Selasa, 7 Jun 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Shark’s fin: A soup with bite

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 03:42 AM PDT

HONG KONG, June 7 — First a golden ladle is laid on its own gleaming stand. The steaming dish is brought out from the kitchen and a dedicated waitress decants it into individual bowls, without spilling so much as a drop of the precious liquid. For the Chinese diners in a specialist Hong Kong restaurant, smiling with anticipation, it is the highlight and centrepiece of the meal, but for environmentalist critics it is one of the worst foods in the world — shark's fin soup.

"It's full of nutrition," said Lisa Lau, a housewife, who was marking her birthday with friends. "In Chinese culture, when a family go out to eat together or when we treat friends we will eat something good. If we want to order something good, most times we will order shark fin."

To a Western palate, it is nothing special, a slightly chewy morsel devoid of a flavour of its own, and benefiting from the vinegary dressing served alongside.

But for the Cantonese who consume it, shark's fin has an appeal that is all its own — a culinary experience in which taste is among the less important factors.

Being seen to be eating it, said Lau, gives "face", the all-important Chinese concept of status and social standing, while hosts offering it to guests demonstrate their wealth.

"Because shark fin is expensive, when you serve shark's fin at a party, the party will be better."

Shark's fin soup is a delicacy for Cantonese diners but environmentalists are concerned about how fins are obtained as well as the sustainability of shark populations. — Picture courtesy of Jordan Tan/shutterstock.com

It is the look of the fins that matters, and their size. Bigger is better, so that dorsal fins are preferred to ventral or pectoral — although retailers say the tail also commands a premium.

Fibre width varies by species, with thicker ones, such as from tiger sharks, denoting higher — and more costly — quality.

Tam Kwok King, the manager of the Fung Shing restaurant in Kowloon, has worked in the trade for more than 50 years. The establishment is renowned as one where diners can order shark's fin soup on the spot rather than in advance, and gets through around 200 kilograms of fins a week.

An individual serving of soup includes about 30 grams of fin, and a 12-person bowl sells for HK$1,080 (RM420).

"When holding a party, it is not respectful if you don't treat the guests to shark's fin soup. You will feel you lose face," he said.

"From the view of traditional Chinese medical science, drinking shark fin soup can strengthen the body and improve health. It is good for the bones.

"The most important thing is that the soup must be cooked well. It takes time to stew the shark fin. If you do not cook it for long enough, the shark fin is not delicious and it does not look very good."

In the kitchen, the dry fins are first soaked for hours, developing a rubbery appearance, before being flash-fried with assorted spices and condiments on one of five giant burners.

The soup — which includes other ingredients such as chicken for flavour — is then assembled and cooked in an oven for four hours, by which time the fins are soft, translucent, and reduced to a fraction of their original size.

Environmentalists object to shark finning as cruel and wasteful on the grounds that the fins are often cut from live sharks which are then dumped back into the sea to die.

They also say it is leading to a rapid decline in shark populations, pointing out that as apex predators they have a vital role in the marine ecosystem.

Silvy Pun, of the conservation group WWF in Hong Kong, said: "Most of my friends think that it is just once-in-a-while that we have shark fin soup, there shouldn't be a big problem.

"However, our occasional consumption fuels a lot of boats to hunt shark all over the world. We are consuming 2-5 per cent of a shark which takes an average 10 years to reach maturity.

"Sharks do not have enough time to grow and replenish themselves."

But Veronica Mak, an anthropologist at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said that shark's fin soup has a vital cultural role, pointing out that as well as the ingredient being expensive, the preparation is highly skilled.

"We have a popular saying in Cantonese that a banquet is legitimated by a dish of shark's fin'," she said.

"Important banquets, like weddings, which people hopefully have only once in their life, usually include shark's fin. This is especially important for the middle or even lower class, to show face' to the relatives.

"There is a big difference in price for a banquet with and without shark's fin, so serving shark's fins to your business partners or relatives or friends shows off your economic and cultural capital at the same time."

The demand is such that Hong Kong is the global focus of the shark fin trade, with the WWF estimating that between 44 and 59 per cent of the world's fin catch passes through the territory.

According to Hong Kong government figures for 2009, the most recent available, that came to more than 9,000 tonnes with a value of HK$1.9 billion at wholesale prices — around HK$200 per kilogram.

Retail is another story. The centre of the shark fin business on the island is Des Voeux Road West, where shops are packed with assorted dried foods from sea and land.

The largest is Wing Yue Marine Food, where large presentation shark fins for gifts, with the skin still attached, sell for HK$12,800 per catty, a local measure of weight equivalent to 604 grammes, and basic cooking fins can cost more than HK$6,000 per catty.

Kelvin Wong, the owner, dresses in jeans, a polo shirt, and a jewel-encrusted Rolex. With the Chinese economy booming, he says he is seeing growing demand from mainland China and dismisses the concerns of environmentalists.

"Western people may not understand what shark's fin means to Chinese culture," he said. "People shouldn't criticise other people because they eat something Western people don't eat."

Nonetheless there are signs that attitudes are changing among Hong Kong's urban younger generation. She On Kuen, who has a small store in a back street, has been selling fins for decades and says that nowadays "for weddings young people choose not to eat it" for environmental reasons.

He does not subscribe to such sentiments.

"We human beings have to control the number of sharks as they are dangerous," he said. "Westerners object to the consumption of shark fins only because it is inhumane. But sharks are inhumane too when they bite." — AFP-Relaxnews

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Caribbean federations won’t attend FIFA hearings: Source

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 08:47 AM PDT

DETROIT, June 7 – The majority of Caribbean football federations will not attend planned questioning with FIFA's bribery investigators, a source said today.

FIFA's investigating team, which includes ex-FBI head Louis Freeh's company, were due in Miami today to conduct interviews with the Caribbean federations who had been invited to attend.

But a Caribbean soccer source said that close to 20 of the 25 federations in the Caribbean Football Union (CFU) had opted not to show up for the interviews which are also scheduled for tomorrow.

"They intend to have a meeting of their own soon to discuss the situation," said the source, who declined to be named.

A FIFA spokesman declined to discuss details of the meeting or attendance in Miami.

"As you may understand and in order not to compromise the efficiency of the investigation, FIFA cannot provide details of the investigation or comment on it while it is ongoing," he said.

Three CFU officials, president Jack Warner and staff members Debbie Minguell and Jason Sylvester, have been provisionally suspended by FIFA's ethics committee pending a full inquiry into bribery allegations surrounding a meeting in the Caribbean with Asian soccer chief Mohamed Bin Hammam.

Some Caribbean federations, including the Bahamas and Puerto Rican bodies, have told FIFA they were offered money at the meeting.

The decision to not attend the interviews in Miami comes after a letter was sent by one Caribbean federation to FIFA president Sepp Blatter urging him to remove Freeh from the investigation.

"The investigation is tainted and biased and clearly has a US driven agenda," a federation official wrote in a letter to FIFA seen by Reuters.

The report to FIFA's ethics committee was initiated by American Chuck Blazer, general secretary of CONCACAF, the regional body for soccer in North and Central America and the Caribbean.

Blazer worked with Chicago-based lawyer John Collins on the dossier and with an American now leading the investigation and with the interviews being held in Florida, Blatter was asked to intervene.

The letter asked Blatter, who is not a member of the Ethics committee, to replace Freeh with a "truly independent investigator and secure a neutral venue for the interview of any Caribbean Football Union member other than the United States of America."

FIFA said it had not made any changes to the make-up of the investigation and confirmed that Freeh's organisation had been hired.

Qatari Bin Hammam, who was running against Blatter for FIFA president at the time of the meeting, has also been suspended following the bribery allegations. He also has insisted he did nothing wrong. – Reuters

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Degenkolb wins Dauphine second stage

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 08:38 AM PDT

LYON, June 7 – German John Degenkolb won the second stage of the Criterium du Dauphine, a 179km ride from Voiron, today.

The HTC-Highroad rider beat Frenchman Samuel Dumoulin of the Cofidis team, who finished second.

Kazakh Alexandre Vinokourov of the Astana team retained the overall leader's yellow jersey. – Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Nashville marks 40 years of country music festival

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 08:17 AM PDT

Dolly Parton will also be at the Nashville music festival. – Reuters pic

NASHVILLE, June 7 – The capital of country music lives up to its nickname beginning on Thursday where some 70,000 fans get the chance to mingle with their musical heroes at the CMA Music Fest.

The June 9-12 music festival, which is celebrating its 40th year, aims to get fans as close as possible to obtain autographs, photo opportunities, and a snatch of conversation with performers.

"Music Fest is a time for all of us to thank the fans and be here for them," said Miranda Lambert, who attended the event as a fan before performing in it as a star.

The music plays practically nonstop in Nashville from 10am to midnight on stages set up from Fifth Avenue to the Cumberland River and across the river at a stadium.

The projected 2011 lineup of more than 150 performers includes Reba McEntire, Brad Paisley, Kelly Clarkson, Jason Aldean, Lady Antebellum, Keith Urban, Billy Ray Cyrus, Gary Allan, Bo Bice, Katie Armiger, Crystal Bowersox, and newlyweds Miranda Lambert and Blake Shelton. Veteran performers include Jeannie Seely, Gene Watson and Earl Thomas Conley.

Some fans come year after year, lining up for autograph and photo opportunities with favourite performers at the Nashville Convention Center.

Last year 65,000 attended the festival and fans queued around the convention centre to get coveted signatures from Taylor Swift and Carrie Underwood.

This year will find similar scenes as Dolly Parton, Lady Antebellum, Trace Adkins, Rascal Flatts, Blake Shelton, Martina McBride, Randy Travis, Darius Rucker, Kellie Pickler and Easton Corbin sign autographs.

Joe Bonsall of the Oak Ridge Boys has been to every festival from its beginnings downtown in 1972 to its move to the Tennessee Fairgrounds and now back downtown.

"It's just gotten bigger and bigger. Right now, I think being part of Music Fest means more to us than it ever has," Bonsall said.

"Most of our fans save their money all year long to come to Fan Fest. For me to be one of the people they come to see is why I do what I do," said Darius Rucker, front man for Hootie & the Blowfish and also an award-winning country singer.

On the sidelines will be benefit shows and fan club parties, kicked off tomorrow by Marty Stuart's Late Night Jam featuring Dolly Parton, Mel Tillis and other friends.

"I expect her 'Dolliness' (Parton) to wreck the room and steal the show and I'm not going to let her leave the stage until she does it," Stuart said.

Some artists host extravagant private events, such as Gary Allen's riverboat ride and Randy Travis' concert for just 75 ticket-holders who will pay US$225 (RM676.53) apiece to hear him perform his new album and talk about his 25 years in the music business.

Reba McEntire told reporters about her first Music Fest in 1977, once known as "Fan Fair" and held at the 10,000-seat Municipal Auditorium in Nashville.

"I think back then I rode to Fan Fair in my car with every piece of clothing I could bum off my college roommate. I didn't have any fancy clothes, but she did because she was in rodeo," McEntire said. – Reuters

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‘Lonely Boy’ singer Andrew Gold dies

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 03:45 AM PDT

LOS ANGELES, June 7 – US singer-songwriter Andrew Gold, famous for 1970s hits "Lonely Boy" and "Thank You for Being a Friend," which was used as the theme music for the hit US TV show "The Golden Girls," has died aged 59, his family said.

Gold, whose other songs included "Never Let Her Slip Away," was also a music producer, a respected session musician as well as a member of Linda Ronstadt's band.

Millions were familiar with Gold's work after "Thank You for Being a Friend" was covered for the theme of the long-running "Golden Girls."

The bearded artist died in his sleep Friday at his home in Los Angeles, where he had been undergoing treatment for cancer, said his sister Melani Gold Friedman.

"Andrew was so enormously talented it almost seemed effortless," Ronstadt told the Los Angeles Times, adding: "He was a real cornerstone of those early records."

Gold played several instruments – including guitar, piano and drums – and was a highly regarded session musician for artists including James Taylor and Carly Simon.

He was born in August 1951 in Burbank, outside Los Angeles. His father won an Oscar for the score of 1960 film "Exodus," while his mother was a singer, providing vocals for Audrey Hepburn in "My Fair Lady," among others.

"It was clear from the beginning that I was going to be a musician," he told the LA Times in 1977. "With those kind of influences at home, what else could I do?" – Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Singapore spurs neighbours into lavish tourist resort development

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 05:35 AM PDT

Model for the Legoland Malaysia theme park. Iskandar Malyasia will be home to three theme parks when completed. — AFP pic

SINGAPORE, June 7 — A little envy looks to be going a very long way for both Indonesia and Malaysia.

Spurred on by the rapid tourism resort development that has been such a feature of neighbouring Singapore over the past decade — and by the incredible success that has met that development — the two countries are now planning to tap into the luxury tourism market themselves.

First up sees the development what has recently been renamed Pesona Lagoi Bintan — which means Wonders of Lagoi Bintan in Bahasa Indonesian. Situated just off Singapore, workers set to the area in March and are currently turning the forest and foreshore into a "water resort city" called Bintan Treasure Bay. The project is expected to cost more than US$400 million (RM1.2 billion) and will feature a circular shaped resort called The Ring — a 149-room resort hotel that will sit 30 metres above a 32-hectare lagoon.

Then there is the Iskandar Malaysia project — a new metropolis situated at the southern end of the Malay peninsula and also just a short ways from Singapore.

As well as pumping an estimated US$100 billion into the area in the hope of turning it into a special economic zone — much like the Shenzhen area that hugs the border between Hong Kong and China — there are three theme parks planned.

Only Legoland Malaysia has so far been announced — but it's pretty impressive nonetheless. Operators are claiming there will be 40 interactive shows, rides and other attractions — and that this park alone will attract more than one million visitors annually.

The motivation behind all the grand plans is simple economics. Singapore opened its two lavish casino-resorts in 2010 — Resorts World Sentosa and Marina Bay Sands and saw a record 11.6 million tourists come to town. Not only that, the two resorts generated an estimated US$5 billion in gaming revenue — the main reason the rumours are flying about just how many of the region's new resorts will be turning to casinos to fill their coffers. — AFP-Relaxnews

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Defiance in Thailand’s ‘red shirt villages’

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 01:02 AM PDT

NONG HU LING, Thailand, June 7 — Its brilliant green rice paddies, thatched-roof huts and overgrown jungle resemble most rural villages in northeast Thailand. But the red sign looming over a quiet dusty road in the community of Nong Hu Ling is something different. "Red Shirt Village for Democracy", it reads, proclaiming its allegiance to the red-shirted, anti-government movement whose protests paralysed Bangkok last year and sparked a bloody military crackdown that ended with 91 people killed and hundreds of activists arrested.

"After what happened in Bangkok, people were scared to wear red shirts," said Kongchai Chaikang, chief of Nong Hu Ling, a village of 350 people in Udon Thani province, about 450km northeast of Bangkok. "They feared they would be harassed by police or followed by plainclothes officers. We want to give them courage by sticking together."

The idea is catching on. Ahead of a July 3 national election, dozens of rural communities are branding themselves a "Red Shirt Village" in this poor northeast plateau, home to a third of the country's population, giving the movement grass-roots muscle to mobilise behind its parliamentary allies, the opposition Puea Thai Party.

Grass-roots muscle for the "red shirt" movement. — Reuters pic

The mostly low-income red shirts broadly support ousted populist premier Thaksin Shinawatra in a five-year political conflict against the traditional Bangkok elite that includes top generals, royal advisers, middle-class bureaucrats, business leaders and old-money families who back the ruling Democrat Party.

At least 320 villages in the provinces of Udon Thani and Khon Kaen have designated themselves "Red Shirt Villages" through regional offices of the United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), as the movement is formally known.

The phenomenon underlines the government's failure to pacify opponents ahead of an election many fear will deepen the divide between the urban and rural poor on one side and the elite on the other, a rift that drove Thailand close to full civil conflict last year.

The villages and their defiance also highlight the failure of a year-long national reconciliation effort, heightening concerns that the losers of the election will not accept the results, a tangible risk in a country scarred by 18 coups since the 1930s and five years of sporadic unrest.

The polarisation comes at a delicate time with Thailand's unifying figure for six decades, 83-year-old King Bhumibol Adulyadej, hospitalised for nearly two years. The military and supporters of the establishment often invoke his name to rally the public against the red shirts, dragging the monarchy into the political melee.

In the balance is Thailand's well-crafted image as "The Land of Smiles", a catchphrase that crumbled last year under a catalogue of horrific scenes: banks on fire, military snipers firing on demonstrators, mysterious black-clad gunmen rallying behind protesters, grenades exploding in the business district, and free-wheeling Bangkok reduced to 9pm curfews.

The red shirts had launched about 50 red villages in the past two weeks alone, said Anond Sangnan, the UDD's secretary-general in Udon Thani. Last week, they inaugurated five at once in Udon Thani's Sam Prao sub-district.

"After we lost last year, we decided we would fight this battle differently," he said at the launch of one village, whose Buddhist leader marked the occasion in a ceremony in which red string was tied to the wrist of each villager in a symbolic show of strength. 

"Originally we wanted the villages to show how much support the movement had, a symbol that empowers people. But it is also a mobilising tool," he said.

In total, 129 red-shirt villages had been launched in Udon Thani and another 100 in neighbouring Khon Kaen, he said. The bigger goal, he added, was to carve out entire red districts and provinces.

Inside the villages, slogans on red T-shirts and posters rail against the "double standards" of Thai society, accusing the rich, the Bangkok establishment and top military brass of breaking laws with impunity — grievances that have simmered since a 2006 coup overthrew Thaksin, a billionaire tycoon-turned-prime minister who is revered by the poor as the first politician to have addressed their needs.

Thaksin's smiling image beams from red signs at the entrance to the red villages. From his villa in Dubai, where he lives in self-imposed exile, he has good reason to smile. His sister, Yingluck, a telegenic 43-year-old businesswoman with no political experience, has electrified supporters since her May 16 nomination to lead the opposition.

'Attack attack'

Reuters interviews with a dozen red-shirt leaders, activists and local businessmen suggest the movement has been energised by Yingluck's popularity. Any perceived injustice to her at the polls could be enough to galvanise supporters and touch off a new wave of unrest. Opposition to Yingluck is fierce among the royalist establishment who toppled her brother. Her supporters fear the courts or powerful behind-the-scenes figures will intervene to prevent her from forming a government if her party dominates.

"If Puea Thai wins and they don't let us form a government, Yingluck should rest first. Brothers and sisters, you come out," veteran red-shirt leader Nattawut Saikua told a recent rally of about 30,000 supporters in Udon Thani. 

"Attack. Attack," he added to waves of applause. "Let's get this over with and finish the fight. Then we will bring Yingluck back to become prime minister." 

It is a message that resonates with Wan Suwanpong, a 72-year-old lawyer and radio DJ, who says the election is not about bread-and-butter issues but social justice.

"This is what I have been telling my listeners," said Wan, whose show reaches tens of thousands of listeners in five provinces on one of several red stations in the northeast set up to rival government broadcasters.

"If we win the election, we need to be ready to go to Bangkok quickly. We need to get food ready, transportation ready, and then we head to Bangkok, surround parliament and raise pressure so the party that comes in first is allowed to set up a government," he said.

Pressure is something Wan knows a thing or two about. In October, authorities turned up at his previous studio, cut the mast-wires and hauled off the equipment. Now he operates in a hole-in-the-wall studio with a bright red carpet on a farm.

While he is a populist hero to the poor, Thaksin has been branded a "terrorist" by the government, which accuses him of directing protests that descended into urban warfare last year.

Even among red shirts, he is divisive. He declares himself the embodiment of democracy, but his record tells a different story. Critics accuse him of abusing his electoral mandate to dismantle constitutional checks and balances while cementing his own authoritarian rule during his two administrations from 2001 to 2006. 

A 2003 war on drugs burnished his image as a crime-buster and won votes, but human rights groups were appalled at 2,800 deaths in extra-judicial killings in the first three months of the campaign. 

Corruption scandals, and alleged abuses of power steadily eroded his popularity among Bangkok's middle class. That was compounded by royalist accusations that Thaksin was undermining Thailand's powerful monarchy — charges he said were politically motivated. Simmering anger exploded in 2006 when his relatives sold off, tax free, their US$1.9 billion (RM5.7 billion) stake in Shin Corp, his telecoms empire, to a Singapore state company. But in the northern heartlands, he remains a hero.

His populist policies — from virtually free healthcare, to easy consumer credit and a system of low-interest loans to the nation's 70,000 villages — were unprecedented, winning him enough support to become Thailand's first elected leader to complete a full four-year term without being unseated by a coup or pressured into stepping down.

The policies proved so popular that the current government is extending them. Rural, conservative Thais say they are willing to overlook his authoritarianism, actually welcoming his take-charge, CEO-style leadership. His ouster reinforced his image as a mould-breaking outsider who had challenged the Bangkok elite and lost. 

Thaksin fled Thailand in 2008, weeks before he was sentenced in absentia on corruption and conflict-of-interest charges, settling in Dubai where he keeps in close touch with supporters through Skype, Twitter and Facebook. 

A court last year seized US$1.4 billion of his assets, but he retains considerable wealth after investing in gold, coal and platinum mines in Africa.

Thaksin's clone

Yingluck Shinawatra makes a Thai dessert at a fresh market during an election campaign in Nakhon Phanom province, June 7, 2011. — Reuters pic

Thaksin describes his sister Yingluck as his "clone", and she does little to dispel that image, hewing to soundbites echoing her brother's populism.

She has rebuffed repeated requests by Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva for a debate despite polls showing undecided voters want to see her take on the British-born 46-year-old economist, an eloquent speaker whose debating skills were honed in the halls of England's Eton College and Oxford University.

Thronged by supporters at Udon Thani's airport for her first appearance in the northeast, she stuck to well-worn talking points, vowing to heal the political divide.

That will be difficult. Many red shirts want Abhisit's government to be held to account for civilian deaths during last year's military crackdown. Abhisit denies troops were responsible for any casualties and blames shadowy black-shirted gunmen among the red shirts for the killings. 

"I am happy to talk to every side," Yingluck said in an interview with Reuters that was nearly drowned out by cheers in an airport lobby packed with red shirts. "Most importantly, this election is one that will bring true democracy to Thailand so I would like to persuade everyone to accept the result." 

That could depend on whether she goes ahead with a general amnesty that would effectively pardon her brother, clearing the way for his return and risking the re-awakening of anti-Thaksin protesters who stormed parliament in 2008, occupied two airports and helped to topple a pro-Thaksin government.

When pressed on this by Reuters, she was non-committal. "I cannot make rules for one person," she said. "I have the interest of the public in mind first." 

Yingluck is well managed but not well known beyond her name. She is the youngest of nine children in a family of ethnic Chinese silk merchants, graduated from Chiang Mai University in the north and received a master's degree in political science at Kentucky State University.

She rose swiftly through the ranks of family companies, first as managing director of Advanced Info Service Pcl, a mobile phone provider formerly controlled by Thaksin before it was sold to investors, and then as president of SC Asset Corp, a property developer. 

Her affable, relaxed manner and northern dialect connect with rural Thais, but she stumbles occasionally on policy.

From the stage at a rally in Udon Thani, she breezed through promises of Thaksin-style policies before tripping over the price of rice. "What about rice? Are we going to buy rice from farmers?" she said. The crowd, clearly apprised of her party's policies, roared back the answer. "Yes."

"Jasmine rice will be bought at 15,000 baht (RM1,460), right?"

"No, no 20,000," shouted the crowd. Yingluck didn't skip a beat. "That's right, 20,000 baht," she said. "See? There are real fans who are listening," she added, to wild cheers.

In a subsequent Reuters interview, she elaborated on her economic priorities, saying she would not interfere in currency trading, vowing to cut the corporate tax rate and to pursue big infrastructure projects in the mould of her brother, whose government built Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport, the largest in Asia when it launched in 2006.

Economists praised Abhisit's government for steering the country out of its first recession in 11 years in 2009 and generating economic growth last year of 7.8 per cent despite the civil unrest. Thailand's stock market was one of the world's biggest gainers last year, climbing 41 per cent. But the Democrats have not won an election in 20 years.

Abhisit is desperate to change that, promising policies straight out of Thaksin's populist playbook, including a 25 per cent increase in the minimum wage, diesel and cooking gas subsidies, and free electricity for the poor. Two years ago he rolled out free healthcare to replace a Thaksin plan in which patients paid just 30 baht a visit.

The campaign platforms of both sides are trying to deal with Thailand's widening wealth gap. The richest 20 per cent of Thais earn 55 per cent of the country's wealth. That figure is close to Tunisia's, the epicentre of the "Arab Spring" uprisings, where the top fifth take in 47 per cent of the wealth, according to World Bank statistics.

Thailand's northeast is its poorest and most populous region. Its sons are Bangkok's taxi drivers and its daughters dominate its racy go-go bars. Although poverty in Thailand is down from 27 per cent of the population in 1990 to about 8 per cent now, many Thais in the red-shirt strongholds of the north and northeast live just above the poverty line.

Per capita gross domestic product in Isaan is about US$1,410 a year — an eighth of Bangkok's. Many red shirts believe Thaksin would have changed that and say they have suffered under Abhisit. But this reflects global trends, not national politics. 

While Thaksin presided over a period of relative economic stability, the world's fortunes shifted under Abhisit, as the global financial crisis hit. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books


First Conan Doyle novel to be published

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 07:00 AM PDT

File photo of a life-size bronze figure of Sherlock Holmes in the main square in the town of Meiringen, some 100km from the Swiss capital Bern. Meiringen was the location of 'The Adventure of the Final Problem' in which, writing in 1893, Conan Doyle killed the detective off — only to be forced by public pressure to resurrect him 10 years later. — Reuters pic

LONDON, June 7 — Sherlock Holmes creator Arthur Conan Doyle's debut novel is to be published for the first time in September, nearly 130 years after it was written.

"The Narrative of John Smith" was unfinished and differed radically from the Sherlock Holmes stories that made him famous, but experts said it offered a window into the mind of Conan Doyle as he started out as a young doctor and author.

"What is interesting about it is not the story for its own sake but as a look inside the mind of this very young man — a struggling physician who is struggling even harder to become a published writer," said Jon Lellenberg, one of the book's editors and a Conan Doyle expert based in Chicago.

To be published by the British Library which owns an extensive Conan Doyle collection, the book was written in 1883 and 1884, a few years before the publication of "A Study In Scarlet", the first story to feature the character of Holmes.

Through the character of John Smith, a 50-year-old man confined to his room by an attack of gout, Conan Doyle sets down his thoughts and opinions on subjects including literature, science, religion, war, and education.

Lellenberg said that while Smith was not a precursor to Holmes, other characters bore more than a passing resemblance to future personalities in the detective stories including his sidekick Dr Watson.

"He's clearly thinking about characters who would become major figures (in the Holmes novels)," Lellenberg said.

According to the introduction to the novel, "The Narrative of John Smith" is not what modern readers might call a "page turner".

"There is very little in the way of plot or characterisation: the work is essentially a series of lengthy reflections on contemporary debates occupying the young Conan Doyle in his early twenties," it reads.

"The Narrative is not successful fiction, but offers remarkable insight into the thinking and views of a raw young writer who would shortly create one of literature's most famous and durable characters, Sherlock Holmes."

Conan Doyle himself once remarked that he would rather the story never saw the light of day, according to Lellenberg.

"It's not because of the issues in there as he was never afraid to tackle controversial issues. But I think he recognised how immature the work was."

Conan Doyle was in his early 20s when he wrote his first novel, although he had already had a number of short stories published in literary journals of the time.

They had been published anonymously, and the doctor living in the southern English city of Portsmouth realised he would have to move into novels to establish himself as a writer.

The original manuscript of "The Narrative of John Smith" was lost in the post on the way to the publisher, and Conan Doyle had to rewrite it from memory.

British comedian and actor Stephen Fry said the publication of the early Conan Doyle work would add to people's understanding of the breadth of his knowledge and curiosity.

"He was the first popular writer to tell the wider reading public about narcotics, the Ku Klux Klan, the mafia, the Mormons, American crime gangs, corrupt union bosses and much else besides," he wrote in a statement.

"His boundless energy, enthusiasm and wide-ranging mind, not to mention the pitch-perfect, muscular and memorable prose is all on display here in a work whose publication is very, very welcome indeed." — Reuters

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Following the man who stole tea from China

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 05:45 AM PDT

Rose spent weeks tracing Fortune's trail through China.

TOKYO, June 7 — Robert Fortune was a scientist, a botanist and, in some ways, an industrial spy. But he is best known as the man who stole tea from deep within China and took it to India in the mid-1800s, changing history.

His venture required years of toil up China's rivers by boat to places where no Westerner had gone before, overcoming illness, pirate attacks and untrustworthy associates in the quest for tea seeds and plants that could be grown in India.

For much of his second journey, he dressed in Chinese clothes, a fake queue of hair down his back.

"People had tried to do what he had done, people had tried to sneak it out via the treaty ports, people had tried to appropriate tea seeds and take them to India, and it ended in failure," said writer Sarah Rose, who spent weeks tracing Fortune's trail through China.

"The plant hunters were the R&D men of the (British) Empire. They took raw materials and said, what can we do with this, and created an entirely new world. And he was one of the very last guys to do that."

Rose's efforts resulted in a book, "For All the Tea in China," that chronicles Fortune's journeys, which finally enabled tea to be grown in India and broke China's monopoly on the beloved beverage for good.

The son of a Scottish farm worker, Fortune's knowledge of plants and science came from practical experience, not higher education. His low social station meant he was only grudgingly provided with weapons by the Royal Horticultural Society, which sponsored the first of his plant-hunting journeys.

Though most of the delicate tea seedlings died due to shipping mishaps on his first try at sending them to India, his experiments with a special case to transport them meant that a later attempt was more successful.

Besides this, Fortune was the first to determine that black and green tea actually came from the same plant. He also introduced many trees, shrubs and flowers to the West, including varieties of roses, tree peonies and azaleas.

For Rose, who stumbled onto Fortune's story thanks to a comment from an ex-boyfriend, the years she devoted to his life, travelling in China and in the stacks of the British Library, then writing, were both joyful and frustrating.

"At some points I found him very unlikable — that kind of haughty Victorian notion of the West, a superior race, and the East as an uncivilised, wild place that they could dominate," she said.

"At the same time, I would have to locate him in the who he was and the world he came from, and out of that he was extraordinary. He was so full of daring — gone from the entire world that he knew for three years at a time, leaving his family behind, to explore this wild place."

Though she began working mostly from Fortune's own papers — "he's not a very joyful writer" — she had exciting moments when, combing through handwritten documents in old, leather-bound books, she discovered stories behind what Fortune himself knew, rounding out the overall drama.

In the end, she also came to feel that Fortune's life and experience may hold a message for modern times.

"There is still a kind of espionage between China and America, there is still so much mutual suspicion," she said.

"I think I might say there's a lesson that when both sides sow so much suspicion and the stakes are so high, somebody has to step down and trust or you are going to get a lot of stealing of national secrets." — Reuters

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Managers digging for Gold

Posted: 06 Jun 2011 04:33 PM PDT

JUNE 7 — With the European football season finally at an end (with the exception of Russia, where the Premier League will continue throughout the summer), it's time for the continent's players to head for the beaches of Dubai and the Caribbean.

But not so for the managers, whose time will be filled with endless reviews of last season, ponderings over match tactics and training strategies, deliberations over which players to release, sell or reward with new contracts, and — most importantly — decisions over how to reinforce the squad with new signings.

Steve Coppell, my former boss at Reading, regularly used to lament that there's no such a thing as genuine "time off" for a manager: whether they're at the cinema, playing golf or having a meal with friends, they can never fully get their team off their minds. And so it is now, even at this "restful" time of year, with transfer market wrangling taking up the majority of their brainspace.

All managers always have a long list of potential transfer targets perennially at the ready — some realistic, some dependant on funds becoming available, some last resorts — and mobile phones are kept busy by desperate agents trying to make a fast buck by promising the perfect new signing.

A lot of those "possible signings" lists will feature the same names – players whose availability, asking price and potential wages are widely known throughout managerial circles; how many Premier League bosses, do you think, are contemplating trying to sign Scott Parker this summer? (Answer: nearly all of them).

But the real aim of every manager is to unearth an exciting new talent, a previously undiscovered gem, before any of their competitors have the chance to get their hands on them.

And with that in mind, many managers and scouts will be keeping a keen eye on the Concacaf (Central and North American) Gold Cup, which got underway in Dallas this weekend and is scheduled to conclude in California on 25th June.

The hot favourites for the tournament are Mexico, who got their campaign off to a winning start by thrashing El Salvador 5-0 on Sunday night, largely thanks to a hat-trick from Manchester United striker Javier Hernandez.

The Mexican squad contains plenty of familiar faces — players such as Hernandez, warhorse midfielder Gerardo Torrado, ex-Barcelona defender Rafael Marquez and Fulham full-back Carlos Salcido.

Those already well-known players won't do much to excite representatives from Premier League clubs — they know everything about them anyway — but there are also a few relative unknowns that could end up provoking some interest.

Angel Reyna, for example, is very much in the shop window. The winger-cum-striker finished the recently-concluded Mexican domestic season as the country's leading goalscorer, helping his club, America, into the play-offs, and at the age of 26 he should be entering the prime of his career. If he impresses in the next few weeks, a European move may well beckon.

Premier League clubs are particularly keen on players from the United States, who generally possess a solid work ethic, impressive athleticism and present no language barrier. Most of the USA squad for the Gold Cup are already well-known, but 18-year-old Colombian-born striker Juan Agudelo, currently with New York Red Bulls, is one possible star in the making.

Another player who could be worth a look is Panama midfielder Armando Cooper. I saw Cooper in action at the Central American Championships (Copa Centroamericana) in January, and he was pretty impressive as a fast, direct winger with good dribbling ability and an eye for goal.

The downside with Cooper was a lack of consistency, but he certainly possesses potential and at the age of 23 there's plenty of time for him to improve. He currently plays for Arabe Unido, one of the strongest club sides in Panama, and would therefore come pretty cheap.

There's little doubt that a number of transfers will follow as a direct result of the evidence presented in the Gold Cup, but it's very important to get it right and try to avoid capturing a dud — in the same way that a good signing can make a season (such as Manchester United's capture of Hernandez), a bad signing can prove fatal to a team's prospects.

Earlier this season, for example, struggling French club Monaco identified a lack of goals as their most pressing concern and snapped up powerful but cumbersome Honduran striker Georgie Welcome in an attempt to address the problem, perhaps encouraged by his vaguely impressive performances in last summer's World Cup Finals; he subsequently scored just two goals in 13 appearances for Monaco and the team was relegated.

Two or three decent games in a middle-ranking international tournament don't necessarily mean a great deal and plenty of pitfalls (like Georgie Welcome) lie in wait, but a few careers will be changed forever in the course of the next few weeks.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

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Profesional tidak tolak kepimpinan ulama PAS

Posted: 06 Jun 2011 04:21 PM PDT

7 JUN — Mohamad Sabu seorang aktivis Islam dari PAS yang bukan ulama. Dia dicalonkan untuk menjadi Timbalan Presden PAS yang terdiri dari yang terdiri dari lulusan pengajian tinggi Islam. Dan Mat Sabu berjaya.

Demikian juga Muktamar PAS ke  57 mengundi tiga orang bukan ulama untuk menjadi Naib Presidennya iaitu Salehuddin Ayub, Dato Husam Musa dan Dato Mahfuz Umar. Mereka mengalahkan beberapa calon dari golongan ulama.

Pemimpin-pemimpin PAS yang terpilih dan mereka yang mengundi menyokongnya masih mengaku bahawa menyokong konsep kepimpinan ulama yang menjadi pegangan parti itu sejak tahun 1982.

Tidak ada ahli PAS termasuk yang menyertai PAS selepas tahun 1982 yang menentang konsep kepimpinan ulama. Malah pemerhati politik percaya bilangan golongan profesional yang menyertai PAS dan komited dengan perjuangannya lebih ketara dari yang menyertai UMNO. Dan mereka tahu pimpinan parti itu berkonsepkan ulama.

Jika terdapat Mat Sabu dan lebih ramai dari kalangan profesional memenangi  pemilihan pimpinan PAS minggu lalu, ia tidak disebabkan mereka menolak konsep itu.

Apa yang berlaku setelah 30 tahun piminan itu diterima ialah terdapat polemik di kalangan penyokong PAS tentang  tafsir kepimpinan ulama itu.                                                                                              

Satu golongan berpendapat  bahawa kepimpinan itu meliputi seluruh keanggotaan Majlis Syura Ulama, Presiden, Timbalan Presiden. Lain-lain jawatan adalah terbuka kepada setiap ahli yang diketahui tidak melakukan dosa besar dan tidak mengekalkan dosa kecil.

Satu pandangan lagi berpendapat bahawa konsep itu memadai dengan semua keanggotaan Majlis Syura Ulama. Presiden dan Timbalan Presiden tidak mestinya terdiri dari ulama.

Pendapat yang pertama itu tidak pernah dicabar oleh sesiapa hinggalah PAS dipimpin oleh Tuan Guru Haji Abdul Hadi Awang.

Ia tidak dicabar sebelumnya kerana wujud ketika kepimpinan ulama yang beerwibawa yang terdiri dari beberapa tokoh yang diterima oleh semua orang iaitu teridiri dari Haji Yusof Rawa,  Ustaz Fadzil Noor, Ustaz Nik Abdul Aziz bin Nik Mat, Ustaz Hji Abdul Hadi Awang, Ustaz Nakhaie Haji Ahmad, Ustaz Harun Taib dan lain-lain.

Soal kepimpinan dan siapa yang akan menggantikan antara mereka tidak berbangkit.

Apabila Majlis Syura Ulama diperkenalkan dengan Mursyidul Am sebagai ketuanya, maka semua nama yang disebut tadi layak dipilih. Badan itu diberi kuasa besar untuk mengesahkan semua keputusan  besar yang dibuat oleh Jawatankuasa Agung.

Ia menjadi badan yang tertinggi dalam parti selepas Muktamar.

Haji Yusuf Rawa, Presiden ketika itu dipilih untuk menjadi Mursyidul Am yang pertama. Beliau merangkap dua jawatan paling penting iaitu Mursyidul Am dan Presiden parti. Dia mempunyai dua timbalan, iaitu seorang Timbalan Muryidul Am iaitu Tok Guru Nik Aziz dan Timbalan Presiden iaitu Ustaz Fadzil Noor. Dua Naib Presiden yang diperuntukan oleh perlembagaan ketika itu ialah Ustaz Hadi Awang dan Ustaz Nakhaie.

Tetapi apabila Tok Guru Haji Hadi menjadi Pemangku Presiden berikut  kematian Ustaz Fadzil, tidak calon Timbalan Presiden yang jelas. Pemimpin yang paling kanan selepas Ustaz Hadi ialah Ustaz Hassan Shukri yang juga seorang ulama. Tetapi beliau tidak dilihat sebagai calon Timbalan jelas.

Di saat terakhir Haji Mustafa Ali, Naib Presiden ketika itu dan beliau bukan ulama bertanding menentang Ustaz Hassan Shukri untuk menjadi Timbalan Presiden. Sejak itu timbul isu Timbalan itu tidak semestikan seorang ulama dan akhir-aakhir ini pula Presiden juga tidak semestinya ulama.

Ketika Majlis Syura Ulama mula dibentuk, empat dari 12 anggotanya adalah mewakili Jawatankuasa Agung. Tidak disebutkan dua dari empat itu mesti Presien dan Timbalan Presiden. Oleh kerana Presiden dan Timbalan Presiden adalah ulama paling kanan dapat Jawatankuasa Agung maka kedua diutamakan untuk menganggotai majlis itu.

Logik mereka menduduki majlis itu kerana sebagai pemimpin utama  dalam Jawatankuasa Agung maka kehadiran mereka dapat memberi keterangan dan penjelasan tentang perjalanan parti dan mengapa satu-satu keputusan dibuat oleh Jawatankuasa Agung.

Kedudukan itu diterima bahawa keahlian Presiden dan timbalan itu seolah-olah wajib dalam Majlis Syura. Atas kededukan itu orang beranggapan jika Presiden dan Timbalan itu  bukan dari golongan ulama, maka bagaimana mereka hendak duduk dalam Majlis Syura yang keahliannya wajib ulama?

Jika mereka bukan ahli Majlis Syura, Majlis Syura terpaksa memanggil mereka hadir untuk bertanyakan sesuatu tentang keputusan yang dibuat dan tentang apa yang diarahkan oleh Majlis Syura untuk tindakan parti.

Perlembagaan PAS sekarang tidak lagi memastikan wakilnya dalam Majlis Syura itu terdiri dari ahli Jawatankuasa Agung. Ia boleh dilantik dari mana-mana ulama bagi mewakilinya.

Sejak itu ada perbincangan-perbincangan dibuat tentang isu Presiden dan timbalannya tidak semestinya dari ulama. Tetapi tidak keputusan diambil.

Sejak Tok Guru Haji Hadi menjadi Presiden  tidak pernah jawatan Timbalan Presiden itu tidak dipertandingkan. Mula-mula pertandingan itu antara Ustaz Hassan Shukri dan Mustafa Ali. Selapas itu Hassan Shukri dicabar oleh Ustaz Nasaruddin Mat Isa. Ustaz Hassan dikalahkan. Selepas itu Nasaruddin pula dicabar oleh Ustaz Harun Taib.

Sebelum Nasaruddin dicabar pula oleh Mat Sabu dan Husam Musa. Nasaruddin dapat mengekalkan kedudukannya. Kali terakhir ini Mat Sabu dapat mengalahkan Nasaruddin.

Pertama penyertaan Mat Sabu itu adalah untuk memenuhi tuntutan umum parti bagi   mendapatkan seorang pengganti Ustaz Hadi yang jelas jika apa-apa keadaan berlaku. Dengan kemenangan Mat Sabu itu belum bererti pengganti  Ustaz Hadi itu terjawab.

Kedua kemenangan Mat Sabu itu adalah bagi mengesahkan tafsiran konsep kepimpinan ulama itu tidak semestinya Presiden dan Timbalan Presiden terdiri dari ulama.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

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PAS: ‘Kalah puak ulama, menang puak kopiah hitam’, kata Dr M

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 02:22 AM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR, 7 Jun – Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad mendakwa pihak menang besar di sebalik pemilihan PAS hujung minggu lalu, dilihat sebagai pertembungan kumpulan ulama dan profesional, adalah tokoh-tokoh yang tidak hadir dan bukan ahli PAS khususnya Karpal Singh.

Dengan nada menyindir, bekas perdana menteri berkata, syabas dan tahniah kepada Karpal kerana "akhirnya perjuangan mu menentang negara Islam PAS sudah berjaya."

Kata Dr Mahathir (gambar), yang kalah ialah puak ulama manakala yang menang ialah puak kopiah hitam, penyokong Anwar.

Sehubungan itu, kata Dr Mahathir, perjuangan Karpal, selaku Pengerusi DAP kebangsaan, supaya PAS menggugurkan matlamat mendirikan negara Islam, yang akan menguatkuasakan hukum hudud sudah pun tercapai.

"Karpal tidak perlu mati untuk PAS langkah mayatnya.

"Belum pun dia mati, PAS sekarang sudah menjadikan perjuangan untuk negara Islam dan hukum hudud tidak lagi perkara utama," kata beliau dengan merujuk kepada ucapan dasar Presiden PAS Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang Jumaat lalu, menekankan bahawa PAS akan berjuang untuk negara berkebajikan.

Ucapan Hadi bertemakan "Membangun Negara Berkebajikan".

"Tidak ada banyak laporan berkenaan perbincangan atau perbahasan berkenaan dengan pengenepian asas penubuhan parti PAS iaitu mendiri negara Islam.

"Dengan begitu mudah asas ini digugurkan," kata Dr Mahathir lagi.

Dr Mahathir mendakwa PAS berbuat demikian kerana ingin menghalalkan kerjasama DAP, khususnya Karpal.

"Lebih tepat lagi ialah kerana PAS tidak sanggup berhujah dengan Karpal Singh," katanya lagi.

Anwar, yang dipecat Dr Mahathir pada September 1998, kini mengetuai Pakatan Rakyat yang dianggotai oleh DAP, PAS dan PKR.

Dalam ucapan dasar Muktamar Tahunan Ke-57, Ahli Parlimen Marang ini berkata, Islam menjadikan kerajaan tidak membebankan rakyat dengan cukai yang tinggi atau cukai paksaan.

"Contohnya dengan mewajibkan bayaran zakat kepada orang Islam, dan cukai kepada bukan Islam dengan kadar kemampuan dan galakan yang meningkatkan produktiviti pendapatan mereka.

"Kerajaan juga tidak boleh menyekat kekayaan yang halal, tidak menipu, tidak menindas dan tidak rasuah," katanya.

Hadi menjelaskan, PAS percaya bahawa perolehan pendapatan negara bukannya dengan cara membebankan rakyat dengan kaedah menaikkan cukai atau menyebabkan kenaikan harga barangan keperluan.

"PAS yakin bahawa keadilan sosial yang berteraskan kebajikan kepada rakyat dan amalan yang adil membawa berkat yang mengembangkan hasil negara," kata beliau lagi.

Bekas menteri besar Terengganu ini berkata, PAS telah melaksanakan sebahagian daripada konsep negara berkebajikan di negeri yang diperintahnya, mengikut kemampuan dan bidang kuasa yang ada di Kelantan dan Kedah, pernah di Terengganu dan Perak dan memperkenalkan di negeri PAS menyertai kerajaan Pakatan Rakyat di Selangor dan Pulau Pinang.

Katanya, PAS bersama Pakatan Rakyat telah memperkenalkan konsep negara berkebajikan melalui Buku Jingga yang dilancarkan.

"Sebenarnya sebahagian daripada Buku Jingga pernah dilaksanakan di negeri yang kita perintah, seperti pembatalan tol, pembatalan cukai yang membebankan rakyat dan memudahkan perkhidmatan asas yang menyentuh rukun hidup rakyat," katanya.

"Kita telah membuktikan kemampuan memerintah selama dua puluh tahun di Kelantan dan di negeri lain, dengan kadar hasil yang tidak boleh difikir mampu oleh mereka yang berfahaman kebendaan.

"Apatah lagi kini kita tentunya lebih yakin berkemampuan kerana hasil dan sumber negara tidak bocor dengan rasuah, membazir dan mewah," kata beliau lagi.

Kata Hadi, negara berkebajikan yang ingin dicapai bukan hanya hebat pencapaian ekonominya semata-mata kerana "kita juga tidak mahu melahirkan masyarakat yang hanya melihat pembangunan material yang bertaburan" di sana sini tetapi  jiwa mereka kosong sehingga melahirkan berbagai penyakit kemanusiaan dalam masyarakat.

Oleh itu katanya, negara yang diinginkan ialah yang juga menumpukan kepada kesejahteraan spiritual dan akhlak serta pembangunan rohani, yang dihubungkan dengan pegangan agama yang mampu untuk memandu kehidupan rakyat.

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Hadi tidak mahu jawatan PM jikapun Pakatan menang

Posted: 07 Jun 2011 01:30 AM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR, 7 Jun – Presiden PAS Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang berkata, beliau tidak mahukan jawatan Perdana Menteri jika Pakatan Rakyat berjaya dalam pilihan raya umum ke-13.

Hadi (gambar), yang juga Ahli Parlimen Marang berkata, perjuangan PAS adalah untuk menyelamatkan negara dan memperkenalkan dasar negara berkebajikan yang dibawa oleh pakatan pembangkang.

"Yang penting kita mahu selamatkan negara... sesiapapun boleh jadi Perdana Menteri," katanya ketika ditemui pemberita selepas mengadakan pertemuan dengan Menteri Besar Kelantan Datuk Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat di Kota Baru hari ini.

Laporan Bernama Online memetik beliau mengulas kenyataan ahli Majlis Tertinggi Umno Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz bahawa perubahan kepemimpinan PAS yang kini dikuasai golongan profesional menunjukkan parti itu mahu berkuasa dalam pakatan pembangkang, termasuk Abdul Hadi yang berhasrat untuk menjadi Perdana Menteri.

Malahan Nazri menegaskan peluang Umno untuk meraih undi kaum Melayu pada pilihan raya umum akan datang lebih besar selepas PAS menukar dasar parti itu untuk tidak lagi mempertahankan perjuangan membina negara Islam, sebaliknya memperjuangkan 'negara berkebajikan' di mana Umno sudah pun melaksanakannya sejak merdeka.

Hadi juga menafikan Timbalan Presiden Mohamad Sabu sebagai liabiliti kepada parti setelah beliau dipilih oleh perwakilan dalam pemilihan pada Muktamar PAS minggu lalu.

"Bagi Umno, Mohamad Sabu adalah satu peluang untuk menjatuhkan PAS. Tetapi bagi PAS, Mohamad Sabu adalah satu senjata untuk menjatuhkan Umno," katanya.

Hadi turut menafikan bahawa wujudnya anggota parti yang kecewa dengan perubahan dasar perjuangan parti itu setelah beliau mengumumkan belum tiba masanya PAS menegakkan negara Islam yang menjadi dasar perjuangan parti itu selama ini, sebaliknya mahu memulakan dulu pelaksanaan negara berkebajikan sejajar tuntutan pakatan pembangkang.

Malahan, katanya konsep negara berkebajikan itu mempunyai elemen yang lebih murni dalam menyelamatkan negara kerana PAS akan menerapkan konsep halal dan haram dalam pelaksanaannya.

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