Tag: Malaysia

  • Nora Danish Dikritik Lagi

    Nora Danish Dikritik Lagi

    Rasanya ini bukan kali pertama selebriti terkenal Nora Danish dicemuh dan dikritik teruk di laman sosial mengenai cara pemakaiannya. Terbaru, dia sekali lagi dikecam kerana memuat naik foto dress berkilat yang didakwa agak ketat di bahagian dada.

    Pelakon popular ini berpakaian ala-ala persis Puteri Arab kerana telah dilantik untuk menjadi duta bagi sebuah produk kecantikan. Untuk makluman, busana tersebut telah direka oleh pereka terkenal Rizman Ruzaini.

    Walaubagaimanapun, Nora Danish seperti biasa tidak memberikan apa-apa kenyataan balas mengenai cemuhan peminatnya di laman sosial. Mengenai gosip yang mengatakan hubungannya bersama Nedim Nazri mempunyai masalah kerana memuat naik gambar dengan kapsyen “The End”, Nora hanya mampu tergelak dan tersenyum.

    Menurutnya lagi, kapsyen tersebut tidak menggambarkan apa-apa mengenai perasaan apatah lagi perhubungan mereka. Ibu kepada Rayqal ini turut memberitahu dia tidak akan meluahkan perasaan negatif sekiranya mempunyai masalah bersama pasangan.

    Dalam pada itu, Nora turut berkongsi perkembangan semasa mengenai anaknya Rayqal yang sudah memasuki darjah 1 di sekolah antarabangsa. Bukan itu saja, cabaran membesarkan Rayqal semakin jelas dan mencuit hati apabila anaknya sudah mula mahukan adik serta menyarankan agar Nora Danish tidak perlu diet sepanjang masa.

     

    Source: http://era.fm

  • DAP: Toll Hikes Reap Exorbitant Profits for Malaysia Resource Corporation Sdn Bhd

    DAP: Toll Hikes Reap Exorbitant Profits for Malaysia Resource Corporation Sdn Bhd

    Toll concessionaire Malaysian Resources Corporation Berhad (MRCB) will reap “exorbitant profits”, Malaysia’s opposition said on Monday after the government revealed that 1.5 million paying vehicles crossed the Causeway in August after a toll-hike that has begun to hit Johor’s economy.

    Malaysia’s works ministry revealed in Parliament last week that in the month following the August 1 hike, 729,657 paid the toll to enter Singapore while 721,384 shelled out the increased fare going the other way.

    Malaysia added RM6.80 (S$2.63) each way to the existing RM2.90 to enter Johor from Singapore for cars, while buses saw a RM5.50 increase in both directions on top of the RM2.30 already paid heading north.

    According to opposition Democratic Action Party (DAP), this totals close to RM11 million per month, the same as the compensation paid by the government to MRCB since 2012 when the toll hike was to come into effect but was delayed ahead of last year’s closely-fought general elections.

    DAP assistant publicity chief Teo Nie Ching said yesterday this would mean that the government-linked MRCB would rake in RM4.3 billion by the end of its 34-year concession, despite the Eastern Dispersal Link (EDL) highway – which terminates at the Johor Baru immigration complex – only costing RM1.2 billion.

    “The profit that they are going to make from toll collection is still exorbitant and astronomical,” the Johor-based MP said, adding that this was before taking into consideration future toll hikes written into the concession deal and increasing traffic volume over the next three decades.

    Singapore matched Malaysia’s collection on Oct 1, bringing the cost of a roundtrip to $13, from just $2.35 as recently as July.

    The double hike caused alarm over the chilling economic impact especially to the Iskandar region – crucial to both nations – in Johor, which has just begun booming in the past two years after a quiet start.

    Even Malaysian ruling party leaders were critical of the hike, such as Public Accounts Committee chief Nur Jazlan Mohamad who told The Straits Times “both governments have to decide if they want Iskandar or not because instead of promoting it, they are imposing a de facto tax.”

    MRCB has insisted that the financing cost incurred to build the EDL – an elevated highway connecting the Johor Baru immigration complex to the North-South Expressway – alone is RM11 million a month, with an additional RM1 million needed for operations and maintenance.

    It also claims that it only collects RM6.80 upon exit and entry at the immigration complex (and not the existing RM2.90) but that up to 200,000 motorists use the EDL for free within Johor without crossing the border.

    Ms Teo added that Kuala Lumpur “should immediately declassify concession agreement with MRCB so that Malaysians will know if our government has again abused its power to enrich its crony.”

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  • Datuk M. Nasir Bergelar Doktor

    Datuk M. Nasir Bergelar Doktor

    SINTOK (Kedah): Seniman Datuk M. Nasir menerima Ijazah Kehormat Doktor Falsafah (Pengurusan Industri Kreatif) daripada Universiti Utara Malaysia (UUM) di sini kelmarin.

    Beliau yang ditemani isterinya, Datin Marlia Musa, menerima penghormatan itu di Majlis Konvokesyen ke-27 universiti tersebut.

    Semasa berucap selepas menerima ijazah itu, M. Nasir berkata komposer dan penerbit lagu perlu menjalankan satu kajian yang mendalam mengenai cara Korea mempromosikan budaya K-Pop dan mempelajari cara mereka membawa muzik setempat ke persada global.

    Beliau berkata budaya K-Pop yang telah menjadi sensasi global ialah satu contoh baik bagi mengeksport seni Malaysia, terutamanya muzik, kepada dunia.

    M. Nasir berkata walaupun kumpulan muzik K-Pop tidak dibentangkan sesuatu yang berbeza daripada genre pop umum, kemampuan mereka memasarkan produk adalah luar biasa.

    “Kami perlu mengkaji bagaimana orang Korea melakukannya dengan muzik K-Pop,” katanya.

    Penyanyi dan penulis lagu mapan itu berkata penulis lagu perlu belajar cara mengurus aspek perniagaan dalam seni mereka.

    “Kami boleh menghasilkan lagu-lagu yang hebat tetapi kami tidak akan ke mana jika kami tidak tahu bagaimana meletak dan memasarkan produk kepada penonton tukikan dan awam,” ujarnya.

    M. Nasir turut memuji penghibur Malaysia yang menebar sayap ke pasaran asing dan berkata lebih ramai yang perlu digalakkan berbuat sedemikian.

    “Kita perlu bekerja keras menyesuaikan muzik kita dengan pasaran antarabangsa dan menggunakan saluran yang betul untuk mendedahkannya sehingga orang dari negara lain akan jatuh cinta dengan produk kita,” ujarnya.

    Beliau turut mengucapkan terima kasih kepada UUM kerana menganugerahkan beliau dengan Ijazah Kehormat Kedoktoran dan berkata ia merupakan satu pengiktirafan yang besar bagi industri tempatan.

    Naib Canselor UUM, Profesor Datuk Dr Mohamed Mustafa Ishak, berkata M. Nasir telah dipilih oleh senat universiti kerana sumbangan besar beliau kepada industri kreatif.

    “Industri kreatif, seperti muzik, mempunyai potensi ekonomi yang besar bukan sahaja untuk pasaran tempatan, bahkan di peringkat antarabangsa juga.

    “Kami perlu modal insan yang terlatih untuk menguruskan industri ini dan bawanya ke tahap yang lebih tinggi. Sebab itulah UUM memperkenalkan Ijazah Sarjana Muda dalam bidang Pengurusan Industri Kreatif ini,” ujar Dr Mustafa.

    Selain M. Nasir, UUM juga menganugerahkan ijazah kehormat dalam pengurusan pembangunan kepada mantan presiden Kongres India Malaysia (MIC), Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu. – The New Straits Times.

     

    Source: www.beritaharian.sg

  • Sisters In Islam:  Malaysia Not A Theocratic Dictatorship

    Sisters In Islam: Malaysia Not A Theocratic Dictatorship

    KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 10 — Women’s advocacy group Sisters in Islam (SIS) has told minister Datuk Seri Jamil Khir Baharom that Malaysia is a democracy and not a theocratic dictatorship.

    The Muslim women’s rights NGO also said shariah laws are man-made and therefore not infallible, pointing out that the recent court challenges by SIS against a fatwa and by a group of Muslim transgender men against a state shariah law prohibiting cross-dressing were challenges to the “unjust and inefficient” Islamic legal system in Malaysia.

    “We would like to remind the minister that Malaysia is a democratic country, not a theocratic dictatorship,” Datin Paduka Marina Mahathir, a member of SIS’ board of directors, told Malay Mail Online.

    “Our Federal Constitution guarantees the fundamental liberties of every citizen including Muslims. The rule of law applies to everyone, and everyone has a right to seek redress in the courts if they feel they have been unfairly treated,” she added.

    SIS also expressed alarm at the call by Jamil Khir, who is the minister in the Prime Minister’s Department in charge of Islamic affairs, for all Muslims to defend their faith from liberal ideologies “by any method”.

    “Does this mean he is giving the go-ahead for anyone to take vigilante action against those the minister deems un-Islamic, including violence? Does this mean that should anyone physically attack such persons, the state will take no action against them?” Marina asked.

    Jamil Khir said yesterday that in a “new wave” of assault, Muslim transgenders and SIS are colluding with Islam’s enemies to put its religious institutions on trial in a secular court.

    The minister was responding to two recent court challenges where state Islamic authorities were cast into a defensive role, with one initiated by SIS at the High Court here against a Selangor religious edict, or fatwa, declaring their organisation and its members “deviants”.

    The other was a separate case mounted by a group of transgender men who were convicted of cross-dressing under the Negri Sembilan state shariah law, which they won at the Court of Appeal Friday.

    A three-judge panel at the Court of Appeal had unanimously ruled Section 66 of the Negri Sembilan Syariah Criminal Enactment 1992 to be unconstitutional as it violated the three Muslim men’s right to freedom of expression.

    Jamil Khir said Islamic institutions like the state Islamic councils must work together to face “this new wave against Islam”, claiming that there is an “agenda” outside the country’s predominant religion aiming to twist the faith of Muslims.

    Malaysia’s religious authorities have long derided liberalism and pluralism, with Friday sermons nationwide claiming a conspiracy by “enemies of Islam” to manipulate Muslims through ideas like secularism, socialism, feminism and positivism, in addition to the two.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com

  • Muslim Sensitivity In Malaysia:  Real Or Feigned?

    Muslim Sensitivity In Malaysia: Real Or Feigned?

    Many women who use dye to cover the grey in their hair know about the skin allergy test to be performed 48 hours before applying it. A person with an allergy to the chemicals in the dye, like the person with a food intolerance, can develop a nasty rash. In extreme cases, the face may swell and the air passages can get constricted to the point of causing suffocation.

    In Malaysia, we have a similar test, known as the “intolerance test”. Malays are sensitive creatures, or so they are told by the ulamas and religious authorities. All Malaysians live in fear of failing the Malay “intolerance test”.

    Religious authorities have told Malays that they are very sensitive creatures and that they will react badly to many everyday items. It is a relatively new phenomenon. In the past, Malays were not afflicted by this condition. Perhaps, when a lie is repeated often enough, people end up believing it.

    Today, we have Muslims, like the person with an allergy, who will react badly to many normal, everyday things, such as touching dogs, wearing items made of silk, not wearing the tudung, holding hands, being in the same house or room with a man who is not a family member, reading some types of books, listening to some types of music or watching certain films, playing stringed instruments, doing ballet, singing Christmas carols and playing choral music.

    In the past, Malay women were not forced to wear the tudung. Today, it is de rigeur, especially if you work in the civil service or aspire to be a politician. In Kelantan, steps are in place to fine women who refuse to wear the tudung. If you are Malay, was your grandmother, who was content with a shawl or selendang, less religious?

    How did we get to this stage, where mullahs and conservative Muslims fail to appreciate that a Muslim’s piety, compassion or spirituality cannot and should not be measured by how well she covers her head?

    There was a time when Malay girls who were active in sports did not mind wearing shorts, but today this mode of dressing is frowned upon. Now, we concentrate on the attire, rather than a healthy interest in sport.

    In years gone by, children were allowed to play amongst themselves. Today, girls and boys, even toddlers, are segregated. Little girls are made to wear the tudung and cover their bodies. Leggings for a child in a tropical climate encourage fungal diseases.

    Why are Malays depriving young children of both sexes the chance to bond? Why are we passing down our own adult fears of sexual impropriety to children who have not even reached the age of puberty?

    This segregation probably explains why young Malay adults are not able to relate to one another as normal human beings. Some Malay adolescents, when meeting a person of the other sex for the first time, do not know how to behave. They mistake a natural biological attraction for love.

    Older Malaysians will remember the days when Malaysians of different races or religions socialised freely. One of these occasions would have been the traditional Malaysian “open house” ritual for festivals.

    Today, Malays are reluctant to attend the open houses of their non-Muslim friends. They refuse to eat off plates which may have been contaminated by non-halal food.

    Non-Malay friends claim that their close Muslim friends would only attend a wedding reception at home if a separate section, with food cooked by halal caterers and served disposable plates, were provided. The preparations for the wedding are already stressful without this added burden. Only the very wealthy can accommodate this request.

    Older Malays used to do yoga in the privacy of their homes or in groups. A few years ago, a fatwa against Malays doing yoga was issued. Did the ulamas suggest alternative methods of stress or pain relief for these people? Is their prescription to read more of the Quran?

    At school, few non-Malay children dare share the contents of their tuck box with their Malay friends for fear of the teacher punishing them for “polluting the blood of the Muslim child” with non-halal food.

    Muslims who go overseas on holiday or work are happy to eat from plates in restaurants or dine at the house of foreigners. Back in Malaysia, some Malays behave with extreme fragility. Why the double standard? Why this Jekyll and Hyde character?

    Now we have water that is “seditious” and “insensitive” to Muslims because it comes in bottles bearing the image of Lord Murugan next to the halal logo. Will the normal, ordinary Muslim take control of his life and hound these gormless extremists from tarnishing Islam? Will Malays with common sense finally make a stand? Or do they agree that the Cactus Brand mineral water is only a side show to distract us from the other farce, the Sodomy II trial, and other issues like the KLIA2 flooding, the mudslides in Cameron Highlands, the GST, and the 1MDB debacle?

     

    Source: www.freemalaysiatoday.com