Monday, April 14, 2008

Lebih 20 ribu hadir di himpunan 'Black 14'
M Khaleel Kas Tue Apr 15, 08

KUALA LUMPUR, 15 April (Hrkh) - Walaupun pihak polis tidak memberikan permit, namun faktor 'Anwar' dilihat masih mampu untuk menarik lebih 20,000 dalam perhimpunan yang diadakan di Kelab Sultan Sulaiman, Kampung Baru malam tadi. -->-->
Tepat jam 9.15 malam, Ketua Umum KeADILan, Dato' Seri Anwar Ibrahim muncul dengan menyampaikan ceramah di hadapan lebih 20,000 orang yang hadir malam tadi.
Perhimpunan yang digelar ""Menghitung Masa dari Black 14 ke Arah Kemenangan Rakyat" telah dianjurkan oleh KeADILan sempena tamatnya larangan berpolitik terhadap Anwar hari ini.
Dalam ceramahnya itu, Anwar meminta semua untuk menunggu dua minggu dari tarikh hari ini untuk mengetahui sama ada beliau akan bertanding dalam pilihan raya kecil atau tidak.
Pada pilihan raya umum yang lalu, Anwar tidak dapat bertanding akibat larangan berpolitik namun, beliau dapat berkempen untuk calon-calon yang bertanding.
Sementara itu, dalam sidang media selepas perhimpunan tersebut, Anwar tidak menjangkakan seramai itu yang hadir kerana pada jangkaan awal pihak penganjur hanya menjangkakan sekitar 10,000 sahaja.
Namun, kehadiran orang ramai sememangnya luar biasa apatah lagi diadakan di luar musim cuti serta di waktu malam pula.
Dalam perhimpunan tersebut, juga kelihatan pelbagai media yang terdiri di kalangan tempatan mahupun luar negeri.
Ketika Harakahdaily membuat tinjauan, seorang peserta yang hadir dalam perhimpunan malam tadi menjelaskan bahawa, inilah kali pertama beliau dapat mendengar ucapan Anwar secara dekat.
Sulaiman Murad, 43, yang bertugas di sebuah agensi kerajaan menjelaskan, ucapan yang didengarnya pada malam itu mengingatkannya pada zaman reformasi.
"Himpunan sebegini ramai, walaupun tidak setanding di zaman reformasi tetapi sekurangnya ia menimbulkan kesan dan memberikan ingatan pada kita tentang peristiwa ketika itu. Siapa kata 'faktor Anwar' tiada. Pilihan raya lalu sudah cukup untuk membuktikannya,"jelasnya sambil memberitahu bahawa beliau hadir bersama rakan-rakan sepejabatnya.
"Tapi saya agak kecewa dengan tindakan pihak berkuasa. Mengapa halang Anwar dari teruskan ucapan. Kami (rakyat) mahu mendengar apa yang ingin disampaikan. BUkankah ini adalah premis persendirian.
"Pihak polis tiada kuasa dan hak.Mana perginya profesionalisme pihak polis yang sering dilaungkan?"tegas Suraya Ahmad, 27, yang turut sama berada di lokasi perhimpunan.
Menurutnya, pihak polis sepatutnya profesional. Perlu memahami dan sedar situasi politik ketika ini tidak sama. Rakyat mula sedar dalam perkembangan yang berlaku terhadapat arus politik negara.
Tambahnya, apakah pihak berkuasa bersekongkol dengan pemerintah dan pemerintah pula masih tidak serik dengan penangan yang diterima mereka daripada rakyat dalam pilihan raya lalu?
Dalam pada itu, sebelum ini Ketua polis Kuala Lumpur Dato' Muhammad Sabtu Osman berkata pihak KeADILan tidak memohon permit untuk perhimpunan tersebut.
Menurutnya, walaupun perhimpunan itu dibuat di tempat persendirian, polis tetap akan mengambil langkah berjaga-jaga dengan mengadakan rondaan dan kawalan lalu lintas di sekitar kawasan itu. - mks.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Malaysian PM hints at hand-over

Malaysia's embattled Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi has signalled he would support a transition of power to his deputy.
The move comes after the government suffered its worst ever showing in last month's general election.
Since them Mr Abdullah has been under intense pressure from within his own party to step aside.
While his UMNO party won the election, the surge in opposition support left him vulnerable.
He has spent the past few weeks repeatedly resisting calls for his resignation - but did admit that he is partly to blame for the disastrous poll results.
Calm nerves
Now there are strong signs that he does not intend to fight on for much longer, says the BBC's Robin Brant, in Kuala Lumpur.
At a meeting with members of his party on Friday, Mr Abdullah said he would discuss a transition with his deputy Najib Razak.
The deputy prime minister's spokesman told the BBC he could not comment on the timescale, but the focus is on party elections due in December. A handover could come then or at some point in 2009.
Last month's general election saw the opposition win unprecedented levels of support in both parliament and state government.
By agreeing to discuss a transition the prime minister hopes to calm nerves of both investors and politicians.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Malaysia Probes DAP Claims of $20 Million Bribes to Cross Over

By Manirajan Ramasamy and Angus Whitley
April 9 (Bloomberg) -- Malaysia is investigating claims that opposition Democratic Action Party lawmakers were offered at least 65 million ringgit ($20 million) each to join the ruling coalition, which last month had its worst election result.
Police started a probe in the northwestern state of Perak, where the allegations were made, Malaysia's Inspector General of Police Musa Hassan said by phone today. Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has no comment, said press secretary Teoh Ai Hua.
Abdullah, facing a leadership challenge within his own ruling party, lost his two thirds parliamentary majority and five of Malaysia's 13 states in the March 8 elections. Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, who promises to fight corruption and racial preference rules, claims he can woo the 30 coalition crossovers he needs to form a government.
``There are definitely efforts on both sides to win people over,'' said Tricia Yeoh, director of the Centre for Public Policy Studies, an independent research institute in Kuala Lumpur. ``We need to validate the claims, but it shows there seems to be a political free-for-all. It's an open market.''
In Perak state, won by Anwar's People's Alliance of parties, offers to cross to the National Front coalition have climbed as high as 80 million ringgit, said A. Sivasubramaniam, a DAP lawmaker in Perak.
Sivasubramaniam said today he'll file a police report after receiving phone calls and mobile-phone text messages offering him between 10 million ringgit and 80 million ringgit to defect.
`Ridiculous Sum?'
National Front Secretary-General Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor denied the claims, according to the New Straits Times, which reported them earlier today. ``There is no such thing. Even the sum is ridiculous,'' he told the newspaper.
Malaysia's opposition last month rejected allegations it's also attempting to buy lawmakers as it tries to wrest control of parliament from the coalition. Abdullah told CNBC in an interview on March 15 that lawmakers shouldn't be bought.
V. Sivakumar, another DAP Perak lawmaker, said he will meet an officer from Malaysia's Anti-Corruption Agency today after being offered a bribe of as much as 65 million ringgit.
``Initially I thought my friends were trying to pull a fast one and check my integrity by offering 7 million ringgit,'' Sivakumar said by phone today. ``Then when the calls became more frequent, the offer kept going up to 10 million ringgit.''
One person claiming to be from the ruling National Front made what he called a final offer of 65 million ringgit, Sivakumar said. The bribe included an overseas trip for the state legislator and his family, guards at home and a personal minder, he said.
Narrow Majority
The opposition alliance achieved unprecedented election gains on March 8 after vowing to dismantle Malaysia's legalized system of preferences for the Malay majority over ethnic Indians and Chinese. Abdullah's coalition plans to keep the race-based program that aims to redistribute wealth in the Southeast Asian economy.
Opposition parties won 31 of 59 state assembly seats in Perak. The National Front coalition, known in Malaysia as Barisan Nasional, won 28 seats.
In Parliament, Malaysia's opposition is 30 seats short of a majority that would hand it control of Southeast Asia's third- largest economy. The government is considering a law to make switching political allegiance illegal, the New Straits Times reported on March 24.
The opposition People's Alliance groups Anwar's People's Justice Party, the DAP and the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party, known as PAS.
Demands for Abdullah to quit have intensified since the election. Malaysian prince Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah on April 3 mounted the first public challenge for the leadership of Abdullah's party, the largest in the coalition.
To contact the reporters on this story: Manirajan Ramasamy in Kuala Lumpur at rmanirajan@bloomberg.net; Angus Whitley in Kuala Lumpur at awhitley1@bloomberg.net Last Updated: April 9, 2008 03:05 EDT

Friday, April 4, 2008

First crack appears in Malaysia's ruling party

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Dissidents in Malaysia's main ruling party formally opened hostilities with Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi on Friday, demanding an urgent party meeting to discuss its poor performance in elections last month.
Abdullah's United Malays National Organisation, which has led the government since independence in 1957, suffered its worst-ever reverse at the March 8 poll, winning just over a third of seats in the federal parliament, less than the opposition.
The National Front ruling coalition, in which UMNO is the dominant partner, lost its two-thirds majority in parliament for the first time in four decades but retained a simple majority, enabling Abdullah to remain in power.
But an UMNO division led by party dissident Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah voted unanimously on Friday to call for a special general assembly to discuss "the direction of the party", state news agency Bernama said. It was the first UMNO division to do so.
"We need to discuss the problems in our own house and find the true and right path to make ourselves better and prevent a situation that may become worse in the next general election," Tengku Razaleigh said in a speech to about 400 party delegates at the division meeting in the northeastern state of Kelantan.
Abdullah faces a possible party revolt, with Tengku Razaleigh offering to challenge the prime minister for the party presidency at the next general assembly, which is not due until December.
In Malaysia, the UMNO chief has always been chosen by the ruling coalition as prime minister.
Tengku Razaleigh's Gua Musang division also called for party rules to be changed to encourage a contested vote for the UMNO presidency and other top positions. Currently, a challenger needs to obtain nominations from at least 30 percent of UMNO's 191 divisions to be eligible to contest the presidency.
On Tuesday, hundreds of UMNO supporters met in Kuala Lumpur to demand Abdullah resign over the election results. The calls for his resignation have been led by former premier Mahathir Mohamad and Mahathir's son, elected MP Mukhriz Mahathir.
Mukhriz plans to contest for the leadership of UMNO Youth, possibly against Abdullah's son-in-law, Khairy Jamaluddin.

Reuters 2008
Malaysia's ruling party shaken by unprecedented election setbacks
by Abdar Rahman Koya
(Thursday, April 3, 2008)
"For now, the new political landscape is still evolving rapidly. Unlike what the real tsunami has done to even the most hardcore conflict-torn region, it still remains to be seen whether Malaysia’s small but uniquely crowded political landscape will be permanently altered."
That there are now two ruling coalitions in Malaysia – UMNO’s and another led by Anwar Ibrahim – aptly describes Malaysia’s post-election reality. For the first time, the opposition’s credibility is being put to test at the governing level.
Like its seismological version, the political tsunami that struck Malaysia had barely been predicted. Even the waves such as public outrage over the reversal of petroleum-subsidies, increasing crime, government wastage and huge anti-government demonstrations over various issues, ranging from price hikes, judicial corruption to perceived alienation of minorities – which all took place in the months before the general election on March 8 – were not considered enough reason to expect the Malaysian electorate to deal the ruling coalition the severest blow in its history. It is precisely because of the tsunamic nature of the changes that very few political analysts in Malaysia had predicted such an outcome, not even this writer, who has been analysing the Malaysian political scene for Crescent for more than ten years.
The aftermath is an open season for everybody, including UMNO stalwarts, to turn on Abdullah Badawi (pic, right), some even demanding his resignation. Several state governments retained by UMNO are also embroiled in delays and crisis: even the sultans, who have traditionally listened to the prime minister’s recommendations, are for the first time using their constitutional powers to refuse Abdullah’s choice of state leaders.
The Malaysian opposition, represented mainly by Islamic Party (PAS), the ultra-secularist Democratic Action Party (DAP) and the fledgling multiracial party People’s Justice Party (PKR) led by Anwar Ibrahim, succeeded in denying UMNO the traditional two-third majority enjoyed by the ruling party. For ruling parties in many countries, not getting a two-thirds majority in Parliament would not be something to get embarrassed about, but against a backdrop of half-a-century of rule by the same coalition since independence, as well as the huge legal and electoral hurdles stacked against the opposition, the performance is a defeat of sorts. As if that were not enough, the opposition parties also took control of another four state governments in the federation, in addition to Kelantan, which has been ruled by PAS since 1990.
It is important to understand just how meaningful this is. Beside Kelantan, Malaysia’s rice-bowl state of Kedah, a Malay heartland, is now controlled by PAS in coalition with PKR; Penang, one of Asia’s premier industrial and tourist destinations, by DAP; the multiracial and historically important Perak and the prized state of Selangor, the country’s most developed province, by a coalition of all three parties. In addition, the three parties quadrupled their seats in parliament, and almost wiped out three main component parties of the ruling National Front led by UMNO, relegating the few winning UMNO candidates to opposition status in these five states.
The opposition’s successes have cost Abdullah many prominent ministers and party leaders, forcing him to trim the cabinet and for the first time admit mistakes, with even UMNO stalwarts calling for reforms within the government: the same battle-cry which almost cost Anwar Ibrahim his life in 1998. Abdullah also announced a new cabinet, breaking away from the one he inherited from the late former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad, the man who many argue orchestrated the systematic rot of the last two decades, for which Abdullah, who has been in office for only five years, has had to carry the blame. On March 22, an incoming minister in charge of the judiciary demanded that the government apologise for its interference with the judiciary in 1988, which led to its parlous state today.
Many attribute the present success of the opposition to Anwar Ibrahim, and rightly so, especially after his intense campaigning, criss-crossing the country, which is typical of his modus operandi. His almost-one-man battle against relentless eleventh-hour personal attacks by the government media ensured a last-minute swing of sympathy votes from Malays, whom many had expected not to vote against UMNO this time. Anwar was not abashed to admit this either: “Newspapers were full of vicious personal attacks against me, so I knew things had to be going well,” he told Newsweek.
That the ruling parties lost votes despite pulling out all stops in their campaigns and engaging billionaire CEOs of banks and airlines as well as celebrity singers, shows the emergence of a maturing electorate that no longer takes propaganda seriously. Even electoral dirty tricks, such as the so-called ‘postal votes’ (which can be brought in at the last minute to any ‘marginal’ seat) and multi-voting by the same individuals in different places, were not enough to swing back the tide. If such tricks had not been used, there is little reason to believe that the UMNO’s dominance might not have been toppled altogether.
The most painful reality for UMNO, however, is the fact that Anwar has been able to return to mainstream politics, and that on a multiracial platform, a feat rarely achieved by opposition leaders because of racial prejudices, exacerbated and exploited by the ruling party. Proving his comeback is the fact that both his wife Wan Azizah Wan Ismail and daughter Nurul Izzah Anwar won with large majorities in two important constituencies; the latter, by all accounts a political rookie who bears a familiar surname, won against a hugely popular UMNO minister. Anwar’s lifelong prime ministerial ambition, for which he was seen as a threat and punished by Mahathir, can now be regarded as an achievable possibility after years of uncertainty. As if that were not enough to frighten UMNO’s leaders, who have tried hard to forget or ignore him, Anwar has been playing on the idea that he needs only thirty defecting MPs from the ruling coalition to form a federal government, a move many warn will backfire if what he claims is true. And even if this does not happen, there will be constant tension, as one observer puts it, from the fact that it might.
In tandem with UMNO’s losing control over several states, calls for “Malay unity” have resurfaced. The move may be a veiled “unity effort” to woo Malay opposition members, especially from PAS, which is part of opposition-controlled states, to abandon their present coalitions and join UMNO to form coalition state governments. Owing to the victories of non-Malay candidates, the new coalitions have increased the non-Malay composition in the new state governments, spelling an end to UMNO’s dominance via business contracts given to UMNO cronies who hitherto greased the party machinery. But the possibility of PAS switching is remote, although not non-existent.
PAS gobbled up almost all the seats in Kelantan, won control of Kedah state, and its candidate became chief minister in the state of Perak despite PAS having won fewer seats than any of its coalition partners. Yet one of the ironies of PAS’s gains is that the party has become more defensive than ever about its Islamic commitments. Even before the elections, it had not taken such pains as it is now to explain that an Islamic state (which effectively means implementing Islamic policies, and not necessarily the implementation of Shari‘ah or hudud laws) is not its aim. So much so that it was forced to lodge police reports against leaflets claiming that PAS will begin curtailing sales of alcohol and close gambling outlets, as it did in Kelantan. In Kedah, a Malay heartland, PAS controls a state which includes the popular tourist destination of Langkawi island, but leaders have been almost silent about any possible action to control the influx of tax-free alcoholic drinks for the tourism industry. In Selangor, PAS’s participation is required to give the coalition a majority to rule a state which has in its economy one of the region’s largest breweries. Odd as it seems, the party appears stronger in exerting pressure over Islamic matters when it is in opposition; but it seems to be on the fringe when it is part of the government.
The fact that Anwar Ibrahim has sprung back to challenge the ruling coalition despite all the propaganda against him, makes the question of PAS’s dependence on him ever more relevant. Not long ago, when pressed to answer this claim, Nasharuddin Mat Isa of PAS explained that its strategy was drawn from the Prophetic example, in which the Prophet (saw) “used different strategies when addressing the Makkan and Madinan communities.” The PAS deputy president, in an interview with Crescent in July 2005, said that “Our relationship with Anwar and the others ... is because we know it is quite impossible for PAS as an 800,000-member organisation to govern at the Federal level.”
PAS is being forced to display “openness” to maintain its fragile majority in several of the coalition state governments. While such openness is an attitude required from a Muslim party, it is not being displayed from a position of strength, nor from an Islamic moral high ground, but rather for political expediency, to deny UMNO and its allies an opportunity to get back to power. Its present share of power has been mostly due to the art of electoral politics. In order to be more effective and not only popular, PAS will ultimately have to generate “power without politics”: an exercise which requires far more commitment and solutions whose terms are longer than five years.
As such, the question posed in the conclusion to last month’s report (see Crescent, March 2008) is still valid, albeit with a new twist, that this time it is to be answered from a position of victory rather than defeat: what is PAS’s future role in a quasi-democratic, multi-racial, multicultural Muslim country such as Malaysia, now that it has met with some electoral success? PAS’s answers will be seen in how it handles non-Muslim support in the new states, at the same time keeping its raison d’etre intact.
The opposition may claim it has won the trust of the electorate; pro-government observers keep arguing that the results of the election were mostly a protest vote. While both interpretations may have some truth, the burden of victory on the opposition is heavier than the burden of defeat faced by the wounded ruling parties. The initial promises to pay more attention to people’s welfare, making large cuts on unnecessary luxuries and pledging zero tolerance on corruption, are positive steps. Any failure to improve things will mean not having such a chance again for a very long time. After all, it’s not for every general election than an Anwar Ibrahim will be there as an alternative prime minister to show the opposition’s seriousness about forming a new government. In the meantime, Malaysians await Anwar’s entry to parliament. Whether he will be occupying the seat more important than his old one, when he was the number two man in power, is another issue to be covered at a later time.
For now, the new political landscape is still evolving rapidly. Unlike what the real tsunami has done to even the most hardcore conflict-torn region, it still remains to be seen whether Malaysia’s small but uniquely crowded political landscape will be permanently altered.
Source:
by courtesy & © 2008 Abdar Rahman Koya

Monday, March 31, 2008

Democracy sneaks into Malaysia

Stop by a coffee shop for teh-tarik (tea with a frothy top) in any neighbourhood in the Malaysian capital these days, one can hear a lively exchange of street wisdom on the future of Malay politics. Will Pak Lah (Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi) resign? Is Anwar coming back? Is UMNO collapsing? The list goes on.Nataraja Naidu, 58, a former government official, says proudly that he voted for the opposition for the first time. "I realised that a change in Malaysian politics must come from me first. I support the opposition," he said. "I want to see every Malaysian being treated equally."Yang Lee-jing, 72, a taxi driver, who has seen it all, is more cautious in his appraisal. "I have seen riots on the streets before. Although now things are different, but it is still bumiputra," he says, referring to the Malay race. Yang was more resigned about the current political scene, saying Malaysian politics will continue to be based on race. The country's population comprises 65 per cent Malays, 25 per cent Chinese, 6 per cent Indian and the rest are other nationalities.Naidu and Yang are not alone in having such juxtaposed sentiments. They know, as minorities, it is a tall order to have everybody enjoy the same rights. But for them to be able to speak aloud on this issue without fear is already a huge accomplishment. Malaysia is more open than ever before. While the mainstream media are still timid, online media and bloggers have filled in the gap and are thriving. The Internet has now become one of the most important communication tools in Malaysian politics. Even Prime Minister Badawi confessed that his party's defeat was due to its failure to acknowledge the power of the Internet.Prem Chandra, chief of the Internet portal Malaysiakini, was succinct, saying that the voices of opposition candidates could be read and heard online. "Quite often, mainstream media have to catch up with the online information, which is freer and faster," he said. Ironically, former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad also lamented the lack of media freedom and sought media space online.Increasingly, ordinary Malaysians have come to grips with the political reality that they have been brought up in since the country gained independence in 1957. Since then, the politics here have been dominated by the United Malay National Organisation (UMNO), along with other smaller community-based parties known as the Barisan Nasional. The Malay voters used to think that without UMNO, their interests would not be protected.But in the past few two years, the Malaysians, especially the Chinese and Indians, have begun to think differently in responding to religious and social discrimination. Instead of asking the ruling political party for changes, they have chosen instead to look for an alternative group, which can give them a better deal. Then came the formation of an opposition coalition with a more holistic approach to economic and social development. Now they think change is possible. As in the US primaries, the call for change is getting louder by the day in the world's most modern Islamic nation.The political tsunami started with the outcome of the March 8 general elections. The opposition seized 82 out of 222-seats in parliament, just 30 seats short of forming a government. The opposition group comprises the Islamist party known as PAS, the Chinese-based and secular Democratic Action Party (DAP) and the multiracial People's Justice Party (PKR). Both PAS and DAP are more pragmatic and more reconciliatory towards each other.For the first time, Malaysians feel that a new dawn is approaching for their country. Of course, mindful of racial history, there is also some anxiety. But intellectuals and the middle class are discussing the possibility of a multi-party system or even an end to race-based politics, which has dominated the country in the past five decades."Malaysians believe that there could be changes without bloodshed as in 1969. We have learned lessons from the past," said Tian Chua, a former activist, who got elected in Batu constituency. Chua was optimistic that sooner than later there would be an alternative government rather than the current National Front led by UMNO."First of all, we have to show that the opposition has the capacity to provide better policies and reduce corruption," he said. Only a few days in his job, he told me in a kopi tiem in Ambang Utama that several wasteful projects were reviewed and slashed and money was saved. At the moment, he said the opposition could make a difference in Selangor, Penang, Perak, Kedah, the country's four richest states, who contribute 60 per cent of its gross domestic product.Chua is confident that if the opposition parties are resilient and end discrimination and can still maintain stability and prosperity, then they would get a chance to form the government. "We must make things better and understand the feelings of the people. It is the \Ireformasi\I spirit."After all, one can also sense that the \Ireformasi\I movement started by former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim is still very much alive. Ordinary people want social justice and better governance. Politics is too elitist, focusing on a few groups of people, they said.If Malaysia can achieve all these, it would impact on political developments in the region and beyond. Singapore has already dispatched teams of political scientists to Malaysia to gain understanding and insights into the latest phenomenon. Currently, the region's existing democracies such as Thailand and the Philippines are in disarray, plagued with political instability, corruption and lack of governance. Further consolidation in Malaysia's democracy will resonate well in Indonesia's current political dynamic.- The Nation/ANN(The writer is a senior editor of The Nation, Bangkok)

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Malaysia PM in deeper crisis as 2 Cabinet ministers seek leadership reforms

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: Two Cabinet ministers have endorsed demands by ruling party dissidents to hold an open contest for the party leadership, highlighting the prime minister's weakening control over power in Malaysia after disastrous election results.
The Star daily quoted International Trade Minister Muhyiddin Yassin and Higher Education Minister Khaled Nordin on Monday as saying everybody should be eligible to run for the post of the United Malays National Organization party's president.
At present, a contestant must be nominated by 30 percent of the party's divisions, which is hard to secure by someone not endorsed by the party leadership. The party president automatically becomes the prime minister.
The nomination quota encourages an "unhealthy political culture," Muhyiddin, who is the party vice president, was quoted as saying. "I hope that with the abolition, the party at all levels will have a healthy democratic election system."
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is facing the biggest crisis of his political career after the March 8 general elections, in which the ruling National Front retained power but lost its traditional two-thirds majority. It also conceded five states to the opposition.
Being the dominant party in the coalition, Abdullah's United Malays National Organization took most of the blame for the losses. The pressure on Abdullah increased after critics called on him to resign, a demand he rejected.
He also postponed party elections, which had been due in August, until December. But it will be difficult for a challenger to dislodge Abdullah in the elections because of the quota system, which was introduced by former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad in 1987 after he narrowly survived a challenge by then-Finance Minister Razaleigh Hamzah.
Mahathir, now an ordinary party member, is one of those calling for abolishing the quota system. Among the others is Razaleigh, who has openly declared he will try to challenge Abdullah.
Critics say the quota system ensures that members dissatisfied with the prime minister's leadership cannot challenge him democratically. Supporters say it is necessary to ensure only serious candidates contest.
Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak, who is also the party deputy president, acknowledged there was unhappiness over the system but denied it was an impediment to democracy in the party.
"The system was introduced to prevent candidates that do not have strong support in the party to contest for top posts just to challenge the leadership," he told reporters.
"It is not aimed at deterring democracy. Even though there is a quota system, democracy still flourishes in our party," he said.
Abandoning the system would also mean changing the party constitution, which can only be done at an extraordinary general meeting. Party leaders have so far rejected calls for such a meeting.
Khaled and Muhyiddin, the two ministers, claimed they had opposed it when it was introduced by Mahathir but failed.
Muhyiddin stressed that his call did not mean he was against the current leadership or was encouraging members to challenge the president, The Star said.
Aides to Khaled and Muhyiddin confirmed they made the comments. The aides declined to be identified citing protocol.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Finally Samy calls for Hindraf 5's release

Finally Samy calls for Hindraf 5's release
Mar 30, 08 12:14pm
MIC president S Samy Vellu today called for the release of the five Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) leaders detained under the Internal Security Act (ISA).
The five were detained shortly after they had organised a mammoth rally in Kuala Lumpur which drew some 30,000 Indians.
Samy Vellu said he will meet Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi to discuss this matter.

When a government department can accept gift in Malaysia

When a government department can accept gift in Malaysia
Kuala Lumpur, March 29 (IANS) Malaysian government offices can accept gifts from companies and private parties after respective secretaries-general approve of it, according to new rules.
In a recent circular issued by the Public Service Department, director-general Ismail Adam said secretaries-general, who are also the controlling officers, were authorised to approve gifts, including those valued at more than RM 10,000 (nearly $3,000).
But the gift has to be voluntary, unsolicited and useful to the department or the country and must be in kind. Anything in cash must be dealt with immediately with a trust fund set up, said the New Straits Times.
Previously, gifts worth more than RM 10,000 had to be approved by the treasury.
Several conditions, however, must be met before the secretaries-general give such approvals.
Among others, Ismail said, the gifts should be freely given, without any conditions attached.
Those presenting the gifts must also not have any connections or interests in the government.
Ismail said the gifts, including equipment, must be new and spare parts should be available in the market in case of a breakdown.
'The gifts must be given voluntarily and not on the request or demand made by the departments or agencies.
'Government departments are barred from soliciting presents or donations from other parties, organisations or individuals,' the circular stated.
Ismail reminded secretaries-general that they should ensure the gifts were used in accordance with the wishes of the donors.
All gifts approved should be noted down in the departments' inventories.
Corruption was a major issue during this month's general elections. Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has asked his ministers and government officials to stay away from anything that smacks of corruption and behave in an exemplary manner.

yahoo india..

Malaysia Spurns Calls to Free Lawmaker

Malaysia Spurns Calls to Free Lawmaker
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia - A Malaysian opposition party on Saturday condemned the government's refusal to release an ethnic Indian activist elected as a state legislator while in jail.
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M.Manoharan _ a leader of the Hindu Rights Action Force, or Hindraf _ was arrested shortly after his group organized a rally in November in which 20,000 Indians protested alleged government discrimination. He has been held since December under Malaysia's Internal Security Act, which allows for indefinite detention without trial.
While behind bars, he contested the March 8 election as a member of the Democratic Action Party and won a seat in the Selangor state legislature.
Despite Manoharan's win, Home Minister Syed Hamid Albar said the government cannot free him because he is still a security threat, The Star newspaper reported Saturday.
Calls to Syed Hamid and his aides went unanswered Saturday.
Lim Kit Siang, who heads the opposition Democratic Action Party slammed the government's decision.
"It shows that the Cabinet is not really listening to the people's voice for change toward a more democratic, accountable, just and more progressive Malaysian society," Lim told The Associated Press.
Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi's ruling National Front coalition retained power in the March election, but suffered the worst losses in its 51-year rule.

AP - Saturday, March 29

Hope spreads from tsunami

Hope spreads from tsunami
For younger Singaporeans who want political change the defining March 8 general election in Malaysia has come as an encouragement and morale booster.
SEVERAL Malaysian friends have asked me whether I believe their election ‘tsunami’ would generate a similar phenomenon on this small island state.
Will the near defeat of an almost indestructible political icon across the Causeway result in some sort of upheaval in Singapore’s next election expected in 2010-11?
“We’ve done it, when will you?” a Malaysian journalist asked me, half in jest. Are Singaporeans stimulated by the Malaysian result to opt for change in the city-state, others wanted to know.
So do Singaporeans. Many, including a few younger People’s Action Party (PAP) Parliamentarians, have discussed it at length. The blogo-sphere is hyperactive with speculation.
So can it happen here? Frankly, my answer is yes, to an extent – but only if the opposition coalition in Malaysia fares well and not degenerate into chaos.
In fact, there has already been a psychological impact on some Singaporean minds that if it can happen there, it can surely happen here.
Historically, there has always been a modicum of affinity, or mutual influence, between our two peoples.
I recall one-time deputy minister and Umno Supreme Council member Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi coming here to warn Singapore not to try to set itself up as an example to influence the ethnic Chinese in Malaysia.
In turn, Singaporean leaders have accused Umno “ultras” of acting as “protectors” of the Malays in Singapore, in violation of non-interference.
Actually, the shocking results evoked a bigger concern in Singapore beyond impacting its next election.
The first over-riding concern here was, and remains, potential racial or political violence. May 13 still evokes emotions in many older Singaporeans.
The second is economic impact. Malaysia still ranks high in Singapore’s economy and tourism and any dislocation in its economy would be very bad news for every Singaporean.
Malaysia is also a major supply of foodstuffs, not to mention water!
It hadn’t helped when the Malaysian stock market dropped more than the allowed 10%, resulting in an hour-long suspension. (It has since recovered significantly).
Singaporeans were reassured only after seeing how maturely both sides – winners and vanquished – reacted, ordering their members to avoid being provocative.
But for younger Singaporeans who want political change here, it has come as an encouragement and morale booster. Some 33.3% of Singaporeans voted opposition in 2006.
Not every one agrees with the domino theory, however.
“The two countries are vastly different in the way they are governed. Many of their problems are different. Their voters and political parties are not the same,” said a long-time foreign journalist.
Despite the close affinity, the peoples are different, and Singapore’s opposition and its leaders are far less able to organise or be as cohesive as Malaysia’s, at least for now.
Singapore’s Low Thia Khiang (Workers Party) is no Anwar Ibrahim.
Singaporeans are nowhere as committed as Malaysians to any political cause.
Lee Hsien Loong – or Lee Kuan Yew, if you believe he really runs things in Singapore – is no Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. Politically, the latter is more tolerant of dissent.
Singapore has serious problems that Malaysia hasn’t got, but the latter, being a larger and more divided nation, is burdened with big troubles that the island-city is largely free of.
“It is these problems – the NEP, corruption, and racial and religious divides – that have dealt the Barisan Nasional a political blow,” he said.
A portion of Singaporeans will undoubtedly be influenced by the Malaysian development to vote against the PAP, but it is unrealistic to expect the mass electorate to follow suit.
However, there are general similarities, too, that must worry the PAP, including the following:
> The ruling parties of both countries – the PAP and the Barisan – have ruled without interruption, and often with huge majorities, since independence;
> They were both powerful giants, domineering, even arrogant. Before this election, the Barisan held about 91% of Parliament seats, almost comparable to the PAP’s 97.6% control in Singapore;
> Their new generation, better educated, with a different mindset, are taking over whose votes can swing elections. Many voted PAP, but a growing number may be turning against it;
> Both are similarly strong about controlling the media, which is forcing the educated towards the largely anti-government Internet; and
> Singaporeans, too, are unhappy over rising prices (highest in 26 years) and the widening economic gap between rich and poor.
The cynics dismiss any chance – short of a larger tsunami than Malaysia’s – of the PAP losing so badly.
The controversial GRC (Group Representative Constituency), which groups together five or six sometimes scattered candidates, into a voting bloc ensures only the rich and big parties benefit.
If Malaysia’s election is run the same way, a voter in Perak may be voting in a Johor group ward.
The election result tells the story: In Singapore 33% popular votes went to the opposition, which won two – or a pitiable 2.4% – of Parliament seats.
Even it gains 51% of the votes, it could be far from forming the government, let alone win a two-thirds majority.
In Malaysia, the government won 52% of the popular votes and 63% of the Federal seats, a more representative result.
But there the Malaysian result could be a two-edged sword for Singapore’s opposition.
If Kuala Lumpur’s three-party Opposition works well, the impact here will be greater.
But if it fails to deliver in the next three years – or worse still, the members start fighting with each other and everything ends up in chaos – then the PAP will have cause to tell Singaporeans: “You want opposition? This is what you’ll get.”

thestar

Malaysia's former PM defends actions after shocking polls results

Malaysia's former PM defends actions after shocking polls results
1 day ago
KUALA LUMPUR (AFP) — Malaysia's former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad defended his 22-year leadership as his successor faces a backlash over the ruling coalition's recent shocking poll losses.
The Barisan Nasional (BN) government coalition was delivered a stunning blow in March 8 general elections, ceding five states and a third of parliamentary seats to the previously impotent opposition.
Mahathir said in an open letter published on the front page of The Sun newspaper Friday that supporters of Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, who heads the BN, would try to blame him for the coalition's woes.
"My detractors are going to say I did worse things when I was prime minister... I am aware that people are looking into possible misdeeds by me during my 22 years so as to threaten me and to ask me to shut up," Mahathir said in the letter.
Abdullah has repeatedly refused to stand down since BN was handed its worst electoral result since 1969 in the elections.
Mahathir had blamed Abdullah of "destroying" the BN and urged him to step down.
Observers say Abdullah, who led the BN to a landslide victory in 2004 after he first became prime minister, was punished for the country's high inflation, rising crime rates, ethnic tensions and a failure to tackle corruption.
The release last year of a video recording by former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim purportedly showing a well known lawyer allegedly brokering top judicial appointments, triggered a commission inquiry.
Mahathir's critics say the image of a tainted judiciary stems from his tenure as prime minister after three of the country's most senior judges were dismissed in 1988 after clashing with him.
In an effort to rejuvenate his administration, Abdullah unveiled a new cabinet last week, appointing many fresh faces including Zaid Ibrahim as the de-facto law minister.
Zaid, tasked with reforming the judiciary, has suggested that the present administration apologise for the sacking of the three judges but the opposition has demanded that Mahathir himself offer an apology.
The former prime minister flatly denied any wrongdoing during his rule.
"Unless there is a frame-up, I think there should be nothing to pin on me. Even other accusations against me, including the dismissal of judges, were not my doing and I do not feel obliged to apologise," Mahathir wrote.

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5gRbUli-E2JHN9lfLxGq3kwIDrIjQ

Malaysia mulls 'blogger register'

Malaysia mulls 'blogger register'
The suggestion comes at a testing time for Malaysia's political blogging community [AP]
Malaysia is reportedly considering moves to compel bloggers on locally-hosted websites to register with the authorities in an effort to control anonymous postings the government says could harm security.
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A compulsory registration could curb the spread of negative or malicious content in cyberspace, the minister responsible for communications was quoted as saying by The Star newspaper.
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Shaziman Abu Mansor said the government welcomed blogging but not negative postings by anonymous bloggers.

Critics however have condemned the idea as "anti-IT" saying it violates the government's own widely-touted 'no-censorship' policy for internet content.

There are about 50,000 websites registered using the .my suffix for Malaysia, Shaziman said, allowing anyone to host websites with malicious content.

Lawsuit

"It's like asking a person who wants to start writing a personal diary to register with the government"
Ahirudin Attan, Malaysian bloggerWhat is malicious and negative content was not specified in the newspaper report, but such terms are generally used in topics considered as sensitive including criticism of the government, and discussions on race and religion.

The government proposal comes as two Malaysian bloggers, Jeff Ooi and Ahirudin Attan, face a defamation suit filed by the government-controlled New Straits Times newspaper.

They allegedly posted libellous remarks in their blogs about the paper's editors and executives.

The defamation suit against Ooi, who runs Screenshots, and Ahirudin, who blogs on Rocky's Bru, is the first time Malaysian bloggers have been hauled before the country's courts.

While the government and parties from the ruling coalition control much of the country's traditional media, many of Malaysia's most popular blogs offer political commentaries that include scathing criticism of government policies.

'Threat'

"Instead of coming up with ways to inhibit blogging, these ministers should be educated to start blogging themselves"
Lim Kit Siang, opposition leaderOoi criticised the proposal saying the government should be "very sure of its objective in formulating new policies and guidelines" for the internet.

"The last four years has seen roughly 20,000 blogs spring up in Malaysia, including those which could not be sustained," he told Al Jazeera.

"If they [the government] are super-cautious of blogs, they need to specify what type of blogs or bloggers who pose a threat to national security."

Both Ooi and Ahirudin said the government was unclear on the concept of blogging.

Ahirudin said the government was trying to control what Malaysians were writing online and to create fear among bloggers.

"I think Shaziman is making the proposal out of ignorance, a lack of understanding of what blogging is all about," he told Al Jazeera.

"It's like asking a person who wants to start writing a personal diary to register with the government."

Influential

He said Malaysian bloggers were planning to set up an alliance to engage the government in discussions about blogs and blogging.

Some politicians with their own blogs have criticised the government's suggestion but acknowledged there were elements in the blogging community looking to stir up trouble.

Shahrir Abdul Samad, member of parliament for the southern city of Johor Baru, said bloggers were generally aware of ethical issues and the responsibility for their content.

But some bloggers do post inflammatory remarks, he said. The problem was also about comments left by anonymous visitors to the blogs, added Shahrir.

Lim Kit Siang, parliamentary opposition leader, said Shaziman's proposal showed that the government was becoming increasingly anti-information technology.

"I think this is the wrong approach altogether," Lim, also a blogger, said.

"Instead of coming up with ways to inhibit blogging, these ministers should be educated to start blogging themselves to invite a more interactive, communicative style of government."
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies