Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Pusat Bantuan Guaman Johor Ke Labis/Johore Legal Aid Coming To Labis




Pusat Bantuan Guaman Johor dengan kerjasama JEWEL menganjurkan Kempen Kesedaran Undang-undang di Bandar Chaah, Labis, Johor. Butir-butir adalah seperti berikut:-

Tarikh: 4 Julai 2010

Masa: 10.00 pagi hingga 3.00 petang

Tempat: SJK (Tamil) Labis

Khidmat bantuan guaman dan nasihat mengenai undang-undang boleh diperolehi mengenai permohonan untuk sijil kelahiran, isu kewarganegaraan, hak-hak pekerja dan lain-lain.

Untuk keterangan lanjut, sila menghubungi Pusat Bantuan Guaman Johor pada nombor telefon: 07-2235698.

Johore Legal Aid Centre in cooperation with JEWEL will bring the Law Awareness Campaign to the town of Chaah, Labis, Johore. Details are as follows:-

Date: 4 July 2010

Time: 10.00 am to 3.00 pm

Venue: SJK (Tamil) Labis

Legal aid and legal advice can be obtained pertaining to application for birth certificate, citizenship, employee’s rights etc.

For further enquiries, kindly contact Johore Legal Aid Centre at telephone no: 07-2235698.

Monday, June 28, 2010

NGOs Call For Sex Education



Published by The Star, 28 June 2010.

PETALING JAYA: Many teenagers are having sex and this calls for an urgent need to introduce sex education in schools, said leaders of several non-governmental organisations caring for children.

Shelter Home executive director James Nayagam, who has been assisting pregnant teenagers for 30 years, said no amount of campaigning and counselling would prevent teenagers from experimenting with sex.

“A comprehensive sex education will be a better source of information than their friends,” said Nayagam, adding that preventing unwanted pregnancies and abandoned babies was its ultimate goal.


He had come across cases where girls had sex when they were having their periods, as they wrongly assumed they would not get pregnant this way.

James also assisted a 14-year-old who had three abortions, all of them in back lane ‘‘clinics’’. She had since moved in with an aunty.

Dr Hartini Zainudin, the general manager of the Nur Salam halfway house for single mothers and children in Chow Kit asked: “Which is the bigger problem? Us being shy to teach our kids about sex, or having to deal with rising cases of abandoned babies?”

OrphanCARE president Datuk Adnan Mohd Tahir said sex should be a topic to be discussed openly with the youths to help them obtain more accurate information.

Christine Alphonse, a counsellor at the Ti-Ratana Welfare Society’s welfare home, said youths should also be taught about the consequences of having sex – and if they were prepared to handle issues such as unwanted pregnancies.

In Petaling Jaya, Datuk Seri Shahrizat Abd Jalil said a 2004 survey on 1,700 young adults ages between 13 and 24 showed more than 50% of the respondents did not know in detail about the functions of reproductive organs.

“Teenagers lack information and access to birth control methods. Many teenagers are also not taught about ways to deal with peer pressure and how to say ‘no’ to sex before they are ready,” said Women, Family and Community Development Minister.

Between 2005 and 2009, the police reported 407 cases of child abandonment, nationwide.

“The statistics up till April 2010 recorded 24 cases. The statistics are increasing every year,” said Shahrizat in response to a report in The Star on Saturday about the higher number of teen pregnancy recorded by the Welfare Department.

Shahrizat said her ministry would propose to the Government to include Social and Reproductive Health (SRH) as part of the co-curriculum programmes in primary and secondary schools.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Cock-eyed View Of What Constitutes Non-Muslim Rights

Published by The Malaysian Insider.
By Francis Loh.






JUNE 23 — Too bad, Nazri resorted to stereo-typed notions of ‘non-Muslims’ and cock-eyed ideas of what constitutes their rights, observes Francis Loh. No wonder there’s no 1 Malaysia!

“You must remember that the country does not belong to the Muslims. There are things that sometimes non-Muslims do, for example, gambling. It is their culture, their way of life and we have to respect their rights.” Apparently, the minister in the prime minister’s department, Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz, expressed these words which grabbed the headlines on 20 June.

Minister Nazri is absolutely right that the country does not belong to the Muslims.

He is also correct to insist that Muslims have to respect non-Muslim rights, and he should have added ‘and vice versa’.

But he is absolutely wrong to suggest that gambling is a non-Muslim “way of life” that ought to be respected. This is a cock-eyed view of what constitutes non-Muslim culture, even less that it is a non-Muslim right that must be respected.

First, gambling is a world-wide phenomenon and gamblers come from all continents, countries and religions. If one doubts this, recall how there have been some big-time Muslim state-exco and dignitary gamblers who have hit the headlines about their debts ever so often. The point is that gambling has nothing to do with any religion. In the event, all religions discourage their followers from gambling. And only some non-Muslims and Muslims gamble. Most do not.

Second, the BN government has consistently argued that certain civil liberties and rights must be curbed for the greater common good. This is why they argue we have the ISA, the Societies Act, the Printing Presses and Publications Act, Trade Unions Act, Sedition Act, etc. Time-and-time again, we have argued against these unnecessary curbs imposed upon the rakyat via the introduction of additional acts of parliament. Yet, suddenly, when it comes to gambling, the BN government takes the stand that gambling is an absolute right and we should respect that right. Whatever happened to those other more fundamental liberties to express ourselves, to gather and to associate, among others?

Third, it is most regrettable that the BN government and the minister chose to portray gambling as such an integral part of non-Muslim rights. Where was the minister and what is the stance of the BN government when it comes to having access to land to build a church or temple in general, or in a specific area, say in a part of Shah Alam, where the majority of the population is Muslim? Or to use particular Bahasa Malaysia words in non-Muslim worship and in their religious publications? For that matter, do we have absolute rights when it comes to choosing our religions? And converting from one religion to another? Cakap tak serupa bikin?

Finally, the minister needs reminding that all religions share many values in common. It is not just a common abhorrence towards gambling. All religions also teach their followers to be compassionate to all, indeed regardless of the religion the other professes. All religions also teach us to respect women, to live in harmony with Nature which is part of God’s creation, and to extend a helping hand especially to the needy and the downtrodden.

Too bad, the minister resorted to stereo-typed notions of ‘non-Muslims’ and cock-eyed ideas of what constitutes their rights. No wonder there’s no 1 Malaysia! — Aliran Online

*Dr Francis Loh is secretary of Aliran.


Sunday, June 20, 2010

Sarawak: Land Of The Filthy Rich & Destitute












Exclusive Taibs Foreign Property Portfolio

Published by Sarawak Report, June 15th, 2010 GMT.

Twin glass towers and a swish shopping complex at Preston Square in downtown Ottawa form just part of an enormous foreign property portfolio controlled in Canada by the family of Sarawak Chief Minister, Abdul Taib Mahmud, according to our exclusive investigations.

These buildings alone are worth at least one hundred million dollars and generate a healthy rental income from some of Canada’s top corporations, including Xerox, Adobe and Sun Life, who rent office space and retail outlets. Numerous Canadian Government Ministries are also listed at the building.

The Preston Square development lies at the centre of the major Canadian property empire run by the developer Sakto, which was founded in the early 1980s by Taib’s college-aged son Mahmud Abu Bekir Taib, his daughter Jamilah and his brother Onn Mahmud. It continues to be managed as a ‘family business’ by his now son-in-law, a Canadian, Sean Murray.

Read more here: http://sarawakreport.org/2010/06/exclusive-taibs-foreign-property-portfolio/

Shady Truths In 'Fancy' Sarawak

Published by Free Malaysia Today, 20 June 2010.

Chief Minister Taib Mamud has for years promised the people of Sarawak that in return for their land and destruction of the rainforest they would receive a future bathed in wealth and prosperity. He promised them a modern standard of living comparable to advanced countries.

But what is the evidence of this?

Sarawak which is the richest state in Malaysia has the poorest population. More than 60% of the population are said to be statistically living in poverty.

Over the years the poor have gotten poorer and hungrier without their lands to live off from.

In contrast the people around Taib and his friends have become richer, living a life in splendour that would have amazed Rajah Brooke himself.

Everything has been taken from the once fabulous interior of Sarawak and given to the rich businessmen from the coastal cities.


KLue Urbanscapes 2010 - 20 June

Saturday, June 19, 2010

UN Slams Malaysia's Detention-Without-Trial Laws



Published by The Malaysian Insider, 18 June 2010.

KUALA LUMPUR, June 18 — Malaysia needs to repeal or amend draconian laws that allow imprisonment without trial and have been used against opposition politicians, journalists and bloggers, a UN body said today.

The UN working group was invited by the government and has been in Malaysia for two weeks to look into arbitrary detentions. It gave a critical assessment on four preventive laws including the Internal Security Act (ISA).

“These preventive laws are exclusively administrative and do not allow intervention by the judiciary,” the group’s chairman, Malick Sow, told reporters. “It is a classic case of arbitrary detention.”

The ISA, which dates back to British colonial rule, permits detention without trial with detainees usually held incommunicado and rarely charged in court.

Its use has been justified on the grounds of maintaining national security although many of its high-profile victims have been opposition politicians.

Former Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, who now leads the opposition, was imprisoned under the ISA when he was the leader of a Muslim youth movement.

He is currently on trial on sodomy charges in what he says is a repeat of a politically motivated prosecution that saw him dismissed from office in 1998, put on trial and imprisoned.

The government had pledged to review the ISA before Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak took office in April last year but no changes have taken place yet.

The ISA and other laws are used against people suspected of criminal activity and against terror suspects.

Sow said the group privately interviewed detainees held under preventive laws and found no complaints about treatment by guards in prisons and detention centres.

However, the group found these detainees were likely to be tortured or mistreated in order to obtain confessions or evidence in police detention.

“It is not necessarily physical violence but also the external conditions and the withholding of food. There were few who said any particular tool was used to beat them but it was more to do with punching and kicking,” Sow said.

“They prefer prisons than police stations. They feel safer in prisons.”

The group will present a full report to the United Nations Human Rights Council in March next year and will follow up again two years after the report is presented.

Malaysia was re-elected to the UN Human Rights Council last month. — Reuters


Thursday, June 17, 2010

David Soggot: Lawyer who fought for justice in apartheid-era Namibia

Published by The Independent, 17 June 2010.
By Denis Herbstein.


David Henry Soggot, lawyer: born Johannesburg 7 August 1931; married firstly (two daughters), secondly (one son, one daughter); died Johannesburg 24 May 2010.

David Soggot's induction into the political life of the colony of South West Africa (now Namibia) was brutal and bloody. It was 1973, and the Anglican suffragan bishop in Windhoek, Richard Wood, unable to find a local lawyer to act on behalf of Swapo nationalists being flogged by South Africa's black quislings, had telephoned the human rights advocate in Johannesburg."I'll be on the next plane," was the response.

"Time was short," the bishop's wife, Cathy, recalled. "It all happened over a weekend. The victims came down the 300 miles from Ovamboland to our house, the Manse. They couldn't sit down. It was too painful. David took the statements in the living room while I typed them up." Church elders, schoolteachers and businessmen, men and women, told how they had been sjambokked in public, some of them 50 times, on their naked bottoms.

Soggot won a two-week injunction to halt the floggings. When he returned to the Windhoek court seeking a permanent ban he found that the judge had been transferred back to South Africa. The new bench of local men refused to renew the injunction, even refusing Soggot leave to appeal to the Appellate Division in South Africa. Though the movement was not outlawed, ordinary Swapo members faced further mediaeval punishment. Soggot persisted, and in time South Africa's chief justice ordered a permanent ban on arbitrary flogging.

David Henry Soggot was born in Johannesburg to Lithuanian Jewish immigrants. His father was a butcher while his mother brought up David and three older siblings. From Parktown Boys School, he studied law at the University of the Witwatersrand, where he was active in the Progressive Forum, affiliated to the Trotskyist Unity Movement.

He was not in harmony with the Communist party, where many white radicals found a home. His political contribution was in the courts. Over the years he advised the likes of Winnie Mandela; Terror Lekota, who later would launch the Congress of the People party; and Steve Biko, father figure of Black Consciousness and the country's most influential black politician.

In a lengthy show trial, nine leaders of the Black Consciousness Movement were charged in 1975 under the Treason Act, though it was their ideas rather than their deeds at stake. Biko was not charged and became a defence witness. As he was restricted to Eastern Cape, Soggot obtained permission for him to live in his home during the trial.

The lawyer's meticulous examination and his admiration for the charismatic leader offered Biko the chance to lay out as never before his political philosophy. Inevitably, all the defendants were convicted and sent to Robben Island prison. Biko was punished as well. In 1977, the police killed him.

Meanwhile Soggot had been briefed to defend a group of Namibians charged with murdering Chief Elifas, the Ovambo leader responsible for the floggings. Soggot wasn't able to appear in the trial but later defended Victor Nkandi, charged with driving the assassins to the bar where Elifas was killed. His tireless cross-examination revealed violent police interrogation practices, with prisoners suspended upside down from iron bars and electrodes clamped to testicles and women's breasts, conducted in a sinister waarheidskamer (truth room).

The case collapsed, the judge blaming "unreliable black witnesses", not the police. "There was not a single police witness," he said, "who did not make a favourable impression upon the court." The judge president was so annoyed with defence counsel that he threatened a contempt of court charge because the counsel's well-used robe was torn.

Justin Ellis, a Namibian friend, said of Soggot that he "understood that the courts could be used to create a very public drama, different from other media, showing something of what was going on in the country. Previously we had not had lawyers in Namibia who were willing, and fully able, to take on the South African government in this way. It was a real and courageous contribution to bringing that crazy and violent era to an end, and limiting the violence of the heritage."

There were other trials. Millions had seen television shots of young men "necklacing", hanging burning tyres around the necks of, a suspected scab. The death penalty seemed certain but Soggot found an American social psychologist who introduced the phenomenon of "de-individuation" to explain the frenzied behaviour of the accused. They were convicted, but with mitigating circumstances and so avoided the gallows.

His activities did not please the security police. There were menacing phone calls, his car tyres were shredded, and after he had exposed serious assaults on Robben Island prisoners in 1977 the Minister of Justice attempted, unsuccessfully, to ban him from contact with political prisoners. Not surprisingly, he was not made a judge in the apartheid years, nor would he have accepted the offer. After the Mandela thaw, he sat several times as an acting judge. Earlier in his career he had lectured in political science at his old university.

But life was by no means all blood and courts. When time allowed, he enjoyed flying his Piper Cub. A bon viveur, he spent a large part of the year in London with his second wife Greta, or in France, where he learned to speak the language as well as he did English and Afrikaans. In his final years, ill-health prevented him from indulging most of his passions but he found solace in painting.


Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Case #1: All Is Not Lost!

This article What are we teaching our young women? reminds me of a client.

He has passed away a few years ago hence this posting is not going to hurt his ego anymore. He was a widower. Saved every sen he earned but spent on cigarettes and beer. Met a woman of his dream, so he thought. You know, the feline type, wears skimpy blouse and shorts, purrs and loves close physical contact. Thirteen years younger than him. Registered their marriage against all the good old advice of his children and his drinking pals. What did they know? Love transgresses age gap. It’s between 2 consenting adults therefore the rest go fly kites!

Here comes the juicy part. The woman would ask for something from my client, usually right after he got his conjugal rights. Among others, an insurance policy for her benefit, a car under her name and a loan under my client’s name for her house. As he was talking, I could see where it was heading to and it was obvious to me that my client couldn’t see it then. Poor man!

As I’ve foreseen even before he has gotten down to the real issue, he was squeezed dry by her, physically [wink wink wink] and financially. Logically, she moved on to another “target” a.k.a. idiot/moron (I don’t mean mentally challenged though it’s close). I can’t believe there are so many targets these days. My client wanted to know how to recover his loss. I had to muster all the years of my discipline and training as a lawyer to control myself from bursting out with laughter and clapping my hands.

Anyway, I’ve successfully recovered part of his loss from that feline. As I recollect, the fees I charged him must’ve caused further loss and suffering. He didn’t complain though. I wanted to tell him this but didn’t have the courage, “You never suffer any loss, actually it’s just that you’ve overpaid for the sex. You had your share of fun so you shouldn’t complain”.

There, I’ve gotten it out of my chest after all these years! I’m sooo relieved...

Here is wisdom from Jesus for those who want to receive: Matthew 7:12 “So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets”.

So, Is Malaysia Going Bankrupt Or Not?




Extracted from The Malaysian Insider.







KUALA LUMPUR, June 9 — The government is considering moving the Parliament to the Putrajaya administrative capital, a move which could cost up to RM800 million...

The minister said another option would be to refurbish the existing building, which would cost substantially less than a new construction.

“We would need the RM150 million for upgrading [works], like fixing the roof and the electricity supply.

“While for the construction of a new Parliament [building], we might need RM800 million. So we will consider on the best proposal,” Nazri said.


KUALA LUMPUR, June 14 — The new Istana Negara in Jalan Duta will now cost more than RM800 million, and not RM400 million as announced by the government in 2006.

Deputy Works Minister Datuk Yong Khoon Seng said the cost includes the construction of a new RM130 million flyover leading to the palace in Jalan Duta, and upgrading works on Jalan Changkat Semantan costing RM32.5 million.

He added that the flyover project and the road upgrading works were awarded to Ahmad Zaki Resources and Kejuruteraan Kenari respectively through direct negotiation.

Read more here: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/rm800m-bill-for-new-istana-negara/

KUALA LUMPUR, June 14 — Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz admitted today that the government did not have the “capacity” to finance the studies of the growing pool of bright students in the country.

The minister in the prime minister’s department said the public would just have to accept the reality of the situation although it was an unpopular decision.

“We have to tell the truth. We just cannot afford it. Just like how a parent cannot afford to send their children abroad to further their studies, the government cannot afford it."

Read more here: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/nazri-putrajaya-has-no-funds-for-bright-students/

JUNE 16 — One day we will be bankrupt in 2019. The next day we won’t be.

One day we have to remove subsidies to stay afloat. The next day we are thinking about building a new Parliament house at the cost of RM800 million.

One day the core proposals of the New Economic Model (NEM) are outlined to great fanfare. The next day these proposals are labelled as a mere trial balloon.

One day sport betting is allowed. The next day nobody is sure anymore.

One day the prime minister pledges to assist youths who are willing to work hard to succeed. The next day it seems that the government does not have the money to do so.

Hello, is there anybody at the wheel in Putrajaya?

Read more here: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/breakingviews/is-there-anybody-at-the-wheel-in-putrajaya-david-d.-matthew/


Tuesday, June 15, 2010

World Refugee Day 2010 - 19 to 20 June




















This World Refugee Day

WALK A MILE IN A REFUGEE'S SHOES.
Experience the journey refugees take in finding safety,
and share the circumstances of life they lead while in exile.
Take a step in helping refugees rebuild their lives in safety and dignity.

WORLD REFUGEE DAY 2010
KL SENTRAL STATION (MAIN ENTRANCE)
SATURDAY, 19 JUNE 2010 - SUNDAY, 20 JUNE 2010
10.00AM - 4.00PM

ATTRACTIONS
● Refugee Bazaar
Over 20 booths selling crafts made by refugees. 100% of the proceeds go to the refugee communities
● Refugee Cultural Performances
More than a dozen cultural dances and songs from refugee groups
● Exhibitions to experience a refugee's flight to safety and a refugee's life in exile
● Malaysian celebrities and performances, win exclusive UNHCR merchandise

For event information, go to www.unhcr.org.my