Tag: Malaysia

  • Termuntah Dekat Kedai Mamak Pun Perlu Bayar Mahal

    Termuntah Dekat Kedai Mamak Pun Perlu Bayar Mahal

    Nasi Kandar Pelita Jalan Ampang KL

    AHAD
    Tarikh : 2.4.17
    Jam 5 pagi

    Berlaku satu kejadian Seorang customer mabuk masuk kedai & order makan lepas tu muntah penuh dalam pinggan dan atas meja.

    Memang patut pihak Pelita Nasi Kandar charge RM 15 untuk cuci najis muntah tu bahkan pinggan tersebut juga telah dibuang.

    Kalau kanak2 muntah dalam kedai tidak pernah kenakan sebarang charge.

    Laporan polis telah dibuat oleh pihak Pelita Nasi Kandar berserta rakaman CCTV.

    Harap maklum.
    Terima kasih

     

    Source: KL Online

  • KL Sets Up Website To Counter Fake News

    KL Sets Up Website To Counter Fake News

    Malaysia’s multimedia watchdog has launched a website to allow citizens to check the authenticity of information spread through social media and to counter fake news.

    Called Sebenarnya (“actually” in Malay), it was launched on Tuesday by the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission.

    “False news not only confuses, but could also threaten security, prosperity and the well-being of the people and country,” said Communications and Multimedia Minister Salleh Said Keruak at the launch.

    “This does not only happen in Malaysia, but also in the United States, Indonesia and European countries,” he said, adding that the Sebenarnya site will ensure members of the public receive only “real news”.

    The minister also said that the communications and multimedia commission had identified nearly 1,000 false news items of public interest being spread in the country.

    He said such items and related information would be gathered, analysed, validated and uploaded to the news site, sebenarnya.my, for reference by the public regardless of their political background.

    For example, the site’s lead item posted last Saturday said in Malay: “Fake: Viral post on social media claims that a Malaysian military personnel was hurt by an explosion.

    “Actually: The army denied reports that its soldier was hit by a bomb, with the photo that went viral having been snapped at a ceremony marking the end of a medical course in Syed Sirajuddin Camp in Gemas.”

     

    Source: ST

  • Perkasa: Singapore Minister’s Remark An Insult To King, Government

    Perkasa: Singapore Minister’s Remark An Insult To King, Government

    Malay right-wing group Perkasa wants Wisma Putra to send a letter of protest to Singapore for comments attributed to a senior minister comparing Singapore Malays with Malaysian Malays.

    Singapore Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam had been reported as saying that Singapore Malays are better off in terms of education standing, skills and wealth than those of similar ethicnicity in Malaysia or Indonesia.

    Perkasa deputy chairman Sirajuddin Salleh said the statement made by Shanmugam was uncalled for.

    “I am concerned about the statement. It is not diplomatic and is an insult to the King and the government of Malaysia,” he told FMT when asked to comment on Shanmugam’s statement.

    Sirajuddin said Malaysia and Singapore were close neighbours and there should be greater diplomacy between both countries.

    “I hope Wisma Putra will issue a strong protest letter. To me, the remark is not good. I will not touch on the content because it is very subjective.

    “It is just like if he comes to my house and says something that is not nice. Whether he is right or not, that is subjective, but in this case, it is not very nice,” Sirajuddin said.

    Earlier Channel News Asia quoted Shanmugam as saying that “with a stable, strong political system, with a strong government, with a guarantee for the minorities … with this framework, we can become the community that Muslim societies in other countries look towards and say, this is the example.”

    Shanmugam had also suggested that Malay, Indian and Chinese PMETs (professionals, managers, executives and technicians) from Singapore were better off than those of the same race, respectively, in Malaysia.

    However, the minister had cautioned that while Singapore was doing better compared with many parts of the world, “within Singapore there is still a gap” and they were no longer just competing with Malaysia or Indonesia, but instead competing with the world.

    He said the proportion of Malay Primary 1 students who go on to post-secondary education had doubled from 45% in 1995 to 93% in 2015. Those who eventually receive polytechnic diplomas, professional qualifications or university degrees have “gone up over a five-year period to 21%.”

    Shanmugam added that the proportion of Malays working as PMETs increased to 28% in 2010 and their median real monthly income per capita had doubled since 1990.

    Nearly 90% of Malay households in Singapore own their own homes, according to Shanmugam.

    However, he singled out three challenges facing the Malay-Muslim community in the country – radicalisation, loss of jobs and the over-representation of Malays being caught for crimes and drug abuse.

    Citing a Pew Research Centre study which showed that 10% of Malaysian Malays had a favourable opinion of Islamic State (IS), and that nearly one-quarter were not prepared to come out and say that IS is wrong, Shanmugam said that Singapore Malays must not get to that level.

    “A key part of that depends on you, the leaders of the Malay community, and whether you can make sure that the right religious values are put forth. We have to work hard at this because the influences are on the internet,” Shanmugam reportedly told a seminar organised by the Association of Muslim Professionals in Singapore.

    On drug abuse, Shanmugam had said 53% of those arrested for drug abuse last year were Malays. This is an increase from 10 years ago when the proportion of Malays arrested for the same was 32%.

     

    Source: freemalaysiatoday

  • Malaysia Attorney-General: Non-Muslims Rattled By Increasing Islamisation

    Malaysia Attorney-General: Non-Muslims Rattled By Increasing Islamisation

    NON-MUSLIMS are against Islamic criminal law amendments as they perceive them as another step towards the Islamisation of Malaysia, Attorney-General Mohamed Apandi Ali candidly told The Malaysian Insight yesterday.

    It does not help either that the Syariah Courts (Criminal Jurisdiction) Act 1965 (or better known by its Bahasa Malaysia acronym, RUU 355) Bill was mooted by PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang, the propagator of hudud laws in Kelantan in the 1990s, with Terengganu following suit later.

    Wading into the issue after Barisan Nasional decided not to table Hadi’s private member’s bill in line with the principle of consensus, Apandi said this issue was always going to be a problem.

    “When Hadi introduced this bill and tried to incorporate the 100 lashes and other severe punishment, the perception of non-Muslims was that hudud is coming, in the guise of the private member’s bill.”

    In fact, Apandi said, RUU 355 was simply to amend the existing Syariah Criminal Law Act to enhance punishments.

    It was also to give Muslims a sense of “feeling good”, as the shariah court currently is even lower than the powers of the magistrate’s court. RUU 355 was to have increased the power of the shariah court  to the position of a Sessions Court.

    “They (non-Muslims), however, read it as the beginning of an Islamic state government like the ones in Iran, Iraq and Syria, despite being told it was not applicable to non-Muslims. That is why the strong resistance.”

    On a personal note, Apandi is relieved that the ruling federal coalition had made a U-turn on RUU 355, as that meant he would not have to draft the amendments to Hadi’s bill, which he felt would have been opposed anyway.

    “When we draft, we have to show that it is a government bill, so in the first place, my office will have to make sure that it is different from Hadi’s draft.

    “So maybe, just maybe, we may exclude Sabah (and Sarawak), to make it different, and even reduce the sentences.

    “On the number of strokes, and even the sentences, I would have probably reduced them.

    “The difference from the current laws which the Syariah Court Criminal Jurisdiction covers, imprisonment is only up to three years. They want to change it to 30 years, such a big disparity.

    “As for fines, currently it is RM1,000, they want to increase it to RM100,000. The disparity is so big. People are going to start questioning the logic behind this.

    “So that is why the perception by the people outside will be ‘Oh, this is definitely going to be hudud’.”

    Apandi also said he had mentioned the matter to BN politicians and they have indicated their concerns to him.

    Many had said it would be difficult for them to explain to their supporters if the government had adopted Hadi’s bill.

    They had also warned that BN could lose seats, especially in Sarawak and Sabah, if the government did not make that RUU 355 U-turn.

    Apandi also feels RUU 355 was more political than legal.

    “The purpose and intention of this is to reap political mileage. Have you heard anybody from the public clamouring for increase of powers of the shariah court? No, nobody asking is asking for it, isn’t it?

    “To my reading, it is mainly political. He (Hadi) has to satisfy the states that have already established hudud laws.

    “People in those states are beginning to question him: ‘Hey, we have the law, why can’t we enforce them? What’s happened?’ He needs to say something to these states. And that is why he is trying to get federal support.

    “So, yes… it’s political!”

     

    Source: www.themalaysianinsight.com

  • Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Says Barisan Nasional Won’t Push Shariah Bill

    Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Says Barisan Nasional Won’t Push Shariah Bill

    Barisan Nasional will not table amendments to increase Shariah punishments being sought by Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Wednesday (March 29).

    The prime minister and BN chairman said this was decided by the coalition following its supreme council meeting this evening.

    “Therefore it will remain a Private Member’s Bill and if it is presented, it will depend on the Speakers instructions,” he was quoted as saying by the Star Online news portal.

    BN previously said it would take over PAS president Abdul Hadi Awang’s proposal and convert it into a government Bill eventually.

    Wednesday night’s announcement will remove the obligation that would have existed for BN federal lawmakers to support the amendments were these tabled by the government.

    Mr Hadi’s Bill may now fail to even surface in Parliament; he was only able to table the motion for his Bill last year after an Umno minister intervened to elevate it above government matters.

    Aside from Umno, the Bill to raise Shariah sentencing limits to 30 years’ jail, RM100,000 (S$31,588) fine and 100 strokes of the cane has been opposed by BN components.

    Umno has used the issue to court federal opposition party PAS ostensibly for Malay-Muslim unity.

    Mr Najib’s announcement could also prompt changes to the political landscape in which PAS had been drifting away from other opposition parties and aligning itself with Umno, the only party to openly support the former’s ambitions on Islamic laws.

     

    Source: Today