Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Saifuddin Nasution said it Precise and concise. Najib should be the last person to talk about Islam. DONT USE for political interests

Saifuddin Nasution -- you said it so well. Precise and concise. Najib should be the last person to talk about Islam. He is using it for political interests and yet calls on PAS to put politics aside. It is also superb very unIslamic for denying involvement in Mongolian, Submarine, jetfighers, Melaka resortsFor people like Najib, scandal&lies 1Malaysia concept of lies and deceit ! are his religion.so desperate? is it Islamic not to admit wrong-doings? is it Islamic to shed innocent blood?Najib, you are diggin ur own grave faster than speeding bullet..

Perbuatan-perbuatan yang tak Islamik:
1. Tidak amanah keatas yang diamanahkan
2. Putar belit
3. Penipuan dalam pilihanraya
4. Hak asasi rakyat ditekan
5. Rasuah
6. Menginayai orang
banyak lagi likes thousands like this
the amount of money they rip off fromthe public in name of
service provider for dataline is in billions
just sign the agreement sue them if they dont pay
who is going to ask them it they provide the service
Rais anak Yatin TO BUSSY CARRING NAJIS BALLS

Shame on you, Telekom or TM or whatever
M Poobalan | Jun 24, 09 5:41pm
Let me present the facts:

1. I registered a fixed line last year September.

2. A week ago, I tried making calls overseas - but the ring tone was different. Upon inquiring with TM Customer Service (by dialing 100), I was informed that my fixed line's IDD service was not activated.

I asked the customer care staff about the activation process and she duly informed me that it was free and that I could apply for it via that phone call itself, without making a trip to TM Point.

She then put in a ‘service’ request on my behalf and told me that it will be processed in three working days.

I made that call on a Saturday evening (June 13). She took down my mobile number for reference.

3. Three working days would mean Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Fine with me. I gave them an extra day and tried again to call/fax overseas on Thursday. It was not working.

4. I called back TM Customer Service on Thursday evening (June 18). The ‘service request’ was still in the ‘system’. ‘They will act on it’, the staff said.

The customer care staff took down my mobile number again. Fine, I can still bear with that.

5. It’s Friday, and I make a call to TM Customer Service regarding my IDD service. It seems there's some problem with the connection or whatever.

The TM staff asked me to call on Saturday to ensure the activation is done. Again, my mobile number was requested.

6. Saturday morning arrives. I call TM Customer Service around 10am. The customer care staff checked the ‘system’ and mentioned that a request was put in on the 17th .

I clarified with her that I made a call last Saturday and the request should have been there on the 13th , not 17th .

I also mentioned that the staff asked me to call today (Saturday) to check on the activation. To my horror, she said the contractors don't work on weekends, so the earliest possible activation would be next Monday.

Well, I kind of expected that.

She was at loss on why the IDD service was still not activated. Anyway, I told her that TM Customer Care already had taken down my mobile number three times and I had not received any call from TM regarding solution of the problem.

I also told her to get someone to call me on Monday morning to clarify this.

My questions:

1. Who is going to reimburse me for calling TM Customer Service (two out of the four calls were from my mobile phone)?

2. Who is responsible for my inability to make calls/fax overseas, which may impact critical decision- making?
3. Who will solve this problem for me?

Such a simple service is not being acted upon. There's no point in being polite and customer-friendly when the work is not done. All style, no substance.




By Wong Choon Mei, Suara Keadilan

In a bid to salvage some pride after the Pakatan Rakyat spurned his offer for a unity government, Prime Minister Najib Razak unabashedly appealed to the Islamist PAS to reconsider on the grounds that it was a religious “obligation”.

“It looks like many Muslims are of the same opinion because unity and efforts to fight for Islam are an obligation,” he told reporters on Wednesday.

“When we follow the obligation, we get blessings for whatever we do. If Islam promotes that, then we should follow its way. Don’t let politics become the obstacle to achieving this.”

But unknown to be particularly holy himself, the 55-year PM may be asking for trouble especially when he did not name or at least giving more specifics about who the “many Muslims” were who shared his disappointment.

In fact, with his latest doublespeak, the scandal-plagued and under-performing leader may have further exposed himself as an unreliable purveyor of the truth and the factual.

“Oh please, Najib should not be the person to talk about religious duty,” PKR MP for Machang Saifuddin Nasution told Suara Keadilan.

“If one really wants to bring out Islam and the majesty and the justice that the religion stands for, why harp on such narrow agenda like unity talks with PAS.

“Why not practise Islam in its full glory by using it to improve the integrity of our judiciary, stopping the abuse of power by the police, the persecution of political foes and minority groups by cruel means and preventing the people in Perak from holding free and fair election?”

Why harp on unity gov’t when Pakatan is ready to discuss key national issues

Najib started the ball rolling last week when he revived interest in forming a unity government with Pakatan partners PKR, DAP and PAS.

All three voted against his offer. PAS was so upset that its spiritual adviser Nik Aziz Nik Mat rushed to publicly chastise its deputy president Nasharudin Mat Isa for not rejecting the PM in strong enough terms.

“The Pakatan stand is very clear. There will be no talks at all as far as unity government is concerned. But as we have stated very clearly, we are open to discussion on national issues, such as, how to improve unity in the country, raise educations standards, revive the economy,” Saifuddin said.

“If Najib is sincere, then he must prove it - not just to us in Pakatan but to the whole country. Let us start with any one of these issues.

“Why keep harping on unity talks with PAS and saying the Malays want it. What Malays is he talking about. Don’t forget PAS is the second largest Malay party and PKR also has large Malay base, but neither of us want anything to do with unity talks with Umno.”

No short cuts especially racist ones

Najib also continued to sideline the non-Malays by saying that they need not worry as they would be protected by the government.

“It does not mean that we would reject non-Muslims because their priorities will always be protected by the government,” Najib said.

But his condescending words gave him away.

At best, they insinuate that the non-Malays would not be included in the talks, not only a tactic that reeks of racism but one that is also bound to worsen the already deepening polarisation in the country.

“In his desperation, because politically, this is a desperate move, he is suggesting that both the Muslims and the Malays are under threat,” said Tian Chua, MP for Batu and PKR strategic affairs director.

“This is not a safe signal coming from a PM. We really wonder what he will do next. Fortunately, Malaysians especially the Malays are more politically savvy that he gives them credit for. They will see this for what it is - typical Umno insecurity and corruption.

“The top leadership is so morally corrupt that whenever there is difficulty, they will resort to trickery and short-cuts like these. But they cannot buy their way out every time. Perhaps it is better they begin to seriously accept reality and start to taste the bitter medicine of reform.”

Why is "unity," so important only after the defeat in Mar'08 GE? Why has PAS suddenly become so adorable?

What is the meaning of "fight for Islam?" Although there are many muslims in UMNO are they fighting for islamic standards of justice or fighting for more power and have more muslim symbols and forms?
Isn't Anwar a muslim? Only a muslim who cooperates with UMNO is regarded as fighting for Islam? Thoses who don't cooperate will be treated like Anwar?

Does fighting for Islam also include saifool swearing on the koran that he was sodomised? Si Saifool is more islamic than Anwar who refused to swear??

If PAS cooperate then there will be blessings? You will be the power-base in this country? What about PKR? At least they are more islamic than you because they practise it but you only use it as a tool for political mileage because you are totally corrupt and unislamic in practice
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