Sunday, April 19, 2009

The Expensive Entitlements of A Simple Man

The Sunday Star let Khir Toyo have his say about all the allegations that came out recently about his and his family's use of state company Permodalan Negeri Selangor Berhad's money to go for what seems like very expensive holidays disguised as 'study tours'. Gee, I wish I had study tours to Hawaii and Disneyland rather than, say, Papua New Guinea.

Do read the interview online because it has more in it than the one in the print version. The most complimentary thing I can say is that the guy just doesn't get it. He really does think we are all dumb and we should buy his answers as plausible.

Most of his answers are predictable enough but these answers stood out for me as being representative of what is wrong with Khir Toyo and his ilk. It was this:

Q: People are shocked by the RM1.7mil spent for the Disney trips?

A: That was decided by the management. I am actually a very simple man. I do not ask for these kind of things. Maybe they said as a chairman, that is my entitlement and they did that.

Q: You say you are a simple man but people would disagree because you fly first class and stay at expensive presidential suites?

A: You must remember when I was the (PNSB) chairman. I have my entitlement. If I were to reduce my entitlement to what an officer gets then what is the officer going to reduce to? I am the chairman. There is the deputy chairman, board of directors, government officers going along. If I fly business class (not first class), then what happens to my state secretary? He will complain. If I am travelling alone it is easier. But I am travelling with a group of people and if I downgrade myself - it’s a problem for the others. But I never ask (for the pricey presidential suites or first class flights). Whatever they provide, I go along with. I just tell them to give me a full itinerary on these trips. I want a full programme with investors and companies.

Someone like Khir Toyo knows only to think in hierarchical terms. He has an entitlement, he has to take it because otherwise 'what is the officer going to reduce to'? It never occurs to him that he and an officer could travel at an equal level, that if he travels Business, then the officer (and even the State Secretary) can also travel in the same class. If they don't want to talk to each other during the flight, then just ask for seats far away from each other. Khir just can't conceive of travelling in the same class as those from his own government because he thinks that going down to 'their' level would be a sign of weakness.

Perhaps it is true that his officers would not want to travel in the same class as their boss. If their boss comes down to Business ( and nowadays many airlines don't have anything higher than Business Class), then they'd have to go down to Economy....with his maid!!! And oh the poor things, if their boss has to come down to economy class, then they don't get to travel at all! That's the way the pecking order works! But given how his former officers are happily singing away at the Selcat, there can't have been much love lost between them.

I guess Khir has never noticed how the rest of the plane really likes it when they see their political leaders travelling economy, just like them. But he's Chairman and therefore must use his entitlement or else society will break down. Perhaps he's forgotten that for those under him to eventually move up that hierarchy he so cherishes, he eventually has to go. Now seems like as good a time as any.

I'm just wondering why the MACC hasn't pulled him up for questioning yet. Or do they actually find his explanations plausible?

Friday, April 17, 2009

Fisk Takes Aunty Beeb to Task

Robert Fisk: How can you trust the cowardly BBC?

The BBC Trust is now a mouthpiece for the Israeli lobby which abused Bowen

Thursday, 16 April 2009

The BBC Trust's report on Jeremy Bowen's dispatches from the Middle East is pusillanimous, cowardly, outrageous, factually wrong and ethically dishonest.

But I am mincing my words.

The trust – how I love that word which so dishonours everything about the BBC – has collapsed, in the most shameful way, against the usual Israeli lobbyists who have claimed – against all the facts – that Bowen was wrong to tell the truth.

Let's go step by step through this pitiful business. Zionism does indeed instinctively "push out" the frontier. The new Israeli wall – longer and taller than the Berlin Wall although the BBC management cowards still insist its reporters call it a "security barrier" (the translation of the East German phrase for the Berlin Wall) – has gobbled up another 10 per cent of the 22 per cent of "Palestine" that Arafat/Mahmoud Abbas were supposed to negotiate. Bowen's own brilliant book on the 1967 war, Six Days, makes this land-grab perfectly clear.

Anyone who has read the history of Zionism will be aware that its aim was to dispossess the Arabs and take over Palestine. Why else are Zionists continuing to steal Arab land for Jews, and Jews only, against all international law? Who for a moment can contradict that this defies everyone's interpretation of international law except its own?

Even when the International Court in The Hague stated that the Israeli wall was illegal – the BBC, at this point, was calling it a "fence"! – Israel simply claimed that the court was wrong.

UN Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338 called upon Israel to withdraw its forces from territories that it occupied in the 1967 war – and it refused to do so. The Americans stated for more than 30 years that Israel's actions were illegal – until the gutless George Bush accepted Israel had the right to keep these illegally held territories. Thus the BBC Trust – how cruel that word "trust" now becomes – has gone along with the Bush definition of Israel's new boundaries (inside Arab land, of course).

The BBC's preposterous committee claims that Bowen's article "breached the rules [sic] on impartiality" because "readers might come away from the article thinking that the interpretation offered was the only sensible view of the war".

Well, yes of course. Because I suppose the BBC believes that Israel's claim to own land which in fact belongs to other people is another "sensible" view of the war. The BBC Trust – and I now find this word nauseous each time I tap it on my laptop – says that Bowen didn't give evidence to prove the Jewish settlement at Har Homa was illegal. But the US authorities said so, right from the start. Our own late foreign secretary, Robin Cook – under screamed abuse from Zionists when he visited the settlement– said the same thing. The fact that the BBC Trust uses the Hebrew name for Har Homa – not the original Arab name, Jebel Abu Ghoneim – shows just how far it is now a mouthpiece for the Israeli lobby which so diligently abused Bowen.

Haaretz gave considerable space to the BBC's findings yesterday. I'm not surprised. But why is it that Haaretz's top correspondents – Amira Hass and Gideon Levy – write so much more courageously about the human rights abuses of Israeli troops (and war crimes) than the BBC has ever dared to do? Whenever I'm asked by lecture audiences around the world if they should trust the BBC, I tell them to trust Amira and Gideon more than they should ever believe in the wretched broadcasting station. I'm afraid it's the same old story. If you allow yourself to bow down before those who wish you to deviate from the truth, you will stay on your knees forever.

And this, remember, is the same institution which said that to broadcast an appeal for medicines for wounded Palestinians in Gaza might upset its "neutrality". Legless Palestinian children clearly don't count as much as the BBC's pompous executives.

How do we solve this problem? Well I can certainly advise viewers to turn to Sky TV's infinitely tougher coverage of the Middle East and – I admit I contribute to this particular station – I can recommend the courage with which Al-Jazeera English covers Gaza and the rest of the Palestinian-Israeli war.

I can well see how BBC executives will say that this article of mine today is "over the top". Jeremy Bowen may indeed think the same. But the First World War metaphor would be correct. For Bowen and his colleagues are truly lions led by BBC management donkeys.






Thursday, April 16, 2009

One Courageous Young Woman



Young woman battling tumour disorder wins award

KUALA LUMPUR: Yvonne Foong, 22, is one tough woman. She survived six surgeries to remove tumours – one on her spine and five on her brain – and is set to go for a seventh surgery next month to remove a 5cm tumour at the base of her brain.

Despite all this she is still optimistic about life and it is no wonder she was awarded the Her World Young Woman Achiever of the Year 2008 on Tuesday.

“I want to thank my friends, because if not for them, I would not be here today,” she said after receiving her award from Deputy Women, Family and Community Development Minister Datin Paduka Chew Mei Fun.

At 16, Foong’s doctors diagnosed her with neurofibromatosis type 2, a rare genetic disease that causes benign tumours to grow in her brain, spine and along her peripheral nerves.

The incurable illness has left her with semi-facial paralysis, deafness, partial blindness, poor balance, and a stiff right leg.

To raise funds for her surgeries at the House Ear Institute (HEI) in Los Angeles, United States, she sells custom-designed Heart4Hope T-shirts. Her next surgery will cost RM140,000.

Foong – a newspaper columnist, blogger (www.yvonnefoong.com) and the author of I’m Not Sick, Just A Bit Unwell – is studying for her Bachelor’s in Psychology at a college here.

The other woman honoured is Women’s Aid Organisation executive director Ivy Josiah, who received the Her World Woman of the Year 2008 award.

Josiah, 53, who was honoured for her prominent voice on women and human rights in Malaysia said that although she was pleased with the award, survivors of domestic violence deserved it more.


Friday, April 10, 2009

The New Cabinet - A Review

Well....I can't say I am completely thrilled by it. Sure, a lot of the guys who should have been dropped a long time ago have finally gone but there are still a few uglies remaining. And I don't know if reducing the size of the Cabinet from 31 to 28 can actually be considered making it 'leaner and meaner'. A slight trimming might be a more accurate description.

But what most disappoints me is again the small numbers of women in this Cabinet. And of the ones that are there, there isn't anyone nor anything new. Dato Ng Yen Yen has gone to Tourism, where she was Deputy before. Dato Shahrizat is back at Women, Family and Community Development. Although I must say this was a disingenuous statement from her:

“I never expected to be back in the ministry I used to lead. I feel very honoured and glad that I’ve been given the trust and faith to be in charge of the ministry I feel strongly for,” said an elated Shahrizat.

Um...what other Ministry was she hoping for? I don't think she's ever imagined herself at any other Ministry. Well, at the very least I hope that all that segregation of women's issues into Muslim and Non-Muslim issues when Shahrizat was Special Adviser on Women's Affairs and Yen Yen was Minister for Women will end. There should not be two classes of women in this country.

This was also another silly statement:

She (Shahrizat) said she was grateful to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak for realising the importance of women in the government.

Chew said she was happy with the increased participation of women in decision-making.

“We did not expect to have more women. This is very good,” said Chew adding that she was grateful to Najib for giving her a chance.


First of all, we now have only two women Ministers instead of three as in the previous administration. So we're down one (not that I much regret Azalina going!). That makes about 7% of the Cabinet. Then among the Deputy Ministers, there are only eight women Deputy Ministers out of 40 (including that useless 2-for-1 package, Mashitah). That makes it about 20%.

This means we are still far short of the target of ensuring that at least 30% of places in decisionmaking bodies are made up of women as Malaysia has agreed to after signing the Convention for the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). This is the FIRST thing that both Shahrizat and her Deputy Chew Mei Fun should have noticed. So, none of this gratitude business, thank you very much!

What's more, how come the only woman on the UMNO Supreme Council, Datuk Dr Norraesah Mohamad got no position at all? She has experience in the government service and in the private sector and is very capable. Being the only woman on the Supreme Council is tough; it would have helped boost her if she'd been given a government position. After all, she did better than Deputy Ministers Husni Hanadzlah and Awang Adek Hussin and Minister Shabery Cheek.

What's more at least four of these women had to be made Senators before they could become Ministers or Deputy Ministers. Which just goes to show the dearth of talent among women politicians. Simply not much to choose from.

And just to show how respected women politicians are in this country, just read this insulting report on one of them here. Would they have written any such thing about male politicians?

But I think what's most disappointing is the lack of innovation and creativity in this Cabinet. My fellow blogger Shaik Rizal had some very interesting ideas for the composition of the Cabinet. That is the sort of thinking we really need in the Government today. For instance, why not call the Women's Ministry the Gender Empowerment or Gender Equality Ministry which is what it is called in many countries? That focuses the work more easily. Some people have even suggested why not have a man head that Ministry? It's an interesting idea though I can't think of a man I truly trust enough to do that.

Instead we have the women kept to the 'soft' Ministries for the most part. Much as I thought Rafidah had no clue about women, she was a good Minister of Trade and Industry, the AP issue notwithstanding. Why not give that responsibility to another woman? Or the environment or whatever?

Anyway, now they are supposed to have Key Performance Indices for each Ministry. I suppose this is a good thing. My only hope is that they get more scientific before they set out policies, by really talking to people, consulting those who actually know what they are talking about and really thinking things out before they decide on a policy. Please let's have no more badly-thought out policies which then need to be reversed after public outcry. And I hope that the KPIs also have a gender perspective incorporated in them, that is, their impact on women must also be considered.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Discovering Oman


Sorry, been a bit slack lately folks but have been tending to my kids for a few days and as usual that doesn't leave much time for anything else.

But anyway, today is April 7 which is election day for the three constituencies. Will be interesting to see what happens. I'll be watching from afar.

I wanted to say something about my short trip to Oman recently. I have never actually been to the Middle East apart from going on umrah once and transiting in Dubai airport a few times. So I was quite excited about going but also had some trepidation. Friends who have been to Oman say that it's their favourite place in the Gulf although that wouldn't really be saying much. But I was going to a Women in Business conference so that said something also.

It turns out that Oman is a bit different from the rest. For a start who knew that it's a great tourist destination? It's a beautiful country with deserts, moutains and the sea. You can go camping in the desert and do sandboarding, or go to the beach or just travel around and visit many old forts and smaller towns and villages.

I was there for all of two nights so I didn't see much. But Muscat, the capital of the Sultanate of Oman, was pretty interesting. For one thing, the architecture all reflects their traditional buildings. There weren't many buildings more than about 10 storeys high and most were white or sandcoloured with many traditional details, flat-roofed and dome-windowed. The highways are new and wide, yet has plenty of cars. It's also remarkably clean and green, with lovely trees and flowers lining the streets. Apparently Muscat has won some UN awards for being the cleanest city in the world. I can certainly vouch that you don't see rubbish in the streets, or people loitering for that matter.

Omanis are also an interesting people. They seem to have diverse heritages, mostly Arab, African and also from Pakistan. Natasha, one of my hosts for instance, spoke fluent Urdu and Baluchi as well as Arabic, English and French. Salma, the organiser of the conference, has African Zanzibari heritage. There also seems to be a lot of Indians and Pakistanis in the shops and in the souk although I don't know if they are citizens, permanent residents or migrant workers.

It struck me that when it comes to dressing, in Oman as well as in most of the Middle East, their traditional dress dictates that both men and women cover up from head to toe, no doubt because of the climate and environment. Omani women wear black abayas, the cover that they use to go out of their homes, which is a long gown and head scarf, worn over regular clothes. But these may be beautifully embroidered on the sleeves and the edges of the scarves with sequins, embroidered flowers, even peacock feathers! Some women don't wear the abaya but just wear long sleeved tops, long skirts and headscarves, sometimes with their hair showing. Non-Muslim and foreign women are not required to wear the abaya at all, nor even to cover their heads.



Omani men wear a long white jubah which has a little tassle at the neckline which, they say, they douse with perfume. From time to time, they raise this tassle to their noses to inhale the essence. On their heads, instead of the long headcovering we normally think of as Arab, Omani men wear either a tall embroidered cap or a turban wound round their heads. The material for the turbans can be in any colour and is usually beautifully embroidered but it is a small turban which exposes their necks and ears. They also wear a small dagger, the khanjar, in their belts but really only for ceremonial occasions.

What is interesting to a Middle East novice like me is that in Oman, there isn't the segregation of the sexes that we tend to expect. I saw men and women sitting together in the coffee house of the hotel. The women who attended the conference had no trouble leaving their homes and going out to work. Indeed, one of the speakers was a senior Omani woman who was pretty much a pioneer in the telecoms industry there. I had a car and driver all to myself and I went out to the souk with him and did not feel unsafe, unlike some other places in the region.

The women who came to the conference were mostly young and working in many areas, including in banking, telecommunications and their own businesses. They spoke so well in English that I had to ask what their schooling was like. It turns out that English is an important subject in schools and in universities, it is the only medium of instruction. I asked why and they simply said they just don't have time to translate everything into Omani. And yet, their traditions and culture seem very much alive and well.

Oman is a Sultanate but the Sultan seems to be very progressive. People are friendly and hospitable and not too protocol-conscious. The conference was officiated by one of the princes but there was no grand ceremony. One of the princesses stayed for the entire proceedings and yet there was not much formality and she herself was very friendly and easy to talk to.

The inside of a shop in Muttrah souk, near Muscat.

I wish I could have stayed longer but had to rush home to catch another flight to see my children. As it happened, coming home turned into a real drama. It hardly ever rains in the Gulf but when I was there it did. Not what we in the tropics would call rain but enough for the Omanis to close their schools and have flights delayed. The result was that I missed my connecting flight home from Dubai and had to go through a lot of hassle trying to get another flight, ending up arriving home ten hours behind schedule. But that short stint in Muscat has given me a taste of what Oman has to offer as a holiday destination and puts it on my list of yet another place I need to see more of. Although I have to say, it's not a cheap place because 1 Omani rial is about RM9!!!

And oh yes, the food! Omani food is much like Middle Eastern food everywhere, with things like hummus, baba ghanouj, tabouleh. I went to dinner at Natasha's house and she had a huge buffet with lots of rice, lamb and salads and very sweet desserts. Great food but to be taken in small quantities!

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

My 2nd Million!


Hi folks, sorry for the silence but I went for a short working trip to Muscat, Oman and then had a horrendous time getting home. It hardly ever rains in the Gulf but it did the weekend I was there and this freaked everyone out, especially those at airports. Thus, flights got delayed, I missed my connecting flight, etc etc. But am home now though am off again...tomorrow. Will do a short piece on Oman soon though.

Meanwhile I was pleasantly surprised to find that slightly over one year after my first million hits, you all gave me my second one. Thank you so much for coming to visit and faithfully following my blog, even though sometimes I can't post as often as I'd like due to so many competing responsibilities. Thanks for all your comments; I've learnt quite a bit from some of them. Some commenters have even become friends in real life. Anyone who says that the Internet discourages human communication and contact is completely wrong as far as I'm concerned. If anything I think it helps us stay engaged with one another.

So thank you once again. I'll try and keep posting on current issues as often as possible. And look forward to your feedback.

Cheers!