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  • Police Officer Shot At Khoo Teck Phuat Hospital

    Police Officer Shot At Khoo Teck Phuat Hospital

    A police officer was hurt in a rare shooting incident yesterday evening.

    According to witnesses, three gunshots rang out from a consultation room at the Khoo Teck Puat Hospital (KTPH) Accident & Emergency (A&E) department.

    A suspect had earlier been escorted to the hospital by two police officers, after he complained of chest pains.

    According to sources, one officer had stepped out of the room and the suspect allegedly attacked the remaining policeman.

    In the struggle, the shots were fired.

    Sources report that two paramedics, who were walking past the private room in KTPH, rushed in to help subdue the suspect.

    “They jumped on him before he could fire again,” he said.

    The paramedics were visibly shocked when the shots were fired, said the man who did not want to be named.

    There was a smell of gunpowder in the air.

    The immediate worry was whether the suspect would run amok in the hospital and hurt more people.

    The incident happened just after 7pm.

    A police spokesman said: “He was swiftly brought under control and remains in police custody. The situation is under control and members of the public were not in any danger at any time.

    “The accused sustained superficial injuries, while the 31-year-old officer sustained gunshot wounds to his thumb and foot. His condition is stable.

    “Police investigations are ongoing.”

    SPECIALIST

    The injured officer was rushed to Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH). He was moved because he needed a specialist hand surgeon and one was immediately available, said a KTPH spokesman.

    Family members of the wounded officer were spotted at TTSH late last night. A police officer was seen talking to two family members, giving them an account of what happened.

    TNPS understands that the officer was hit between the thumb and index finger.

    The family members declined to comment when approached.

    Police officers milled around both hospitals last night.

    Assistant Commisioner of Police Lian Ghim Hua was seen arriving at TTSH around 1am.

    Relatives of patients waiting at the A&E department at KTPH did not seem to be aware of the drama that had taken place earlier.

    A national serviceman, who wanted to be known only as Mr Leen, said he had been at the hospital since noon.

    The 21-year-old was visiting his grandfather who was in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).

    He said he did not hear anything even though the ICU is near where the incident happened.

    “If there was a shot fired, I had no idea about it. I couldn’t believe it when a friend told me through Facebook,” said Mr Leen.

    “He was swiftly brought under control and remains in police custody. The situation is under control and members of the public were not in any danger at any time.”

    – A police spokesman

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Walimah Ringkas, Lagi Jimat

    Walimah Ringkas, Lagi Jimat

    Isu pembaziran di majlis perkahwinan memang sudah lama diperkatakan.

    Namun, tidak banyak pakej pilihan yang diperkenalkan bagi mengatasinya.

    Ini mendorong Encik Aydarus Ahmad, pengasas Relite Events Management, memperkenalkan majlis walimah yang mudah, ringkas, dan paling penting, tidak membazir.

    “Banyak anak muda yang menangguhkan perkahwinan kerana masalah kewangan.

    “Seperti yang kita maklum, melangsungkan walimah menggunakan banyak wang – daripada katering, dekorasi dan andaman.

    “Ini belum termasuk wang hantaran dan barang hantaran yang ditukar kededua pihak lelaki dan perempuan lagi,” ujarnya.

    Mungkin ada yang menganggapnya agak janggal menghadiri majlis walimah yang tiada kerusi meja.

    Tetapi inilah perbezaan pakej walimah Relite Events Management.

    Tiada kerusi yang perlu disarung dengan sarung kerusi berwarna-warni, diikat dengan tali reben khas ataupun penggunaan kerusi khas putih. Setiap tetamu yang datang juga akan menjamu selera dengan makanan hidang yang dikongsi empat orang sedulang. Setiap dulang akan disaji dengan nasi beriani dam kambing, ayam masak merah serta kuah dalca.

    Tuan rumah juga boleh memilih pakej yang menyediakan nasi mandi, salad dan sambal Hadramaut.

    Dulang itu kemudian akan diletakkan di atas sebuah meja bulat kecil bagi memudahkan tetamu menikmati jamuan yang disediakan.

    “Kami menggalak pasangan mengadakan majlis walimah di dewan serbaguna yang mempunyai tempat terbuka dan tidak diadang tembok.

    “Kemudian kami akan membentangkan permaidani besar bagi tetamu duduk,” ujar Encik Aydarus yang menambah bahawa beberapa kerusi akan disediakan khas bagi warga emas dan mereka yang memerlukannya.

    Sejak memperkenalkan pakej ini Julai lalu, Relite Events Management sendiri tidak menyangka terdapat banyak permintaan daripada pasangan muda yang memilih mahu bersederhana.

    Sejak Julai tahun lalu, syarikat itu telah mengendalikan 10 majlis.

    “Usah fikir corak majlis begini tidak diminati pasangan muda.

    “Kesemua walimah yang kami kendalikan merupakan pasangan muda yang rata-rata sudah agak penat dengan majlis perkahwinan besar-besaran yang membebankan mereka,” ujarnya yang merujuk kepada majlis perkahwinan kini yang boleh mencecah sehingga $30,000.

    Majlis sederhana yang dimaksudkan menelan belanja separuh daripada jumlah itu iaitu sekitar $14,000.

    Kalau majlis mewah banyak memberi tumpuan kepada kecantikan visual, majlis sederhana menitikberatkan soal makanan dan layanan terhadap tetamu.

    Menurut Encik Aydarus, 41 tahun, beliau mempunyai sehingga 20 kendarat – 10 lelaki dan 10 perempuan – yang telah dilatih cara melayan tetamu.

    Mereka bergerak daripada seorang tetamu ke seorang tetamu yang lain dengan membawa bekas pembasuh tangan, siap dengan sabun bagi memudahkan tetamu mencuci tangan selepas makan.

    Dari segi dekorasi pula, ia ringkas, tiada balutan kain pada tembok.

    Pelamin juga tidak sarat dengan bunga-bunga – cukup bagi mempelai bergambar bersama keluarga dan sahabat handai sahaja.

    “Kami juga galakkan mempelai berinteraksi dengan tetamu yang hadir. Ada kalanya pengantin sendiri tidak tahu siapa yang datang untuk menyerikan majlis mereka,” tambahnya.

    Bagi jemputan 1,000 orang, Relite Events Management mengenakan bayaran sekitar $14,000 termasuk makanan, kendarat, pelamin, sistem bunyi serta persembahan qasidah.

    “Yang penting, kami mahu menggalakkan mempelai melakukan apa yang wajib sahaja dalam majlis persandingan mereka,” ujar Encik Aydarus.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • Dominant Lions XII brush Off ATM

    Dominant Lions XII brush Off ATM

    LionsXII dominated from start to finish as they emerged 3-1 victors over ATM FA on Saturday evening at the Jalan Besar Stadium.

    An own goal from Fazly Alias set the home team on their way, before Safuwan Baharudin and Shahdan Sulaiman wrapped up the win in the second half.

    As early as the second minute, they threatened to open the floodgates, but Khairul Nizam’s acrobatic effort from a deflected Gabriel Quak cross was wide of the mark.

    The hosts were unable to break down a compact ATM side, until Faris Ramli had another bicycle kick attempt after Quak guided a cross towards him in the 21st minute. The winger however, scuffed his attempt and the ball bounced wide.

    Three minutes later, Izzdin Shafiq saw a volley deflected off target, before he set up Faris in the 30th minute with a fantastic ball, only for the latter to put his attempted lob over the bar.

    Amri then smacked his free-kick against the cross bar, before Venice Elphi forced Izwan Mahbud into a save down the other end.

    The pressure finally paid off though, as the LionsXII got their deserved goal six minutes from the half-time whistle after Fazly turned Faris’ free-kick into his own net under pressure from Safuwan.

    LionsXII head coach Fandi Ahmad made some tactical changes at the break, with Zulfahmi Arifin moving into the heart of the defence while Safuwan took his place in midfield.

    The move worked a treat, as they doubled the lead minutes after the restart.

    A cross from Quak that failed to find Nizam was picked up by Faris. The winger laid the ball back for Safuwan, and he side-footed the ball into the bottom corner to double the lead.

    It could have been three four minutes later, but Syed Adney produced a superb double save to deny Khairul Amri’s flick with his back heel, and Faris’ shot from the follow-up.

    Fazly then redeemed himself by reducing the deficit in the 60th minute, after escaping Nizam’s attention to meet Mario Karlovic’s corner and power a bullet header into the roof of the net.

    Centre-back Madhu Mohana wasted a golden opportunity almost three quarters into the match, heading wide Quak’s cross despite having ample of space and time.

    Substitute Shahdan then wrapped up the victory with LionsXII’s third goal, guiding a nodded ball from Safuwan into the bottom corner in the 84th minute to wrap up the win.

    LionsXII: Izwan Mahbud (GK)(C), Madhu Mohana, Gabriel Quak, Khairul Nizam (Shahdan Sulaiman 81’), Nazrul Nazari, Izzdin Shafiq, Faris Ramli (Firdaus Kasman 78’), Khairul Amri (Sahil Suhaimi 68’), Safuwan Baharudin, Zulfahmi Arifin, Shakir Hamzah

     

    Source: http://lionsxii.sg

  • PAS Will Never Get Back Non-Muslim Support

    PAS Will Never Get Back Non-Muslim Support

    Mohamad Sabu is one of PAS’s most popular leaders, outside his party and among non-Muslims, that is. Internally, the party booted him out at the recent elections where he failed to defend the deputy president’s post. In the first of a two-part interview, Mat Sabu, as he is popularly known, mourns the passing of an Islamist party that enjoyed the support of non-Muslims for a period and fears it may never regain that trust.

    Even if he is voted back into the PAS leadership, the Islamist party will never regain its non-Muslim support, said former deputy president Mohamad Sabu.

    Better known as Mat Sabu and popular with the non-Muslim crowd, he also told of how hard he had to work to persuade PAS grassroots members to go out and rally with non-Muslims in earlier demonstrations led by electoral reform group Bersih.

    Mat Sabu painted a bleak future for the only opposition party with a religious ideology that had contributed to the death of Pakatan Rakyat (PR).

    He said there was now no remedy which could fix the situation for PAS to get back its non-Muslim support.

    “Non-Muslims are disappointed and broken-hearted by the whole situation.

    “Furthermore, PAS is now led by personalities from the east coast who rarely come into contact with Malaysians of other races and faiths,” he told The Malaysian Insider.

    Mat Sabu said the east coast leaders from Kelantan and Terengganu might think they do not need non-Muslim support since they only interacted with Malays daily.

    “They won’t feel it like we do here in Penang and Selangor. The Kelantan leaders had even said it is okay to do without PR because they were making assessments based on their own locations.

    “They can win in their areas but what about Selangor, Malacca and Johor? In Kedah, there are also parliamentary constituencies where non-Muslim votes make up some 40%.”

    He said the PAS leaders were not realistic if they thought the party could make it in general elections on its own.

    “In an election, you must have a coalition, unless you just want to be a regional party in Kelantan and Terengganu.

    “This is all going backwards.”

    He said when the first Bersih rally was being planned in 2007, it took him almost a year to go around asking PAS members to take part and join those from other races in the demonstration.

    The success of the rally, he said, contributed to PR’s victory in five states – Penang, Kedah, Perak, Selangor and Kelantan – in the 2008 general election.

    “Now, that multiracial image we built is gone. I do feel sad. Let PAS with its present leadership try to gather a crowd with all the different races now.

    “The ulamas in PAS organised an anti-GST (goods and services tax) rally first but the event was only attended by their own people. GST affects all Malaysians. You have got to include everyone.

    “This is what we are seeing. If PAS goes back to being a regional party, it will become stronger. But when election comes, it will be another matter.”

    Mat Sabu said even with PR now dead, the ruling Barisan Nasional would still fall, with or without PAS in the picture, because the people, especially the younger generation, were rejecting the ruling coalition.

    He said PAS should take care about trying to get close to Umno because this would only spell its own ruin.

    “If PAS wants to work with Umno, it, too, will suffer a hit. People just don’t want BN or Umno.

    “Take the Permatang Pauh by-election last month. In all streams, the percentage of votes for PKR by youth went up. It was not because they were PKR members. They just didn’t support Umno.”

    The PR pact “officially died” on Wednesday after PKR agreed with DAP that it no longer existed.

    The end of PR came after the PAS leadership, now dominated by the conservative ulama faction led by party president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang, accepted a motion to sever ties with DAP without debate.

    The relationship between DAP and PAS had been rocky since last year over the Selangor menteri besar imbroglio, and worsened after the Islamist party tabled and passed the hudud bill in the Kelantan assembly to implement the Islamic penal code in the state.

    Things appeared to reach the point of no return when PAS adopted a motion without debate at its recent general assembly to cut ties with DAP.

     

    Source:www.themalaysianinsider.com

  • Implications Of The Pakatan Rakyat Split

    Implications Of The Pakatan Rakyat Split

    Malaysia’s three-party opposition alliance Pakatan Rakyat (PR) has split up over a series of policy disputes, including calls for the implementation of the Islamic penal code, or hudud, in Kelantan.

    The Democratic Action Party (DAP) announced on Tuesday (June 16) that the alliance was dead, blaming it on Parti Islam SeMalaysia (PAS). But more significantly, the collapse left the third component party – Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) – in a potentially dire situation.

    Here’s what you should know about the break up of PR and what may happen next:

    What is Pakatan Rakyat?

    The opposition bloc was formed in April 2008, uniting opposition parties that had long been pushed around by the governing Umno-led Barisan Nasional (BN). Experts said PR was always a fragile alliance, given that it brought together bedfellows who were opposed ideologically, particularly the Islamist PAS and the secular DAP.

    The bloc won 52 per cent of the popular vote in the 2013 elections, tapping into growing resentment of Umno’s rule and corruption scandals. It failed to take power due to Umno gerrymandering, but its stunning performance under leader Anwar Ibrahim – jailed earlier this year on sodomy charges widely seen as trumped up by the government – had raised the possibility of a historic change of power in Malaysia.

    The PR currently controls three states: Kelantan (PAS-led), Penang (DAP-led) and Selangor (PKR-led). The DAP holds 37 of 222 seats in Malaysia’s parliament, the PKR 29, and PAS 21.

    What happened?

    When PAS saw its share of seats shrink in the 2013 election, it started to reassert its Islamic agenda and push for hudud in Kelantan state. Its president Abdul Hadi Awang was criticised for pushing a bill on hudud without consulting his opposition partners. This led to the DAP announcing in March that it would no longer work with the PAS leader.

    The rift worsened this month after the PAS leadership was captured by conservatives and the party accepted a motion by its conservative ulama (clerics) wing to sever ties with the DAP.

    In response, DAP’s Secretary-General Lim Guan Eng said in a statement on Tuesday (June 16) that the PR no longer exist. Mr Lim, who is also Penang’s Chief Minister, said it was the PAS president’s unilateral decision to push for hudud and his party’s decision to sever ties with DAP that led to the PR’s collapse. He added that the DAP would continue to work with PKR and other parties that want to end BN’s rule “to reshape and realign Malaysian politics with the aim of winning Putrajaya for the people”.

    Dismissing the DAP’s statement, PAS Youth chief Nik Mohamad Abduh Nik Abdul Aziz said the opposition alliance was still intact. “DAP’s decision will not dissolve the coalition,” he stressed.

    PKR president Wan Azizah Wan Ismail said on Wednesday (June 17) that PKR will not cut its ties with the DAP and PAS, blaming neither but chiding both for precipitating a crisis. “PR no longer functions formally,” she said in a statement, emphasising that PKR would continue to support the DAP-led Penang state government and the PAS-led Kelantan state government.

    What are the implications?

    Analysts are divided over how Umno and the ruling BN, as well as Prime Minister Najib Razak could benefit from the break up of the PR.

    “Opposition in disarray is certainly helpful for Najib’s survival. He is now actively courting Sabah and Sarawak for support even within Umno and BN. As long as he can convince the party he can still deliver, the party members will stick with him. Corruption is not a cardinal sin for Umno leaders. Mahathir had his own shares of financial scandals but he ruled for 23 years. Najib, and certainly Rosmah, see no reason why they can’t learn from Mahathir,” said Penang Institute fellow Wong Chin Huat, referring to former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad and wife of Mr Najib, Rosmah Mansor.

    But analyst Tan Seng Keat from the Merdeka Centre for Opinion Research said the impact is difficult to predict. Umno and its coalition are racked by infighting of their own, as concerns over the economy and damaging financial scandals have further raised the possibility of defeat in the next polls, due by 2018.

    On the opposition side, the DAP has asked PAS representatives to resign from their posts in the Penang state government and its agencies. PAS does not hold any influence in the state assembly as it has only one lawmaker while DAP dominates the 40-seat state legislature with 29 assemblymen.

    PAS, on the other hand, controls the Kelantan state assembly with 32 out of 45 seats. DAP has no representatives while PKR has only one.

    PKR, however, could find itself in potentially dire straits. It cannot sustain a majority in the 57-seat Selangor state assembly without the support of both PAS and DAP. The party had wanted to mediate between the two feuding partners but DAP turned down its offer.

    PAS strategist Zuhdi Marzuki has called for the formation of a new political pact involving only Malay-Muslim parties, similar to one that PAS joined and was led by Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah in the 1990s. It was disbanded after Tengku Razaleigh rejoined Umno in 1996.

    “Now it is up to PKR which leads Selangor to decide whether it wants to continue with a coalition with PAS in PR or not,” Dr Zuhdi said. “If PKR also withdraws from PR, then it is not impossible that the Selangor state government will become shaky.”

    What could happen next?

    The opposition parties and even the ruling BN may seek new realignments, including:

    A new opposition pact

    Analaysts believe the DAP and PKR will try to link up with a new partner to form a new opposition pact before the next general election because this remains their only realistic path to defeating BN. Along with PAS, PR has 87 seats in Parliament against BN’s 134. A possible partner is a new party mooted by PasMa, a PAS splinter group formed last year. Following the conservative sweep in PAS’ party elections earlier this month and the collapse of PR, PasMa said it was in discussion with several leaders and parties to set up a new moderate Islamic party that could cooperate with both PKR and DAP.

    “It is back to square one until they find a replacement vehicle for PAS. May or may not be PasMa. PR needs a party for Islamists and rural areas, something PKR is not good at,” said Professor James Chin, director of the Asia Institute at the University of Tasmania.

    PAS and Umno coalition

    The possibility of a unity government of PAS and Umno – the key, Malay-based party in BN – has been talked about since before the 2013 General Election. With the conservatives now dominating PAS, it is increasingly likely that the two parties may be tempted to work together.

    However, it is unclear if Umno is willing to risk breaking up its own multiracial coalition to embrace the Islamist PAS. Although Umno supported the PAS-run Kelantan government’s plans to adopt hudud in March this year, Mr Najib has yet to make his stand on hudud.

    “It is most unlikely that Umno will accept PAS in a Malay/Muslim-only unity government as this will mean the effective breakup of the Barisan as a multiracial, multi-religious coalition,” said Centre for Policy Initiatives director Lim Teck Ghee.

    However, Mr Wong, the Penang Institute fellow, said Umno might compromise, allowing PAS safe seats in Kelantan and Terengganu in the next general election.

    “What will likely happen is a covert pact between the two, with PAS attacking DAP, PKR and the PAS pragmatists if they leave the party.

    “Since it is in the interest of Umno to keep PAS floating, Umno will not put up a full fight in some seats in Kelantan and Terengganu so that PAS will survive with 10 seats or so. A complete collapse of hardliners within PAS will drive the Islamist voters to the splinter party, PKR or even DAP.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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