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  • FB Najib Razak Dibanjiri Puluhan Ribu Letak Jawatan

    FB Najib Razak Dibanjiri Puluhan Ribu Letak Jawatan

    Bermula dari pengumuman rombakan kabinet yang menggugurkan Muhyiddin Yassin baru-baru ini, Facebook Perdana Menteri, Najib Razak dibanjiri dengan puluhan ribu mesej letak jawatan yang dicopy paste  di ruangan komen status Perdana Menteri Malaysia itu.

    Komen-komen terbabit dipenuhi dengan hashtag najibletakjawatan.

    Selain dari itu terdapat juga komen-komen dari pengguna media sosial yang melawan komen letak jawatan itu dengan menulis #wesupportyounajib.

    Komen-komen terbabit paling banyak ditulis di dalam kenyataan di Facebook tersebut yang menjelaskan tindakannya merombak kabinet semalam.

    Sehingga ke saat ini, pertarungan berbalas komen itu masih lagi berlaku.

     

    Source: www.siakapkeli.my

  • US Academic: Blame Dr Mahathir For Malaysia’s Mess

    US Academic: Blame Dr Mahathir For Malaysia’s Mess

    History should judge former Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad as being himself the author of a long national decline that has culminated in this latest crisis, wrote University of Chicago political science associate professor Dan Slater.

    In a piece published in the EastAsiaForum today, Slater wrote that Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak is right about one thing. “The current mess in Malaysian politics is the making of his greatest nemesis, Dr Mahathir, who led the Southeast Asian nation with an iron fist from 1981–2003.”

    Slater wrote that Mahathir has not produced this mess by criticising (Najib’s) leadership, but by paving Najib’s path to power in the fashion he did during his decades in office.

    “Dr Mahathir may believe that he can end the crisis by bringing Najib down… But this road toward ruin commenced with Dr Mahathir, not Najib.”

    In outlining the events that led to the current crisis, Slater wrote: “Dr Mahathir was holding a winning hand when he became prime minister in 1981.

    “Then came the debt. Obsessed with following in the footsteps of Asia’s technological leaders, Mahathir began borrowing heavily to fund his ‘Look East’, state-led heavy-industrialisation programme.

    “Privatisation was part of his growth package, but the beneficiaries were businessmen of loyalty more than talent.

    “When the global economy went into recession in the mid-1980s, patronage started drying up. Umno split, largely in reaction to Dr Mahathir’s strong-armed style of rule.

    “Dr Mahathir’s two most talented rivals, Tengku Razaleigh (Hamzah) and Tun Musa Hitam, bolted from Umno despite their deep personal ties to the party, mostly to get away from Dr Mahathir himself.

    “Dr Mahathir responded by launching a police operation under the pretext of racial tensions, imprisoning and intimidating political rivals, and cementing his autocratic control.

    “Hence by the late 1980s, all of the defining features of Malaysia’s current crisis under Najib’s leadership were already evident under Dr Mahathir.

    “Ethnic tensions had been reopened to political manipulation. The economy was worrisomely indebted. Umno was shedding some of its most capable leaders. This was the beginning of Malaysia’s sad national decline, under Dr Mahathir’s watch and at his own hand.”

    These seeds were to play out towards the current crisis because of what Dr Mahathir did next, wrote Slater.

    “Fast-forward a decade and all of these syndromes would recur in even nastier forms. The Asian financial crisis of 1997–98 punished Malaysia for the unsustainable dollar-denominated debts it had accumulated under Dr Mahathir’s single-minded push for breakneck growth.

    “Dr Mahathir blamed everybody but himself for the crash. Dr Mahathir didn’t pull Malaysia out of its crisis with economic reform or adjustment, but with more and more borrowing and spending.

    “Hence even before the turn of the millennium, Malaysia was hurtling down the very trajectory of decline we are witnessing in the current crisis.”

    Slater also noted that Najib has taken a page out of Dr Mahathir’s playbook, when the latter was publicly criticised by then Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim.

    “In consummate Dr Mahathir style, Najib has now even sacked his deputy Tan Sri Muyhiddin Yassin for questioning Najib’s repression of the media in response to the 1MDB scandal.

    “In sum, Dr Mahathir has nobody to blame more than himself.”

     

    Source: www.therakyatpost.com

  • UMNO Leader: Najib Told Supreme Council He Never Took 1MDB Money

    UMNO Leader: Najib Told Supreme Council He Never Took 1MDB Money

    Datuk Seri Najib Razak had explained to Umno Supreme Council members about allegations of billions of ringgit going into his personal accounts, newly-appointed deputy minister Datuk Ahmad Maslan said tonight.

    He rejected claims made by former deputy prime minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin in a leaked video clip that Najib had admitted to receiving US$700 million (RM2.67 billion) in his bank accounts.

    Ahmad Maslan, who is also an Umno supreme council member, dismissed Muhyiddin’s claim and said Najib, who is prime minister and also Umno president, had already explained the matter.

    “It’s not true, it was not channeled or otherwise,” he said when met after the Matrade Hari Raya open house tonight.

    “The president had already given a briefing to Supreme Council members on the matter, that he had never used money from 1MDB nor put it in his accounts,” Ahmad Maslan added.

    The allegation was reported on July 2 by The Wall Street Journal, which said it had sourced the information from documents from Malaysian investigators.

    Najib has publicly denied taking money for personal gain but has not directly addressed the alleged fund transfers. The biggest portion of funds, which according to WSJ is US$681 million, had been transferred to his accounts at AmBank in Kuala Lumpur in March 2013, ahead of the general elections in May that year.

    The leaked video of Muhyiddin speaking in his home where he received visitors and supporters after being sacked from the Cabinet, showed him recounting a confrontation he had with Najib, in which he said the prime minister admitted to having the money “from the Middle East” in his account.

    Those accounts in AmBank have since been closed, while Najib has blamed former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, for conspiring with foreigners to bring down his administration.

     

    Source: www.themalaysianinsider.com

  • Leaked Video! Muhyiddin Claimed Najib Admitted RM2.6 Billion In His Account

    Leaked Video! Muhyiddin Claimed Najib Admitted RM2.6 Billion In His Account

    Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak admitted that US$700 million (RM2.6 billion) was transferred into his accounts, former deputy prime minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin said in a video (see below) that has leaked on the Internet.

    In the video, Muhyiddin appeared to be informing his guests at his home last night that he had confronted Najib on The Wall Street Journal’s report that US$700 million (RM2.67 billion) of funds from 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB)-linked firms were deposited into Najib’s personal accounts.

    “I asked him (Najib) from whom? He did not mention the name, from somewhere in the Middle East. How much?… Hard to count, he said ‘a lot, a lot’.

    “Then I asked why was it transferred to your accounts?… Why did it enter Najib Razak’s accounts? How much money? US$700 million.

    “If you multiply that by three point something…2.6 billion goes into his personal account. He said this, he admitted,” Muhyiddin said in the leaked video.

    The video ends abruptly after Muhyiddin says, “so I said why did you put into your personal account”.

    In the video, Kedah Menteri Besar Datuk Mukhriz Mahathir could be seen seated beside Muhyiddin.

    Mukhriz’s visit to the former deputy prime minister’s house took place yesterday, the same day Najib reshuffled the Cabinet, dropping Muhyiddin as his deputy.

    Muhyiddin was sacked two days after he told an Umno Cheras division meeting that The Wall Street Journal’s report was a serious matter that needs explaining.

    Najib had said members of the Cabinet should not air their differences in an open forum that can affect public opinion against Malaysia and the government.

    Meanwhile, Malaysiakini reports former Umno supreme council member Tan Sri Abdul Kadir Sheikh confirming that the conversation in the video took place.

    “I don’t want to comment on it. It was a private conversation. It wasn’t supposed to be recorded. Mukhriz had asked people not to record it,” Kadir was quoted as saying by the news portal.

    The Malaysian Insider has asked one of Muhyiddin’s officers to verify the video but the query has not been answered.

    Meanwhile, in a statement posted on Mukhriz’s website earlier today, the Kedah menteri besar said he accepted the prime minister’s decision to reshuffle the Cabinet as it was his prerogative to do so.

    He thanked Muhyiddin, who had also been education minister, for helping in the development of schools in Kedah.

    Mukhriz added that he and Muhyiddin had not discussed anything else of importance.

    Earlier this month, WSJ and whistleblower website Sarawak Report reported that up to US$700 million (RM2.67 billion) was allegedly transferred from state-owned funds to two bank accounts under Najib’s name with AmBank in March 2013.

    The prime minister, however, has denied ever taking any funds from 1MDB for “personal gain” but has not commented directly on the fund transfers. His accounts that allegedly received the funds have since been closed.

    Najib has also blamed former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, Mukhriz’s father, whom he accused of working with foreign agents against his administration.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8lxLVTaLaM#action=share

     

    Source: www.malaysianinsider.com

  • Another Escalator Incident In PRC Leaves Parents On Edge

    Another Escalator Incident In PRC Leaves Parents On Edge

    Shortly after the fatal accident which saw a young mother being “swallowed” up by a revolving escalator in a PRC mall, another report of a chilling incident involving escalators in Guangxi Province has emerged.

    According to local media reports, a 1 year-old toddler had gotten his left arm trapped in the grooves of an escalator at a mall. He was riding the escalator with his mother when the incident took place on Monday at about 10AM.

    A distress call was sent out and local rescue workers were dispatched to the scene. They found the boy crying in excruciating pain and his mother in shock and a state of panic.

    Rescue workers used hydraulic equipment to pry open the escalator steps and freed the boy within 5 minutes. However, according to eye witnesses, the boy’s left arm was “basically destroyed”.

    Local PRC authorities are investigating the case.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

     

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