Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Can India and MALAYSIA Reform Its Wayward Police Force?“Royal Malaysia Police towards Global Distinction”or Distortion? that engineered and well-craft

Can India and MALAYSIA Reform Its Wayward Police Force?“Royal Malaysia Police towards Global Distinction”or Distortion? that engineered and well-crafted fake charges

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Can India and MALAYSIA Reform Its Wayward Police Force?

By MADHUR SINGH / NEW DELHI Monday, Aug. 10, 2009
Manipur state police commandos announce resumption of curfew after a relaxation period of four hours expired in Imphal, India, Aug. 6, 2009
Manipur state police commandos announce resumption of curfew after a relaxation period of four hours expired in Imphal, India, Aug. 6, 2009


Last Updated on Monday,
It is apt that Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, who happens to head Barisan Nasional (BN) in Selangor, has signalled the ruling coalition’s intention of reclaiming Selangor from Pakatan Rakyat (PR) by calling for the BN to change, beginning with Umno.
Change is indeed the need of the hour for the BN’s component parties, since the voters in Selangor and four other states that chose to back non-BN candidates in the 2008 general election were clearly sending a message to their leaders that they want the “business as usual” culture to stop.Some of you may think that theSEE VIDEO ON YOUTUBE HERE video is in bad taste. I mean, how can we make fun of Teoh Beng Hock’s death when we should instead be mourning him? Yes, it was a hard decision to make as to whether to publish that video or not. But we decided to do it anyway not with intent to make fun of Teoh’s death but to reveal the real circumstances behind his death. And the video best describes the events behind what really happened
Nevertheless, “The Taking of Selangor 123”, to borrow a phrase from the box office’s recent offering, starring John Travolta and Denzel Washington, should be neither like a celluloid hostage drama nor anything as chaotic as the unfolding of the Perak constitutional crisis.
The prudent way to achieve that goal would be for the BN to take the long road by re-building its reputation with the voters one step at a time. As the Perak episode has shown, muscling into office does not win support for the politicians or coalition involved.
BN, which currently controls the state pending various court rulings, might end up winning the legal cases, giving it the undisputed right to run the state. But in the court of public opinion, it has already lost and in a bad way.

Demonstrators flee as Malaysian anti-riot police fire tear gas shells near Merdeka Square in Kuala Lumpur on August 1, 2009

Najib if you extended his service on contract basis for another two years as the sleepy head did you are gone with the wind “Royal Malaysia Police towards Global Distinction”or Distortion? that engineered and well-crafted fake charges

Filed under: Uncategorized — taxi2driver @ 4:03 pm Edit This

“Royal Malaysia Police towards Global Distinction”or Distortion?This marks a potential shift for Malaysian politics, in which the ruling party worksThe new generation of Malaysians want a peaceful interpretation of history -The ultimate objective would be to gradually replace them with needs-based affirmative-action policies that do not discriminate upon race. We desperately need this to preserve racial harmony.

SOME OF THE NAMES ON THESE DOCUMENTS HAVE BEEN BLACKED OUT, FOR OBVIOUS REASONS. REST ASSURED WE HAVE THE UN-BLACKED OUT VERSION IN OUR SAFEKEEPING, WHICH CAN BE REVEALED IF THE GOVERNMENT CHALLENGES THESE DOCUMENTS AS FAKES, ‘POISON PEN’ LETTERS, OR LIES. AND IF THE IGP GETS AN EXTENSION ON HIS CONTRACT, THEN THE UN-BLACKED OUT VERSION WILL SURELY SURFACE TO ENSURE THAT WE EMBARRASS THE MALAYSIAN GOVERNMENT TO THE MAXIMUM. THE WORLD WILL BE TOLD THAT THE CHINESE MAFIA RUNS THE MALAYSIAN POLICE FORCE.

When an unidentified militant was reportedly killed in “an encounter” with police commandos in the northeast Indian state of Manipur on July 23, the news created only a minor stir. One more death was hardly startling in an insurgency-ridden state where abductions, torture, extortion and killings by the police are routinely documented by human-rights activists. A week later, however, Tehelka, a prominent national weekly, published a series of photos of the events surrounding the supposed shoot-out. Chungkam Sanjit, a former militant, is shown standing unarmed, putting up no resistance as the commandos push him into a shop. Moments later, he is dragged out by his feet, dead, and dumped, oozing blood, into the back of a pickup.
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