Tag: Malaysia

  • ‘Saya Bukan Aliff Aziz, Berhenti Ganggu Saya’ – Mohd Faris

    ‘Saya Bukan Aliff Aziz, Berhenti Ganggu Saya’ – Mohd Faris

    SUSULAN kontroversi hangat penyanyi kelahiran Singapura, Aliff Aziz, bukan jejaka bernama Alif sahaja terkena tempias malahan orang yang tiada kena mengena dengan nama tersebut pun turut ada yang menjadi mangsa.

    Apa yang terjadi kali ini?

    Hal ini bermula apabila terdapat satu status di laman Twitter milik Aliff yang bertulis “Jangan nak kecam sangat, siapa tak puas hati kol aku 0111192**** , bangsa* Haters”.

    Berikutan itu, seorang ahli perniagaan, Mohd Faris Mohd Ali telah menerima lebih daripada 7,000 mesej di aplikasi Whatsapp, 400 panggilan telefon dan hampir 100 khidmat pesanan ringkas (SMS) memaki hamun, menghina serta tidak kurang yang mencabarnya untuk bergaduh.

    Nombor telefon miliknya telah disalah guna oleh orang tidak bertanggungjawab dan menjadi tular kononnya ia adalah milik penyanyi kelahiran Singapura itu.

    “Saya bukan Aliff Aziz, tolong berhenti hubungi nombor telefon saya. 
    Saya mula terima gangguan pada 5 pagi semalam dan tak tahu apa-apa sehinggalah tunang saya beritahu yang nombor saya sudah disebarkan. 
     “Ada yang memasukkan saya dalam kumpulan Whatsapp dan ada juga yang saya sudah jelaskan yang tertera dalam Twitter itu bukan nombor Aliff.

    Bagaimanapun, sehingga sekarang saya masih diganggu tanpa henti walaupun saya sudah kongsi di Facebook dan buat laporan polis,” katanya dipetik sebuah portal online.

    Faris mengatakan bahawa dia telah membuat laporan di Balai Polis Sepang dan juga Suruhanjaya Komunikasi dan Multimedia Malaysia (SKMM).

    Selain itu, dia juga berkemungkinan akan mematikan talian tersebut sekiranya gangguan masih berterusan.

    Dalam pada itu, Aliff pula dalam satu kenyataan media mengatakan dia tidak tahu menahu dan menafikan ada kena mengena dengan penyebaran nombor berkenaan.

    “Saya akui itu akaun saya tetapi akaun itu sudah digodam oleh individu tidak bertanggungjawab. Saya tidak tahu mengenai twit (status) itu. “Saya hanya sedar bila dah tular dan keluar di Twitter. Akaun itu digodam oleh orang lain dan lagipun saya sudah lama tidak aktif di Twitter,” ujar Aliff.

    Aliff juga memohon agar orang yang tidak bertanggungjawab tersebut segera memulangkan semula akaun miliknya itu.

    Semalam, telah berlangsung sidang media Aliff dan isterinya, Bella Astillah tentang kontroversi yang telah melanda rumah tangga mereka.

    Sidang media itu telah diadakan di Crystal Hall, Roff Garden, Bukit Jelutong bermula kira-kira jam 2.45 petang dan berakhir pada 4.20 petang.

    Source: http://carianpanas.blogspot.sg

  • Mahathir Hits Back At Dig About His Indian Roots

    Mahathir Hits Back At Dig About His Indian Roots

    Former Malaysian premier Mahathir Mohamad has been trading barbs with Prime Minister Najib Razak over the last two years over the scandal involving state fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), with Datuk Seri Najib defending his record and mounting counter attacks.

    In the past week, however, the attacks against Tun Dr Mahathir have also come from Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, as the government tries to weaken the standing of the 92-year-old politician among Malay voters.

    Dr Mahathir was a feared strongman during his 22 years as prime minister until 2003, but it is now open season for him as he leads the opposition alliance into the next election.

    Dr Mahathir still has some influence among older Malays, as his leadership brought economic prosperity to Malaysia and lifted many Malay families from poverty.

    Mr Najib has attacked Dr Mahathir in recent weeks by reminding the public that many scandals happened during the Mahathir era, including the foreign-exchange losses incurred by the central bank in the 1980s, which ran into billions of dollars, local media has reported.

    Mr Najib also claimed that the MRT system should have been built long ago to boost public transport, but Dr Mahathir instead threw billions of dollars away setting up a national car industry through Proton.

    Datuk Seri Zahid joined the attacks last weekend when he took a dig at Dr Mahathir’s ancestry, saying the veteran politician’s identity card (IC) showed he was Indian because his name was stated as Mahathir a/l Iskandar Kutty. The “a/l” refers to “anak lelaki”, or “son of”, a naming convention used by Malaysians of Indian descent. Malay men on their ICs carry “bin”, which refers to “son of”, in the patronymic style used in Malaysia.

    Mr Zahid also read out the full IC number of Dr Mahathir, which alarmed some observers as this was supposed to be confidential information.

    The former PM called Mr Zahid, who is also Home Minister, a “big liar” as there was no such IC.

    “This is good enough to show that Zahid is a big liar. A big liar because he cannot show the blue-coloured identity card,” Dr Mahathir said on Monday, in a video on the Facebook page of his party Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia. “I can still remember the first identity card I received. I was still in university at the time.”

    Dr Mahathir’s daughter Marina Mahathir said Iskandar was the name of her father’s grandfather.

    While not denying her Indian heritage, she said the late Iskandar had married into a prominent Malay family.

    Mr Zahid’s deputy at the Home Ministry, Datuk Nur Jazlan Mohamed, defended his boss yesterday, saying the IC is a public record and there was nothing wrong in sharing that information with the public.

    Dr Mahathir, in the same video, made his own explosive claim about Mr Zahid. The Deputy PM – not long after he was elevated to the position by Mr Najib – had asked him for support to become the next prime minister, said Dr Mahathir.

    “Zahid should remember, when he became the DPM, he came to see me to try and seek my sympathy, my support,” Dr Mahathir said in the video. “I told Zahid the truth. Even if Najib were to resign, which is impossible, Zahid must still wait for Umno to decide who should replace Najib.”

     

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/

  • China Wants This Malaysian Port To Rival Singapore

    China Wants This Malaysian Port To Rival Singapore

    The Straits of Malacca have been a gateway for China for centuries in its quest for power.

    A story blended from Malaysian history and folklore says an emperor sent a princess called Hang Li Poto marry the Sultan of Malacca in the Ming Dynasty, offering a ship filled with gold needles. He also sent a blunt message. “For every gold needle, there is a subject. If you can count the number of needles, you will learn the true extent of my power”, the emperor reportedly said in a letter.

    Hundreds of years later, China is again seeking influence in Malaysia as it spreads its economic and military clout through South-east Asia. It is investing billions in a US$7.2 billion (S$9.8 billion) redevelopment that will see Malacca, long the haunt of Chinese traders, become a new deep sea port.

    It is also providing funds for infrastructure projects down the eastern seaboard of Malaysia, key heartland areas for Prime Minister Najib Razak ahead of an election that could be held this year. New roads and bridges may help him woo ethnic Malays, but the money could come at a long-term cost.

    “The closeness with China is an Achilles heel for Najib,” said Dr Mustafa Izzuddin, a fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore. “While investment coming in will balloon government coffers and boost the economy, the opposition is using the China card to criticise the government for becoming too close to China and accusing it of selling Malaysia’s sovereignty.”

    China’s investment in Malaysia has risen since Mr Xi Jinping took power in 2012, with the president describing ties with Mr Najib as the “best ever”. Beijing is readying a state visit by Mr Xi to Malaysia in the coming months, according to three people with knowledge of the plans who asked not to be identified given the sensitivity of the discussions.

    China has committed to import goods worth US$2 trillion from Malaysia over the next five years (a nearly eight-fold jump from 2016 imports over that period), invest up to US$150 billion in the country and offer 10,000 places for training in China.

    Mr Najib brought home US$33.6 billion in deals when he visited China in November — the biggest haul yet between the countries — plus an agreement to buy four patrol boats from China.

    China has been Malaysia’s largest trading partner since 2009, displacing Singapore, with two-way trade last year valued at US$83.4 billion. China is Malaysia’s biggest export market.

    Malaysia, like Singapore, has strong historical links to China. About a quarter of its population is ethnically Chinese, and traders for centuries stopped at ports in Malacca and Penang to sell silk, tea and porcelain while buying cinnamon and nutmeg. There is even a fusion cuisine based on Chinese and Malay ingredients, called Peranakan or Nyonya.

    Chinese companies accounted for 8 billion yuan (S$1.6 billion) in construction projects in Malaysia in 2015, DBS analyst Chong Tjen-San said in an April report — nearly half the total value of projects clinched by foreign contractors.

    “We are going to be drawn into the economic gravity of China,” said Mr Steven CM Wong, deputy chief executive of the Institute of Strategic and International Studies Malaysia, at a conference on Mr Xi’s Belt-and-Road trade project in Kuala Lumpur last month. “Just as if you are in North America, you are drawn into the economic gravity of the United States,” he said. “This is not what we want or we don’t want. It’s just the way things are.”

    Still, the money risks being caught up in domestic politics. Mr Najib’s critics, including former premier-turned-opposition leader Mahathir Mohamad, say the country will need to cede influence to China in exchange for its money, and that local businesses will lose out.

    “Much of the most valuable land will now be owned and occupied by foreigners,” Dr Mahathir wrote on his blog in January. “In effect they will become foreign land.”

    Mr Najib, in an article published in May in the South China Morning Post before a visit to China, said that he made “no apologies for wanting to build world-class infrastructure for Malaysia that will, with local ownership being preserved, open up huge swathes of our country”. His office did not respond to requests for comment.

    Some analysts said Najib risks being painted as too close to China. While the countries both claim parts of the disputed South China Sea, for example, Malaysia has been mostly quiet on China’s military build up in the region.

    “There are perceptions that Najib is being bought by the Chinese,” said Professor Bridget Welsh, a political scientist at John Cabot University in Rome and author of The End of UMNO? Essays on Malaysia’s Dominant Party.

    “Within Malaysia, China’s interventions have the potential to bring about greater ethnic tensions and political instability, as well as affect Malaysia’s relationships with its neighbours,” she said.

    The Malacca Strait already has sufficient port facilities, according to opposition Selangor state legislator Teng Chang Khim. “Why can’t you make use of the present ports?” Mr Teng said at the Belt-and-Road conference.

    Deputy Secretary General for Trade Isham Ishak said the government would seek to balance its relationship with China.

    “We want to make sure that there’s fair value in terms of investments from China into Malaysia,” he said at the same conference. “It’s not only about Chinese products coming in, Chinese money coming in, and Chinese foreign workers coming in.”

    Investment in infrastructure is good for Malaysia whether it comes from China or the US, according to Mr Xu Bu, China’s ambassador to the Association of South-east Asian Nations.

    “Whoever comes to power that really doesn’t matter,” he said in a July interview. “Whoever comes to power in Malaysia, the leaders or the people in Malaysia they need investment.”

    Mr Harrison Cheng, a senior analyst with Control Risks in Singapore, said there were signs of unease in some quarters of Mr Najib’s United Malays National Organisation about Chinese investments.

    Still, UMNO’s core voters are more interested in bread-and-butter issues, he said. “There has yet to be any strong signs of a serious backlash within UMNO and the public.”

     

    Source: http://www.todayonline.com

  • Zed Zaidi: Aliff Aziz Tak Respect Artis Malaysia, Akan Dicari Sampai Dapat Kalau Aliff Perangai Lagi

    Zed Zaidi: Aliff Aziz Tak Respect Artis Malaysia, Akan Dicari Sampai Dapat Kalau Aliff Perangai Lagi

    Boleh tahan beremosi juga Zed Zaidi memberi pandangan mengenai isu Aliff Aziz yang hangat diperkatakan baru baru ini. Walaubagaimanapun, Zed selaku Presiden Seniman itu juga dalam masa yang sama masih menghormati pelakon berkenaan.

    “Dari sudut pandangan saya, bagi saya, Aliff, lu memang tak gentleman. Sebab sebagai lelaki patut kita menghormati wanita lebih lebih lagi isteri kita yagn memang sentiasa di belakang kita”

    “Kalau nak cakap jujur, bagi akulah, kau ni dah mencemarkan imej artis Malaysia. Walaupun kau bukan artis Malaysia, kau kena respek artis Malaysia,” antara kata-katanya kepada Rotikaya.

    Selain itu, Zed turut mengaitkan beberapa lagi kes melibatkan artis luar yang datang ke Malaysia sebelum ini dan menegaskan mengapa dia ingin menghalang kebanjiran artis luar negara di Malaysia. Namun kata Zed, jika ingin bawa artis luar datang ke Malaysia, biarlah yang berkualiti dan membantu industri tanah air terutamanya dari sudut cukai.

    Di penghujung video, Zed sempat menyuarakan lagi pendapatnya sendiri berkenaan isu tersebut selain menegaskan supaya Aliff Aziz tidak mengulangi perkara yang sama buat kali kedua.

    “Aku ni tahan sabar ni sebab apa sebab aku masih respect kau lagi sebab isteri kau. Kau kena ingat tau, isteri yang kau pukul tu rakyat Malaysia tau. Aku buat complaindengan imigresen dan macam-macam – yang memang kau tak boleh masuk Malaysialah”

    “Jadi, masa ni aku masih respect. Jadi jaga perangai kau. Kau dah berjanji tadi aku tengok, yang memang kau tak nak buat lagi. Tapi kali kedua kau buat, lu jagalah bro, gua cari lu sampai dapat,” tegasnya menutup bicara.

    Jika anda mempunyai banyak masa, bolehlah tonton video pendek di bawah untuk mendengar sendiri apa yang diperkatakan oleh Zed Zaidi.

     

    Source: https://terbakor.com

  • Mark This Date 31 Dec 2024, Can Take MRT Into JB

    Mark This Date 31 Dec 2024, Can Take MRT Into JB

    JOHOR BARU – Singaporeans will be able to hop on an MRT train in Woodlands to cross the border to Johor Baru by Dec 31, 2024.

    The Rapid Transit System (RTS) Link can carry up to 10,000 passengers an hour in each direction between Johor’s Bukit Chagar terminus station and the Singapore terminus in Woodlands North, where it will join the upcoming Thomson-East Coast Line (TEL).

    It is slated to greatly improve transport connectivity between Singapore and Malaysia, providing an alternative option for reducing congestion at border crossings.

    The new starting date for the line was announced in a joint statement on Monday (July 31) after the 13th meeting of the Malaysia-Singapore Joint Ministerial Committee for Iskandar Malaysia.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com