Friday 14 December 2007

The Star: Rainfall level 'at normal range'

From The Star: Rainfall level ‘at normal range’

KUALA LUMPUR: Rainfall recorded for the past few weeks was within the normal range compared to the same period last year, said Deputy Science, Technology and Innovations Minister Datuk Kong Cho Ha.

He said it was normal for floods to occur in the east coast states due to the heavy rain brought on by the north-east monsoon.

Kong added that normal rainfall was also forecast for the weeks to come.

“For decades, floods have been occurring in the east coast states, and district officers and the relevant authorities have been prepared for months,” he told reporters after opening the Tunku Abdul Rahman College’s Project Design Exhibition 2007 in conjunction with its open day Friday.

Kong said it was expected that there would be about four “waves” of floods in the next three months.

“The current flood is the first wave, and each wave can last about three to four days,” he added.

Is it just me or is there something wrong with the picture? This is "normal", has been happening every year, and yet their "preparations" consists of preparing not for excessive rainfall, but for people being affected by floods due to the excessive rainfall. Isn't that like thinking, 'it's inevitable that I get this disease, but instead of preparing for it by taking preventive medicine, I will instead prepare my will and deathbed'?

What?

Removing the blindfolds

Ever wonder what we'd be privy to in the newspapers if the government didn't have a stranglehold on the media, and free speech was prevalent? Probably this.

I got the Hindraf letter in the inbox today. The authenticity cannot be ascertained, but it seems pretty genuine to me. Only read it if you want to, and I'm only putting it up because I believe in freedom of speech and freedom of opinion. As in, if you call me unpatriotic, I will have the freedom to be of the opinion that you're a shithead.

HINDRAF
Hindu Rights Action Force
No. 135-3-A, Jalan Toman 7,
Kemayan Square,
70200 Seremban,
Negeri Sembilan Malaysia.
Tel : 06-7672995/6
Fax: 06-7672997
Email waytha@hotmail.com

15.11.2007
The Rt. Hon. Gordon Brown Prime Minister of the United Kindom
10 Downing Street,
Fax: +442079250918
London, URGENT
SW1A 2AA

Dear Sirs,

RE: 1. COMMONWEALTH ETHNIC INDIAN PEACE LOVING SUBJECTS IN MALAYSIA PERSECUTED BY GOVERNMENT BACKED ISLAMIC EXTREMIST VIOLENT ARMED TERRORIST WHO LAUNCHED A PRE DAWN VIOLENT ARMED ATTACK AND DESTROYED THE KG JAWA MARIAMAN HINDU TEMPLE AT 4.00 A.M THIS MORNING (15.11.2007).

2. APPEAL FOR U.K TO MOVE EMERGENCY U.N RESOLUTION CONDEMNING "ETHNIC CLEANSING" IN MALAYSIA .

3. APPEAL TO REFER MALAYSIA TO THE WORLD COURT AND INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT FOR CRIMES AGAINST IT'S OWN ETHNIC MINORITY INDIANS.

We refer to the above critical matters in Malaysia but which generally gets the least attention locally even by the Opposition parties, NGO's, the Malaysian Human Rights Commission and the media for this community is generally regarded as politically insignificant, do not draw local or international funding and are deemed not pressworthy. To the contrary the Malaysian government has successfully projected itself to the world as a modern Islamic thinking country which is not true.

The ethnic minority Indians in Malaysia were brought in to Malaysia by the British some 200 over years ago. Since independence in 1957 the Malaysian Indians have been permanently colonialised by the Islamic fundamentalist and Malay chauvinists UMNO led Malaysian government.

Among the recent atrocities committed by this government are as follows:-

1.100 over Indians were slashed and killed by the UMNO controlled Malaysian government in the Kampung Medan mini genocide. Despite numerous appeals, the Malaysian Human Rights Commission has refused to hold a Public Inquiry. The UMNO controlled Malaysian courts struck off a victim's public interest civil suit for a Public Inquiry to be held without even the said UMNO controlled government having to file in their defence. The UMNO controlled Attorney General and the Inspector General of Police refused to investigate and / or initiate an inquest into the death of at least six Indians in this tragedy despite.

2. Every week one person at average is killed in a shot to kill policy and in every 2 weeks one person is killed in police custody. About 60% of these victims are Indians though they form only 8% of the Malaysian population.


3. In every three weeks one Hindu temple is demolished in Malaysia. The latest being the demolishment of the Mariaman temple in Padang Jawa, Shah Alam, Selangor early this morning ( 15.11.2007) and the next being the (Mutaiya) Hindu temple in Sungai Petani scheduled for the 29.11.2007.


A violent armed pre down attack at 4.00a.m this morning was launched by the UMNO controlled Malaysian government backed by about 600 police, riot police, Islamic extremist and armed terrorists which completely destroyed this temple.

In an attack two weeks ago, uniformed police, riot police and city Council officers hurled rocks and attacked unarmed Hindu devotees with knives, sticks and iron rods.

At least 20 Hindu devotees were seriously injured and 19 arrested including 4 of their United Kingdom trained lawyers in direct violation of Article 5 (Right to life) Article 8 (Equality) Article 11 (Freedom of Religion) Section 295 (defiling a place of worship), Section 296 (disturbing a religious assembly), 298A(causing racial disharmony) and Section 441(criminal trespass) of the Malaysian Penal Code.

These authorities are plagued by an above the law mindset and in fact liberally take the law into their own hands. These atrocities however does not happen to almost all Islamic places of worship. Please visit http://www.policewatchmalaysia.com/ for further and better particulars.

4. State sponsored direct discrimination against the Indians in Public University intakes, Indian (Tamil) Schools, skills training institutes, civil service and private sector job opportunities, business and license opportunities and in almost all other aspects of daily life.

Despite our hundreds of letters, appeals and pleas to the Malaysian King and Sultans, the Prime Minister, Attorney General, Inspector General of Police, Ministers, Chief Ministers and the latest being our letters to the Prime Minister dated 29.10.2007 and 30.10.2007 and to the Attorney General dated 1.11.2007 the Malaysian authorities are only proceeding with greater ferocity and with impunity with very little regard for the Federal Constitution and laws of Malaysia. So please help us.

CONCLUSION

We fear that this peace loving Indian community of Tamil origin having been pushed to the corner and the persecution getting worse by the day may be forced to into terrorism in a matter of time as what has happened to the Sri Lankan Tamils.

APPEAL

On our part we are committed to a peaceful and lawful struggle and pray and appeal that the Government of the United Kingdom :-

1. Moves an emergency United Nations resolution condemning these state sponsored atrocities and persecutions of Malaysian Indians in Malaysia .

2. Refers Malaysia to the World Court and the International Criminal Court for Crimes against it's own ethnic minority Indians

Thank You,
Yours Faithfully P.Uthayakumar Legal Adviser


So there it is. Interestingly, I looked up "Kampung Medan" on our good old friend, Google, and found what they were talking about. I'd never heard about it.

From Malaysiakini: Remembering Kampung Medan: one year after:

Prasana Chandran

Mar 8, 02 10:08am

There was a funeral, a wedding, and a misunderstanding over a broken van windscreen. These led to a full-blown racial clash in Petaling Jaya Selatan that left six people dead and scores others suffering from head injuries, slash wounds and broken bones.

Photographs in malaysiakinis possession are gruesome evidence of the extensive hurt, both physical and emotional, inflicted by the clashes.

One of the victims, V Vasu, 24, had both his hands hacked off by rampaging youths. Doctors managed to reattach his left hand but failed to save two of his fingers.

There are several large stitch wounds on his forearm and on his wrist. There is also an unsightly wound on his palm.

Another photograph shows a man with a 20cm healed wound from below the navel right up to the rib-cage. While a third shows a man with over 20 stitches on each wrist.

The infamous incident, better known as the 'Kampung Medan clashes', took place exactly a year ago today.

It is often compared to the racial riots of May 13, 1969 which was sparked off after an opposition party's election victory parade.

The May 13 incident has been frequently used as a bogeyman during election time by the ruling coalition to urge the masses to reject the opposition, claiming that a bloody riot could recur.

One wonders why the March 8 clashes had not been twisted to the ruling coalition's benefit as well?

Apart from the six deaths, the four-day long clashes, also saw more than 40 people hospitalised. The majority of the victims were poor Indian Malaysians.

The incident created a climate of fear, anxiety, suspicion and trauma as attackers armed with parangs, samurai swords, iron rods and sticks roamed the vicinity baying for blood.

The government has been accused of denying the racial dimension of the clashes, perhaps concerned over Malaysia's international image as it might rattle investor confidence.

Until today, despite numerous memorandums sent to the Prime Minister's Department and Human Rights Commission (Suhakam), there has not been a show of a response.

This has undoubtedly created dismay among the minority Indians in the country.

The wedding tent

The whole episode supposedly started with an Indian security guard returning from work at 3am on March 4.

He found a tent erected for a wedding in the middle of the narrow road in Kampung Medan. He grew agitated and started kicking the tables and chairs.

This angered the Malay family that was preparing for the wedding, who rushed out and assaulted him. He fled but returned later with a parang and five other cohorts.

A fight broke out and at one point, the security guard fled to a nearby house, belonging to an Indian family, where a funeral wake was being held..

The group of Malays, who assumed he was a member of the household, then set fire to a car and two motorcycles parked nearby.

This marked the beginning of the bloody clashes, which was further aggravated when an Indian boy, using a slingshot, smashed the windscreen of his neighbour's vehicle.

The angry van owner, an Indian, sought compensation from the children's parents. He was joined by his driver, a Malay, but some villagers who saw the commotion thought that a Malay was threatening the Indians. Rumours began to spread and the rest is history.

The fragile balance of inter-racial 'harmony' was tipped with dire consequences -neighbourhood quarrels led to a racial strife.

The accounts

A six-member team representing a network of NGOs for a Violence Free Community took upon themselves to record the names and injuries of the victims.

Below are some of the details:

March 8: A 26-year-old construction worker and his friend were returning to their homes in Kampung Semarak off Old Klang Road on a motorcycle at 10.30pm. They were attacked by about 50 youths carrying iron rods, wooden sticks and hockey sticks. His friend escaped, but the construction worker ended up with a broken right
leg.

Suresh, 19, sustained head injuries when he was assaulted by five people at about 10.30pm. The college student from Taman Medan was returning home when five to six youths obstructed his way. They asked him about his ethnic origin. When he told them, Suresh was attacked with sharp instruments and wooden sticks. He passed out. He suffered multiple slash wounds on the head and abdomen. He also suffered a deep slash which almost severed the wrist from his left hand.

March 9: Mathavan was assaulted by a gang of youths when he was returning home on a motorcycle. He suffered a leg fracture and injuries on his hands. His motorcycle was torched.

Annadurai was carrying goods in his van when youths attacked him near the Shell petrol station in Sri Manja (near Taman Medan). He suffered injuries on his head and hands.

Security guard Kanan was assaulted in Kampung Medan while returning home from work. He had head injuries, a fractured leg and suffered a hemorrhage in his kidney. Rajathurai was on drips and on a resuscitation machine.

Naharul Hisham sustained injuries on his hands and his fingers were almost severed.

March 10: A fifth form student from Kampung Gandhi who was in Taman Medan with his brother at 3pm were chased by about 100 men on motorcycles, armed with samurai swords, wooden sticks and iron rods. The two were caught and assaulted. His brother's hands were almost severed.

Norhashihadi was returning to Kampung Medan after work when he was attacked by 10 men. He suffered head injuries.

In Sungei Way, Indonesian worker Sujari was attacked by six men while Yong So Lin was attacked by three.

Muthukumar, from Bidor, Perak, was delivering fruits when he and his co-worker were attacked by youths in Kampung Datuk Harun. He sustained head injuries.

Anbalakan was assaulted by a few youths when he stopped at the traffic light near Kampung Datuk Harun. He was on his way home to Sungai Buloh. He had leg injuries.

Ramesan, a mute, was attacked in Kampung Medan, sustaining injuries on his legs and hands.

March 11: Sahjahan, a Bangladeshi factory worker, was attacked by a man in Sungei Way. He fell unconscious and sustained injuries on his head and hands.

Kathirvelu had nose and head injuries. Thinakaran had injuries on his hand and leg.

Parthiban, 19, had stitches on the face and head. Anbarasan had injuries on his legs, hands and ear.

March 12: Subramaniam was travelling from Brickfields in Kuala Lumpur to his home in Sri Sentosa when he was assaulted. He had injuries on his head and back.

Bakhshish Elahi, a Pakistani, and his partner were assaulted in a lorry by about 100 youths armed with pipes, swords and parangs. He had injuries on his head, legs and hand.

March 13: A lorry driver and a factory supervisor were attacked by youths with parangs. Four fingers on the supervisor's right hand were almost severed. He also had two slash wounds across his shoulders. The lorry driver's fingers on his left hand were almost severed. He also suffered a slash wound to the back of the head.

In the aftermath

Following the bloody clashes, a group of concerned citizens comprising non-governmental organisations and individuals came together to draw-up a memorandum that was sent to the Prime Minister's Department, after failing to hand it personally to premier Dr Mahathir Mohamad at the Parliament House last year.

In the memorandum, the group asked that financial support be provided for the affected families as the victims were from the lower-income group such as petty traders, lorry drivers and factory workers. And some families had lost their breadwinner.

The group asked for immediate socio-economic development programmes aimed at providing adequate housing, sanitation, community centres, recreational facilities, public amenities and places of worship in Kampung Medan and the affected areas.

The poorest of them, regardless of their ethnic background, should be given further aid to own houses.

There was a request for the setting up of a special multi-ethnic police task force as the police were perceived to have acted sluggishly during the first three days of the
clashes. Only a multi-ethnic police force would be able to handle Kampung Medan-type of conflicts that involve racial dimensions, said the memorandum.

The communities living in the affected areas have long been suffering from drug and gang related problems. These problems, however, are not merely confined to the Kampung Medan area. Therefore, the setting up of a national task force was in order to take a holistic approach to resolve the problems.

The memorandum said Malaysians from all walks of life face racial discrimination and religious intolerance. Taking the Kampung Medan incident as a cue, it called for a Race Relations Commission be set up in order to eradicate unfair discrimination.

However, there has been no response to the memorandum, and no Royal Commission of Inquiry into the matter.

A political party, Parti Reformasi Insan Malaysia (Prim), has also been pressuring the government for adequate compensation and to investigate the cause of the clashes.

In the aftermath of the clashes, a BBC news article dated March 18, 2001 reported:
"Today, it is clear that beneath the normally tranquil surface of Malaysian society, dangerous tensions of the potential for violence still lurks."

I think there are a lot of fair requests in there. How did I not know about this? Oh that's right. Censorship.

Thursday 13 December 2007

Preparing for the new wave

Here's where I set out my New Year's Resolutions. In banking-speak, that means setting out my Key Performance Indicators (KPI), because how else are we supposed to measure how good the year was?

  1. Skydive.
  2. Go white water rafting.
  3. Visit a country that I've never been to before.
  4. Learn to ride a scooter properly.
  5. Get over the NYE debacle (See? It's in here).
  6. Moderate my drinking.

For bonus points:

  1. Move out.
  2. Fund a holiday entirely by myself.
  3. Scale a mountain (Kinabalu if possible).
  4. Decide on my career plan for the next 5 years.

And now, there is a public record of this.

Holocaust offends Muslims? What?

From BBC: Holocaust 'ban' e-mail confusion:

E-mails are circulating around the world, claiming the UK has banned the teaching of the Holocaust in schools.

The false suggestion is the action has been taken by the government to avoid offending some Muslim communities.

A number of people have contacted the BBC News website querying e-mails they have been sent.

One example is headed "In Memoriam".

It says: "Recently this week, UK removed The Holocaust from its school curriculum because it 'offended' the Moslem population which claims it never occurred."

It adds: "This is a frightening portent of the fear that is gripping the world and how easily each country is giving into it."


What? I'm not offended by the Holocaust. That's ridiculous. What does the Holocaust have to do with Muslims? It was the persecution of Jews.

You'll be glad to know that the e-mail is totally and wholly untrue.

BBC: Why we snooze after Sunday lunch

From BBC: Why we snooze after Sunday lunch:

University of Manchester researchers have discovered how the nerve cells in the brain that keep us alert become turned off after we eat.

Glucose - the sugar found in foods - stops these cells from producing signals to keep people awake.

The human body has an in-built mechanism which means that when the body needs fuel, the brain chemistry creates alertness.

But when that hunger is sated, the chemistry swings the other way.

Neil Stanley, director of sleep research at the Human Psychopharmacology Research Unit Medical Research Centre at the University of Surrey, said the work was interesting.

But he added: "There are many behavioural, circadian and societal factors that also determine whether we nap in the afternoon or not.

"The siesta is not only dependent on the intake of food.

"We naturally have a dip in alertness around 2pm to 4pm that happens whether we eat lunch or not.

"We also do not get tired after eating breakfast because we are on the rising phase of our circadian rhythm."

And now we know.

(FYI: circadian rhythm
A daily cycle of biological activity based on a 24-hour period and influenced by regular variations in the environment, such as the alternation of night and day. Circadian rhythms include sleeping and waking in animals, flower closing and opening in angiosperms, and tissue growth and differentiation in fungi.)

The Star: Mild earthquake hits Bukit Tinggi

This is relevant to those who attended the midweek madness last night.
Oh my god. This is the funniest thing ever.

Thursday, December 13, 2007
The Star: Mild earthquake hits Bukit Tinggi

KUALA LUMPUR: A mild earthquake, measuring 3.2 on the Richter scale, hit Bukit Tinggi in Pahang at 6.01pm yesterday.

It caused weak tremors in and around Bukit Tinggi, the Meteorological Department said.

It advised the public not to be alarmed by the tremors. – Bernama

Wednesday 12 December 2007

Why democracies don't work

September:
Candidate puts forth proposition NYE. No quorum, no decision.

October:
Candidate re-submits proposition NYE. No quorum, no decision.

November:
Candidate re-submits proposition NYE. Quorum is achieved. Council deliberates. No decision.

December:

  • Candidate re-submits proposition NYE with deadline. Council deliberates. Deadline passes with 20% participation. Decision requires simple majority. No decision.
  • Second Candidate submits proposition NYE2.0. Council deliberates. Quorum is achieved. No decision.

Don't ask me about NYE

I hereby wash my hands off any and all decisions relating to NYE. If a plan comes through, I'm in. If not, fine. I don't care if I end up staying at home and doing nothing. It's just another day. You want me to get over it? That'll be one of my new year's resolutions, okay?

This is fucking frustating is what it is. I've been trying to get someone to just say "okay" to booking something somewhere since fucking September. No. No okay. Not even from people who know they're going to be here. It's so frustrating that I gave up 2 weeks ago and was going to run off to Singapore until Pher said he was going to be here.

So, no. I don't know if you will be able to make it for NYE because I have no clue about what you do and what needs to be done. No, I cannot choose a suite type unless you tell me what kind of space the suite involves. No, I will not give my credit card number to book a room for people who refuse to confirm it. If anyone has a bloody good reason to say "I'm okay with whatever", it's me.

Don't fucking ask me about NYE.

Proud to be Australian?

So much went on yesterday that I forgot to put this up:

A judge's decision not to jail nine men guilty of raping a 10-year-old girl in an Aboriginal community has triggered outrage in Australia.

The offenders were either placed on probation or given suspended sentences for the 2005 rape in the Aurukun settlement, in northern Queensland.

In her ruling, Judge Sarah Bradley told them that the victim "probably agreed to have sex with all of you".


(Source: BBC: Rape case ruling shocks Australia)

THE prosecutor at the centre of the case in which six attackers escaped jail time for the gang rape of a 10-year-old on Cape York has been stood aside, pending an investigation.

Queensland Attorney-General Kerry Shine last night said the Director of Public Prosecutions would investigate the conduct of Steve Carter, the senior legal officer responsible for Cape York matters, in the DPP's Cairns chambers.

Court transcripts released yesterday showed Mr Carter had described the 2006 incident as "childish experimentation" and consensual "in a general sense".

The girl was gang-raped at the age of seven in Aurukun on Cape York in 2002, and was later put into foster care with a non-indigenous family in Cairns. However, child safety officers in April 2006 returned her to Aurukun, where she was raped again at the age of 10.

(Source: TheAge: Gang rape prosecutor stood down)

Yep. That's right.

The aftermath

The road leading to the Parliament building was swarming with police personnel who were on a mission - Stop Coalition for Free and Fair Elections (Bersih) members from entering the August House.

(Source: Malaysiakini: Mission accomplished: 'Bersih 8' sneak in memo)

KUALA LUMPUR: Police arrested 29 people who snubbed a court order and went ahead with an illegal gathering at the Parliament House yesterday.

They were detained after they showed up to submit a Bersih memorandum to protest against the Constitution (Amendment) Bill to extend Election Commission members’ retirement age from 65 to 66.

  • Parti Keadilan Rakyat, PAS and Parti Socialist Malaysia leaders were among those arrested at Parliament House.
  • The Dewan Rakyat passed the Bill yesterday with more than a two-thirds majority after Opposition MPs staged a walkout.
  • Seventeen of those arrested were released on police bail and the rest freed unconditionally.

(Source: The Star: 29 nabbed at illegal gathering at Parliament House)

OPPOSITION members present at Dewan Rakyat yesterday staged a walkout five minutes before a vote was taken to amend the Constitution to extend the retirement age of seven Election Commission members from 65 to 66 years.

(Source: NST: Dewan Rakyat: Walkout over bill to extend retirement age)

KUALA LUMPUR: In a dramatic sequence of events, Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) legal adviser P. Uthayakumar was arrested twice over alleged seditious offences yesterday.

At 9.20am, policemen picked him up outside a shopping mall in Bangsar and brought him to a Sessions Court at noon to face a charge of publishing a seditious letter on a website.

Eight hours later, after he posted bail of RM50,000 for allegedly posting the Nov 15 letter on the Police Watch website, he was arrested again at the lobby of the Jalan Duta court complex.

By 7pm, his lawyer M. Manoharan said Uthayakumar had been taken to the Pudu prison in connection with another sedition case.

(Source: The Star: Hindraf leader nabbed, freed on bail, nabbed again over alleged sedition)


KUALA KRAI: The 38 people who fell sick while being stranded in the jungle with more than 100 participants of an off-road expedition, have been rescued.

A team of VAT 69 police commandos helped them out, some on piggybacks, to the search and rescue operations centre at SMK Lakloh, about 270km from Kota Baru, where they were given first aid.

(Source: The Star: Commandos rescue 38 stranded in jungle)

Tuesday 11 December 2007

Bersih Update

So here's the gist of what's been happening today from Malaysiakini:

AFP Dec 11, 07 1:04pm
The United States called on Malaysia to allow freedom of expression and assembly as the government of Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi widened its crackdown on dissent.

(Source: US tells M'sia to allow freedom of expression)


Beh Lih Yi Dec 11, 07 12:12pm
PKR de facto leader Anwar Ibrahim was detained by immigration officials for 45 minutes after he arrived at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport this morning.

(Source: Anwar hauled up by immigration officials)

Sequence of Events

Here's the sequence of events of Hindraf:

22 November:

PUTRAJAYA: Police will not be issuing a permit for the Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) rally this Sunday.

Deputy Internal Security Minister Datuk Mohd Johari Baharum said judging from text messages being circulated, Hindraf appeared to be playing up sensitive issues which included the demolition of Hindu temples.


KUALA KANGSAR: The decision whether or not to charge leaders of the Hindu Rights Action Force Hindraf with sedition will be known next week, said Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Aziz.

He said police had conducted an investigation into whether Hindraf was behind a recent petition accusing the Government of carrying out ethnic cleansing of Indians here.


5 December:

SHAH ALAM: Attorney-General Tan Sri Abdul Ghani Patail made a personal appearance at the Sessions Court here to lay charges against 26 people who allegedly took part in an illegal gathering at the Sri Subramaniar Temple in Batu Caves on Nov 25.


The 26 were charged with being in an illegal assembly and using criminal force on policeman Dadi Abdul Rani with the intent of causing death, under Section 149 of the Penal Code that was punishable under Section 307 of the same code.


KUALA LUMPUR: Datuk Seri Rafidah Aziz was shocked during a recent work trip to India to find a newspaper there carrying a front page article that claimed that Malaysia was practising apartheid against Hindus.

Holding up the DNA newspaper of Nov 28, the International Trade and Industry Minister said that the article quoted a 22-year-old Sri Lankan-born poet who had spent 17 years in Malaysia, as saying that she fled Malaysia last month to escape “systematic racial harassment.”


6 December:

KUALA LUMPUR: Allegations by the Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) that the Government was carrying out ethnic cleansing and had committed atrocities against Indians in Malaysia are baseless and untrue, said lawyer Karpal Singh.


7 December:

SHAH ALAM: The 31 alleged supporters of the Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) charged with attempted murder, causing mischief and participating in an illegal assembly were denied bail by the Sessions Court yesterday.

Sessions judge Azimah Omar said she had considered the severity of the offences and the issue of national security in making the ruling.


8 December:

KUALA KANGSAR: The Government has identified the overseas groups linked to Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf).

Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Aziz said the groups are Sri Lanka’s Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the RSS, a militant organisation in India.


9 December:

KUALA LUMPUR: The Indian community has been advised not to heed an SMS that claimed Hindraf would hold a gathering in Kg Baru, said Selangor Mentri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Mohd Khir Toyo.

He said the messages were sent out with the intention of causing anger among the Malays and create racial tension.


11 December:

SHAH ALAM: The High Court here set aside a lower court's decision to discharge three Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) leaders who were charged with sedition earlier.


PETALING JAYA: Umno Youth regrets the statement by the Hindu Rights Action Force which described Umno as its enemy.

Its treasurer Datuk Abdul Hamid Nazahar said the statement showed that the organisation was playing extremist politics.

He said Hindraf should be rejected and hated by all for the sake of peace and prosperity of the country.



So, I worked on all this as a run-up to telling you that there are roadblocks in place today. No one was sure why but speculation was that Hindraf was planning a mass rally or something along those lines. You see, there'd been an SMS and emails going around saying that they'd been stockpiling weapons, and there was gonna be something on Dec 16. I think these might just be stupid people trying to incite people and think it's fun. Yes, there are people like that.

And then whoren pointed me to MalaysiaKini which reported:

Dec 11, 07 10:35am
The police have closed all entries to Parliament since this morning, ostensibly to block members of polls reform group Bersih from submitting a protest memorandum on a proposed constitutional amendment.

(Source: MalaysiaKini: All roads to Parliament blocked)

So there you go. It's not Hindraf. It's the other human rights group.

The Star: JPJ men and cop nabbed

They may not be the best, or the most honest, but it's nice to know they're doing something:



KUALA LUMPUR: Three Road Transport Department (JPJ) officers, a traffic police corporal and four runners have been arrested in a sticker-for-protection scam worth hundreds of thousands of ringgit.

Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA) officers who arrested the eight in Selangor in the last two days seized stickers with initials like KCE, KCHAI, BoB, VML, John, KFC, CB and one with a star-shaped symbol.

Lorry drivers who display the stickers would not be hauled up for overloading during operations by the JPJ and police.

(Source: The Star: JPJ men and cop nabbed)

Of course, the question now is, were they charged because the ACA didn't get a kickback? And why didn't they charge the rest of the syndicate?

Monday 10 December 2007

Plan B

So I had a good old reflection of my life yesterday, as I rushed in my BMW to Palacio to pick up the platinum credit card that I'd left at a different location the night before (shut up). You see, I passed by this old man sitting by the side of the highway, and that got me thinking about how much I don't want to end up like that: a person with no means in a culture where means mean everything.

I was depressed all along Jalan Parlimen, thinking about what it would be like living without a car, or the possibility of spending more than what I earn every month. And then BAM! it hit me. I have a plan B. Plan B comes in the form of Pai, Thailand. I know, I've been going on and on about it, but that's really it.

Plan B:
If my life starts going the way that people commonly call "downhill", I'll pack up and move to Pai, where you don't need much to live on and there's no pressure or influence to make you buy a thousand dollar handbag. And if I get tired of it? I'll go somewhere else like that.

I don't want to be unhappy. Meaning, I don't want to live where people will think less of me because I don't have the means. Who knows? My Plan B might actually turn out to be my Plan A one day.

What's up?

So much news. And so much to be proud of, too.















For starters, this happened on Kuta Beach, Bali. Those are the bodies of about 1,000 participants depicting a world in which global warming has taken its toll, along with the words "11th hour".

This was to prompt action from the UN Climate Change Conference being held in Bali.

Source: 11thHourAction.com


Could global warming be causing this?

PETALING JAYA: A weak 3.5 magnitude earthquake occurred in Bukit Tinggi, Pahang, at 8.55pm last night.

According to the Meteorological Department, the incident triggered off slight tremors.

(Source: NST: Quake measuring 3.5 hits Bukit Tinggi)

In a country that's supposed to be off the fault lines, this worries me. I mean, I thought we were safe here. If we're going to be susceptible to things like earthquakes anyway, we might as well be so in like California or something. Am I right?

And then there was the march for World Human Rights Day yesterday, which I blogged about before but totally forgot about on the day itself. I suck. What happened was this:


About 100 lawyers, activists, bloggers and members of non-governmental organisations gathered near the Sogo Shopping Complex at 7.30am and walked to the Bar Council building, about 3km away, where events to commemorate World Human Rights Day were planned. The group held a banner during the walk.

There were also some people, said to be family members of Internal Security Act detainees, with surgical masks with ISA written on them.

When the group reached Jalan Tun Perak, an argument broke out between some marchers and the police, who ordered them to disperse. The police then arrested the eight people.

(Source: The Star: Eight held in illegal march)

I'm proud of people being socially conscious, and being brave enough to stand up for what they believe in. So many people these days just sit down and complain amongst themselves, but when it comes down to it, they'll never do anything. You're either part of the solution or you're part of the problem. Or you're just whiners. (Like certain uncles of mine who do nothing but complain about anything and everything. When presented with a suggestion, his immediate response will be "You think they'll do anything about it?" in an incredulous tone. If you don't like it, move back to that country.)

What was wrong with having the walk in the first place? It isn't meant to invoke any racial or religious elements, or even anything in Malaysia for that matter. It's for the rights of humans, regardless of location, religion or race. What the hell?

Oh, and so much pride in the government:


KOTA KINABALU: An officer of the National Registration Department that issued a MyKad belonging to a teenager from Sandakan to someone else has told the girl that she can make a “fresh application with a new identity to resolve the problem.”

(Source: The Star: Change your identity, girl told)


No seriously. I mean, forget the fact that identity theft is illegal and they haven't done anything about it. Really.

Moving on to the government's actions:


IPOH: Police detained 82 people, including women and students, and seized 77 motorcycles in a pre-dawn operation to catch illegal racers and Mat Rempit.

(Source: The Star: Married couple and students among 82 caught in dragnet)


That's right. They're doing something. Prediction for what will happen in my family sooner or later:

KAPAR: A tow-truck operator was killed during an argument with a family member at his home in Jalan Kaya, Taman Aman, yesterday.

C. Navinden, 24, had his throat slit and bled to death in the living room of the house.

(Source: NST: Man killed in family feud)


One more inspirational story for the road:


KUALA KRAI: Seven participants of an international rainforest challenge expedition, who were among 124 people trapped in a forest area after a makeshift bridge collapsed because of rising floodwaters, made their way to safety yesterday.

(Source: The Star: Seven stranded off-road participants make it out).

It can be done. Let's hope it happens for the remaining 117.

Okay, that's enough for now.