Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Fabrication of lies and cover-ups ! The government doesnt need to protect EZAM&CO

The main stream media reporting has reached a new nadir. The ugly politicization of BARISAN media has once again taken the opportunity to behave like vultures on the misery of the VOTERS

In a recent new story the tied the RACIAL threat assessment in to the FEAR, and made it sound like PAKATAN IS faking it.
The venom against PAKATAN in the MALAYSIAN press knows no bounds. Even during one of the worst calamities of the world, the UMNO press is projecting a vile message to the MALAYSYAN about PAKATAN. This negativity definitely has hampered HARMONY to MALAYSIA–and cost MALAYSIAN live when the chips are down, one discovers who the enemies are.What more does the Malay population want to hear-what else MCA want to hear is only 1 common enemy in Malaysia-Its the UMNO/MCA Corruption Company BHD. These are the thieves killing Malays, Indian and Chinese-remove the CANCER and all will be well. is apparent the country is now run by a de facto minority government. In fact, it has been so for some time with the "ketuanan Melayu" (Malay supremacy) party at the helm. This corruption tainted party is supported by about a third of the Malays which make up about 56 per cent of the population. In other words about 20 per cent of Malaysians at most. Yet this 20 per cent-government is imposing its will upon 80 per cent of the people. It is foaming in the mouth with insults, threats, intimidations, bullying venom and fascist utterings against the other four-fifth of Malaysians. Its statue books are brimming with repressive laws that suppress free speech and allow for detention without trial. Its supporters also claim the right to 67 per cent of the country's wealth by fiat. And now it is working hard to carry this big brother hegemony further by trying to curb free speech further with this insidious internet filter scheme. Political science students from the West (students and teachers from our own varsities lack the necessary intellect and objectivity) will find it a very interesting case to study. Barry Wain has already made a good startM.C.A FORMULA to wrest back Selangor and


SHAH ALAM, Aug 18 — Shah Alam MP Khalid Samad has warned that Perkasa is deliberately trying to whip up religious and racial tension to give Barisan Nasional (BN) an excuse to use the Internal Security Act (ISA) against the opposition.
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is apparent the country is now run by a de facto minority government. In fact, it has been so for some time with the "ketuanan Melayu" (Malay supremacy) party at the helm. This corruption tainted party is supported by about a third of the Malays which make up about 56 per cent of the population. In other words about 20 per cent of Malaysians at most. Yet this 20 per cent-government is imposing its will upon 80 per cent of the people. It is foaming in the mouth with insults, threats, intimidations, bullying venom and fascist utterings against the other four-fifth of Malaysians. Its statue books are brimming with repressive laws that suppress free speech and allow for detention without trial. Its supporters also claim the right to 67 per cent of the country's wealth by fiat. And now it is working hard to carry this big brother hegemony further by trying to curb free speech further with this insidious internet filter scheme. Political science students from the West (students and teachers from our own varsities lack the necessary intellect and objectivity) will find it a very interesting case to study. Barry Wain has already made a good start
On July 31, Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, who is rapidly becoming the stormy petrel of Malaysian politics, made a tough, uncompromising speech to the annual Malaysian Student leaders Summit in Kuala Lumpur.

The 72-year-old Razaleigh, an elder statesman of the United Malays National Organization, called for the abolition Malaysia's Internal Security Act, the Official Secrets Act, the Printing and Publication Act and the Universities and Colleges Act, which circumscribes the freedom of expression of students and professors and which, Razaleigh said, "has done immense harm in dumbing down our universities."

It was a major speech on an important occasion to Malaysia's future leaders. Other speakers included members of the judiciary, presidents of bar councils and many others. (It can be found here in its entirety)

"Billions have been looted from this country, and Billions more are being siphoned out as our entire political structure crumbles. Yet we are gathered here in comfort, in a country that still seems to 'work': Most of the time," Razaleigh said. "This is due less to good management than to the extraordinary wealth of this country. You were born into a country of immense resources, both natural, cultural and social. We have been wearing down this advantage with mismanagement and corruption. With lies, tall tales and theft. We have a political class unwilling or unable to address the central issue of the day because they have grown fat and comfortable with a system built on lies and theft."

Razaleigh's speech, controversial as it was, was not mentioned anywhere in the nation's mainstream press, despite the fact that among other things, he said that "over the last 25 years, much of the immense wealth generated by our productive people and our vast resources has been looted."

Despite the fact that no newspapers printed any of the speech, Rejal Arbi, the former editor of the Malay language Berita Harian who is now a columnist, thought it merited exposure. However, Mior Kamarulbaid, the editor of the paper, thought otherwise. He spiked Rejal's column.

Berita Harian is owned by UMNO, which is increasingly unsettled by Razaleigh's calls to clean out the endemic corruption in the party. Likewise, The Star, which is owned by the Malaysian Chinese Association, the second-biggest component of the Barisan Nasional, the ruling national coalition, didn't carry Razaleigh's remarks, nor did the New Straits Times, which is also owned by UMNO. Nor was it carried on the party-owned television stations.

However, it was carried widely on Internet news sites, including being streamed on the independent Malaysiakini television. It was carried verbatim on the Internet-based news portal Malaysian Insider, among other Internet sites.

This has assumed increasing importance because of an Aug. 16 report in the independent Internet news site Malaysian Insider that the administration of Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak is evaluating the feasibility of putting an Internet filter in place to block so-called "undesirable websites."

According to the report, the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission commissioned the Malaysian arm of KPMG, the accounting and advisory firm, to carry out a "'Study on Positive and Safe Use of the Internet' in early August to evaluate, among others, "the implementation of Internet Filter at Internet Gateway level" and "the impact of the various methods to Malaysian Internet users and Malaysia economy.'"

A year ago, the government backed away from a similar plan for a filter to block websites it considered undesirable. After the story became public, Najib denied there was any plan to police the Internet. Although the rationale cited for such a filter is usually to keep pornography away from the nation's youth, it can be used to block undesirable political comment as well. In Thailand today, for instance, at least 13,000 websites have been blocked by the government, ostensibly to block unfavorable comment about the country's monarchy. But in fact, it is being used extensively to block political comment as well.

It isn't clear what the KPMG study will be used for by the government. But when Internet journalism was just getting started in the late stages of the reign of former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, the government took a decision not to place the same kinds of controls on websites that it maintains for the print media, which are onerous indeed.

The Printing and Presses Act, passed in 1984, has been used repeatedly against such publications as The Rocket, the vehicle of the opposition Democratic Party, and others. Human Rights Watch reported from New York in July that "the government has effectively suspended indefinitely publication of Suara Keadilan, the paper of the opposition Parti Keadilan Rakyat" and severely circumscribed the circulation of Harakah, published by the opposition Parti Islam se-Malaysia, or PAS.

As a result of the fact that political parties control the mainstream media, the Internet in Malaysia has come alive, not just with opposition blogs and comment about the government, but with some solid – and some not so solid – journalism. But backing away from total internet freedom today is a difficult thing for any government to do and would generate considerable embarrassment, if not public outrage. In Malaysia, the Internet is broadly regarded as having played a major role in 2008 national elections that cost the Barisan Nasional its two-thirds majority in the parliament for the first time in the 50-year history of the country and delivered several states into the hands of the opposition.


SHAH ALAM, Aug 18 — Thai pathologist Dr Pornthip Rojanasunand maintained today that she is sure Teoh Beng Hock’s death last year was not a suicide, but she declined to repeat her previous assertion that it was 80 per cent a homicide.
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More lately, the Internet has carried extensive and embarrassing reports by The Sarawak Report, a Sarawak-based NGO, of the astonishing international holdings of the chief minister, Abdul Taib Mahmud, in Canada, the United States, Australia and the United Kingdom, which the NGO claims were built on the ravaging of Sarawak's vast natural resources, particularly timber. Not a word of Taib's holdings has been carried in Malaysia's press.

"We must have freedom as guaranteed under our Constitution," Razaleigh told the student leaders. "Freedom to assemble, associate, speak, write, move. This is basic. Even on matters of race and even on religious matters we should be able to speak freely, and we shall educate each other."

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