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.

Immediate Press Release    1/6/2012

அம்பிகாவின் மீது தாக்குதலுக்கு ம.இ.கா கண்டனமாமெர்லிமாவ் ம.இ.கா வின் செயல் எதை குறிக்கிறது – சார்ல்ஸ் கேள்வி

டத்தோ அம்பிகா வீட்டின் முன் மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்ட தாக்குதலுக்கு ம.இ.கா கண்டனம் தெரிவித்துள்ளது என  மனித வள அமைச்சர் டத்தோ ஸ்ரீ டாக்டர் சுப்பிரமணியம் தமது அறிக்கையில் தெரிவித்துள்ளார். அப்படியானால், மெர்லிமாவ் ம.இ.கா வினரின் செயல் எதை குறிக்கின்றது என கேள்வி எழுப்பினார் கிள்ளான் நாடாளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர் சார்ல்ஸ் சந்தியாகோ.

டத்தோ அம்பிகாவின் மீது போலிஸ் புகாரும், அவரின் குடியுரிமை மற்றும் பட்டத்தை மீட்க சொன்ன மெர்லிமாவ் ம.இ.கா வின் மனித அடிப்படை உரிமை அத்துமீறும் செயல் குறித்து டத்தோ ஸ்ரீ டாக்டர் சுப்ரமணியம் என்ன சொல்ல போகிறார்?

இனவாதம் அடிப்படையிலான தாக்குதல் இது இல்லையென என்று இவர் கூறினாலும் , உண்மை நிலவரங்கள் அதற்கு மாறாகவே சித்தரிக்கின்றன என கூறிய சார்ல்ஸ் ஏன்  பெர்சே அமைப்பின் இன்னொரு இணைத் தலைவரான பாக் சமாட் என அழைக்கப்படும் ஏ சமாட் சைட் மீது எந்த தாக்குதல்களும் நடத்தப் படவில்லை என மேலும் கேள்வி தொடுத்தார்.

டத்தோ அம்பிகாவின் மீது மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்ட  தாக்குதலுக்கு ம.இ.கா கண்டனம் தெரிவிப்பது உண்மையானால்,  அவருக்கு எதிராக செய்யப்பட போலிஸ் புகாரை மெர்லிமாவ் ம.இ.கா உடனடி மீட்டுக் கொள்ளும் படி  டாக்டர் சுப்ரமணியம் உத்தரவிடத் தயாரா என சார்ல்ஸ் சவால் விடுகையில், அதே வேளையில் அவரின் குடியுரிமையையும் பட்டங்களையும் பறிக்க சொன்னதற்காக மன்னிப்பு  கேட்கும் படி வலியுறுத்தி கேட்டுக் கொண்டார் சார்ல்ஸ்.

Source : MalaysiaKini

  • Aidila Razak
  • 3:32PM May 29, 2012

The American Chamber of Commerce has not observed any impact on investor sentiment among its members, following the three Bersih rallies to date.

fta free trade agreement and usa and malaysiaIn fact, said Wong Siew Hai Amcham, the governor for the Malaysian American Electronics Industry (MEAI), a survey conducted on MEAI members found that investments have grown last year.

“As far as the survey results show, I don’t think there is impact. If you look at the data presented, most companies have expanded,” he told the media at the Invest Malaysia 2012 conference in Kuala Lumpur.

As far as the most recent rally is concerned, investors are “watching from the sidelines” but are unlikely to scale back investments.

“Some have even set up regional headquarters here,” he said.

The MEAI annual survey results for 2011 released today saw a significant 34.1 percent growth in design and development expenditure by the 29 members.

This is on the back of a 9.1 percent export sales growth at RM56.5 billion in 2011.

MEAI forecasts a further 3 percent growth this year.

Situation not extreme

Speaking to Malaysiakini on the sidelines, Wong said  investors would only likely pull back investments if “the situation leads to airports being shut down, etc” and that Malaysia is far from such a situation.

NONEHe, however, noted that this would refer to existing investors and that the situation may not be the same for new investors.

Federal Territories and Urban Well-being Minister Raja Nong Chik Zainal Abidin (right) had reportedly said that the Kuala Lumpur lost out onRM20 million worth of investments when a South Korean company held off investment following the Bersih 3.0 rally on April 28.

International Trade and Industry Minister Mustapa Muhamad, after a recent post-Bersih 3.0 dialogue with industry players, however said that investment has not let up since the demonstration.

But he cautioned that investors may consider their positions if the demonstrations persist.

Amcham Singapore chapter representative James Andrade said, meanwhile, that the chamber is encouraged by greater deregulation and focus on human capital in Malaysia.

The delegation from Amcham Singapore is here for a two-day visit, and has met with International Trade and Industry Minister Mustapa Muhamad. It will speak to Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Idris Jala tomorrow.

Also at the press conference was US Ambassador to Malaysia Paul Jones and US Ambassador to Singapore David Adelman, who both noted the importance of Southeast Asian markets to the US.

Jones said the US is Malaysia’s largest investor and its fourth biggest trading partner.

மூலம் : மக்கள் ஓசை

Source : Free Malaysia Today

Stephanie Sta Maria | May 19, 2012

Victims of police brutality during the April 28 Bersih rally relate their ordeal of being on the receiving end of ‘karate chops’ and ‘flying kicks’.

KUALA LUMPUR: Mohd. Saufi Othman, 29, was attempting to leave the city on the evening of April 28 when he was confronted by a group of policemen who began raining blows on him.

In the midst of the assault, he felt the barrel of a gun shoved into his chest. The bruise is only just beginning to fade.

Satesh Kumar, 29, was recording the events taking place around the Masjib Jamek LRT station when another group of policemen dragged him away from his mother and girlfriend.

He was kicked and stepped on before being hauled to Dataran Merdeka where the other Bersih detainees were grouped.

Along the way, a traffic policemen stopped him and glanced around before delivering a swift punch to his gut. Satesh was released from Pulapol at 3am the next day.

These were two of the testimonies from the 19 victims of police brutality during the Bersih 3.0 rally last month. Two of the 19 were reporters who decried being beaten up for carrying out their work.

At a press conference here today, the victims spoke of being beaten by unidentified policemen for walking on the streets, recording the on-goings, helping another victim or for simply catching their breath on the sidewalk.

‘Karate chops’ and ‘flying kicks’

“I tried to help my friend who was lying on the road but the policemen who were kicking and punching him turned on me,” said Hanafi Ahmad Zubidin in his 30s. “I had no choice but to run.”

“The police saw me recording them beating people in the Masjib Jamek station and they set upon me too,” recalled Daniel, 39. “I was pushed down a staircase and have five stitches at the back of my right ear,” he added.

But Daniel was luckier than Asrul Wadi, 26, who wound up with nine stitches near his right eye and two more near his left. He has consulted three eye specialists and is facing the possibility of blindness.

Many of those detained had similar stories of being hauled through Dataran Merdeka past two lines of policemen who dealt out punches, “karate chops” and “flying kicks”. Members of PAS’ Unit Amal team who were arrested were reportedly made to walk past the police line twice.

Those who were already in the Black Maria remembered police literally throwing the injured into the trucks and kicking them inside. Some were locked up in back of the trucks for two hours with only a small opening above them for ventilation.

Bersih: Organised pattern

Bersih 3.0 leader Hishamuddin Rais highlighted what he said was an “organised pattern” in the acts of police brutality on that day.

“All the cops who were beating up people wore no name tags or numbers,” he stated. “Groups of them assaulted a single person and they also targetted those with recording devices.”

“There was an organised pattern that day which means that there was a methodology to the brutality. And that means that there were instructions from the top.”

Bersih co-chairperson A Samad Said added that the bulk of assaults had taken place after the rally’s end time of 4pm.

“I am certain there were specific orders for this,” he said, echoing Hishammudin’s allegation. “And we cannot allow such a thing to happen.”

Lack of transparency

The national laureate also read out a press statement by Bersih expressing deep concern over the lack of transparency and information on the status of investigations into the police force as well as the Home Ministry’s failure to provide a press release of the 100 people who have yet to surrender to the authorities.

“Every single day since the Bersih 3.0 rally, fresh allegations of police abuse have surfaced,” Samad read. “Disappointingly to date there has been no substantial action taken by the government to bring to book those responsible for the violence perpetrated by law enforcement officials.”

“Instead police have released images of 141 individuals who are wanted for breaking the law on that day. There appears to be a witch hunt for these individuals instead of seeking out police personnel who committed violence against rally goers.”

On May 9, the police issued a seven-day deadline to the 141 individuals but only 26 have surrendered so far.

Two policemen were charged yesterday for assaulting Guang Ming daily photograper, Wong Kin Onn, but have since pleaded not guilty.

Physical, mental abuse

Samad also pointed out that those who have surrendered to the police had been subjected to physical and mental abuse.

These include Mohd Safuan Mamat 24, who claimed that he had been hit with a metal pipe when he was held overnight after turning up at the police station.

Fadiah Nadwa Fikri of Lawyers for Liberty meanwhile advised those on the list not to go to the police station alone for safety purposes.

“We will accompany you there,” she said. “People are afraid to cooperate with the police after Safuan’s case and the police must give assurance that they will treat people humanely.”

Suaram’s E Nalini added that the police intimidation is not restricted to Peninsular Malaysia but also East Malaysia where students are being threatened by the universities.

“This shows that the issue isn’t over as we are still receiving reports of intimidation to this day,” she said.

Bersih 2.0 has set up a hotline (012-3496013) and an email address (info@bersih.org) for the public to lodge reports of incidents of police brutality on April 28.

The Bersih rally saw some 80,000 people, mostly clad in yellow, taking to the streets demanding free and fair elections.

The peaceful protest turned violent when the barricades at Dataran Merdeka were breached, prompting the police to fire tear gas and water cannons.

Source :- Free Malaysia Today

April 29, 2012

While the police had treated Malaysians like criminals by erecting barricades around Dataran Merdeka, maybe the head of the government can still do the right thing.

By Charles Santiago

Saturday’s Bersih rally, calling for changes to the country’s electoral system, was a milestone in Malaysia’s political history.

At least 100,000 people marched on the streets to send a clear message to Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak – they want reforms to the poling system.

No, they did not mean the sham of setting-up committees only to dismiss crucial issues, which have contributed to the ruling coalition’s grip on power.

While Najib passed a slew of reforms on the electoral system, his actions did not address critical issues such as cleaning up the electoral roll.

But with thousands of Malaysians demanding serious, durable reforms, Najib has no choice but to heed their concerns.

This means he must postpone the next general election, widely expected as early as June, until the eight-point demand of election watchdog, Bersih, is met. Anything short of this will not be good enough for Malaysians.

It was unfortunate that the rally ended in a chaotic manner, with protesters and media workers arrested.

As I write this, close to 400 people are reported to have been detained with no access to lawyers. I also note that some policemen and protesters were hurt in scuffles.

While it is yet to be ascertained if the protesters who defied the order of rally organizers to disperse were planted, what cannot be denied is the excessive use of tear gas and water cannon against the people.

The police had also manhandled protesters and beaten up press photographers for taking pictures of violent arrests.

In sharp contrast, northern Penang has a peaceful rally as there were no presence of the police or razor wires.

Malaysians living in 80 different cities across the world also rallied peacefully, with no untoward incidences.

While the police had treated Malaysians like criminals by erecting barricades around Dataran Merdeka, maybe the head of the government can still do the right thing.

And Najib should start by working on the demands of the people who painted the city yellow.

Charles Santiago is DAP’s Klang MP.

Saturday’s Bersih rally, calling for changes to the country’s electoral system, was a milestone in Malaysia’s political history. At least 100,000 people marched on the streets to send a clear message to prime minister Najib Razak – they want reforms to the poling system.

No, they did not mean the sham of setting-up committees only to dismiss crucial issues, which have contributed to the ruling coalition’s grip on power.

While Najib passed a slew of reforms on the electoral system, his actions did not address critical issues such as cleaning up the electoral roll.

But with 100,000 Malaysians demanding serious, durable reforms, Najib has no choice but to heed their concerns.

This means he must postpone the next general election, widely expected as early as June, until the eight-point demand of election watchdog, Bersih, is met. Anything short of this will not be good enough for Malaysians.

It was unfortunate that the rally ended in a chaotic manner, with protesters and media workers arrested. As I write this, close to 400 people are reported to have been detained with no access to lawyers. I also note that some policemen and protesters were hurt in scuffles.

While its yet to be ascertained if the protesters who defied the order of rally organizers to disperse were planted, what cannot be denied is the excessive use of tear gas and water cannon against the people.

The police had also manhandled protesters and beaten up press photographers for taking pictures of violent arrests.

In sharp contrast, northern Penang has a peaceful rally as there were no presence of the police or razor wires. Malaysians living in 80 different cities across the world also rallied peacefully, with no untoward incidences.

While the police had treated Malaysians like criminals by erecting barricades around Dataran Merdeka, maybe the head of the government can still do the right thing.

And Najib should start by working on the demands of the people who painted the city yellow.

Charles Santiago

Member of Parliament, Klang.