Category: Politik

  • UN Leader Says He Bowed To Threat From Saudis On Rights Violations

    UN Leader Says He Bowed To Threat From Saudis On Rights Violations

    The UN secretary-general is supposed to answer to every nation on Earth — and no nation at all.

    So the unusually frank admission by the secretary-general, Mr Ban Ki-moon, on Thursday (June 9) that he had essentially been coerced into removing a Saudi-led military coalition in Yemen from an ignoble list of armies that kill and maim children was a rare window into the limits of his moral and political authority — and an object lesson for whoever succeeds Mr Ban next year.

    On Thursday, Mr Ban told reporters that he had been threatened with the loss of financing for humanitarian operations in the Palestinian territories, South Sudan and Syria if he did not temporarily delete the Saudi-led coalition, which has been battling Houthi rebels in Yemen for more than a year, from the list.

    The coalition has been accused of indiscriminately bombing civilian and non-military targets, which the coalition has consistently denied.

    Mr Ban’s office had issued a report last week on violations of children’s rights in war zones, and it cited deadly coalition attacks that had hit schools and hospitals. By Monday, however, the coalition was taken off the list, after lobbying by Saudi Arabia and some of its wealthiest allies who help finance UN humanitarian operations.

    “I also had to consider the very real prospect that millions of other children would suffer grievously if, as was suggested to me, countries would defund many UN programs,” Mr Ban said.

    By the standards of mild-mannered diplomat-speak, he went on to issue an uncustomarily direct rebuke.

    “It is unacceptable for member states to exert undue pressure,” he said.

    The Saudi ambassador promptly asserted that there had been no undue pressure.

    Mr Ban’s comments came as he is wrapping up his 10-year tenure and as world powers begin to bargain over who his successor will be and just how independent she or he ought to be.

    Secretaries-general have frequently faced intense political pressure from countries large and small, and Mr Ban’s time in charge has been punctuated with a number of awkward compromises.

    Last summer, Mr Ban reversed course on his list of armies and guerrilla groups that violated child rights in war. In that instance, his special representative for children and armed conflict, Ms Leila Zerrougui, recommended that the Israel Defense Forces and Hamas be included on the list for their role in bombing schools and hospitals and otherwise breaking international law during the 50-day war in the Gaza Strip in 2014.

    Israel was consulted before the release of the report, Mr Ban’s aides said at the time, and both Israeli and US diplomats lobbied intensely against the listing. In the end, both Israel and Hamas were kept off the list. Mr Ban declined to address reporters’ questions on the matter at the time, leaving it to his envoy, Ms Zerrougui, to explain the redaction.

    The generally risk-averse Mr Ban has tried to step out a bit more during his last year, but he has also repeatedly had to step back.

    In March, on a rare visit to a camp that houses refugees from Western Sahara, Mr Ban used the term “occupation” to refer to Morocco’s 1975 annexation of territory that the Sahrawis claim as theirs. The Moroccan government responded by ejecting dozens of UN staff members, effectively kneecapping the peacekeeping mission there.

    Morocco has a powerful ally in France, a veto-wielding member of the Security Council, which helps explain why the French said nothing to persuade Morocco to reverse its decision. That left Mr Ban on his own, and within days, his spokesman was compelled to swallow his words.

    “We regret the misunderstandings and consequences that this personal expression of solicitude provoked,” said the spokesman, Mr Stephane Dujarric.

    Perhaps Mr Ban’s most awkward moment came when he sought to act independently of the United States. In January 2014, he invited Iran to UN-brokered political negotiations over Syria, only to be advised by US officials to rescind the invitation, according to interviews with diplomats at the time.

    A day after he publicly announced the invitation, he appeared before reporters and said Iran could not attend. The State Department made its opposition clear and demanded that Iran first accept certain conditions that it knew Tehran would find unacceptable. One of Mr Ban’s aides said he felt betrayed.

    Asked at a news briefing Thursday about Mr Ban’s admission of Saudi pressure, a State Department spokesman, Mr Mark C Toner, said, “We agree with the secretary-general that the UN should be permitted to carry out its mandate, carry out its responsibilities, without fear of money being cut off.”

    Pressed about US threats to cut off funding, Mr Toner said, “I’m aware of our own track record.”

    Eleven candidates have so far declared their candidacy to succeed Mr Ban when his term expires at the end of this year. A few others are expected to throw their names into the race in the next few weeks.

    The president of the General Assembly, Mr Mogens Lykketoft, who has held the first-ever public hearings for the candidates, has used the terms “independent” and “courageous” to describe his ideal future secretary-general.

    That may be unrealistic. It is really up to the five permanent members of the Security Council to choose the next head of the organisation, and while many of them have said they want a strong secretary-general, they have also avoided calling for one who is independent.

    As for the Saudi-led coalition, Mr Ban said he would jointly review the claims made by his special representative who accused the coalition of indiscriminate attacks against children. Privately, diplomats say such a review could drag on until it vanishes from public memory.

    For its part, Saudi Arabia flatly denied that it had exerted any pressure.

    “No, of course not,” the ambassador, Mr Abdullah al-Mouallami, said in a telephone interview. “It is not our style. It is not our culture. It is not our spirit to use threats or intimidation.”

    He did say that he had met with Mr Ban’s deputy, Mr Jan Eliasson, a Swedish diplomat, on Monday and expressed his concerns about the listing. He said he told him that “it would have an adverse impact on relations between Saudi Arabia and the United Nations.” NEW YORK TIMES

     

    Source: TODAYOnline

  • Muhamad Faisal Manap Emerges As WP Vice-Chairman, After Latest CEC Meeting

    Muhamad Faisal Manap Emerges As WP Vice-Chairman, After Latest CEC Meeting

    The Workers’ Party (WP) held its first Central Executive Council (CEC) meeting on 7 June 2016 following the election of the CEC on 29 May 2016. The office bearers of the Workers’ Party elected for the term of 2016 to 2018 are as follows:

    Chairman: Ms Sylvia Lim Swee Lian

    Vice-Chairman: Mr Muhamad Faisal bin Abdul Manap

    Secretary-General: Mr Low Thia Khiang

    Assistant Secretary-General: Mr Pritam Singh

    Organising Secretary: Mr Png Eng Huat

    Deputy Organising Secretaries: Mr Foo Seck Guan, Kenneth and Mr Tan Kong Soon

    Treasurer: Mr Chen Show Mao

    Deputy Treasurer: Mr Dennis Tan Lip Fong

    Chair, Media Team: Dr Daniel Goh Pei Siong

    Deputy Chair, Media Team, and Webmaster: Mr Leon Perera

    Deputy Webmaster: Mr Firuz Khan

    President, Youth Wing: Mr Gerald Giam Yean Song

    Council Member: Ms Lee Li Lian

     

    Source: www.wp.sg

  • China Larang Puasa Semasa Ramadan Di Kawasan Ramai Muslim

    China Larang Puasa Semasa Ramadan Di Kawasan Ramai Muslim

    Para pegawai China dikatakan melarang kakitangan awam, para pelajar dan kanak-kanak di wilayah Xinjiang yang ramai penganut Islam daripada berpuasa semasa bulan Ramadan.

    Demikian menurut lelaman web pemerintah sempena permulaan Ramadan di sana hari ini (6 Jun).

    Parti Komunis yang juga parti memerintah negara itu sudah bertahun-tahun melarang kakitangan pemerintah dan anak-anak kecil daripada berpuasa di Xinjiang, tempat tinggal kepada lebih 10 juta penduduk yang kebanyakannya adalah muslim.

    Mereka merupakan kaum minoriti Islam daripada kaum Uighur.

    Ia juga memerintahkan beberapa restoran untuk kekal dibuka.

    Pertempuran sering berlaku di wilayah tersebut, antara puak Uighur dengan pasukan keselamatan negara itu.

    Beijing sering menyalahkan pihak militan Uighur di atas kejadian-kejadian serangan di Xinjiang dan di wilayah-wilayah lain di China.

    Pihak pemberontak muslim dikatakan mahu wilayah yang kaya dengan sumber itu berpecah dari pemerintah pusat.

    “Anggota parti, anggota kader, kakitangan awam, para pelajar dan anak-anak kecil tidak boleh berpuasa semasa Ramadan dan tidak terlibat dalam aktiviti agama,” demikian menurut sebuah notis yang dimuatnaikkan Khamis lalu (2 Jun) di laman web rasmi kota Korla di tengah Xinjiang.

    “Semasa bulan Ramadan, perniagaan makanan dan minuman tidak boleh ditutup,” tambah notis tersebut.

    Satu laman web yang dikendalikan biro pendidikan kawasan Shuimogou di wilayah Urumqi memuatnaik satu notis Isnin lalu (30 Mei) yang menyatakan “para pelajar dan guru dari semua sekolah dilarang memasuki masjid bagi aktiviti keagamaan” semasa Ramadan.

    Di bandar Altay yang terletak di utara China, para pegawai juga setuju untuk “lebih berhubungan dengan para ibu bapa” demi melarang berpuasa semasa bulan Ramadan, menurut satu laman web Agama Etnik China.

    China sering mengawal ketat kumpulan-kumpulan agama, tetapi sering juga mendakwa ia memberi para penduduknya kebebasan untuk mengamalkan kepercayaan masing-masing.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Activist: Malaysian Malays Still Cannot Accept Non-Muslim PM

    Activist: Malaysian Malays Still Cannot Accept Non-Muslim PM

    PETALING JAYA: The majority of those who responded to a survey conducted by social activist Fahmi Reza rejected the possibility of Malaysia having a non-Muslim prime minister some day.

    According to a Malay Mail Online report, out of 1,344 respondents, 39% said they could accept such a situation, while 31% said that as long as the prime minister was a Muslim, they would be agreeable to it.

    The other 30%, however, completely rejected the possibility of having a non-Malay premier.

    The one-day survey conducted on Fahmi’s Twitter account revealed the prevalence of mistrust among the Malays towards those of other ethnicities which he said portrayed Malaysians’ failure as a society.

    Speaking to the English news portal, he said the country’s education and political systems, which had increasingly become polarised based on race, were not helping the situation.

    “But at the same time, this problem exists because there is a lack of interaction and sharing among races and an in-depth understanding among ourselves in society.”

    Targeted only at Malays, Fahmi said he conducted the survey because he was interested in finding out their views over such a possibility.

    The graphic designer acknowledged that the results of his survey may be flawed as anyone could have responded to it, but said that was a trivial matter as the survey’s primary aim was to get the public speaking on the issue.

    It was also a follow-up to a previous question he posed on Facebook, asking his followers if they were prepared to openly discuss matters related to racial discrimination and racism, with those of a different ethnicity.

    “I posted this question because I wished there were more spaces and opportunities where these exchanges could really happen in real life, and not just on social media,” he said, adding that the poll was merely a starting point for open talks on the rarely discussed topic of racism.

    “I am actually planning to hold a few series of workshops about the issue of racial discrimination and racism that is intended to create a space and opportunity for this issue to be discussed openly by workshop participants from different ethnic backgrounds.”

    Public policy advocacy group Centre for a Better Tomorrow had on March 17, released the results of a survey it conducted last year where 60% of the 1,056 Peninsular Malaysians polled claimed they were not racist.

    Out of the 60%, half however said they would not vote for a candidate coming from a different race, while another 34% felt race-based politics was still relevant.

     

    Source: www.freemalaysiatoday.com

  • Faisal Manap: Ramadan Is Opportunity To Become Better Individuals

    Faisal Manap: Ramadan Is Opportunity To Become Better Individuals

    Assalamualaikum Wr. Wb.
    May Peace Be Upon You

    Ramadan Kareem to my fellow Muslims.

    Please allow me to do a brief sharing regarding the month of Ramadan.

    Ramadan is the ninth month in the Muslim calendar (a total of 12 months). During this month, fasting is made obligatory to all Muslims who have reached the age of puberty.

    Now you may ask why do Muslims fast during the month of Ramadan?

    The feeling of hunger and thirst that one experience during fasting will help one to develop compassion for those who are less fortunate and underprivileged. It also allow one to build up a sense of self-control and willpower.

    The holy month of Ramadan is also a period for Muslims to enhance or ‘recharge’ our spirituality through inner reflection and devotion to God which leads to a greater sense of humility.

    With better self-control, willpower, compassion and humility, one will then be able to become an individual who will benefit his community and nation.

     

    Source: Muhammad Faisal Abdul Manap

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