Ahad, 19 Jun 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Lin Dan not feeling so super in Singapore

Posted: 19 Jun 2011 01:18 AM PDT

China's Tian Qing and Zhao Yunlei (right) celebrate on the podium after defeating South Korea's Ha Jung-Eun and Kim Min-Jung during their women's doubles final match at the Singapore Badminton Open tournament in Singapore June 19, 2011. — Reuters pic

SINGAPORE, June 19 — China's Olympic badminton champion Lin Dan was subjected to boos and jeers today after the sport's golden boy was forced to withdraw from the Singapore Open final due to illness.

The 27-year-old, who also skipped a news conference earlier in the week, had been due to play countryman Chen Jin in the final but pulled out after being diagnosed with gastroenteritis by the tournament's doctor.

Some 7,000 fans who had turned up at Singapore's Indoor Stadium to see "Super Dan" vented their frustration at his withdrawl.

"I felt very unwell after I went to bed. This morning I still didn't feel very well so I went to the tournament office and consulted the team doctor," Lin told a news conference.

"I can understand how the spectators feel, as the week went on I have had more and more people cheering for me. I can empathise with them as I have a lot of supporters in Singapore."

Tournament referee Ernest Robinson confirmed that Lin had pulled out due to gastroenteritis and that Chen Jin had been awarded the title on a walkover.

In the women's final, China's Wang Xin defeated Denmark's Tine Baun 21-19 21-17. — Reuters  

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Seppi beats Tipsarevic in bizarre final

Posted: 18 Jun 2011 11:06 PM PDT

Not happy: Janko Tipsarevic has his appeal to stop play turned down. — Reuters pic

LONDON, June 19 — Unseeded Italian Andreas Seppi won the first ATP title of his career in extraordinary circumstances yesterday when Serbian opponent Janko Tipsarevic retired hurt in a rain-interrupted Eastbourne International final.

Seppi won 7-6, 3-6, 5-3 after two hours 35 minutes when the third seed retired after injuring his leg following a tumble on the greasy surface. Tipsarevic an hour earlier had called for the match to be halted because of bad light.

Officials halted play for about 20 minutes, with Seppi leading 4-0 in the final set before the match resumed in an almost deserted stadium.

Unseeded benefactor Andreas Seppi wins his first ATP title. — Reuters pic

Tipsarevic fought back to 4-3 before play was halted for another 10 minutes when he was strapped up after being wrong-footed by a return at the baseline, splaying his legs as he fell to the ground.

With Wimbledon starting tomorrow and the tournament already hit by rain that washed out play on Friday, officials were keen to get the match finished.

Tipsarevic, though, was unhappy with the conditions. He asked for play to be halted at the start of the third set but was overruled by the tournament supervisor.

Complaining soon after because he said "the scoreboard was shining", some spectators, wrapped up in hats and scarves in the chilly conditions, shouted back at him "get on with it".

As conditions worsened, Tipsarevic complained more loudly, and with Seppi leading 5-3, 15-0 in the final set, he decided enough was enough.

Both men were playing their second match of the day after Tipsarevic beat Japan's Kei Nishikori 6-2, 6-4 in his semi-final earlier, and Seppi eliminated Russian Igor Kunitsyn 6-4, 2-6, 6-4.

World No. 30 Tipsarevic had previously reached three ATP finals and lost them all. His most recent defeat was at Delray Beach in the United States in February, when he lost to Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina.

Seppi was playing his first ATP final in four years. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Springsteen saxophonist Clemons dies

Posted: 18 Jun 2011 06:41 PM PDT

Musician Clarence Clemons poses for a portrait while promoting his new book 'Big Man' in New York in this October 21, 2009 file photo. — Reuters pic

LOS ANGELES, June 19 — Clarence Clemons, the burly saxophone player who played a crucial role in shaping Bruce Springsteen's early sound, died today, six days after suffering a stroke at his Florida home, media reports said. He was 69. 

The New York Times said Clemons' death was confirmed by a spokeswoman for Springsteen. Reuters could not immediately confirm the reports. 

Clemons, dubbed the "Big Man," started working with Springsteen in 1971 and was a charter member of the backing group that came to be known as the E Street Band. 

His gritty, evocative saxophone solos powered such notable Springsteen songs as "Born to Run," "Jungleland," "Prove It All Night," "Tenth Avenue Freeze Out," and "Badlands." 

On stage, Clemons proved a worthy foil for Springsteen and his bandmates. In a 1975 concert review, Rolling Stone said Clemons betrayed an "ominous cool" in contrast to guitarist Steven Van Zandt's "strange hipster frenzy." 

"Clarence was the big black saxophone player who completely represented the tradition of rock 'n' roll and R&B," Van Zandt told Britain's Mojo magazine in 2006. 

Alongside Van Zandt, Clemons personified the E Street Band, and he took it hard when Springsteen broke up the group for a decade in 1989. But by then, Clemons was being used less in the studio. On stage, he was often reduced to playing tambourine or engaging in crowd-pleasing theatrics, like kissing Springsteen during the live staple "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)." 

He also dabbled in acting, enjoyed a solo hit single with Jackson Browne, 1985's ""You're a Friend of Mine," toured with Ringo Starr and even played on two tracks on pop singer Lady Gaga's new album. 

Clemons' death came three years after organist Danny Federici, Springsteen's longest-serving musical partner, lost a three-year battle with cancer. 

Clemons had been in ill health in recent years, suffering back and hip problems. He had double knee-replacement surgery in 2008, and walked for the first time in three months when Springsteen and the E Street Band played the Super Bowl early in 2009. The band's eight-month world tour that year was "pure hell," he told Rolling Stone earlier this year. 

Clemons was born Jan. 11, 1942 in Norfolk, Virginia, and played saxophone in high school where he was also a promising football player. A car crash ended his professional sporting dreams, and he went on to become a social worker, family man and barroom rocker. 

His first meeting with Springsteen was auspicious. Clemons had heard about a hot young rocker on the Asbury Park, New Jersey, scene, and walked into one of his club shows on a bitterly windy night. A gust of wind ripped the door from his hand, and it flew down the street. All eyes turned to Clemons, and Springsteen readily agreed when he asked to sit in with him. 

"When I first walked on that stage and hit the first note, I saw things that are happening today, then," he told Reuters in 2009. "I knew that he (Springsteen) was what I was looking for and I was what he was looking for to take that next step to the big time. It was just love, man, at first sight." 

During sessions for Springsteen's 1975 breakthrough "Born to Run," Clemons spent 16 hours recording his solo on "Jungleland," the nine-minute track that closes the album. 

"Creating is like religion," Clemons said later of the marathon session. "I was willing to relinquish myself to him (Springsteen). I've had people say to me, 'That sax solo saved my life.' So I did my job." 

Clemons was used more sparingly in later years as Springsteen opted to emphasize the guitars (1978's "Darkness on the Edge of Town") or recorded largely solo (1982's "Nebraska" and 1987's "Tunnel of Love." 

He still brought fervor to later-era songs like the hit single "Dancing in the Dark" and "Land of Hope and Dreams, but "over time his role in the band has become more symbolic than musical," author Jimmy Guterman wrote in his 2005 Springsteen biography "Runaway American Dream." 

In 2009 he published his memoir, "Big Man: Real Life and Tall Tales," co-written with his friend Don Reo. — Reuters

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US festival promises hip documentaries

Posted: 18 Jun 2011 05:49 PM PDT

The Silverdocs film festival runs June 20-26 at the Silver Theatre complex in Silver Spring, Maryland. — AFP pic

WASHINGTON, June 19 — One of the largest US festivals for documentary cinema — screening more than 100 films from 52 countries — will open in a renovated 1938 theater this month near the Capitol. 

The Silverdocs film festival, which runs June 20-26 in the Washington bedroom community of Silver Spring, Maryland, is dedicated to the idea that documentary films can be fun. "Watching documentaries is not old-fashioned anymore," said Festival director Sky Sitney. 

"It used to be sort of like eating spinach, it's good for you, but it's not fun. I think Silverdocs turns that on its head." 

The festival, now in its ninth year, includes 108 films selected "from more high quality submissions than ever before," said Sitney. 

Among the filmmakers of note are Marshall Curry, whose 2005 film "Street Fight" was an Academy Award nominee for best documentary. Curry's new film, "If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front," is about the unraveling of the radical ecological group the FBI at one point called "America's number one domestic terrorist threat." 

Among the festival's other "green" screenings are "Revenge of the Electric Car," whose director, Chris Paine, tells the tale of electric vehicles produced at Nissan and General Motors factories, as well as a Silicon Valley start up. The Canadian film "Wiebo's War" is a portrait of an environmental militant from Alberta at war against the western prairie province's oil producers. 

Several films deal with the theme of urban violence, including one by director Steve James, of "Hoop Dreams" fame, whose "The Interrupters" follows three fomer gang members trying to protect their Chicago neighborhoods from the violence they once employed themselves. 

Director Alex Gibney, who took apart the Enron financial debacle in a 2006 film, returns with a look at baseball spectator Steve Bartman, who endured the scorn of thousands of Chicago Cubs fans after he disrupted a possible catch in the sixth game of the National League Championship Series. 

The move was later seen as the turning point in the Cubs' ultimate defeat. Whitney Dow, who documented the 1998 racially-motivated murder and mutilation of James Byrd Jr. in Jasper, Texas, turns to Haiti with "When the Drum Is Beating," the story of the ultra-popular band "Septentrional." 

Britain's James Marsh, who won an Oscar in 2008 for "Man on Wire" detailing the exploits of French tightrope walker Philippe Petit, returns with "Project Nim," a film about a landmark experiment in the 1970s that sought to prove that a chimpanzee raised like a human could eventually communicate like one. 

The festival also includes a sneak preview of "Age of Champions" by Christopher Rufo, which takes a look at the extraordinary activities of many older people, including a group of grandmothers who play basketball, a 100-year-old tennis player and 80-something swimmers and other athletes. 

Then there's "Bakhmaro," a film about a restaurant in a provincial Georgian town that remains open — although no one ever comes. The festival will also screen the entire six hours of the 2010 Chinese film "Karamay." 

Director Xu Xin tells the story of a 1984 fire that killed 300 people during a performance in which officials asked the children in the audience to remain seated so the adults could save themselves. — AFP-Relaxnews

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Blooming after 200 years: the “Infiorata” decorations of floral petals in Genzano, south of Rome, June 19, 2011, part of festivities marking the Corpus Domini (Body of Christ) feast. — Reuters

Posted: 19 Jun 2011 07:41 AM PDT

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Federer back to reclaim his Wimbledon crown

Posted: 19 Jun 2011 12:32 AM PDT

Roger Federer on life on the road: "I really enjoy time with the kids . . . I've been very fortunate to have such a wonderful wife (Mirka, second right) who is so supportive and so willing to pack all the bags and come on the road with us and make it work." — Reuters pic

LONDON, June 19 — A Wimbledon final without Roger Federer almost seemed unthinkable 12 months ago, but the "unthinkable" happened last July when the most gifted player to have picked up a tennis racquet discovered he was no longer on the guest list for the showpiece match at the grasscourt grand slam.

But the man who enjoyed the privilege of opening Centre Court proceedings at the All England Club for seven successive years — including 2009 when Rafa Nadal was unable to defend his title — is now back to reclaim his crown.

The six-times Wimbledon champion purposefully strode into the grounds yesterday at 1027 GMT (11.27am British time) and even the miserable British weather did not dampen his spirits as he went through his paces during a 30-minute hit with his friend Tommy Haas.

Just in case Federer had forgotten who the defending champion was, Nadal navigated his way through the couple of hundred people jostling for space around the outside court and the Spaniard was soon nodding his head in appreciation as Federer finished off the session with a flurry of aces.

Job done for the day, Federer exchanged high fives with his great rival and walked off court knowing that he was just seven matches away from drawing level with the record that Pete Sampras shares with William Renshaw of seven men's titles.

Federer, dressed in an all-white track suit, settled into a green chair in a bunker of the All England Club to have a chat with Reuters about how much he wants to win back the Wimbledon crown, his desire to reclaim the world No. 1 ranking, his various records, and how he combines his on-court commitments with fatherhood.

Reuters: Roger, last year was the first time in eight years that you were not involved in the final weekend at Wimbledon. What was that like for you?

The Roger Federer the world (thinks it) knows: Intense, yet the perfect gentleman on court. — Reuters pic

Federer: "Honestly I did not even think of that. First you're disappointed you lost, then you move on and then you're like 'okay, I'm going on vacation'. Then you don't think about it. Only later did I hear so many people telling me 'uh, a final without Federer is not the same'. 

That's just the Federer fans or my supporters who felt that. I didn't think about it too much and it hasn't come to my mind much this year. What you play for is really to be in a Wimbledon final, walking out on that Sunday, that's so special. 

I've been fortunate enough to be there so many times. But (Tomas) Berdych played a great match against me and deserved to be in that final against Rafa. Obviously it hurt a bit but it didn't hurt not being in the final. It hurt not winning that match against Berdych."

Q: Is that something that you have been dreading for the last few years — that your run of reaching seven consecutive finals would eventually end?

A: "I was disappointed but life goes on. I've had an amazing run here. I did so much better than I ever thought I would. The important thing is that you learn from defeats like this. You take the right decisions after that and that you don't panic. Many times what can also happen is you lose a match and whole thing just goes sideways.

"You (think) 'I'll change everything around me. I'll change my coaches, I'll change the way I travel, I'll change the tournaments I play because I made so many mistakes'.

"But the important thing is to really be able to pinpoint what didn't go well, what I could have done better. You just lay out all those things in the table and you take the right decision for next time. Sometimes you have to accept that a guy played better on the day than you. 

(Alejandro) Falla played fantastic in the first round (last year before losing in five sets) and Berdych played an amazing match against me. Ok, maybe I wasn't playing at my very best but I was playing not bad. I didn't make it easy for those guys to beat me."

Q: When you see that people are not talking about you as a potential champion of an event, as was the case in the build-up to Roland Garros — does that irritate you?

A: "I felt I was (in contention). I was quite surprised (how people) said 'oh you have no pressure'. I would have had less pressure anyhow because I wasn't defending champion, Novak (Djokovic) was on an (unbeaten) streak and Rafa was defending champion. I've already beaten the all-time grand slam record (by winning 16 majors), I've won the French Open before so I'm going into this French Open regardless of how I did before. 

That I was such a small favourite, only later did I hear that. It surprises me a bit and it seems sometimes people are very short sighted and they look at only the last three weeks instead of looking at the last three years. That's unfortunately how tennis is, it's very volatile in terms of the rankings, and that can change a few things. I know I have a chance for world No. 1 if I play well from now till the US Open. The players know that but sometimes people tend to forget."

Q: Out of all the records you have achieved, which is the one you are proudest of?

A: "Let's wait and see when I finish. Then maybe I'll say 'this one is my favourite one'. I'm still going and I'm still able to rewrite history. But I guess it's the ones (streaks) that last five or seven years, that you know you only get one chance in a lifetime to do, like Sampras's six straight year end No. 1 rankings. You're not going to miss one year and then get another six. It's almost impossible to do. You only get one chance for those kinds of things.

"I have short-term records, like at one point I think I beat 24 top 10 guys in a row. Or once I made the finals, I won 24 finals in a row. Those kinds of records are also unbelievable for me when I look back. There are many of them but I don't know which one to choose from."

Q: Out of all your many records, which is the one do you think will last the longest and why?

A: "I wouldn't know because sometimes you think 'this is the one' but then it won't. It doesn't matter too much to me."

Q: What about the streak of reaching 23 successive grand slam semi-finals?

A: "Maybe that one. Yeah, maybe you're right. If it gets interrupted once after a few years, then you won't get it again. That will be a tough one to beat."

Q: If you had to pick one career-defining shot/point you have played during your career, which one would it be and why?

A: "Uhhmmmmm (laughing). For me the biggest shot was unfortunately against Tommy Haas, who's a good friend of mine, at the French Open (in 2009). You probably know which one I'm talking about, on break point (at two sets and 3-4 down in the fourth round), the forehand inside out. I couldn't hit any more forehands; for some reason I completely lost it. That's the one I needed and I remember I fist-pumped and thought 'this is it'. This is what was going to put me back into the match and into the tournament. 

Who knows, maybe I would have still won the French Open later on but it just all seemed so perfect to win that year. The way I had to battle against Haas, against (Juan Martin) del Potro, against (Jose) Acasuso, against (Gael) Monfils, against (Robin) Soderling, all those players. It was just a very tough tournament and still very vivid in my mind."

Q: That shot was a bit like Tiger Woods's miracle birdie at the 16th — when the ball appeared to teeter tantalizingly over the edge of the hole before, a second later, dropping into the cup — during the final round of the 2005 US Masters.

A: "Yeah, maybe, although mine went a bit quicker. It was all over in a hurry. Second serve, bang, bang and it was over. But it was huge."

Q: Lots of people have said they wished they could have played like you. Is there any player or a particular shot of a player — past or present — that you are envious of.

A: "I am very happy with what I have. Sure I cannot hit a double-handed backhand, I wish I could. But it's fine. I wish I had a serve like Sampras but I'm happy with mine. I wish I had volleys like (Tim) Henman or (Stefan) Edberg or (Pat) Rafter but I'm happy with what I have. I have tried to become the best player I can be over all these years and I think I did really well. I'm surprised how well I actually did.

"I grew up in the era of Sampras, Henman and (Richard) Krajicek and all those guys who kept coming in, I would have loved to have played an even better serve-and-volley game. Even though I know I can play it well.

I don't know if surfaces have slowed down or if my volleys are just not good as the other guys or if the guys return so much better today. I guess it's a combination. I would like to play much more moving forward but it is very difficult in this day and age."

Q: In less than two months you turn 30. Are you dreading it?

A: "No, no problem. I can only smile about it. Do I feel 30? I guess I do. I feel ripe like a grape for (a good-quality) wine. I feel like I'm in a really nice place right now. Everybody who's 20 wants to stay 20 and everybody who turns 30 wants to stay 30. That's the feeling I get. It's a wonderful age to be. You've already experienced a lot but there's still a lot to come. It's a wonderful age and I'm looking forward to the next 10 years."

Q: What has been your lowest point in your tennis career?

A: "I have had a few tough losses and the other night I was having dinner and (my friends) were saying 'oh I remember that loss, and this one and that one and this one' and I was like 'oh God, we're only talking about my losses'. 

With all the 950-plus matches I have played, I've had a lot of losses and a lot of heart breaks. To pick the toughest one, was it here against Nadal (in the 2008 five-set final described as the best ever tennis match)? Possibly, but at the same time it was such a special match to be part of it doesn't hurt as much down the stretch. In the very moment it hurts but not later on."

Q: How does Roger Federer the tennis player differ from Roger Federer the father?

A: "I'm as patient a father as I am on the tennis court. It takes a lot for me to get really upset but sometimes kids can get you really cross if they really keep bugging you. As they get older, they push the limits more. So it's more a matter of setting boundaries for the kids than getting really upset with them. But you have to pretend that you're a little bit upset sometimes.

"I really enjoy time with the kids and I'm really happy I've only missed them for three weeks in the last two years. I've been very fortunate to have such a wonderful wife (Mirka) who is so supportive and so willing to pack all the bags and come on the road with us and make it work. 

It's a lot of organisation but I don't want to be away from the kids, I don't want to be away from Mirka and it's just a nice time and I wouldn't want to miss it for the world. I think I'm patient, good husband and good father but you have to ask others about it."

Q: Are you a strict dad?

A: "I think the strictness will grow as they grow, unfortunately for them." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa


Anwar: Saya akan minta Bersih batal himpunan jika Najib jamin pilihan raya adil

Posted: 19 Jun 2011 03:00 AM PDT

SHAH ALAM, 19 Jun — Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim akan meminta Himpunan Bersih 2.0 bulan depan dibatalkan jika Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak dapat memberi jaminan pilihan raya umum yang bersih dan adil.

Ketua Umum Pakatan Rakyat ini berkata beliau bersedia meminta Pengerusi Bersih Datuk Ambiga  Sreenevasan "esok juga" jika Najib sanggup memberi jaminan itu.

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PKR desak timbalan presiden SPR undur jika gagal bukti daftar pemilih bersih

Posted: 19 Jun 2011 02:01 AM PDT

SHAH ALAM, 19 Jun — PKR menggesa timbalan pengerusi Suruhanjaya Pilihan Raya (SPR) Datuk Wira Wan Ahmad Wan Omar meletakkan jawatan jika tidak dapat membuktikan daftar pemilih induk yang diwartakan bulan lalu adalah bersih seratus peratus daripada pengundi hantu.

Wan Ahmad diberi kata dua 48 jam membuktikan perkara itu.

Sambil menjadikan contoh di bahagian Parlimen Gombak diwakilinya, timbalan presiden PKR Azmin Ali berkata SPR perlu membuktikan dakwaan dibuat beliau hari ini adalah tidak benar.

Dalam kenyataannya hari ini, Azmin (gambar) berkata, rumah diduduki ibunya di Kampung Klang Gate dekat sini mempunyai 11 pemilih berdaftar iaitu enam Melayu dan lima Cina.

"Emak saya tinggal seorang diri sejak ayah saya meninggal dunia pada 1999. Sekarang saya ada (lima) adik-beradik Cina (pengundi kalangan kaum Cina) di rumah emak saya," kata beliau ketika berucap pada Konvensyen Pilihan Raya PKR 2011 di sini hari ini.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Keeping in touch… with strangers

Posted: 18 Jun 2011 05:28 PM PDT

JUNE 19 — I pride myself on being an independent woman, but the truth is I am a slave to modern life and its conveniences. 

You put your trust in what is now part of your everyday: cellular technology, Internet banking, online purchases, the convenient curse of credit cards, etc. And when something goes wrong, you're upset, but you accept it because hey, technology ain't the be all and end all of civilisation (though I know some may argue). 

But when these conveniences are abused, being upset comes in a different form. 

Hi, hru? the text message read. 

Sorry, who's this please? was my reply, thinking this was perhaps a friend whose number was not registered on the temporary phone I was using since my Blackberry 9700's motherboard seems to have lost its way from Hungary or Budapest or Norway (or wherever it was the service centre said) to Kuala Lumpur. Seven weeks ago. Giving me severe shakes. Unable to work, play, sleep or, for that matter, wake up. 

I'm  Mahen from Subang — a message which I ignored. Obviously a stranger. I switched off the phone, boarded the flight and on the way to the hotel I was staying at in Penang, another message comes in from Mahen from Subang: "…today I checking 4 u go 2 penang…I'm the one…r u remember? Actually wan to tell got vacan in firefly as a secretary…if u interest plz send ur resume or col me…tq" 

In the hotel room up for a friend's wedding, I laughed for a full five minutes. I wanted to edit the text message. I wanted to give the guy a grammar lesson. Then I completely flipped. 

If this was indeed the man who checked me in for my flight, that would mean he went to the trouble to copy my number from the system and send me a text message. Doesn't that also mean he knows where I live? And considering I live alone, I have a right to panic. 

On the other hand, I have always wanted to use the phrase "utterly mortified" in writing. There is something thrilling about those two words when put together. And yippee, I don't have just one occasion on which to use it, I have two when I write letters of complaint. 

My long-standing love affair with shopping has kept me off credit cards, until recently when I found out that I need to be in debt to stand a better chance for a housing loan. 

So with much trepidation, I applied for the latest 2-for-1 deal, received pre-approvals (yay) and started cautiously swiping the card each time I wanted to pay for something. 

Barely two months, and I receive a phone call on my mobile from a "credit card agency" asking me for my details, and wanting to know why, when my name was Shamini Darshni, I was unable to speak Tamil. 

"What has that got to do with anything?" I yelled, followed by a long pause, after which the idiot from "Grand Takaful Sdn Bhd" (as a colleague later found out when she pranked call the number) hung up. 

When I called back, the line got passed to four people — all women with thick Indian accents. Including the child grumbling and wailing in the background. Despite repeated demands, none of the women were able to give me their "office" address. 

A call to the bank follows. A report is lodged. Almost two weeks pass. No updates. Other "crooks" have my cell phone number. And home address. And birth date. Though I don't think they'll be sending me pretty gifts any time soon. 

Sigh. I am utterly mortified.

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

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A nation divided?

Posted: 18 Jun 2011 05:16 PM PDT

JUNE 19 — On the one hand there are the Petronas Twin Towers, Malaysia Truly Asia, Vision 2020, the Economic Transformation Programme, the Government Transformation Programme, National Key Result Areas and the prime minister's international call towards moderate Islam. 

On the other hand is Malay First, Malaysia Second, Perkasa calling for jihad against Christians trying to take over Malaysia, the cow head and Allah controversies, the failure of the New Economic Model, legalised child marriage, female genital mutilation and the latest additions being the Obedient Wives Club and the Polygamists Club. 

The former aims to project Malaysia as a responsible, progressive member of the community of nations committed to inclusive spiritual and material growth. The latter reflects the changing social realities on the ground, where there seems to be a regression of sorts towards a narrow backward looking society, distrustful of multiracialism, insecure about its own identity and religious practices, and hell bent on seeking comfort in extreme traditionalism. 

At a deeper level, this points towards a fundamental shift away from the quintessential Malaysian belief in the middle way, where everyone understood the fragility of the peace between the races and instinctively stayed away from trampling on the sensitivities of others. 

It can be argued that the real social contract post 1969 was not political in terms of an exchange of citizenship for special privileges, but one where the similarities between the races as humans took precedence over the differences. 

And it had a lot to do with the generosity and welcome provided by the majority community in integrating the races at a people to people level. Like it or not, the way the majority community sees itself and the world determines the national discourse to a large degree. 

At a time when the majority community was comfortable in its own skin, convent schools were popular for the quality of education they offered and open houses promoted true integration. The media played its part by highlighting the positives and suppressing the negatives. 

For a period of time, coupled with steady economic growth this resulted in the emergence of the harmonious blend of tradition and modernity that came to be seen as distinctively Malaysian. The global success of Malaysia Truly Asia had less to do with the originality of the slogan and more to do with the fact that it was an accurate reflection of Malaysian social reality. 

In retrospect, it was too good to last. With the advent of new media, the iniquities and injustices of the 90s were laid bare. As Malaysians were exposed to global best practices in the areas of politics and economics, this new generation of Internet savvy citizens were the first to be outraged. It led to the dramatic 2008 elections which forced the powers that be on both sides of the political divide to reassess their positions. 

While both political coalitions jumped to take ownership of the progressive liberal agenda through slogans such as 1 Malaysia and Malaysian Malaysia, a justifiable fear that the erstwhile beneficiaries of the NEP would not take kindly to its reversal forced the ruling coalition to devise a two-pronged Jekyll and Hyde policy. A debate over competing policies of growth, welfare and distribution of resources, normal in any country was suddenly tinged with racial undertones. 

More than anything else, this attempt to be everything to everybody at the same time, moderate and extremist, inclusive and separatist, traditional and modern, has led to the current situation. The majority community now feels under siege and is forced to adopt a defensive approach in the face of the negative portrayal of some of its erstwhile leaders and their policies. 

Ordinary people are being forced now to choose rather than co-exist. Are you more proud of your race or your country? Will you go to your neighbour's house for a meal even if she is not a co-religionist? How will you decide where to live, where to educate your children? What criteria will you use? 

From a society that could effortlessly internalise, reconcile and even celebrate differences, symbolised most memorably by the sight of girls wearing the tudung on top of a pair of Levi's, Yasmin Ahmad's Petronas commercials, or the universal popularity of the baju, to today where Man U T-shirts are the work of the devil, religious belief is worn on the sleeve rather than in the heart and educational and housing patterns reveal progressive ethnic segregation. 

The biggest clue as to which direction has more appeal to Malaysian society today will come in the next general election. In many ways by simply stating its commitment to a needs- and merit-based vision for Malaysia independent of race, the opposition has been able to actually appropriate the underlying meaning of 1 Malaysia to itself and to portray the ruling coalition as majoritarian and conservative, more 1 Bumi than 1 Malaysia. 

This allows the opposition to ignore its own internal differences, or propose its own coherent, detailed vision for the country and rely on the rakyat merely deciding whether they want to be part of 1 Bumi or not. 

Therefore the next GE should reveal the relative appeal of different worldviews, epitomised in a microcosm, by say the Sisters In Islam versus the Obedient Wives Club or Malaysia Inc. versus PKMM (Bumiputera Contractors Association). And it will determine the future social fabric of this country.

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

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