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Rakyat Himpun Tuntut Hak

DUDUK BANTAH_TUNTUTAN KEWARGANEGARAAN

குடியுரிமை நிராகரிக்கப்பட்ட மலேசிய குடிமக்களின் உரிமைக்காக அமர்ந்து போராடுவோம் – சார்ல்ஸ் ஆதரவு

மலேசியாவிலே பிறந்து மலேசியராக வாழும் நமது இந்திய சமூகத்தினர் பலர் வருடங்கள் பல கடந்தும் இது நாள் வரை குடியுரிமை கிடைக்காமல் அல்லல் பட்டுக் கொண்டிருக்கின்றனர். இந்த பிரச்சனை இந்தியர்களின் நீங்கா பிரச்சனையாக இருந்து வருகின்றது என தமது ஆழ்ந்த வருத்தத்தை தெரிவித்தார் கிள்ளான் நாடாளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர் சார்ல்ஸ் சந்தியாகோ.

“மை டப்தார்” எனப்படும் என் பதிவு நடவடிக்கை மலேசியா முழுதும் நடத்தப் பட்டன. அதில் பல்லாயிரக்கனக்கான மலேசிய இந்தியர்கள் விண்ணப்பங்கள் அனுப்பியும் பலருக்கு ஒரு முறையான தீர்வு காணப்படாமல் இருக்கின்றன. இவர்களில் பலர் இன்று நேற்றல்ல பல ஆண்டுகாலமாக குடியுரிமைக்காக விண்ணப்பித்தவர்களாவர்.

இனியும் காத்துக் கிடப்பது சரியான முடிவல்ல. குடியுரிமை நிராகரிக்கப்பட்ட மலேசிய குடிமக்களின் உரிமைக்காக அமர்ந்து போராடும் உரிமை பேரணியான அமைதி பேரணியில் இந்தியர்கள் தளராது கலந்துக் கொண்டு ஆதரவை நல்குமாறும் தான் அதில் நிச்சயம் கலந்துக் கொள்ளப் போவதாகவும் சார்ல்ஸ் கூறினார். நமது உரிமை பறிக்கப் படும்போது நாம்தான் அதை தட்டிக் கேட்க வேண்டும். அனைவரையும் புதன்கிழமை 12/12/12, காலை மணி 10.00 க்கு, புத்ரா ஜெயா,தேசிய பதிவு இலாகாவில் அமைதியாக ஒன்று கூடுமாறு இந்திய சமூகத்தினரை கேட்டுக் கொண்டார் அவர்.

 

Forum tentang salah satu isu serius yang menimpa negara kita.
Sebagai pihak berkuasa, kerajaan dan pengguatkuasa mempunyai tanggungjawab untuk melindungi rakyat dan menjalankan tugas secara professional.
Keganasan secara berleluasa harus dihentikan.

Dijemput rakan-rakan Klang hadir ke forum ini untuk mengetahui dengan lebih lanjut tentang isu ini.

*Sila sebarkan. Terima kasih.

Source : The Malysian Insider

By Clara Chooi
Assistant News Editor

November 06, 2012

Ambiga stressed that Malaysians don’t take to the street so easily unless it is for a very good reason. — File pic

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 6 — The Bersih 2.0 movement does not want to cause an Arab Spring in Malaysia, Datuk Ambiga Sreenavasan told CNN in a rare interview on international television aired here this morning.

She stressed that the election watchdog group she heads only wants a clean polls process to ensure a democratically-elected government.

Ambiga told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour during the New York interview that Bersih 2.0 is not opposed to the possibility of the present government returning to power after the next polls, provided that its leaders are elected fairly.

“Well, let me tell you where we’re coming from. We don’t want an Arab Spring,” the activist said to the renowned CNN chief international correspondent.

Ambiga was being interviewed alongside another pro-reform fighter, Ukraine’s Eugenia Tymoshenko, the daughter of the jailed former prime minister Julia Tymoshenko, on “Amanpour”, the nightly foreign affairs programme on CNN International which Amanpour anchors for.

Both were described by Amanpour as “brave women” and “brave voices for democracy”.

“We want to choose our leaders through clean and fair elections. We want to do it through the ballot box, which is why the government really, if they want peaceful transition of any sort — it can be the same government,” Ambiga said, according to a transcript of the interview available on CNN.com.

Amanpour had asked Ambiga if she felt that Malaysia would witness the same uprising seen over the past two years in the Middle East, pointing to the string of pro-democracy protests that the prominent lawyer has led since 2007.

To be honest, as far as our movement is concerned, we’re not — we’re not worried about who wins. We’re worried about the process.

“The process is important because what it needs to reflect is the will of the people. It’s about legitimacy. It’s about honouring the right of the voter to vote,” she said.

The Arab Spring or the Arab revolution has seen rulers forced from power in several countries across the Arab world including Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and Yemen, in a wave of anti-government street demonstrations.

“It can be the same people coming in,” insisted Ambiga, stressing again that Bersih 2.0 does not want a Malaysian version of the Arab Spring.

“They have to allow it to happen through clean and fair elections. That’s what we’re asking for. We want to bring change through the ballot box, if there is to be change at all,” she said.

Ambiga has so far led three Bersih demonstrations in the capital city, amassing a crowd of thousands in a march for free and fair elections.

The first rally in 2007 was partly credited for the colossal losses suffered by the ruling Barisan Nasional government during Elections 2008, where it failed to recapture its coveted two-thirds parliamentary majority and even ceded four states and Kelantan to the opposition.

But every Bersih protest had resulted in scenes of chaos as the government deployed riot police to stop protestors from marching on the streets of the capital through the use of tear gas and chemical-laced water.

Since the protests, Ambiga and her fellow Bersih 2.0 steering committee members have been the target of attacks by pro-BN hardliners, some of whom have even held mini protests outside the leader’s home and hurled threats and racial slurs at her.

But asked if she was afraid, Ambiga told Amanpour that she had little choice in the matter.

“I mean, the choices are this: you either give into the intimidation, which means you undermine the whole movement, or you stand up to it.”

She pointed out that such “oppressive conduct” by those in power was a clear indication that the government saw the Bersih movement and the crowd of thousands it had amassed for the rally as “a threat”.

Ambiga also made it a point to correct Amanpour on the size of the crowd at the last Bersih rally in Kuala Lumpur on April 28, saying some 200,000 had attended, instead of the 20,000 that the correspondent had earlier suggested.

“Malaysians don’t take to the street easily. So if they have, there is a good reason for it.”

மூலம்  : மக்கள் ஓசை    24 அக்டோபர் 2012 , பக்கம் 3

Sumber : ROKETKINI.COM               24 October 2012

KUALA LUMPUR 24 OKTOBER: Penentangan MCA-BN terhadap cadangan perlaksanaan gaji minima RM1,100 oleh PR menimbulkan tanda tanya samada parti tersebut memusuhi golongan pekerja negara ini apabila mendakwa perlaksanaannya bakal memufliskan negara.

“Kualiti hidup keluarga dan individu di Malaysia akan bertambah baik. Yang menghairankan, mengapa MCA menentang cadangan ini seolah-olah mereka melancarkan perang terhadap golongan pekerja di Malaysia?” soal Ahli Parlimen Klang Charles Santiago ketika menjadi salah seorang panelis dalam forum ‘Bagaimana Pakatan Rakyat akan Membelanjakan Wang Rakyat’ anjuran Roketkini.com di Kuala Lumpur Ahad lalu.

Walhal katanya, sebelum ini Perdana Menteri Najib Razak sendiri telah memperkenalkan dasar gaji minima sebanyak RM900 di Semenanjung Malaysia dengan perbezaan cuma di antara RM900 dan RM1,100.

Pun begitu ujar Santiago, perlaksanaan gaji minima sebanyak RM900 tidak memberi apa-apa makna kerana ramai kalangan pekerja berpendapatan sekitar jumlah tersebut.

Jelasnya lanjut, gaji minima RM1,100 ini akan meningkatkan kualiti hidup golongan pekerja negara ini selain merapatkan jurang golongan miskin dan kaya melalui lebihan pendapatan.

“Ada kajian telah menunjukkan bahawa ia juga akan membuka lebih banyak peluang pekerjaan dan perniagaan yang baru,” kata Santiago.

Ujarnya, kenyataan beliau ini turut bersandarkan kepada satu kajian di Indonesia pada tahun 1990 yang menunjukkan perlaksanaan gaji minima tidak akan meningkatkan jumlah pengangguran.

Menyifatkan dakwaan MCA-BN sebagai sebuah paranoia dan tuduhan tidak berasas, Santiago berkata hasil kajian dari laporan dari Bank Dunia juga mendapati perlaksanaan gaji minima RM1,100 ini tidak akan memberi sebarang kesan besar kepada pelaburan.

Tambah Santiago, selain mampu menaiktaraf kehidupan keluarga golongan pekerja negara ini, dasar gaji minima PR bakal mengurangkan kebergantungan terhadap pekerja asing di Malaysia.

“Ia akan memberi peluang kepada orang tempatan memperoleh peluang pekerjaan dan pendapatan yang lebih baik,”

Merujuk kepada amalan dasar merakyatkan ekonomi negeri oleh Kerajaan Negeri Selangor, katanya Selangor telahpun menetapkan gaji minima sebanyak RM1,500 bagi syarikat-syarikat GLC negeri.

“Kerajaan negeri telah menubuhkan dana peralihan untuk membantu syarikat GLC mereka yang bersaiz lebih kecil untuk memenuhi dasar gaji minimum ini.” ujar beliau.-Roketkini.com

Jangan lupa sertai kami di Konsert Bersih…Sila sebarkan…

IMMEDIATE PRESS RELEASE                                       14 /9/2012

Chances are that now, instead of developing team building and learning to respect one another for who they are, our students will be busy looking out for boys with tight T-shirts and big handbags.

They will also subtly “sweep” every girl to figure out if she could possibly be a lesbian. In short, they would become adept at stereotyping.

This is what the Education Ministry has encouraged by endorsing “guidelines” to help parents to identify gay and lesbian “symptoms” in their children so that these “tendencies” could be nipped in the bud.

Speaking at a seminar on “Parenting in addressing the issue of LGBTs”, deputy education minister Mohd Puad Zarkashi said the exposure of such symptoms was the best way to check the spread of such unhealthy phenomenon among students.

In effect, Puad has spread hate among these kids. He has also fanned the flames of intolerance and homophobia.

Our children must be taught to see the importance of human relations and respect the rights of all people irrespective of their sexual orientation. They must also be taught not to condemn or bully anyone based on how they identify themselves.

They need to learn to identify and protect themselves from sexual predators and not to label people based on their sexuality.

The unveiling of an education development blueprint by prime minister Najib Razak to swiftly raise standards right across the entire system clearly shows we are lagging far behind.

Our students are incapable of critical thinking. The standard of English is down the drains. Students’ proficiency ranks among the bottom one third of countries. The global ranking for local universities keeps dropping.

Najib said Malaysia is at critical crossroads if it hopes to make the leap to become a developed nation. But instilling such belief systems among students will not help the country make the jump as there is a famous saying that “obsession with a belief limits your ideas”.

People from the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender community face the worse forms of discrimination. They are already ostracized in schools and occupy the lowest position in the job market, where they are often harassed.

They are the targets of verbal abuse, sexual and physical violence. They are ostracized by their families and face hate crime-related sexual abuse.

If at all, the government and Education Ministry must teach students to stop the existing name-calling and instead look at ways to ensure the LGBT community has equal access to education.

In fact, this is binding on the government as it ratified the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948 and Human Rights Charter before becoming a member of the Human Rights Council of the United Nations, vowing to respect sexual rights as universal rights based on the inherent freedom, equality and dignity of all human beings.

The government has made many blunders. But this madness of discriminating against its own children and citizens must stop.

Let’s not fail our children.

Charles Santiago

Member of Parliament, Klang

@mpklang

Source : MalaysianMirror

Charles Santiago
Friday, 29 June 2012 11:52

Civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr said “Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity”. I wonder what ruling Barisan Nasional’s Sri Gading lawmaker Mohamad Aziz is. Chances are maybe both.

I cannot really say I am shocked by his statement calling for Bersih’s co-chairperson Ambiga Sreenevasan to be “hanged” for treason towards the King. Mohamad called her a traitor for leading the call for free and fair elections, prompting tens of thousands of people to take to the streets last July.

We have been seeing politicians from the ruling camp spewing venom just because they have absolute power and know their dangerously stupid remarks would be dismissed.

And sure enough BN secretary-general Tengku Adnan Mansor said Mohamad’s views were his personal opinion and do not reflect party stance. And then he subtly reminded the public that the case related to the Bersih 3.0 assembly is still under investigation by the authorities.

Mohamad was not reprimanded although his remarks have the danger of further dividing the nation which is already split down the middle as a result of race-based politics. But realizing his statement sounds ludicrous, he scrambled around to manage the damage done by saying he was merely posing a question to parliament on the possibility of Ambiga being punished. Then Mohamad retracted his remarks.

It is shameless that threats and attacks have been mounted on Ambiga because she is an easy target. Mohamad’s statement is not just racist but also seditious. Its clear he threatened Ambiga because she is a woman, an Indian and a Hindu. Even her counterpart, poet laureate Samad Said has said he has been spared because he is a Malay.

Prime minister Najib Razak goes around town trying to engage different communities with his 1Malaysia rhetoric which aims at national integration through racial unity. But his men don’t get it, do they? And Najib himself has kept painfully mum when Ambiga was targeted.

Malaysians sent a strong message at the rally, demanding for electoral reforms. The crowd that turned up cut across a diverse segment of the society. And the government is still reeling from the hit it took – not just because it was unprepared to handle a politically maturing society but also because of the back lash it suffered due to arbitrary and excessive force by the police.

Almost a year after the rally, the government is yet to implement durable reforms ahead of a general election, which is described as one that would be the dirtiest in the country’s political history. Instead, we have seen Najib throwing money to buy votes.

But all the cash handouts and speeches peppered with racial undertones, threats of a looming disaster if UMNO loses power plus promises of even more money to the people have not worked to shift the sentiments on the ground.

People are fed-up of a corrupt government. People are fed-up of the ruling elite lining its pockets. People are fed-up of race-based policies. People are fed-up of widespread discrimination.

In short the people want a change of government and Barisan Nasional politicians are growing out of ideas to hoodwink the public.

So we have a few stupid men talking nonsense.

Malaysia became the laughing stock of the world when international headlines highlighted the “butt exercise” by former soldiers outside Ambiga’s house to embarrass and harass her.

While there was no official statement checking this indecent incident, the police came to the aid of traders who set-up burger stalls outside her home to make up for losses sustained during the rally calling for electoral reforms.

Deputy police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said they could not act against the traders as they were in a public space.

And recently Ambiga was slapped with a half a million ringgit fine for alleged damage to the capital city during the rally. If anything, such continued victimization of Ambiga has only angered the people even more.

The government might think that it can cleverly rely on pure fluff that pours out of the mouths of ruling politicians to divert attention from much-needed electoral reforms.

Such thinking is archaic. And the government is better off getting used to the idea that its stronghold on power is slipping fast.

CHARLES SANTIAGO is Member of Parliament, Klang

 

Source : Free Malaysia Today   June 29, 2012

BN politicians are growing out of ideas to hoodwink the public, including the latest attempt by Umno MP Mohamad Aziz.

COMMENT

by Charles Santiago

Civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr said: “Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.”

I wonder what Barisan Nasional’s Sri Gading lawmaker Mohamad Aziz is. Chances are maybe both.

I cannot really say I am shocked by his statement calling for Bersih’s co-chairperson S Ambiga to be “hanged” for treason towards the King.

Mohamad called her a traitor for leading the call for free and fair elections, prompting tens of thousands of people to take to the streets last July.

We have been seeing politicians from the ruling camp spewing venom just because they have absolute power and know their dangerously stupid remarks would be dismissed.

And sure enough BN secretary-general Tengku Adnan Mansor said Mohamad’s views were his personal opinion and do not reflect the party stance. And then he subtly reminded the public that the case related to the Bersih 3.0 assembly is still under investigation by the authorities.

Mohamad was not reprimanded although his remarks have the danger of further dividing the nation which is already split down the middle as a result of race-based politics. But realising his statement sounds ludicrous, he scrambled around to manage the damage done by saying he was merely posing a question to Parliament on the possibility of Ambiga being punished.

Then Mohamad retracted his remarks.

It is shameless that threats and attacks have been mounted on Ambiga because she is an easy target.

Mohamad’s statement is not just racist but also seditious. It is clear he threatened Ambiga because she is a woman, an Indian and a Hindu. Even her counterpart, poet laureate A Samad Said has said he has been spared because he is a Malay.

The silent PM

Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak goes around town trying to engage different communities with his 1Malaysia rhetoric which aims at national integration through racial unity. But his men don’t get it, do they? And Najib himself has kept painfully mum when Ambiga was targeted.

Malaysians sent a strong message at the rally, demanding electoral reforms. The crowd that turned up cut across a diverse segment of the society.

And the government is still reeling from the hit it took – not just because it was unprepared to handle a politically maturing society but also because of the backlash it suffered due to arbitrary and excessive force by the police.

Almost a year after the rally, the government is yet to implement durable reforms ahead of a general election, which is described as one that would be the dirtiest in the country’s political history.

Instead, we have seen Najib throwing money to buy votes.

But all the cash handouts and speeches peppered with racial undertones, threats of a looming disaster if Umno loses power plus promises of even more money to the people have not worked to shift the sentiments on the ground.

People are fed up of a corrupt government. People are fed up of the ruling elite lining its pockets. People are fed up of race-based policies. People are fed up of widespread discrimination.

In short, the people want a change and the BN politicians are growing out of ideas to hoodwink the public.

So we have a few stupid men talking nonsense.

Archaic thinking

Malaysia became the laughing stock of the world when international headlines highlighted the “butt exercise” by former soldiers outside Ambiga’s house to embarrass and harass her.

While there was no official statement checking this indecent incident, the police came to the aid of traders who set up burger stalls outside her home to make up for losses sustained during the rally calling for electoral reforms.

Deputy police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said they could not act against the traders as they were in a public space.

And recently Ambiga was slapped with a half-a-million ringgit fine for alleged damage to the capital city during the rally.

If anything, such continued victimisation of Ambiga has only angered the people even more.

The government might think that it can cleverly rely on pure fluff that pours out of the mouths of ruling politicians to divert attention from much-needed electoral reforms.

Such thinking is archaic. And the government is better off getting used to the idea that its stronghold on power is slipping fast.

Charles Santiago is DAP’s MP for Klang.

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