Category: Politik

  • Muslim Jakarta Governor Candidate Ahead In Election, Early Count Shows

    Muslim Jakarta Governor Candidate Ahead In Election, Early Count Shows

    Former Indonesian education minister, Anies Baswedan, was slightly ahead of Jakarta’s incumbent Christian governor in the race to lead the Indonesian capital, unofficial early counting by a private pollster showed on Wednesday.

    Baswedan had secured 51.93 per cent of the votes, just ahead of Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, known as “Ahok”, on 48.07 per cent, based on a quick sample count of around 5 per cent of the vote by Indikator Politik.

    A candidate needs a simple majority to win. The national elections commission will announce official results in early May.

    The Jakarta poll has been overshadowed by religious tensions, with mass Islamist-led protests against Purnama, and is being widely seen as a proxy battle for the presidential election in 2019.

    Purnama is backed by President Joko Widodo’s ruling party. Baswedan is supported by a conservative retired general, Prabowo Subianto, who lost to Widodo in a 2014 presidential vote and may challenge him again.

    But the election is also viewed as a test for Indonesia’s young democracy and record of religious tolerance, with both sides raising concerns about intimidation and voter fraud.

    The campaign featured mass rallies led by a hardline Islamist movement, which has strengthened in recent years in a country long dominated by a moderate form of Islam.

    Police said 15 people were detained following reports of disturbances at several polling stations in the city of 10 million people, after what the Jakarta Post this week dubbed “the dirtiest, most polarising and most divisive” election campaign the nation had ever seen.

    “Political differences should not break our unity,” President Joko Widodo said in a statement after casting his ballot at a central Jakarta polling station. “We are all brothers and sisters. Whoever is elected, we must accept.”

    LIGHT SECURITY

    “Don’t let any cheating happen, because the future of Jakarta is determined by the election today,” Purnama, 50, told reporters after voting with his family in North Jakarta.

    His rival, Baswedan, 47, said as he voted in the south of the city that the election was being closely watched at home and abroad, so it was important to avoid an atmosphere of tension.

    Polls closed at 1pm (0600 GMT) with 7 million people eligible to vote. Security appeared light at several polling stations, though police said 66,000 personnel were deployed across the city.

    Police in neighbouring provinces on Java island searched private cars and public buses heading for Jakarta on Tuesday to look for sharp objects and explosives.

    Jakarta police spokesman Argo Yuwono said police had stopped and searched vehicle heading for Jakarta on Tuesday to ensure “no movement of masses toward the capital”.

    Religious tensions have been an undercurrent in the campaign, with Purnama on trial for blasphemy over comments he made last year that many took to be insulting to Islam.

    Hundreds of thousands of Muslims took to the streets late last year to call for his sacking and to urge voters not to elect a non-Muslim leader. One person died and more than 100 were injured after one protest turned violent.

    Police fear Islamic leaders could incite a fresh bout of unrest if Purnama wins the election.

    CONTESTING THE RESULTS

    Purnama faces up to five years in jail if convicted of blasphemy. His trial will resume on Thursday, when prosecutors will submit a sentence request.

    “We are worried things could be hotter if the results are quite close,” said Isabella Hariyono, a 30-year-old voter in North Jakarta. “We hope things don’t heat up. The police and military are ready but we never know.”

    Private pollsters, approved by the national elections commission, are expected to announce an unofficial tabulation of a sample of votes, known as “quick counts”, within a few hours of polls closing. The elections commission is expected to announce official results by the first week of May.

    The loser can contest the results in the Constitutional Court, which could prolong political uncertainty for weeks.

    Citigroup said in an investor note that, despite the potential for renewed protests if Purnama won, it was maintaining a Jakarta stock index target of 6,150 by the end of 2017, representing an 8 per cent upside.

    “As long as there are no security issues, the election outcome should not significantly stall the reform programme of the national government, in our view,” it said.

     

    Rilek1Corner

    Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Singapore Is First World Country With Third World Hijab Policy

    Singapore Is First World Country With Third World Hijab Policy

    “Focus on unity, not division”: Minister Masagos Zulkifli

    “Allowing hijab problematic for some jobs”: Minister Yaacob Ibrahim

    Please tell me are there any DIVISION caused or PROBLEMATIC issues found in these photos? Or in their respective countries?

     

    Source: Syed Mahdzar Al-Shahab

     

  • Alias Ismail: Othman Wok May Championed Multiracialism But Didn’t Champion Rights Of Malays

    Alias Ismail: Othman Wok May Championed Multiracialism But Didn’t Champion Rights Of Malays

    The man who suggested that the Muslim be burned on their death because Singapore has a land shortage.

    The man who kept quiet when Malay youth was not called for National Service and many become drug addict BecoS to find a job u must complete ur National service and many Malay man had no letter to say they were exempt .

    YES THIS IS THE MAN.

    Maybe we should burn his body as he was so into it

     

    Source: Alias Bin Ismail commenting on ST video on Othman Wok

  • Family Remebers Othman Wok As Humble, Kind And Loving

    Family Remebers Othman Wok As Humble, Kind And Loving

    Pioneer Cabinet Minster Mr Othman had been warded at SGH since April 6 for a chest infection and stomach complications.

    Madam Lily, 60, said she usually does the night duty in caring for him.

    “I will read some prayers for him and pat him to sleep before I go off,” she recounted his final hours to The Straits Times on Monday (April 17), after Mr Othman died just after noon. He was 92.

    “We hope that he will always be remembered as part of the Singapore Old Guard and a contributor to the harmony of Singapore,” she added.

    “We tried our best to take care of him to the best of our ability, but I think God knows better, and you know we are quite happy to let him go. He passed away…peacefully, so we are happy with that,” Madam Lily told reporters during the wake for Mr Othman outside the family home in Kew Avenue in Bedok.

    Madam Lily, a housewife, described him as a kind and loving father who was also devoted to his work when he was MP for Pasir Panjang constituency from 1963 to 1981.

    “We know that we are more or less like his second family compared to his political work. We totally got it and we appreciated that as well,” she said with a laugh.

    But he always made time for the family, especially when he returned from his overseas trips as Singapore’s first Minister for Social Affairs, a post he held from 1963 to 1977.

    “Whenever he (came) back from his travels, he (spent) at least one night with us, sharing his overseas stories, souvenirs,” she said.

    One lesson he often drummed into them was the importance of racial harmony as he lived through the 1964 race riots. He also emphasised humility, she said. “You could be the president’s daughter or the king’s daughter, but humility should be your middle name,” she recalled him saying.

    Mr Othman had been in and out of hospital since last November, and his last message to his children was to live peacefully with each other and maintain good relationships with one another, she said.

     

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Late Minister Othman Wok To Be Given Highest State Honour For Funeral

    Late Minister Othman Wok To Be Given Highest State Honour For Funeral

    The late Mr Othman Wok will be given a state-assisted funeral on Tuesday (April 17), with a memorial service for invited guests to be held on Wednesday evening.

    At a quarter past noon on Tuesday, a private hearse carrying the casket will make its way from his residence in Kew Avenue to the Sultan Mosque at North Bridge Road for funeral prayers.

    After the prayers, the State Flag will be draped over the casket in the presence of Mr Othman’s family.

    A statement issued on Monday by the State-assisted Funeral Organising Committee said the draping of the flag is “the highest State honour that can be accorded to a deceased person”.

    It added: “The State flag is placed over the casket with the crescent and stars lying over the head and close to the heart. The Order of Nila Utama (2nd Class) that was awarded to the late Mr Othman Wok will accompany the casket.” Mr Othman was conferred the honour in 1983 for his contributions to Singapore and nation-building efforts.

    At 2pm, the gun carriage carrying the casket will travel to the burial site at the Choa Chu Kang Muslim Cemetery — passing through North Bridge Road, North Boat Quay, River Valley Road as well as the heartlands of Alexandra Road, Commonwealth Avenue, Commonwealth Avenue West and Clementi Avenue 6.

    On Tuesday, Mr Othman’s body will be moved to Sultan Mosque, which was closed to visitors on Monday. The mosque’s manager, Mr Zainal Abidin Omar, said regular prayers will start shortly after 1pm, followed by prayers for Mr Othman.

    After that, Mr Othman will make his final journey to Pusara Aman at Choa Chu Kang Muslim Cemetery. In a statement on Monday, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said Mr Othman will be accorded the honour of being borne on the Ceremonial Gun Carriage for the journey to the cemetery.

    The Mufti of Singapore, Dr Mohamed Fatris Bakaram, will lead the last rites.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

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