Category: Politik

  • PAP Has Gotten Worse Since Last GE

    PAP Has Gotten Worse Since Last GE

    <Written by Joseph Tan Kheng Liang>

    The PAP has gotten worse since the last GE!

    One of the most recent landmarks in the Singaporean political calendar was the ‘watershed elections’ of 2011. The term watershed was used because it seemed highly probable at that point in time that the PAP would lose several GRCs. Lee Hsien Loong even apologised and cried in public.

    The key question is this: How has the PAP changed for the better since then? The clear and simple answer is that the PAP is back to their own arrogant ways and Singaporeans are not going to benefit from this! Let me give you some examples to illustrate.

    In 2011, they promised to work harder and apologised for their mistakes, mainly due to a liberal immigration policy and an infrastructure which did not keep up. 5 years later, they have come up with arrogant tactics and a completely befuddling “ownself-check-ownself” governing philosophy.

    We have seen numerous cases of lack of transparency in recent times, including the Hep C outbreak at SGH which was not made public until a later stage, we had the case where residents in Sengkang felt cheated after plans to build a columbarium was labelled as a ‘temple’ instead.

    When the trains have new problems such as mysterious ‘signalling fault’, there was no sound or trace of apology from their favourite fixer Khaw Boon Wan. Instead, he chose to pretend that everything was fine, celebrating openings and gatherings on his Facebook page.

    Looking at the by-election of 2016 (which was caused in part because of the actions of their own MP), ministers and even junior MPs took the liberty to ‘whack’ their opponent’s character. When another by-election took place 3 years before, they resorted to no such thing with Lee Li Lian.

    Their jokes even continued abroad! Mainstream media was so proud that Pinky got invited to a US State dinner but did not boast as much when he later ended up offending China by commenting on their territorial dispute and later prove their foreign policy lapses by offending Trump!

    If the average man thinks that these issues do not affect him, look at the price increases: parking charges and waste collection charges (which Leong Sze Hian dug and found an increased surplus)! Even though there is a drop in transport charges, it is not as much as the drop in oil prices!

    Ask yourselves: has the PAP given you a better life since the last General Elections? If the answer is no, the PAP must be very thick-skinned to tell us that they wish to check themselves! Is this even right given their recent track record?

    I can only conclude that they have gotten worse and need someone like the SDP to keep them in check!

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Thousands Of Malaysians Participated In BERSIH March Against Government

    Thousands Of Malaysians Participated In BERSIH March Against Government

    When they were completed in 1998, the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur were the tallest buildings in the world. At 1,483 feet, they beat out Chicago’s Sears Tower — which had held the record since 1973 — by only 10, but all the same, the superlative was a trophy for a Southeast Asian nation that had transformed itself from a sleepy agrarian society into a crucial economic center in less than a quarter of a century. Specifically, they were a point of pride for Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who had led Malaysia in its rebirth; so personal was the accomplishment that he himself chose the fixtures in the skyscrapers’ bathrooms.

    On Saturday, Mahathir was one of the many of thousands of people who gathered in the shadow of the towers to demand that Malaysia’s current Prime Minister, Najib Razak, step down from office. “Time has come for us to topple this cruel regime,” Mahathir said, standing on a portable stage before a crowd of roaring supporters dressed in yellow. “Najib is no longer suitable to be the prime minister. He is abusing the law.”

    Saturday’s protest, organized by a group of pro-democracy and anti-corruption activists collectively known as Bersih (the Malay word for “clean”), was the second massive display of outrage towards Najib since July 2015, when the Wall Street Journal and investigative news website Sarawak Report reported that his personal bank accounts held nearly $700 million in cash apparently siphoned from a state development fund called 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB). Najib has strenuously denied the allegations.

    The rally — which attracted around 40,000 people, according to local media reports, though one organizer placed it at twice that — was peaceful, even festive, despite the endemic frustration here. Attendees blew vuvuzelas and shared bottles of water when the equatorial heat proved too oppressive. (Before afternoon thunderstorms accumulated overhead, the thermostat hit close to 90 degrees.) Police blocked access to Merdeka Square, where the march was scheduled to culminate, so organizers deftly regrouped and informed participants over social media that they would instead head to the Petronas Towers. Reports that violent pro-government groups would be there to provoke demonstrators proved false.

    “We’re not out here to create any sort of problems — we just want to be seen and be heard,” 37-year-old Rizal Ahmad, who says he is currently unemployed, tells TIME. “The situation is getting worse, and people are becoming more desperate. We need to be heard.”

    Fahmi Reza, a street cartoonist who has previously been arrested for his work, is blunter. “We live in a country that’s full of clowns and crooks stealing money from us,” he says, raising over his head a large cutout of a caricature of Najib.

    It is hard to discredit their frustration. Najib took power in 2009 promising to bring the country into the 21st century, emphasizing ethnic plurality, economic growth, and good governance. Instead, he has supported not only policies that not only reinforce the country’s ethnic tensions — Malaysia is about 60% ethnic Malay, 25% Chinese, and 10% Indian — but plot the blueprint of a security state. In the year and a half since the 1MDB scandal erupted, he has penalized his detractors, shutting down or prosecuting media outlets that aspire to transparency in their political reporting. His party, the right-wing United Malays National Organization (UMNO), is stronger than ever.

    “We are looking at a collision between what has been a clubby, insular Malaysian political order and the norms and the expectations of the wider world,” Michael Montesano, a researcher at Singapore’s Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, tells TIME. “The nagging question is whether movements like Bersih point to patterns in social change in Malaysia that will lead to a different outcome.”

    The prelude to Saturday’s protest was an anxious one. The night before, it was reported that Maria Chin Abdullah, Bersih’s chairperson, and her colleague Mandeep Singh had been arrested at the Bersih headquarters on charges of “activity detrimental to parliamentary democracy.” On Monday, Rafizi Ramli, a prominent opposition politician, had been sentenced to 18 months in prison for revealing “state secrets” concerning the 1MDB scandal.

    The prosecution of two largely popular progressive figures “tipped the scales,” opposition lawmaker Wong Chen says, prompting Malaysians to flood the streets rather than stay at home. “The government really wants to keep people away, and I think it’s backfiring,” Ambiga Sreenevasan, a human-rights lawyer who organized earlier iterations of Bersih, tells TIME. “The Malaysian people are fuming.”

    Rafizi Ramli is currently out on bail, and when he showed up at Saturday’s demonstration, he was treated as a celebrity. He was a good sport about the dozens of selfies he was asked to pose for.

    “I’ve been in the so-called reform movement since I was 21, and every year we make gains inch by inch,” he told TIME late in the afternoon, as rain began to fall over the city. “It may not seem momentous, but it’s 10 or 15 times more than what it once was. The fact that people come out, in spite of all the intimidation, means that we have reached something that is unstoppable.”

     

    Source: http://time.com

  • Rahayu Buang Dilantik CEO Baru MENDAKI, Berkuatkuasa 1 Jan 2017

    Rahayu Buang Dilantik CEO Baru MENDAKI, Berkuatkuasa 1 Jan 2017

    Yayasan MENDAKI akan mempunyai Ketua Pegawai Eksekutif (CEO) yang baru, Cik Rahayu Buang, mulai 1 Januari depan.

    Beliau mengambil alih jawatan tersebut daripada Cik Tuminah Sapawi, 56 tahun, yang sudah menerajui badan bantu diri itu selama tiga tahun.

    Cik Rahayu , 45 tahun adalah Pengarah Bahagian Sokongan dan Pendidikan Keluarga serta Pejabat Pembangunan Wanita di Kementerian Pembangunan Sosial dan Keluarga (MSF).

    Beliau menyertai MSF 20 tahun lalu dan sepanjang tempoh itu, terlibat dalam pelbagai program pembangunan termasuk isu-isu pemulihan, perlindungan, hilang upaya, keluarga dan wanita.

    Di bawah kepimpinannya juga, program-program pendidikan keluarga diperkenalkan dan keluarga yang bercerai disokong melalui program berasaskan kanak-kanak dengan penubuhan Agensi Pakar Sokongan Perceraian.

    Cik Rahayu adalah penerima Pingat Emas daripada Sekolah Dasar Awam Lee Kuan Yew, dan menerima Pingat Pentadbiran Awam (gangsa) pada 2014.

    Cik Tuminah pula akan menyertai Kementerian Kebudayaan, Masyarakat dan Belia (MCCY) pada 1 Januari depan.

    Menurut MENDAKI, Cik Tuminah sudah banyak menyumbang kepada masyarakat Melayu/Islam, dan menyerahkan MENDAKI dalam keadaan yang lebih kuat kepada penggantinya.

    Beliau menerajui Semakan Pendidikan MENDAKI yang meletakkan asas bagi usaha meningkatkan program pembangunan guru-guru pembimbing dan memperbaiki program pendidikan ibu bapa.

    Di bawah pentadbiran beliau, MENDAKI juga meningkatkan usaha memupuk minda masyarakat Melayu Islam untuk siap menghadapi masa depan. Ini termasuk kempen #RaikanIlmu, yang menggalak masyarakat menghayati semangat mencari ilmu dan pembelajaran sepanjang hayat.

    YAACOB UCAP TERIMA KASIH KEPADA CIK TUMINAH ATAS PELBAGAI SUMBANGANNYA

    Sementara itu, menulis di laman Facebook beliau, Menteri Bertanggungjawab bagi Ehwal Masyarakat Islam, Dr Yaacob mengucapkan terima kasih kepada Cik Tuminah Sapawi bagi pelbagai sumbangannya sejak tiga tahun lalu.

    Di bawah kepimpinan Cik Tuminah kata beliau, MENDAKI selesai melakukan semakan pendidikan menyeluruh untuk memperkuat sokongan pendidikan dalam masyarakat Melayu.

    Dengan fokus kepada usaha membangunkan generasi yang dinamik dan bersedia untuk masa depan tambah Dr Yaacob, MENDAKI di bawah Cik Tuminah menubuhkan sebuah unit Future Ready.

    Unit tersebut melengkapkan masyarakat dengan kemahiran-kemahiran dalam menghadapi ekonomi yang sentiasa berubah-ubah.

    Mengulas pelantikan Cik Rahayu pula, Dr Yaacob yang juga merupakan Pengerusi MENDAKI, yakin bahawa CEO baru itu mampu memimpin MENDAKI untuk meningkatkan khidmatnya kepada masyarakat dan negara.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Goh Meng Seng: PAP Has To Take Blame For Over Reliance On Cheap Foreign Labour

    Goh Meng Seng: PAP Has To Take Blame For Over Reliance On Cheap Foreign Labour

    Don’t blame the tightening of foreign labour policy. Hong Kong has minimum wage while Singapore doesn’t. Singapore has been on the steroid of cheap foreign labour for far too long, so much so that it became opium to the economy and reduced productivity drastically.

    PAP’s empty promise of raising productivity for the next few decades just fall flat while cost of business went up due to rental as well as other indirect taxes.

    For a start, GST itself has affected our comparative cost structure to HK while not to mention ERP, COE and other hidden taxes.

     

    Source: Goh Meng Seng

  • Penghapusan Bangsa Rohingya Di Myanmar

    Penghapusan Bangsa Rohingya Di Myanmar

    Maungdaw 15 Nov. – Operasi penghapusan bangsa etnik Rohingya terus dilancarkan pasukan keselamatan Myanmar apabila jumlah korban ketegangan baharu di negeri Rak­hine dalam keja­dian kelmarin yang masih berte­rusan meningkat kepada lebih 100 orang.

    Penderitaan dialami penduduk minoriti Islam di Myanmar itu didedahkan di blog RB News memandangkan media asing tidak dibenarkan memasuki Rakhine sejak keadaan di negeri tersebut tidak menentu bulan lalu.

    Menurut penduduk, tentera menggempur beberapa buah kampung di utara Maungdaw pada pukul 6.30 pagi kelmarin, memaksa penghuni keluar atau mereka akan ditembak jika enggan berbuat demikian.

    Semua rumah kemudian ditembak dengan meriam sebelum terbakar.

    Seorang saksi berkata, semua 700 buah rumah di Kampung Dar Gyi Sar musnah sepenuh­nya.

    Selain membakar rumah, anggota tentera turut mencampak kanak-kanak Rohingya yang masih hidup ke dalam api sehingga rentung dengan si ibu hanya mampu memandang tanpa berbuat apa-apa.

    Kekejaman tentera Myanmar tidak berakhir di situ apabila mereka dilapor turut melepaskan tembakan ke arah penduduk Rohingya yang mahu melarikan diri termasuk kanak-kanak.

    Difahamkan, pasukan tentera itu masih menggempur kedudukan penduduk Rohingya atas alasan ‘memburu’ penyerang yang membunuh anggota mereka.

    Bagaimanapun, jumlah kematian sebenar masih tidak dapat dipastikan kerana banyak penduduk terutamanya lelaki ditahan tentera.

    Sekurang-kurangnya 5,000 penduduk dilapor hilang tempat tinggal sejak kelmarin tanpa tempat berlindung dan maka­nan.

    Kejadian terbaharu itu di­khuatiri mencetuskan semula krisis kemanusiaan membabitkan etnik Rohingya sama seperti yang berlaku pada 2012.

    Source: www.mapim.org

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