Category: Politik

  • Hazel Poa Appointed Acting Sec-Gen Of The National Solidarity Party

    Hazel Poa Appointed Acting Sec-Gen Of The National Solidarity Party

    Ms Hazel Poa has been appointed as the Acting Secretary-General of the National Solidary Party (NSP), following a meeting by the party’s Central Executive Committee (CEC) on Thursday (Jun 25).

    In a statement on Friday, NSP President Sebastian Teo said the decision was made not to appoint a new Secretary General “in view of the need to focus on preparations for the next General Election”.

    “The CEC felt this would not be an appropriate time to call for a Party Congress to elect a new Secretary-General,” Mr Teo said.

    In the meantime, Ms Poa will carry out the duties of the Secretary General. She held the role from 2011 till September 2013 before resigning, citing health concerns.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • PAP’s Potential Malay/Muslim Candidates For Upcoming Elections Identified

    PAP’s Potential Malay/Muslim Candidates For Upcoming Elections Identified

    A few Malay-Muslim candidates, including women mostly in their early 30s, have been identified for the next General Election, said Second Minister for Home Affairs and Foreign Affairs Masagos Zulkifli.

    “I do not know who will finally … become candidates, but … they are committed, they are also single-minded about helping out, contributing to the party as well as to become part of the party,” said Mr Masagos, referring to the People’s Action Party.

    He said the potential candidates hail from various sectors, adding that most of them are young. “Therefore, they will have a very good long runway to learn about leadership and be moulded into credible and reliable leadership.”

    When asked whether they are ready for a leadership role in the community and on the national stage, Mr Masagos said, “I don’t know anyone who is ready … Even for myself, after I have been elected, the kind of work I’m exposed to is something I couldn’t imagine.”

    He added that the potential candidates need mentors. “They are not merely (serving) their constituency, they are also the vanguard of the Muslim community,” said Mr Masagos.

    “Therefore, we have to guide them and teach them. We have to embrace them to teach them to become reliable and respectable (not just for the community).”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Hougang DBSS Resident Files Court Application To Demand S&CC Refund From AHPETC

    Hougang DBSS Resident Files Court Application To Demand S&CC Refund From AHPETC

    A resident of a new Housing Board development in Hougang has gone to court to obtain a refund for the service and conservancy charges (S&CC) she paid to the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council (AHPETC).

    Corporate travel manager Melinda Teo, 37, lodged a report with the Small Claims Tribunal on Monday (June 22), in a bid to get back the $367.20 that she paid in S&CC between November last year and May this year.

    Ms Teo, who lives in the 680-unit Parkland Residences, a Design, Build and Sell Scheme (DBSS) project, said she should not have to pay the fees to the Workers’ Party-run town council as it took over the management and maintenance of the property only on June 1.

    Before that, the project’s developer, Kwan Hwee Investment, had to step in to clean the common areas.

    Earlier this month, more than 300 residents of Parkland Residences sent a petition to the town council demanding to have their S&CC waived or refunded. But their appeal was not answered by either the town council or the Workers’ Party MPs, said Ms Teo.

    However, an AHPETC spokesman had said in response to media queries earlier this month that the town council would have to compensate Kwan Hwee Investment for the maintenance work done before June 1. As such, it cannot return the S&CC to residents, it told reporters.

    Following Ms Teo’s move to take court action, a representative of AHPETC must attend a meeting at the Small Claims Tribunal on July 2, according to a court document issued to the town council.

    Otherwise, an order could be given against the town council in its absence. The order could include a mandatory compensation to the claimant for claims below $10,000.

    Ms Teo said she decided to go down the legal route as “our e-mails and petition have only received the silent treatment from the MPs and town council”. She added that several neighbours have expressed interest in filing similar claims with the tribunal.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • The Untouchables In Malaysia

    The Untouchables In Malaysia

    OUTSPOKEN: The recent public spat between the Crown Prince of Johor, Tunku Ismail Ibni Sultan Ibrahim, popularly known as TMJ (Tengku Mahkota Johore) and Tourism and Culture Minister Nazri Aziz showed that under Umno Baru, two rules apply.

    One for the ordinary people and another for Umno Baru ministers. The irony is that it took a prince to force ministers to acknowledge that they lord it over the rakyat.

    Najib Razak should have ordered his minister to stop escalating tensions between royalty and ministers. Regardless of who is right or wrong, it is most unbecoming of ministers to act in an uncultured manner.

    Nazri behaved like a fish wife, trading insults over the garden fence, while others say he acted like a gangster. Najib’s silence reflects on his poor leadership skills, and heightens the enmity and fragile co-existence between the common man, ministers and the royal household.

    TMJ did not mince his words, when he rebuked Nazri, on social media and said, “You are a minister, not a God from the heavens who lords over everybody. Do not think that the people of this country exist to provide you with position and wealth. The position exists for you to serve the people.”

    The prince wanted to remind politicians of their roles and responsibilities and said, “… If you cannot deal with that, it just shows your arrogance to the people.”

    “I envision a future that every person has a right to voice their opinions. However, that is not the case in Malaysia today, where ministers think they are untouchable,” he added.

    TMJ is right. Ministers are Malaysia’s “untouchables”. Ministers can do no wrong. They are not subject to the laws which govern the rakyat. Ministers and their cronies, escape all punishment. Any court judgement appears to work in their favour, with only minimal fines.

    The following are possibly Malaysia’s most notorious untouchables:

    Dr Mahathir Mohamad may crow about Najib’s corruption and his link with Altantuya, but Mahathir’s laundry list of crimes against the nation, is as long, if not longer, than Najib’s. The monopoly of Malaysia’s major industries from padi to power supply, transport to telecommunication are self-evident. When things go wrong, as in the PKFZ scandal, no one is found guilty.

    Mahathir denied ordering the detention of people in Operation Lalang and distanced himself from Project IC. He shifted the blame for the emasculation of the judiciary to TMJ’s grandfather. Malaysians who consider Mahathir a hero, for taking up the rakyat’s cause, fail to realise that Mahathir has a hidden agenda.

    Across the South China Sea, Sarawak Governor Taib Mahmud is East Malaysia’s most prominent untouchable. Despite various disclosures by Bruno Manser Fonds and Sarawak Report, the MACC can find nothing concrete against Taib. The syariah courts find it difficult to prosecute his son, Bekir, for his infidelity and refusal to pay alimony to his wife. Being untouchable is perhaps, hereditary.

    Najib’s role in the Perak coup d’état of 2009, was an act of treason but Najib is an untouchable and no court can, or will, find him guilty. It helps when the PM and his deputy, close one eye to wrongdoings in government. All that matters is that Umno Baru triumphs.

    Despite the contradictory statements issued over 1MDB, Najib is still in charge of Putrajaya. The various departments, which conduct the investigations, the Attorney General and the IGP all report to him. That figures!

    Untouchables are not limited to men. Former Minister for Family, Women and Community Development, Shahrizat Abdul Jalil and her family were involved in the National Feedlot Corporation (NFC) scandal, but the investigation into this fraud, has more or less fizzled out.

    Despite Shahrizat’s family’s alleged abuse of the funds, allocated for the NFC, and the evidence collected by opposition politicians, there has been no prosecution of the key players in the NFC corruption. Scapegoats are plentiful.

    The ulamas create divisions in society. They work hand-in-glove with Umno Baru and use religion to control the behaviour of Malaysians. They support one another’s hidden agenda. The ulamas are another strong group of untouchables in Malaysia.

    Extremist NGOs like Isma and Perkasa are also untouchable. They are outsourced by Umno Baru to cause tension and create distractions, when bad news hits the country. They make false claims about Malays being proselytised and make false accusations of Malays being “influenced” to convert, by the crosses on top of churches.

    Other untouchables are institutions like the Election Commission. Despite allegations of cheating in elections, the EC is not subject to scrutiny and has long-term plans to make Umno Baru win in future elections.

    Ordinary ministers, like Nazri, are untouchable. Nazri was not charged with sedition for rebuking TMJ and only had his knuckles rapped for “making mischief”. Opposition MP Nizar Jamaluddin, was charged with sedition, for tweeting that the money spent on the Sultan of Johore’s WWW1 car registration plate, could have been put to better use, to help the poor.

    Engineer Chan Hong Keong was jailed for one year and fined RM50,000 for sedition, for insulting the late Sultan Azlan Shah in appointing Zambry Abdul Kadir as Perak mentri besar, in the Perak coup d’état.

    Despite the 4R rule using ‘race, religion, rural people and royalty’ to control the rakyat, Malaysia appears to be unravelling at the seams, and lurches from one toe-curling embarrassment to another. This is perhaps, the curse of the Dalits.

    Mariam Mokhtar is “a Malaysian who dares to speak the truth”.

     

    Source: www.theantdaily.com

  • SDP Mahu Kemuka Tiga Isu Sewaktu Berkempen

    SDP Mahu Kemuka Tiga Isu Sewaktu Berkempen

    Parti Demokratik Singapura (SDP) akan mengetengahkan tiga isu semasa berkempen dalam pilihan raya umum akan datang, kata pemimpin parti itu, Dr Chee Soon Juan.

    Tiga isu tersebut ialah kos hidup, Jumlah Minimum Tabung Simpanan Pekerja (CPF) dan jumlah penduduk negara yang semakin bertambah.

    Isu yang bakal diketengahkan itu berdasarkan apa yang dimaklumkan kepada beliau oleh warga Singapura, terutama kesukaran dalam menampung kos sara hidup yang semakin meningkat, kata beliau dalam satu pameran di Holiday Inn Singapore Atrium kelmarin, yang diadakan sempena menyambut ulang tahun ke-35 parti pembangkang itu.

    Menurut beliau, SDP pertama kali menentang keperluan Jumlah Minimum CPF 20 tahun lalu.

    “Kami mahu memberitahu pengundi: jika anda tidak mempunyai pembangkang, Parti Tindakan Rakyat (PAP) akan bertindak bebas dalam mempertingkatkan Jumlah Minimum,” ujarnya.

    Pada Februari lalu, panel penasihat yang dilantik pemerintah menyarankan menjadikan skim CPF lebih fleksibel, namun berkata keperluan bagi jumlah asas untuk disimpan perlu dikekalkan.

    Mengenai jumlah penduduk pula, Dr Chee berkata ia penting dalam menilai sama ada Singapura mempunyai prasarana mencukupi.

    Terdapat bantahan pada 2013 apabila pemerintah memperkenalkan Kertas Putih mengenai parameter bagi jumlah penduduk lebih ramai.

    Namun, kertas itu juga menggariskan rancangan bagi prasarana menampung potensi jumlah penduduk antara 6.5 juta hingga 6.9 juta orang menjelang 2030.

    Dr Chee kelmarin berkata SDP telah membuat persiapan bagi pilihan raya umum akan datang, yang perlu diadakan menjelang Januari 2017, berdasarkan anggapan ia boleh diadakan seawal September ini.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg