Isnin, 12 September 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Robben out of Bayern squad against Villarreal

Posted: 12 Sep 2011 08:24 AM PDT

BERLIN, Sept 12 – Winger Arjen Robben will miss Bayern Munich's Champions League Group A match against Spain's Villarreal on Wednesday because he has not yet recovered from a groin injury, the club said today.

The winger has been nursing the injury since the end of August and has missed the last two league games, including Saturday's 7-0 demolition of Freiburg.

Robben (picture) joins the injured Ivica Olic, Daniel Pranjic and Breno on the sidelines

"He is still feeling the effect of his injury which will not allow him to play against Villarreal," the club said after coach Jupp Heynckes named the same squad as for the Freiburg win.

The Champions League final will be held in Munich on May 19 next year. – Reuters

Ramsey to miss Arsenal’s opener with Dortmund

Posted: 12 Sep 2011 07:37 AM PDT

LONDON, Sept 12 – Arsenal midfielder Aaron Ramsey was left out of the squad for tomorrow's Champions League Group F opener against Borussia Dortmund with local media reporting he had injured his ankle in training.

The 20-year-old Welshman (picture) was not in the 18-man squad listed on the club's website (http://www.arsenal.com) but there was no reason given for his omission.

The BBC reported that manager Arsene Wenger had said Ramsey had limped out of training today before the team's departure to Germany.

It comes as a blow to the London side, who are already struggling with an injury to fellow first-choice midfielder Jack Wilshere as well as the departures of Samir Nasri and Cesc Fabregas. – Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Superstrong spider skin: Art or scientific miracle?

Posted: 12 Sep 2011 08:16 AM PDT

UTRECHT (Holland), Sept 12 — What started as a work of art and science fiction may become a medical miracle that benefits burn patients, aids bone regeneration and one day may even make us bulletproof.

Dutch artist Jalila Essaïdi and cell biologist Abdoelwaheb El Ghalbzouri blended synthetic spider silk with human skin to produce a superstrong material that can stop a rifle bullet shot at half its regular speed.

Time to move over Kevlar? Not quite yet, but the new weave could turn out to have various medical uses.

Essaïdi's original art work is a lab sample of skin tissue stored in a refrigerator and accompanied by a video showing a gunshot test on the material.

The special skin will soon become part of Belgian art collector Geert Verbeke's unusual portfolio: he plans to graft part of the artist's creation into his arm later this year.

"It connects nature, science and art. If I put the art that Jalila has made on my arm, then I will always have it with me," said Verbeke, who has a particular interest in marrying arts and life sciences.

However, such grafted skin is still far from being truly bulletproof.

El Ghalbzouri said that spider silk is three times stronger than Kevlar, which is used in bulletproof vests worn by the military and others in conflict zones. Since bulletproof vests are made from 33 layers of Kevlar, using more layers of spider silk could prove more effective in stopping a bullet, he said.

He and Essaïdi see more potential for the blended skin and silk when it comes to developing skin grafts for burn patients.

"This skin is much stronger and tougher than regular skin ... you can also make much larger pieces of skin" this way, the artist told Reuters. The layers of spider silk embedded in the skin allow the cultivation of larger sheets of tissue which literally outgrow their petri dishes, she added.

Some studies show that incorporating regular silk in burn wounds encourages faster healing and less scarring, she said, so now she wants to see whether incorporating spider silk in the treatment of burn wounds has similar results.

While human cells appear to adhere well to spider silk, more research is needed, El Ghalbzouri said.

"Next to skin, spider silk could be a very good scaffold for bone regeneration, cartilage, tendons, ligaments," he told Reuters in an interview, while other applications for the silk alone include surgical stitches, thanks to its strength and elasticity, as well as parachutes and parachute cords. — Reuters

Smartphones more popular than feature phones in Western Europe

Posted: 12 Sep 2011 05:33 AM PDT

Smartphones are more popular than feature phones in Western Europe. — AFP pic

FRANKFURT, Sept 12 — Smartphone shipments outstripped feature phone shipments in Western Europe for the first time during the second quarter of 2011 said market researcher IDC in a study published September 9.

Smartphone shipments grew to reach 52 per cent of the total mobile phone shipments within the region during the second quarter of 2011 — an increase of 48 per cent year over year to 21.8 million units. Feature phone shipments, on the other hand, dropped by 29 per cent to 20.4 million units.

The large increase in smartphone shipments across all European countries can be largely attributed to a surge in consumer adoption of "smart" Android and iOS devices.

Market researcher IDC also suggests that feature phones have become "a niche segment driven by the very-low-end devices targeted at users who only need a device for voice and texts."

While smartphone shipments are on the rise, the total Western European mobile phone market declined by 3 per cent year over year to 42.2 million units.

Francisco Jeronimo, European mobile devices research manager, IDC, said that a number of factors were responsible for the drop including the current economic environment in the Eurozone and "the sharp decline of Nokia, which was not totally offset by the remaining players, which may indicate that Symbian fans are holding off on their phone replacements until Nokia launches its Windows Phones."

"Lastly," he added, "operators focused on clearing inventories for the introduction of the new devices expected in the third quarter, such as the iPhone5 from Apple and Windows Phones from HTC and other players."

Samsung was the most popular phone vendor in the region during 2Q11 with a 33 per cent market share followed by Nokia (21 per cent), Apple (11 per cent), HTC (7 per cent) and Research In Motion (7 per cent).

A September 6 report by Taiwan's DigiTimes Research division predicts that Apple will surpass Nokia to become the world's largest smartphone manufacturer in 2011. — AFP-Relaxnews

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Woody Harrelson finds groove in bad cop role

Posted: 12 Sep 2011 08:18 AM PDT

TORONTO, Sept 12 – Actor Woody Harrelson confided yesterday that he had difficulty portraying a cop in "Rampart," which premiered at the Toronto film festival, but critics praised his performance as his best ever.

Dozens of actors have given memorable performances as corrupt cops over the years, including Harvey Keitel in "Bad Lieutenant" (1992), Gary Oldman in "The Professional" (1994) and Richard Gere in "Internal Affairs" (1990).

Denzel Washington won an Oscar for his performance as a dirty cop in "Training Day" in 2001.

"I didn't try to stack myself up against Harvey Keitel or any of those other performances because if I were to think that way I'd have shot myself in the foot before I got out of the gate," Harrelson (picture) told a press conference, "because those were amazing performances."

"To me it was about coming to believe that I could be a cop. That was my hardest thing," Harrelson said.

To prepare for the role, the free spirit rode along with Los Angeles policemen on patrol, which he said helped him to believe he could be play the role.

"And then to jump into the ring with these people (pointing to his co-stars and director Oren Moverman), they make it all much more believable," he said.

In the film, Harrelson plays a hardened, reckless officer who patrols the streets of Los Angeles, dealing out punishment as he sees fit until suddenly finding himself at the centre of a corruption scandal.

The story is based on a real life Los Angeles Police Department public embarrassment in the 1990s.

Directed by Oren Moverman, who was nominated for an Oscar in 2009 for "The Messenger" and co-written by crime fiction legend James Ellroy ("L.A. Confidential"), the movie also stars Ben Foster, Robin Wright, Sigourney Weaver, Steve Buscemi and Ice Cube.

When asked about buzz in Toronto that he is deserving of an Oscar nod for his performance in "Rampart," Harrelson recalled an encounter with director Milos Forman who had previously pushed him to give a stellar performance in "The People Versus Larry Flynt" (1996).

"I ran into Milos Forman in New York and he'd just seen (Moverman's) 'The Messenger' and he said, 'Now you won't be able to say that Larry Flynt was your best film'," Harrelson said.

Certainly, his co-stars think so too.

"Woody is so humble about these things," piped in Ben Foster. "He's a national treasure."

"You see a man who willingly loses his... marbles on the screen and he went there and he continues to go there. He's one of the finest actors we have and to compare him to anyone else is ridiculous and embarrassing." – AFP

South Korean composers scoop prizes at Enescu music festival

Posted: 12 Sep 2011 05:58 AM PDT

20th Enescu music festival, an international classical music festival. – AFP pic

BUCHAREST, Sept 12 – Three South Korean composers won top prizes at the George Enescu International music competition held in Bucharest, organisers said yesterday.

Kwang Ho Cho with his "Cytisus/A-Phonie" and Mihyun Woo with 'The play of light for string quartet", tied for the first prize in the chamber-music section.

In the category Symphonic music, Chang Eunho finished first with his symphonic poem "The Human".

Chinese musician Tian Bonian, 25, won the first prize in the cello competition among 48 candidates from around the world.

There were no first prizes in the piano and violin section.

The competition is held here every two years in Bucharest during the Enescu music festival, one of Europe's most famous.

The festival was launched in 1958 to pay tribute to the Romanian composer and violinist George Enescu (1881-1955), whose pupils included the late Yehudi Menuhin.

The festival was banned by the communist regime in 1971 but came back to life after the fall of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu in 1989. – AFP

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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views

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Greater tolerance — Lim Mun Fah

Posted: 19 May 2011 05:07 AM PDT

MAY 19 — We have just celebrated Wesak Day, a festival promoting mercy and world peace. On that day, politicians, religious practitioners and community leaders promoted tolerance, harmony and mutual respect while spreading love and praying for peace and prosperity. It is undoubtedly a good thing.

It is because we are very clear about what is happening in our society. When racists remarks are still rampant and the word "jihad" was blurted out by the chief of Perkasa, aren't we in great need of calling for greater rationality and being determined to say "no" to all words and deeds of racists?

Yes, we must not turn a blind eye and let our society suffer more hostility and harassment. Religious practitioners advocating religious harmony should unite regardless of religion and race. Politicians advocating peace and moderation should also stand together regardless of political party and faction. We must clearly express our disgust and disdain over the words and deeds of extremists and fanatics.

Yes, we have had enough over all these days. How much harm has been done to our society, how many conflicts and wars of words have been caused and how much hatred and mistrust has been created by remarks defaming and rejecting other racial groups?

Yes, after experiencing so many incidents and lessons, we should have caught a clearer picture of extremists and understand better the problem. We should stop being easily offended by these people, neither should we turn a blind eye to them and let them do whatever they want.

Yes, society should move towards harmony. However, true harmony should never be led by double-faced politicians. Instead, it can only be achieved through the collective awakening and pursuit of different believers of various racial and religious groups.

We believe that the idea of seeking common ground while reserving differences is still a desire of the people, as well as a general direction of our society. Undeniably, we still have various differences in terms of culture and custom. Differences, however, do not mean conflicts and discord.

More specifically, harmony cannot be achieved through neglecting, suppressing or eliminating differences. Instead, it can only be achieved through tolerance and respect.

In the face of clamour from extremists and overbearing behaviour of fanatics, all we need is not a war of words, but greater unity and determination. Only when we unite regardless of religion and race and speak in one voice can we can make society more harmonious and progressive.

The acceptance of differences and peaceful co-existence should be our consensus and common voice! — mysinchew.com

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication. The Malaysian Insider does not endorse the view unless specified.

Opium and walking stick — Lim Sue Goan

Posted: 19 May 2011 03:14 AM PDT

MAY 19 — For the very first time, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak described the fuel subsidy as opium. His remarks were shocking as the people have been enjoying subsidies over the past few decades and would it mean that they have taken opium for decades?

Long-term opium use would cause irreversible damage to health and even death. The Chinese used to be called "The Sick Man of East Asia" during the Qing Dynasty as opium taking was a trend at that time.

If subsidies are opium to the national economy, the country must then first go through a painful process of rehabilitation before it can recover. And whether it would succeed, it all depends on the people's determination.

Subsidies had once stirred up the people's spirit. However, after they have gradually adapted to the effects, they started to ask for more. As a result, they have taken in too much and become lazy and dispirited. Also, their competitiveness and productivity fell.

Therefore, removing subsidies is good for long-term national economic development. It can also keep the people free from being over-reliant on subsidies and help stimulate their creativity.

However, "opium" is not the only poison to the national economy. The walking stick and other policies are infecting the economy too.

Former Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad described the habit of relying on government assistance as the "Tongkat (walking stick) Culture". A man would forget how to walk on his own if he relies on the walking stick for a long period of time and when he encounters a rough road, I am afraid that he would need someone to carry him.

Approved Permits (APs) for imported cars, protection for domestic cars, subsidies for independent power producers (IPPs), housing discounts, assistance for F-Class contractors and other polices are all defective measures. They must be abolished to recover the national economic health.

In addition, over-reliance on foreign workers is another kind of drug to the national economy. The country will never be able to get out from the "middle-income trap" if it does not find ways to add values, automate production and get rid of foreign workers.

Management loopholes would also cause losses to the national treasury. For example, the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) found that the country has been suffering RM108 billion of loss yearly but after the fatal fall of a Customs officer from a MACC building, we could hear no more about the development of the investigation.

All in all, there are too many factors causing the national economy to be unhealthy. If they wish to transform the economy, they must first eliminate the factors. If they can, the government could then save up to RM20.5 billion of subsidies and a hundred billion of subvention. The country would then be able to achieve financial surplus and no longer need to borrow money.

However, it is always easier to say than do, particularly when the next general election is about to approach. As the prime minister said, they have to pay a political price to cut subsidies.

If the general election is held at the end of this year, the price of RON95 would not be increased and the walking stick would not be removed in the coming 10 years.

Another factor to consider is, there are signs showing that economic downturn and inflation are worsening. The people's incomes have not been raised and cutting subsidies at the moment would not help the economy to recover immediately.

Malaysians have been relying on opium and the walking stick for too long. It is indeed not easy to get rid of them! — mysinchew.com

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication. The Malaysian Insider does not endorse the view unless specified.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books


World of fiction lags the trauma of 9/11

Posted: 12 Sep 2011 12:38 AM PDT

NEW YORK, Sept 12 — Norman Mailer once advised another author to wait 10 years before writing about the attacks of September 11 because "it will take that long for you to make sense of it".

The estimate by the prominent New York novelist and journalist, who died in 2007, may have been premature. As the world marks a decade since the attacks, literary circles are still waiting for a definitive work on the topic.

"The world has changed since 9/11 and our culture has changed but I haven't yet seen the book or the movie or the poem or the song that captures the people we are now and helps us redefine who we are in this new post-9/11 world," journalist Lawrence Wright told Reuters.

Ten years after, fiction lags the trauma of 9/11. — Reuters pic

Wright wrote a Pulitzer Prize-winning account entitled "The Looming Tower: Al Qaeda and the Road to 9/11".

While publishers are bringing out a slew of new works, reruns of memoirs, survivor tales, Iraq war stories and fiction books tackling September 11 and its aftermath, writers are still making sense of an altered era.

Movies and television are often inspired by playwrights and novelists. But Broadway has yet to produce a significant play directly about September 11 and no novel dealing with the attacks has been a top bestseller or come to redefine a changed collective psyche.

Celebrated names such as John Updike, Martin Amis, Ian McEwan and Don DeLillo have all produced fiction stories. Many have written from either the militant's perspective or painted the post-September 11 era with a broad apocalyptic brush.

Kiss of death

Amis' "The Last Days of Muhammad Atta" (2006) imagined the last days of one September 11 hijacker while Updike's "Terrorist" (2006) centred on a US-born Muslim teenager set in a decaying New Jersey. Neither won major awards.

DeLillo's "Falling Man" (2007) concerned a World Trade Center survivor and included several chapters told from the perspective of one of the hijackers. While applauded for its description of the attacks, it received mixed reactions.

Non-American writers have also weighed in: H.M. Naqvi's "Home Boy" (2009), Chris Cleave's "Incendiary" (2005), Joseph O'Neill's "Netherland" (2009), Salman Rushdie's "Shalimar the Clown" (2005) and Mohsin Hamid's "The Reluctant Fundamentalist". Some were heralded for challenging orthodox interpretations of terrorism and of the attacks.

But writers admit the process is slow. McEwan, whose novel "Saturday" (2005) reflected what he has called "a general darkening and gathering pessimism since the . . . attacks", told Reuters back then it could be years until a definitive post-September 11 novel was written.

Others, such as Florida author Andre Dubus III, whose novel "The Garden of Last Days" was critically well received but sold sluggishly, told Reuters the public wasn't ready to embrace such tales.

"My novel did very well until the word got out that it had something to do with 9/11 then it kind of fell off the radar," he chuckled. "It was like the kiss of death, it was like, 'Oh I am not reading about 9/11'— and I can understand that."

Dubus said he never set out to write "a 9/11 novel", and even cut his ending of the hijacker inevitably slamming into the twin towers for "treading on really sacred ground".

"Were we ready to write about this? I don't think anyone was ready to read about it," he said. "As we get to the 10th anniversary, I have a hunch Norman Mailer was right. We are just at the cusp of being ready to look back with any degree of perspective, that we need emotionally, to see it more clearly."

Toll on culture

Some believe authors were subject to harsher reviews due to the sensitivity of the topic. Others, such as Amy Waldman, a former New York Times reporter whose new novel "The Submission" imagines a jury that chooses a Muslim-American architect to design a September 11 memorial, think it foolish to expect a single novel to capture the era.

"Why should we expect one novel to capture an experience that was so diverse in both its facets and how people experienced it and the way it affected America? That is a lot of pressure to put on a single novelist," she said.

Non-fiction books, especially straight after the attacks, were easier to digest by readers hungry for information. Official and non-official accounts, even with dry titles such as "The 9/11 Commission Report", were bestsellers.

History had shown that traumatic events could take decades to process, said ACLU president Susan Herman. It took decades for the United States to officially apologise for the imprisonment of Japanese Americans during World War Two, a theme dealt perhaps most poignantly in David Guterson's 1994 novel "Snow Falling on Cedars".

Journalists, she said, immediately had to address the post-September 11 era effects such as the Patriot Act, an October 2001 law that gave expanded powers to US law enforcement agencies, but "individuals who are writing books, stories, plays, poems don't really have the same ethical obligation".

Wright said Americans were still trying to come to terms with September 11 and its impact on their lives.

"We are not comfortable with who we are. We are still in a period of discovery. Certainly 9/11 was a shock and there was bound to be a lag before people were able to address it in a cogent way," Wright said.

"In terms of post-9/11 artistic production, the escapist factor has far outweighed the enlightenment factor. And maybe it indicates a longing to retreat from the confrontation with the complexities of the new world that we find ourselves in." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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At De Niro’s table

Posted: 11 Sep 2011 05:01 PM PDT

SEPT 12 — Malaysia's Hari Merdeka is a holiday conveniently falling on our wedding anniversary. We celebrated it four times in Kuala Lumpur, at least one involving a trip to our local Nasi Kandar Bestari to enjoy fresh clay oven tandoori, roti and steaming teh tariks.

This year we celebrated it in Manhattan. No national holidays to help it along. But since we've reached a milestone, an evening of fine dining and bubbles were in order.

Not being one for half-measures, I set my sights on Per Se. According to several of my New Yorker friends, it is the number one restaurant in Manhattan... with a price tag to match.

Thomas Keller — a name mentioned with overt reverence by food critics here — owns the three-star Michelin restaurant, one of just four holding this heady accolade on Manhattan Island.

A booking through the OpenTable Internet reservation service failed. So I called the booking line. Waited. Waited some more. Someone picked up my call, placed me on hold, and left me to inspect the abandoned assortment of kids' toys strewn across the kitchen floor for longer than I cared to. A woman finally answered without any of the usual niceties:

"Evening of 31 August... we are fully booked."

Robert De Niro's table at Per Se... it was ours for the evening of August 31! — Picture by Helen Hickey

Summoning the plummiest of British accents (which Americans adore), I tried a little small talk armed with the knowledge that without celebrity status, securing a table at Per Se was, at best, tricky. "It's our tenth wedding anniversary and we've been wanting to come for..."

"I'll put you on the wait list," came the terse interruption. Per Se is Latin for "through itself'", "in itself" or "by itself." Although, at that very moment I was thinking more towards "up itself."

The big day came round; plan B was shaping up.

Remember Hurricane Irene? Caused flooding, damage, and worse. But Manhattan got lucky. So did we: closure of NYC airports left New Yorkers stranded abroad or repairing their homes upstate and... the cancellation of longstanding reservations at Per Se.

The call came, the curtness switched to niceville sealed with "you have a great day now." And in case you are wondering, you won't find niceville in the Oxford English Dictionary, but there is a Niceville, Florida. I'd like to go there someday.

I admit to feeling short-changed though on the way up the third escalator of Time Warner Centre's busy shopping mall. But then we found Per Se, and my high expectations were sated on spying the Relais & Chateaux gilded plaque marking its entrance.

We were ushered by two starched white-and-black dressed waiters into an understated dining room decorated in earthy tones, and framed by four oversized autumnal-looking floral displays.

Once seated, we were presented with the chef's US$295 (RM885) tasting menu emblazoned with the greeting: "Happy Anniversary Helen and Tom." I was smitten, instantly.

Now this is a gushing admission, forgive me, but from the "first" starter, "oysters and pearls" — sabayon of pearl tapioca with Island Creek oysters and Sterling white sturgeon caviar — to the last of the nine courses, I can honestly say this was the best American cuisine I have tasted, and probably ever will.

The elaborate presentation of the bite-sized courses, and in-depth descriptions of purveyors of the produce used in creating each dish were pretty impressive too. I have since read the reviews: even bitchy, I've seen it all before, New Yorkers rave about Per Se.

The only criticism I have — and to be fair it's a very personal one — is all that pomp and ceremony put me on edge: the jackets-only policy, the whispered conversations, the pervading chink of cutlery on bone china and the slavish indulgence of diners by a clutch of eagle-eyed wait staff.

In fact, it was only after our seventh course, champagne and that fourth half bottle of wine that I relaxed and the questions began to flow.

"So, do you have anyone famous in tonight?" I hadn't spotted any but it is said they tend to look quite different up close. My husband Tom flipped me the look: did you really just ask that question?

The young sommelier, who had just talked him into a 2010 Goose Island Brewery "Maltilda" beer from Illinois with his cheese course, briefly surveyed the mezzanine-split dining room, his eyes drawing to a halt at the private room to the right. "No", came the reply; not the one I was expecting.

Before disappointment set in, he very astutely came to my rescue: "Well, you are sitting at Robert de Niro's table."

Really? My lust for a brush with a NYC celebrity — no matter how remote — overcame any British reservedness I was previously masquerading. "So how often does he come?" "Four times a year, and he always sits at that table, it's his favourite... it's a popular table," he added, momentarily allowing himself a self-congratulatory smile.

As we sat back on our leather couch, looking dreamily out onto the now shadowy treetops of Central Park silhouetted by the penthouse lights of Fifth Avenue mansions, I couldn't have agreed more. And, suddenly, my evening at Per Se was complete.

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

Misteri surat izin Komsas

Posted: 11 Sep 2011 04:44 PM PDT

12 SEPT — Isu mengenai sekumpulan penulis yang mendakwa dinafikan hak royalti teks Komsas ternyata masih jauh daripada menemui titik penyelesaian.

Surat rayuan yang ditulis oleh Rohani Deraman (Johor), Amy Suzani Mohd Ainuddin (Kelantan), Hazama Harun (Kuala Lumpur), Mohd Izan Abd Hazes (Kuala Lumpur) dan Erda Roslan Khairi (Putrajaya) pada 26 Ogos 2011 tidak mendapat perhatian pihak berwajib.

Begitu juga e-mel rasmi kepada Menteri Pelajaran, Ketua Pengarah Pelajaran dan semua penerbit terbabit pada 2 September. Hanya Ketua Pengarah Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (DBP) yang bersikap profesional dan gentleman dengan mengirim balasan yang memang memuaskan hati.

Terbaru, para penulis terbabit mempunyai alasan untuk mempercayai kemungkinan ada penerbit mengemukakan dokumen palsu kepada kerajaan dalam usaha mengaut untung atas nama penulis yang dianiaya.

Dua buku Amy Suzani Ainuddin.

Persatuan Penerbit Buku Malaysia (Mabopa) menetapkan syarat bahawa penerbit teks Komsas wajib mengemukakan surat izin yang menyatakan dengan jelas bahawa penulis membenarkan karyanya diedit dan disesuaikan bagi teks Komsas.

Langkah murni ini bagi memastikan penerbit tidak menganiaya penulis atau menerbitkan karya tanpa izin daripada pemegang hak cipta karya iaitu penulis.

Dalam isu lima penulis yang saya wakili, mereka mengesahkan beberapa kali menerusi perbualan telefon, SMS dan e-mel bahawa mereka tidak pernah menulis atau menandatangani atau menyerahkan surat izin seperti itu kepada penerbit.

Pengarah Bahagian Buku Teks (BBT) yang saya temui pada 7 September di Putrajaya berkata, penerbit terbabit yang beliau temui pada 18 Ogos mengesahkan bahawa para penulis sudah memberikan surat izin; tetapi penerbit tidak perlu menyerahkan salinan surat izin itu kepada BBT. Malah, itu bukan bidang kuasa BBT.

Tentu sahaja saya sedikit pun tidak meragui kebenaran kata-kata Pengarah BBT. Kalaulah salinan surat izin itu ada pada beliau, tentu beliau tidak keberatan untuk menunjukkannya kepada saya.

Mungkinkah surat izin itu diserahkan penerbit kepada bahagian lain yang terlebih dahulu menguruskan teks Komsas sebelum ia sampai ke tangan BBT? Bahagian Pembangunan Kurikulum (CDC), misalnya.

Tidak kisahlah bahagian mana, tapi yang pasti, mengikut syarat wajib ditetapkan Mabopa, penerbit sepatutnya sudah menyerahkan salinan surat izin penulis kepada Kementerian Pelajaran Malaysia (KPM).

Soalnya, kelima-lima penulis yang saya wakili tidak pernah menyerahkan surat izin itu. Malah, dalam kebanyakan kes, penulis tidak diberitahu langsung oleh penerbit bahawa karya mereka terpilih sebagai teks Komsas. Penulis hanya mendapat tahu daripada orang lain selepas buku terbit dan digunakan di sekolah.

Timbul kemusykilan dalam kalangan penulis yang menghubungi saya: Mungkin penerbit telah menyerahkan dokumen palsu kepada KPM; iaitu dokumen palsu yang kononnya adalah surat izin yang ditulis dan ditandatangani oleh penulis berhubung teks Komsas.

Malah, disebabkan "syarat wajib" itulah ada penerbit terpaksa menghubungi beberapa penulis dan meminta mereka memberikan surat izin yang diwajibkan itu.

Akan tetapi, penerbit tetap tidak mahu membayar royalti kepada penulis terbabit. Atas sebab itu, kesemua penulis yang saya wakili tidak memberikan surat izin yang diminta.

Rohani Deraman, misalnya, mengirimkan kepada saya e-mel yang diterima pada 11 April untuk meminta beliau memberikan surat izin. Dia enggan kerana penerbit tetap tidak mahu memberi walau satu sen sebagai royalti.

"Saya mula syaki kemungkinan penerbit memberi surat izin palsu kerana dua minggu kemudian, saya buat panggilan susulan ke KPM dan seorang pegawai mengesahkan penerbit sudah tunjukkan surat dan urusan penerbitan sudah diluluskan pegawai atasan," kata penulis itu.

E-mel yang diterima oleh Rohani Deraman.

Pengarah BBT menasihatkan saya berhubung terus dengan penerbit. Beliau juga berbesar hati menelefon pengarah penerbitan sebuah syarikat dan meminta penerbit memberi kerjasama apabila saya menghubunginya nanti untuk mengatur pertemuan.

Maka, untuk berlaku adil kepada penerbit dan untuk mendengar penjelasan di pihak mereka, saya menghubungi pengarah penerbitan itu.

"Kamilah pemegang hak cipta (copyright) dan kami ada perjanjian dan surat yang sudah ditandatangani penulis lama dahulu," katanya dalam Bahasa Inggeris; tanpa tahu membezakan antara copyright dan publishing right.

"Kalau begitu, mengapa puan menghubungi penulis untuk meminta surat izin terbit sebagai teks Komsas?" saya bertanya.

"Tak, saya hantar e-mel meminta biodata sahaja."

"Pada 11 April 2011, puan ada menghubungi penulis ini menerusi e-mel dan meminta kirim surat izin untuk mengedit karya itu seperti ditetapkan oleh BBT," kata saya sambil merujuk pada salinan e-mel yang ada pada saya.

"Kami tak perlu minta apa-apa izin daripada penulis. Kami tak ada masa nak layan semua ini," katanya.

"Jadi mengapa puan mengirim e-mel dan meminta penulis itu beri surat izin?"

"Tak ada apa-apa sebab. Okey?" Katanya dengan nada marah.

"Jadi puan tidak bersedia untuk bertemu bagi membincangkan isu ini?"

"Awak bukannya seorang peguam pun! Kami tak perlu berjumpa awak," kata wanita itu yang mengaku pembaca setia blog saya sejak isu ini timbul.

Terdahulu, pada pagi 2 September, saya menghubungi sebuah penerbitan di Melaka dan sempat bercakap dengan pengarah urusannya.

Beliau menceritakan bahawa pihaknya telah memberikan hak penerbitan (publishing right) bagi sebuah novel Komsas kepada penerbit lain selepas berjaya mendapat kontrak teks Komsas.

"Anuar (pemilik syarikat satu lagi) memang ada perjanjian dengan kami tapi dia dah 'mainkan' kami. Jadi, kami yang uruskan penghantaran novel untuk kegunaan Komsas," katanya.

Hazama Harun.

Saya cuba menelefon pejabat "Anuar" di Kompleks Damai, Kuala Lumpur dan Taman Perindustrian Belmas Johan, Rawang tetapi nombor-nombor telefon sudah tiada dalam perkhidmatan.

Saya akhirnya berjaya menghubungi "Anuar" menerusi telefon bimbit. Dia juga enggan berbincang. Sebaliknya mengirim SMS "Dah keling perangai macam keling" tanpa menyedari saya Malayali.

Pada pagi 8 September, saya sekali lagi menghubungi pengarah urusan syarikat di Melaka itu kerana Pengarah BBT sudah menasihatkan saya supaya berhubung terus dengan penerbit.

Anehnya, pengarah urusan itu menafikan pernah berbual bersama saya pada 2 September. Bagaimanapun beliau mengaku membaca blog saya dan tahu apa yang sedang berlaku.

"Kalau kamu mewakili penulis, sila kirim surat," katanya dalam Bahasa Inggeris.

"Saya sudah kirim menerusi e-mel."

"Kami tidak layan e-mel. ..."

"Soalan akhir, ada penulis terbabit beri surat izin bagi teks Komsas?"

"Saya tak boleh terangkan semua ini kepada kamu."

Katanya, dua penulis yang karya mereka diterbitkan syarikat berkenaan sedang mempergunakan saya untuk "mendapatkan" wang daripadanya.

Apa pun, sehingga artikel ini ditulis, misteri "surat izin palsu" masih belum terjawab.

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

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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Najib: Bajet 2012 umum satu lagi pusingan liberalisasi ekonomi

Posted: 12 Sep 2011 02:37 AM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR, 12 Sept — Akan ada satu lagi pusingan liberalisasi ekonomi dalam pengumuman Bajet 2012 bulan depan, kata Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak.

"Liberalisasi itu baik untuk daya saingan mampan jangka panjang kita. Ia membina kekuatan intrinsik kita bukan melalui perlindungan ataupun subsidi," kata beliau dalam temubual dengan Forbes Asia Magazine.

Temu bual itu disiarkan dalam edisi khas majalan itu bulan ini.

"Kita telahpun meliberalisasikan ekonomi, tetapi saya perlu meredakan kebimbangan domestik yang pembukaan yang terlalu pantas boleh mengancam," kata Perdana Menteri (gambar) ketika menjawab mengenai bagaimana Malaysia meliberalisasikan/melonggarkan ekonominya.

"Kita perlu berdaya saing kerana faktor-faktor seperti produktiviti, teknologi dan proses kita," kata Najib yang juga Menteri Keawngan.

Mengenai bagaimana ekonomi Malaysia menunjukkan prestasinya, Najib dipetik Bernama Online berkata pemulihan negara daripada krisis kewangan global begitu menggalakkan.

"Berikutan penguncupan ekonomi pada 2009, kita telah mencapai 7.2 peratus pertumbuhan pada 2010. Pemulihan yang kukuh ini berterusan ke tahun 2011 dan kita menjangka mencapai pertumbuhan lima hingga enam peratus tahun ini," kata beliau.

Najib berkata angka-angka berhubung asas-asas seperti pelaburan awam dan swasta serta pengunaan nampak begitu mantap.

"Antara faktor utama untuk pemulihan ini ialah lonjakan 530 peratus pelaburan langsung asing (FDI) di mana ia mencecah kira-kira RM28 bilion pada tahun 2010," katanya.

Minggu lepas, Najib mengumumkan bahawa untuk separuh pertama 2011, Malaysia telah menarik RM21.3 bilion dalam jumlah FDI.

"Para pelabur semakin yakin dengan program transformasi ekonomi dan model baru ekonomi kita.

"Kita pantas membuat keputusan mengenai menyeragamkan insentif untuk FDI yang menyumbang dengan ketara kepada pekerjaan yang bergaji tinggi, teknologi baharu dan permulaan positif untuk ekonomi tempatan," kata beliau.

Najib berkata pada pemulihan global kali ini, "kita sedang mengukuhkan Malaysia secara strategik sebagai hab untuk Asean dan Asia Timur."

Mengenai hubungan ekonomi Malaysia dengan negara-negara Asia dan Timur Tengah, Najib berkata negara mempunyai hubungan ekonomi yang baik dengan China dengan jumlah dagangan mencecah RM149 bilion.

"Satu perkara yang saya ingin tingkatkan dengan secara signifikan ialah menggalakkan China untuk meningkatkan pelaburan jangka panjang di Malaysia melangkaui pelaburan jangka pendek seperti projek-projek pembinaan."

Dengan Singapura pula, beliau berkata Malaysia telah menyelesaikan masalah selama 20 tahun mereka berhubung pendapat mengenai perjanjian dan kini masing-masing dalam mode konstruktif dari segi hubungan dua hala.

"Walaupun kita bersaing, kita seharusnya memajukan hubungan produktif selagi kita boleh lakukan.

Najib juga berkata beliau telah memajukan hubungan persendirian yang amat kukuh dengan para pemimpin di Timur tengah dan sehubungan itu, mereka kini melihat Malaysia untuk penglibatan ekonomi.

"Abu Dhabi telah menjadi rakan kita dalam Pusat Kewangan KL dan mahu membina kemudahan alumuminium bersepadu hiliran di Sarawak," kata beliau.

Pulau Pinang perkenal borang bebas identiti kaum, pertama di Malaysia

Posted: 12 Sep 2011 02:28 AM PDT

Oleh Lisa J. Ariffin

KUALA LUMPUR, 12 Sept — Ketua Menteri Pulau Pinang Lim Guan Eng hari ini mengumumkan borang pertama di negara ini yang tidak memerlukan seseorang menyatakan identiti diri mengikut kategori kaum.

Borang Program Anak Emas Pulau Pinang tidak memerlukan seseorang mendedahkan identiti kaum apabila memohon untuk mendapatkan bayaran sekali RM100 daripada kerajaan negeri.

MENYUSUL LAGI

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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