Tag: Malaysia

  • RTM Encrypted Signals to Ensure Commonwealth Games Coverage Exclusive to Malaysia Only

    RTM Encrypted Signals to Ensure Commonwealth Games Coverage Exclusive to Malaysia Only

    rtm1

    SINGAPORE – Singapore did not block the airing of Radio Television Malaysia (RTM) news to Singapore households.

    Rather, it was RTM that had encrypted signals to ensure that its coverage of the Commonwealth Games was confined to Malaysia only.

    “It seems like the mystery of the alleged blocking of RTM1 news by Singapore is, in fact, the encryption of signals by RTM,” said Singapore’s High Commissioner to Malaysia, Mr Ong Keng Yong, in comments provided to the New Straits Times yesterday.

    Mr Ong’s statement addressed Singapore viewers’ complaints that RTM1 broadcasts had been blocked from their homes.

    Earlier this week, Malaysian Broadcasting Department technical services director Abdul Wahid Hamid explained that some blockage of RTM1 broadcasts had occurred. But this was to protect the broadcasting rights for the Commonwealth Games in Glasglow.

    Claims that the Singapore government had blocked coverage of the violence in Gaza were unfounded, he added.

    Mr Ong also denied that the blocking had anything to do with Singapore’s stand on the Gaza issue because it was allegedly pro-Israel, according to the New Straits Times.

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/singapore-did-not-block-rtm-newsfeeds-20140807

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  • Two British Medical Students Murdered After Pub Quarrel

    Two British Medical Students Murdered After Pub Quarrel

    PETALING JAYA: The identities of the two British medical students stabbed to death by four local men in Kuching have been disclosed in a heartfelt posting on their university’s official Facebook page.

    Neil Dalton and Aidan Brunger, were named by Newcastle University acting vice-chancellor Prof Tony Stevenson in the post which added that the students were on six-week work placement in Kuching.

    MAIN-Aidan-and-Neil Aidan-Brunger (1)

    “Neil Dalton and Aidan Brunger, both 22, were on a six week work placement along with five other medical students to put the skills they had learnt during their time here at the university into practice.

    This has come as a huge shock to us all and our thoughts are with their families and friends at this very difficult time,” the posting read.

    Neil-Dalton-23-and-Aiden-Brunger Neil-Dalton-23-and-Aiden-Brunger (1)

    Stevenson added that two staff members from the university were flying out to Kuching and working with the British High Commissioner to provide support to the other students there, and to arrange for their flights home.

    The comments section of the Facebook post were filled with messages of condolences.

    Aidan-Brunger Neil-Dalton

    Dalton and Brunger were found murdered at 4.15am Wednesday with stab wounds on their chest and back after an early morning quarrel with four local men at Abell Road.

    A restaurant worker had alerted the police after witnessing the incident.

    A quarrel is alleged to have taken place between the victims and suspects while both parties were drinking at a pub. When the students left the pub on foot, the suspects pursued them in a car and one of the suspects attacked victims.

    At 6am, police arrested three of the suspects at their homes and seized the car, a knife, mobile phones. They have been remanded for seven days. The fourth suspect was arrested at 4.45pm and will be remanded today.

    Police-arresting Police-arresting-one-of-the-four-murder-suspects-at-their-respective-homes

    The main suspect is a 23-year-old fishmonger. One of the suspects is a 29-year-old mechanic while two others are unemployed, aged 19 and 35. Two of them have previous convictions for a drug-related offence and armed robbery.

    Dalton and Brunger arrived in Sarawak in June to undergo a six-week placement at a local hospital there. They were due to complete their placement on Thursday and planned to return to Britain later this month.

    Source: http://www.thestar.com.my/News/Nation/2014/08/07/University-discloses-names-of-students/

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  • Dr Mahathir: Johor Bahru Tidak Akan Jadi Seperti Singapura?

    Credit: Reuters
    Credit: Reuters

    1. Johor Bahru akan bertukar wajah secara radikal. Pembangunan yang dicadangkan, dengan berpuluh bangunan pencakar langit yang tinggi dan indah, dengan mercu tanda yang berbentuk ‘sky scraper’ tertinggi akan menjadikan Johor Bahru lebih menarik dan mengagumkan dari New York.

    2. Tidaklah salah jika JBB (Johor Bahru Baru) ini akan mengheret Malaysia ke era baru. Ia tetap mencerminkan kemodenan dan kemajuan Malaysia. Seperti dengan Kuala Lumpur, Johor Bahru akan sampai Wawasan 2020 lebih awal dari wilayah lain di Malaysia.

    3. Walau bagaimanapun soalan yang timbul ialah siapa yang akan tinggal dan bekerja dalam puluhan pencakar langit ini. Dari manakah mereka akan datang. Dari Johor Bahru? Dari Malaysia?

    4. Bangunan-bangunan ini bukanlah rumah murah. Tentulah bahan yang diguna ialah daripada marmar dan granit. Lif dan escalator memudahkan pelawat naik-turun. Di tingkat atas yang mungkin 30 atau 40 tingkat tingginya, tentulah disedia flat mewah dengan sewa puluh ribuan ringgit sebulan.

    5. Mungkinkah yang akan isi pejabat mewah ini syarikat dari Majidee atau Gelang Patah? Dan Penduduk terdiri dari orang Melayu Johor Bahru dan kampung-kampung di sekitar. Di khuatir bukan.

    6. Pada 1819 Singapura dijual kepada British oleh Temenggong dengan harga Dolar Sepanyol 60,000. Terdapat beberapa nelayan yang tinggal di pulau itu, pada ketika itu.

    7. Pendatang asing membanjiri Singapura sehingga penduduk asalnya tenggelam dalam bandar besar yang didirikan. Demikianlah besarnya jumlah pendatang asing ini sehingga Singapura menjadi negara asing yang tidak dikembalikan kepada Johor apabila British bebaskan pulau itu daripada penjajahannya.

    8. Apakah mungkin bandar indah dan mewah yang sedang didirikan tidak akan jadi satu lagi Singapura. Dalam sistem Malaysia sesiapa yang tinggal di negara ini selama 10 tahun dari 12 tahun yang lepas berhak mendapat kerakyatan. Dan kita tak pandai tolak permintaan orang. Lihat sahaja apa yang sedang berlaku sekarang.

    9. Kawasan yang akan dibangunkan ini tentu akan menjadi sebahagian dari Malaysia. Ia akan memiliki beberapa kawasan pilihanraya. Kalau pun dicantum dengan kawasan lain majoriti penduduk akan terdiri daripada warga baru ini.

    10. Sekarang kita tidak boleh sebut Melayu. Ia rasis. Tak apalah jika tidak ada seorang pun warga keturunan Melayu, asalkan yang akan mengundi dan memilih wakil rakyat terdiri dari warganegara Malaysia.

    11. Saya mengalu-alukan transformasi di Johor Bahru seperti saya alu-alukan transformasi di lain-lain tempat. Yang penting ialah Malaysia menjadi negara maju walaupun ayam dikepok mati kelaparan dan itik di air mati kehausan.

    Authored by chedet @Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad

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  • DPM Teo: SG Woman and Her Children Fighting in Syria

    130622-syria-women-fighting-01.photoblog600-600x300

    SINGAPORE – The conflict in Syria now in its third year is a security concern for many countries, including Singapore, Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean told Parliament on Wednesday.

    The Government already knows of Singaporeans who have gone there to take part in the conflict or who have plans to do so, he added. He revealed that a Singaporean woman is believed to have gone to Syria with her foreign husband and their two teenage children.

    “The whole family is taking part in the conflict in various ways, either joining the terrorist groups to fight, or providing aid and support to the fighters,” he said.

    Earlier this year, the Ministry of Home Affairs disclosed it was investigating another Singaporean, Haja Fakkurudeen Usman Ali, 37, for allegedly going to Syria with the intention of taking part in armed violence there.

    Mr Teo said that the naturalised Singapore citizen of Indian origin had also taken his wife and three children, then aged between 2 and 11, with him.

    Several other Singaporeans had also intended to take up arms in Syria, but were detained before they could do so. There are also others who have “expressed interest” to do so, who are under investigation.

    In Malaysia and Indonesia, there had also been those who joined the armed conflict in Syria and Iraq, which is being rocked by an uprising of an extremist Sunni group trying to carve out a purist Islamic state across both sides of the Syria-Iraq border.

    Mr Teo said: “The presence of former foreign fighters in our region – whether they originate from South-east Asia or elsewhere, is a security threat to us. This threat is magnified if these returnee fighters are Singaporeans.”

    Drawing parallels with the Soviet-Afghan war in the 1980s, he said that the Al-Qaeda terrorist organisation was spawned from that conflict, which had also attracted scores of foreign fighters. And the Al-Qaeda had planned attacks on Singapore after the September 11 terrorist attacks in the US in 2001, through the regional terrorist organisation Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), he noted.

    “Foreign fighters in Syria may similarly return from conflict proficient in terrorist activities in their home countries or overseas or provide logistical help to those they have befriended in Syria,” said Mr Teo.

    Another worry is the impact of this on social cohesion, he added.

    If support for the fighting in Syria becomes more widespread, he said, it could cause “disquiet on the ground” and mistrust between different communities.

    To guard against these threats, Singapore will “continue to investigate persons who intend to engage in violence overseas, so as to prevent them from posing a security threat to Singapore and their fellow citizens”, said Mr Teo.

    The Government will also work with religious leaders and community groups to counter the radical propaganda used by terrorists to recruit fighters.

    Said Mr Teo: “At the core of the issue is an ideological battle, between those who distort Islam for their violent political ends, and those who uphold the tenets of Islam as a religion of peace.”

    His speech comes amid growing concern about foreigners, especially from Europe and the United States, travelling to Syria to join rebels in their fight against President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

    Mr Teo noted that the Internet and social media had been a “game-changer” in the conflict, allowing extremists to market their cause and also recruit foreigners to fight.

    Some extremists have also been posting selfies online, attracting young people through the “jihad cool” factor, he said.

    He urged Singaporeans to keep a lookout for family members and friends, and to bring them to the attention of authorities if there are any signs of them becoming radicalised.

    “By intervening early…(we) would be saving these individuals from taking a course of action that would have caused them and others harm,” he said.

    Singaporeans who want to help Syrian civilians who are victims of the violence, should check with the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore, or Muis, to see if humanitarian organisations they are donating to are bona fide, and not just fronts for extremists to raise funds, he added.

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/parliament-syrian-conflict-security-concern-some-sporean

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  • Don’t Discriminate Filipinos, We Are Malays Too

    Maria Menado

     

    I’m getting frustrated being labeled as non-Malay. Why? Here’s my story.

    My mom is a Filipino Catholic and my dad is a Malay Muslim. None of my parents convert, and so I was brought up going to church several times a year. Never been to a mosque because my dad has never cultivate any Islamic values in me or in our family. At this age, I still don’t know what is my religion, and I like it that way. But this topic is not about my religion. Being brought up speaking both Malay and Tagalog, and having experience both cultures, I do have a valid testimony to this confusion. Today I want to share my story about being a Filipino-Malay.

    But first, I think the term Filipino Malay is oxymoronic.

    Filipinos are of Malay stock. I know because I study SEA’s history in uni and this is my area of research.

    People of ASEAN mostly they came from Malay stock that is why our face and skin complexion looks very much the same. Although there are many mixed marriage it didn’t only happen in the Philippines.

    In the Philippines they call it mestizo while in other countries they have their own abbreviation. Please don’t think that Malay people in the Philippines are the only Malay who practice inter-racial marriages. There are many others in Indonesia (Dutch), Malaysia & Singapore (Chinese, Indian, British, Portuguese), Brunei etc.

    Because of different religious background people may forget that Filipinos are actually Malay because predominantly Malays in ASEAN are Muslim while in the Philippines almost all of them are Catholic.

    You don’t lump the race Malay as people who subscribe to the religion Islam, and therefore they are Muslims. Neither do you claim all Filipinos are Catholics.

    Language is a little bit different but they derived from the ancient Malay language. While Indonesians, Malaysians, and Bruneians can understand each other, many find it hard to understand Tagalog because it is completely different language BUT there are words that are similar or sounded similar. I don’t think there is any problem if people from these countries want to learn Tagalog/Bahasa Melayu/Indonesia.

    Tagalog is partly influenced by Spanish language, Malay, Chinese and local language like kapampangan, waray, cebuano.

    Spanish = trabajo is trabaho in tagalog
    Malay = kerbau is carabao in tagalog, mata is same in both language, as of kanan, kambing, anak etc.

    If asked about their race, most Filipinos would identify as being Malay. Filipinos are taught in schools to be proud of their Malay heritage and encouraged to strengthen their ties with other Malays in Southeast Asia.

    But Filipinos wishing to migrate in Singapore have to deny this fundamental identification because the Singapore government rejects the classification of Filipinos as Malay. But if Filipinos are not Malay, what ethnicity are they? Officially, Singapore recognizes immigrants from the neighboring Philippines as part of the racial category referred to as “Other.”

    Singapore’s Immigration and Checkpoints Authority have clarified that new Singapore citizens of Filipino origin are not classified as Malays. They are typically classified as ‘Others’ under the race category. Indeed, this was affirmed by Communications and Information Minister Yaacob Ibrahim who wrote on Facebook that Filipinos are classified as “Others” and not as Malays.

    But why refuse the Malay background of Filipinos in the first place? Perhaps it has something to do with the special privileges accorded to the Malay minority in Singapore. Article 152 of the Constitution of Singapore states that the government “shall recognize the special position of the Malays, who are the indigenous people of Singapore, and accordingly it shall be the responsibility of the Government to protect, safeguard, support, foster and promote their political, educational, religious, economic, social and cultural interests and the Malay language.”

    For Filipino immigrants, it must come as a shock for them to be told by Singaporean authorities that they are not Malays. To avoid immigration troubles, perhaps it is more convenient for Filipino workers to shade the “Others” category when filing paperwork than to insist that they are Malays.

    Source: Marie Joy Talib

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