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  • Rancangan Sinar Lebaran 2017 Tak Power, Perlu Dipertingkat

    Rancangan Sinar Lebaran 2017 Tak Power, Perlu Dipertingkat

    “”Sinar Lebaran 2017” Rancangan Tv untok Hari Raya baru2 ini , dari MediaCorp kali ini tidak menyengat dan sehebat dari rancangan2 yg tlh berlalu.

    Haryani Hassan Basri yg mendendangkan lagu Raya yg d popular kan oleh Sharifah Aini, terlau banyak kekurangan nya ,suaranya, dan patah lagu nya.. beliau perlu banyak belajar tentang lagu2 tradisonal. Jika beliau benar2 mau menjadi saorang penyanyi yg baik. Cuma yg boleh membanggakan ia lah Elfi R Ismail, beliau memang lah sa orang anak muda yg penuh berbakat dgn lagu2 tradisional yg boleh membawa beraneka rentak lagu dan yg boleh mewarisi Bapa nya… R Ismail..

    Penerbit tlh mengenengahkan penyanyi2 dari Anugrah, tapi ada juga dari penyanyi2 nya tidak dapat membawakan lagu2 Raya dan lain2 nya dengan begitu baik.. Penerbit rancang selau nya mengundang kumpulan dari Sri Mahligai,, apa kah tidak ada kumpulan lain, atau pemuzik2 lain yg penuh berbakat untok rancangan TV.. atau mengapa Penerbit tidak mengundang Wan Ibrahim Wan Embong.. bagi memimpin pemuzik,d rancangan Tv mediacorp. beliau ada lah sa orang pengarah muzik.. yg luar biasa baik..
    Saya sarankan kpd Penerbit Rancangan untok Hari Raya yg akan datang, agar rancangan2 hiburan ini lebih baik dari yang ini, tahniah… kpd pelawak2 kita yg sungguh luar biasa baik.. yg menghibur kan dan yg patut kita bangga kan.

    Mohon maaf jika ada yg kurang senang dgn saya. Tapi ini ada lah ikhlas dari saya seorang pencinta muzik.

     

    Source: Nasir Abdullah

  • Damanhuri Abas: High Time Government Treats Madrasahs More Fairly

    Damanhuri Abas: High Time Government Treats Madrasahs More Fairly

    Four of my five children are in Madrasah. They spanned 3 out of the 6 remaining full-time Madrasah still providing valuable service to the Muslim community. The Madrasah is a vital educational institution serving both iconic and strategic value to the interest and identity of the local Muslim community. The recent adjustment to allow Madrasah students to get Students yearly per capita grants for extra-curricular programs are overdue but nonetheless welcomed and helpful.

    Yet decades on, the government is still only making baby steps towards acting as they should to provide equal share of aid to all educational institutions that serves the arduous task to the public of providing learning for our next generation. Just because it is a religious institution that is privately owned do not in any way justify an exclusion from its rightful entitlement for public aid when it is crystal clear that the Madrasah have no profit motives in doing their selfless work for the Muslim community.

    It was only like yesterday when the Muslim community had to rally behind these 6 full-time Madrasah when changes to the education act were made imposing compulsory secular education upon them. By the Grace of God, far from wrapping up, the Madrasah raised up their game and vigorously struggled and came up to speed in meeting the conditions imposed upon them. Backed by a very strong united collective community-driven action, they continued to move forward under severe duress straining and testing them tremendously along the way.

    It was never a level playing field for the 6 surviving full-time Madrasah. Some had to struggle under enormous circumstances to keep the listing institution alive and floating believing in their relevance and value to the community. Financially, the Madrasah were severely tested having to cope with burden of staff salary, operational cost from maintenance, upkeep, etc., to ensuring educationally robust infra-structure within severe spatial constraints to meet the ever changing challenging new educational needs for their students.

    It was nothing short of a miracle that with only the heavily subsidized fees paid by parents which barely covered not more than 30% of operational cost, the deluge of donations from the community became the vital lifeline for the Madrasah over the last few decades until today. But surely this is a great affront to justice, fairness and equality that the 6 Madrasah continue to be denied the equivalent financial support they should have been entitled to like other similar religiously based schools that runs in Singapore providing selfless services to their communities.

    Why does the Government choose to discriminate against the Madrasah by denying their full right to be fully funded as a legitimate educational institution in this country serving the public with no profit motives?

    We can see religious based schools among them the Buddhist based schools such as Manjusri and Maha Bodhi operating in spanking buildings paid for by taxpayers money. We have even huge buildings for Christian based schools from convent schools such as CHIJ to St Andrews, St Joseph and many more with some even sitting on prime sites in various parts of this Island. We then have the race based Chinese schools with its strong Confucious ethics and Chinese identity with the label of SAP schools endowed with even more glorious infra-structure. The only exceptions are our Hindu brethren as the second biggest minority without any religious or ethnic based school.

    The Government must answer for its refusal to give equal treatment like what is accorded to the other religious or ethnic based schools but not to the Madrasah. The past excuses are really unacceptable when we think of the severely imbalanced provision given to the examples of the list of religious and ethnic based schools mentioned above.

    Here the Muslim community had never asked for special provision, it is simply equal, fair and just treatment that we are asking from the Government. There is no justification for the Government not providing all the material support needed by the Madrasah like any other educational institutions that serves the people albeit a designated group in society, the Muslim families who chooses to school their children in the Madrasah.

    The selective arguments that Madrasah is a private school do not hold water. The Madrasah is a private school categorised as Islamic schools in the Ministry of Education apart from other private schools in general and directly under the purview of the Islamic Council of Singapore, MUIS.

    This demarcation shows the unique position of the Madrasah as an essentially Muslim community based school and not a strictly private school with profit motives. How can the Government choose to place the Madrasah on the same status as other profit-driven private schools knowing fully well that they never functioned today as a strictly private entity but exists only as first an Islamic educational service provider for the Muslim community and now fully running national curriculum too?

    The recent news of the merger of JCs leaving potentially unused infra-structure should be good news for the 6 full-time Madrasah as they should have first right of refusal to occupy the premise under subsidized or even rental free occupancy since they were not given any funding or privileges for decades before to build on any land provisioned with the luxury of space conducive and ideal for an educational institution comparable to other national ones or the religious/ethnic based ones mentioned earlier.

    It is overdue that the Government be just and fair to the 4% or less of Muslim students who chooses Madrasah as their choice of school so that the constitutional demands that each Singaporean child be given equal opportunity to access the best education in sufficiently provided space for full holistic learning of the mind and physique be met. This grotesque marginalization of Madrasah and the education it offers must end as it goes against the spirit of our beloved country’s constitution that guarantees equal rights and access to quality education regardless of race, language or religion.

     

    Source: Damanhuri Bin Abas

  • Be Careful, Ben & Jerry’s Urban Bourbon Ice-Cream Not Halal, Contains Whiskey

    Be Careful, Ben & Jerry’s Urban Bourbon Ice-Cream Not Halal, Contains Whiskey

    Hi all my muslim brothers n sisters..just a heads up on ben n jerry ice cream we all love…some of them have halal logo like this strawberry cheesecake

    …and some of them does not like this urban bourbon..contains whiskey…

    Allahu Musta’an

     

    Source: Taufik Hidayat in Halal Cafe & Restaurants in Singapore

  • Dr Tan Cheng Bock’s Constitutional Challenge On Reserved EP: High Court Reserves Judgement

    Dr Tan Cheng Bock’s Constitutional Challenge On Reserved EP: High Court Reserves Judgement

    The High Court reserved its judgement on Dr Tan Cheng Bock’s constitutional challenge against the Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC) over the timing for the reserved presidential election, after a 3.5 hour closed-door hearing on Thursday (June 29).

    Justice Quentin Loh is expected to deliver his decision in a week or so, Deputy Attorney-General Hri Kumar Nair, representing AGC, and Dr Tan’s lawyer Chelva Retnam Rajah told reporters after the court session.

    Last month, Dr Tan filed a legal challenge against the AGC’s findings that Dr Wee Kim Wee was Singapore’s first elected President, which formed the basis for the Government to trigger a reserved election for Malay candidates for the coming polls in September.

    Among the various changes to the Elected Presidency scheme – passed in November last year – was triggering a reserved election for a particular race that has not seen an elected representative for five consecutive terms.

    The Government, on the advice of AGC, started counting the five terms from Dr Wee’s presidency.

    The late Dr Wee was the first President to exercise powers under the EP scheme, after it was introduced in 1991 while Dr Wee was in office.

    But Dr Tan, who was contesting the constitutionality of reserving the upcoming presidential election for Malay candidates, argued that the Government should have started counting from the late Mr Ong Teng Cheong, who succeeded Dr Wee. This would make it four terms since the Republic has had an elected Malay President.

    The upcoming presidential polls should, therefore, be an open election, he said, in a press conference on the same issue in March.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Restriction Order Against Singaporean Former Member Of Moro Islamic Liberation Front Allowed To Lapse

    Restriction Order Against Singaporean Former Member Of Moro Islamic Liberation Front Allowed To Lapse

    A Restriction Order (RO) that was issued against a member of a Philippine-based militant group was allowed to lapse in June, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Thursday (Jun 29).

    The RO was issued against Abdul Majid Kunji Mohamad, who was a member of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which is based in the southern Philippines.

    Abdul Majid was detained under the Internal Security Act (ISA) in June 2011, MFA said, adding that he had undergone military training at MILF’s Camp Abu Bakar in Mindanao and aided the MILF in procuring funds and weapons components.

    He was released from detention and issued with an RO on 17 Jun, 2013.

    “While on RO, he was cooperative and responsive to rehabilitation efforts,” MFA said. “As such, he no longer requires RO supervision.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com