Ahad, 6 November 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


David storms to sixth World Open title

Posted: 06 Nov 2011 07:20 AM PST

David holds up five fingers to signify her fifth World Open win, September 23, 2010. The world number one today added her sixth world title.

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 6 — World squash number one Datuk Nicol David decimated long-time adversary Jenny Duncalf to secure a record sixth World Open championship in Rotterdam, Netherlands today.

David raced ahead of her rival 11-2, 11-5, before taking the last set 11-0 in the final of the competition, needing little more than 30 minutes to dispatch the second-seeded Englishwoman.

Her latest championship makes David the most successful in the history of the competition, going one better than the five-win record she hitherto shared with Australian Sarah Fitz-Gerald.

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Spurs boss Redknapp could miss five weeks

Posted: 06 Nov 2011 06:58 AM PST

Redknapp was initially expected to be out for a fortnight. — Reuters pic

LONDON, Nov 6 — Tottenham Hotspur manager Harry Redknapp could face a four- or five-week layoff after undergoing minor heart surgery, he said today.

The English Premier League club had initially said the 64-year-old, favourite to take over as England manager from Fabio Capello next July, would be set to return to work in two weeks following Wednesday's operation.

"(The doctor's) telling me I shouldn't even think about (returning) for at least four to five weeks. I hope to be back before then," Redknapp told Britain's Sky Sports News.

Redknapp said he would try to stay calm in front of the television while watching Spurs visit Fulham in the Premier League later today. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Cultural thirst drives China’s high-end tea boom

Posted: 06 Nov 2011 12:05 AM PDT

Tea shop owner Sam Lam smells a 50-year-old pu erh tea cake in his shop in Hong Kong September 9, 2011. — AFP/Relaxnews pic

HONG KONG, Nov 6 — Fifteen years ago the Lam family business picked up a consignment of aged tea from a defunct Hong Kong restaurant. Its value has since risen by a factor of 10,000, as the Lams have found themselves part of a boom that is both investment fad and cultural obsession.

"It's like magic," managing director Sam Lam told AFP as he prepared tea according to the Chinese ritual, pouring boiling water through rough leaves and then into tiny cups to drink, and spoke of the profits to be made.

The tea is pu erh, a dark tea that is fermented after drying and whose taste mellows with age. Its history is thought to date back between one and two thousand years, with legends of growers in mountainous Yunnan province ferociously guarding their cultivation secrets.

Over the past 20 years prices for aged pu erh have rocketed, while China has encouraged renewed development of a luxury tea culture which parallels that of wine — partly as a source of national pride in a home-grown high-end product.

With over 70,000 tea businesses in mainland China, skilled buyers must taste tea in order to assess its quality, which only increases pu erh's mystique and sociability.

"You can tell from the aftertaste, the smoothness," says Lam, pouring out cups with practised hands. The tea is sold in pressed round "cakes", wrapped in paper printed with bold designs that reflect the vintage of each one.

Lam's father set up the business, Lam Kie Yuen, after moving to Hong Kong from the war-torn mainland in 1949.

But the pair say it is only since the mid-nineties that the market for luxury pu erh — also, in its less refined forms, a staple of cheap restaurants — has exploded, with middle-class investors joining the wealthy to buy it up.

The Lams are now selling tea from the 1930 to 1950 era for up to HK$200,000 (RM80,180) per 345-gram cake, having bought much of it in cheap truckloads from dim sum restaurants that closed down.

"Growth slowed during the economic downturn, but it's still ongoing," said Sam Lam. "As the price is rising, people are buying it less to drink, and more to collect and invest."

But luxury pu erh is not just bought to lay aside; it is identified with proud, ancient aspects of Chinese culture, in contrast with the cheap "made in China" goods that have spurred the country's economic rise.

In Hong Kong's hectic Mong Kok district, fashionably dressed young men gather at a calm teahouse for lessons from qualified tea master Eliza Liu.

"It's like a drug — I'm addicted now," said student Ngan Kan Shing, 21. "By discovering tea I feel that I've learned about China."

He has been coming to classes for six years, but says: "I still only know the basics."

The group examines the colour of each cup of tea before sniffing and then slurping it in respectful silence, as Liu talks them through the value of the aged tea.

Grown before artificial pesticides and dried naturally rather than at a high temperature, it has a paler colour and a smoother taste.

"Good tea is produced at higher altitude, and also depends on climate," says Liu. "In Yunnan, they say a tea tree can experience all four seasons in one day."

The tea is served from small fine china tea sets, used with a tray that drains off excess water. The first cup of each brew is not drunk, as it is used to clean dust or residue from the leaves. After that, a good tea should taste different with every cup, say experts.

According to China's state-run Global Times, one batch of top pu erh sold at auction for US$250 per gram in 2002, while rare Da Hong Pao oolong can also rival such prices.

But Liu and tea professor Yip Man, who taught her the art, are sceptical of the eye-popping prices paid for some teas, preferring to emphasise tea's long-time role in Chinese medicine and thought.

"Tea has a philosophy behind it, and it's about health. Tea has been very commercialised, but a cheaper tea may also be as good (as an expensive one)," said Yip.

"The philosophy is about harmony, bringing people together, peace within the self."

The price of pu erh is acknowledged to be boosted by a tight supply, and sceptics argue that investors buying aged pu erh may be made to look foolish as China's newly affluent drinkers move on to fresh fashions like Phoenix Oolong.

However Lam says that although the astonishing growth of the last two decades may not be sustained, pu erh is still a good investment.

He said a buyer of a good, inexpensive pu erh — at, say, HK$100 a cake — now could expect to make a 10 per cent return in a year. "But you have to choose the right tea," he said.

Luxury teahouses springing up in London and Sydney indicate China might succeed in exporting its high-end tea culture. And Liu and her students feel meanwhile that they are tapping into much more than a fad.

Student Ngan is evangelical about pu erh. "Before learning about tea, a lot of my friends believed the stereotype that tea is for old people. But now I think they're changing their minds," he said. — AFP/Relaxnews

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Brand-addicted Indians propel luxury sector

Posted: 05 Nov 2011 07:45 PM PDT

NEW DELHI, Nov 6 — India's luxury sales are expected to expand by a scorching 20 per cent annually until 2015, according to a new report, as brand-smitten consumers snap up big names to flaunt their wealth.

Luxury sales were slow to take off in India a decade ago, disappointing retailers who had rushed into what they hoped would be the next China — a vast market of over a billion people with an eye for status symbols.

But now Indian consumers "are quickly catching up with global trends", according to Neelesh Hundekari, head of Indian luxury retail at consultancy AT Kearney and author of the recent "Indian Luxury Review" report.

An office-worker walks past a billboard advertising a luxury watch boutique in Mumbai. — AFP/Relaxnews file pic

Global labels are jostling to make their mark in India where 153,000 dollar millionaires — and many thousands just a notch below — have created a luxury market in a nation also home to untold millions living in poverty.

India's luxury sales grew by 20 per cent to reach $5.75 billion (RM17.9 billion) in 2010, despite high tariff barriers, a lack of retail infrastructure and costly rents, according to the AT Kearney report.

That figure is expected to rise at a similar pace annually to reach US$14.72 billion by 2015 — around half of the forecast US$27-28 billion for the sector in neighbouring China by the same date.

"We expect this strong Indian upward trajectory to continue," Hundekari told AFP, with the market propelled by increasingly affluent and "brand conscious" shoppers.

Indians are buying everything from high-end handbags, jewellery, electronics and cars to expensive wines and spirits, with all the big names present in the market from Gucci and Chanel to Porsche and Ferrari.

Hermes has just launched a limited-edition sari range, while international high-end brands are spreading from niches in the lobbies of five-star hotels to branches in new shopping malls.

The vast DLF Emporio mall, which opened in 2008, was built on rough ground on the outskirts of Delhi with a mission to sell only luxury goods — it now houses names including Giorgio Armani, Louis Vuitton, Cartier and Dior.

"This is just a beginning where the big boom is waiting to happen," said Sanjay Kapoor, managing director at Genesis Luxury, which distributes brands like Bottega and Cavalli.

For many Indians, who are casting off the mantra of frugality espoused by independence hero Mahatma Gandhi, wealth is a novelty that they "like to flaunt", Hundekari said.

"If they spend money, they want to get social recognition. They are not buying for intrinsic satisfaction — their primary motivation is to show off."

The Internet and social media are also making it possible for luxury firms to connect with once hard-to-reach consumers in smaller cities and rural areas.

Angela Ahrendts, chief executive of iconic British brand Burberry, told an industry conference in Delhi last month that some 500,000 Indians are among its 8.5 million Facebook fans.

Also fuelling the lavish spending is the large amount of so-called "black money" on which people have paid no taxes.

"They need to do something to do with it," said one analyst who did not wish to be named.

India's luxury market is still weighed down by a combination of 35-40 per cent import tariffs on luxury goods and bureaucratic red tape.

"World-over, customs duty varies from 15 to 20 per cent, but in India, it's much higher, making brands very expensive," said Pradeep Hirani, chairman of designer retailer Kimaya Fashions.

Some Indians shop abroad for cheaper luxury prices but many of the well-heeled do not want to wait.

Global luxury firms are pushing India to cut import taxes on prestige goods and to lift a 51 per cent cap on foreign ownership of Indian units that they say undermines their brand value.

India is "looking at how we can make it for you people to come here", Commerce Minister Anand Sharma told the Delhi conference, adding that the government was considering raising the foreign investment retail cap. — AFP/Relaxnews

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Belfast hosts pop royalty for MTV awards

Posted: 06 Nov 2011 05:26 AM PST

MTV EMA host Selena Gomez speaks at a news conference at the Odyssey Arena, in Belfast November 5, 2011. — Reuters pic

BELFAST, Nov 6 — Belfast has had its first taste of "Biebermania" with the arrival of Canadian singing sensation Justin Bieber, in the city for the annual MTV Europe Music Awards staged later today.

Hundreds of screaming girls crowded outside the Merchant Hotel to catch a glimpse of the 17-year-old hit machine late on Saturday, and thousands more are expected at the main show at the Odyssey Arena nearby.

The hype, which some have likened to "Beatlemania" in the 1960s, could even overshadow that surrounding Lady Gaga, another global superstar who is in Belfast for the show.

"He's beautiful, he's like an angel," said Aya Lawlor, a 14-year-old from Belfast who stood for hours in the cold just to see Bieber. "He's proven that anyone can do it."

She said she was not put off by recent allegations made by a young woman that Bieber fathered her child when he was 16.

The singer has addressed the issue on his Twitter account, which has more than 14 million followers, and denied the claims on the US Today show.

"I'd just like to say basically that none of those allegations are true," said Bieber. "I know that I'm going to be a target, but I'm never going to be a victim."

Adding to media interest in the MTV show in Belfast is the fact that Bieber's girlfriend Selena Gomez, an actress and singer, is hosting the event.

When she met the press yesterday, journalists did not have the opportunity to ask her questions.

The celebrity couple will joined in Belfast by Coldplay, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Bruno Mars and Lady Gaga among others at what is billed as the biggest night in music outside the United States.

Northern Irish rockers Snow Patrol, whose 2006 album "Eyes Open" sold over five million copies worldwide, also make an appearance as do the surviving members of Queen, who will pick up the Global Icon accolade.

"Very often Northern Ireland in the past has been in the news for other reasons and this is a really, really amazingly positive reason to be in the news," said Gary Lightbody, Snowpatrol lead singer.

Thousands of people are expected to watch the main concert at Odyssey Arena and other performances in the open and in smaller venues around Belfast.

The awards tend to be dominated by US acts even though they are held in a different European city each year and are mostly decided by fans from the region.

Last year it was Gaga who dominated the winners, picking up prizes for best female, best pop act and best song for "Bad Romance". This year she leads the way again with six nominations.

In four categories — best song ("Born This Way"), best pop and live act and best female artist — she is up against rival chart-topping diva Katy Perry.

Lady Gaga's other two nominations are best video ("Born This Way") and biggest fans, a new category introduced this year.

Bruno Mars joins Perry with four nominations — best new, best male, best "push" or up and coming act, and best song for "Grenade."

Adele, Britain's own international chart queen, is short-listed three times — best female act and best song and best video for "Rolling in the Deep."

Bieber competes for best pop, best male and biggest fans, while Thirty Seconds to Mars is up for best alternative, best world stage and biggest fans.

Bieber, who launched his new album "Under the Mistletoe" this week, has also been named the inaugural winner of the MTV Voices award in recognition of his charity work. — Reuters

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Stripper drama sells bulk of foreign territories

Posted: 05 Nov 2011 08:47 PM PDT

LOS ANGELES, Nov 6 — FilmNation Entertainment says it has sold most of the international territories on Steven Soderbergh's upcoming stripper drama, "Magic Mike".

Among the countries that have been locked up are Russia, UK and South Africa.

The film stars Channing Tatum, Alex Pettyfer and Matthew McConaughey, and is based on Tatum's experiences as an exotic dancer.

"Magic Mike" recently wrapped principal photography in Florida. Warner Bros will release the film in the US on June 29, 2012.

The story follows Mike (Tatum) as he takes a young dancer, The Kid (Pettyfer), under his wing. It's a safe bet g-strings will enter the picture at some point.

The studio announced that the following territories and respective distributors have been secured: Lionsgate in the UK, ARP in France, Telemunchen in Germany, Top Film in Russia, A Film in Benelux, Ascot Elite in Switzerland, M Pictures in Thailand, SPI in Eastern Europe, Shani in Israel, MGM in Latin America, Italia Film in the Middle East, Golden Scene in Hong Kong, PT Amero in Indonesia and Ster Kinekor in South Africa. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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A slightly different take on PPSMI

Posted: 05 Nov 2011 09:57 PM PDT

NOV 6 — In a conversation with the Asia Economics Editor of The Economist magazine earlier this week, he asked how Malaysians react to IDEAS' endeavour to propose policies based on 'first principles'. I said the biggest problem that we actually face is most people usually do not ask about first principles. Principles don't seem to matter. Debating technicalities takes precedent.

It is this lack of first principles that results in a mishmash of policies, and ever more confused implementation of policies, which in the end puts us the citizens in a dilemma.

Let me use as an example the recent debacle over the teaching of science and maths in English (PPSMI).

The prime minister said in 2009 that the era of government knows best has ended with him at the helm. I was delighted with this statement even though I think that that era has never existed. Najib also went on to say that he wants to put the people first. Both of these, to put it simply, are wonderful assertions.

The Parents Action Group on Education (PAGE) has been lobbying hard for the government to respect choices made by parents. They submitted dossier after dossier calling for the government to allow parents to choose whether they want their children to be taught science and maths in English or in Malay.

For PAGE, by giving parents choice, the government can show that they respect the wishes of the rakyat, and that they acknowledge they cannot possibly know better than parents what is best for an individual child.

I believe PAGE's proposal is fair and balanced. All they want is choice, not the imposition of a policy assumed to be fitting for all. PAGE's plea also fits in well with one of the core first principles that we in IDEAS are promoting, that in a free society, individuals must have both liberty and responsibility

Giving choice to parents means we respect their liberty to decide what is best for them and their families. Similarly, by getting parents involved in making educational choices, we will eventually create a more responsible society, not a society wherein parents 'dump' their children in schools because they assume teachers will take over their responsibility as parents.

Let me make one clarification. When Tun Mahathir as prime minister introduced PPSMI and made it compulsory, I was against it. My reason at that time was that parents were coerced rather than given choice.

To me, that too was wrong. The current proposal by PAGE is superior than what Tun Mahathir introduced.

Coming back to the current debate, if we look at how the deputy prime minister reacts to PAGE's plea, it seems as if he is bent on rubbishing Najib's assertions. At the time this article was written, Muhyiddin still believes that simply because the prime minister has appointed him as minister of education, he automatically knows better than you and I about what is best for our children. Hence he refuses to let us choose how our children will be educated. Clearly he does not share the same first principles with the very person who appointed him.

The same can be said about some leaders in Pakatan Rakyat too. Many of us would be familiar with their call for kuasa rakyat (people power). This is one of the slogans they have shouted for many years. Ironically when a group like PAGE asks for the power to be given to the rakyat to choose, many Pakatan leaders have balked. This time, the same Pakatan leaders have chosen to be in cahoots with the deputy prime minister to deny choice from the rakyat.

Similarly, when Anwar Ibrahim was denied his liberty, they claim it was foul play for political reasons. But they hardly hesitate to deny individuals like you and me our liberty to choose what is best for our family, perhaps because it is politically expedient for them to do so. After all, they too are hungry for Malay votes.

In fact, in a statement dated January 15, 2009, Anwar himself labelled those who support PPSMI as traitors to the Malay struggle, making him sound more extreme than some nationalists in Umno.

Once again, we see how the lack of commitment to first principles — that of individual liberty and responsibility — led to the same people who shout loudest for kuasa rakyat to unashamedly deny the rakyat from kuasa when it counts.

I cannot hide my disappointment with some of those who claim to want a Malaysia that is free and fair. What could be freer and fairer than giving choice to common people like you and me?

Most of the arguments against PPSMI as an option are technical issues. I posit that if only we could agree on the first principle first, then it should become the responsibility of government to solve the technical hurdles. They should not give us technical hurdles as an excuse right from the start.

It is certainly ironic — or perhaps telling? — that when politicians from both sides unite, we suddenly find ourselves losing our liberty.

* Wan Saiful Wan Jan is chief executive of the Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs (www.IDEAS.org.my).

* A version of this article was published previously by The Edge.

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

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Harapan pengguna terhadap kelahiran sebuah rangkaian TV baru

Posted: 05 Nov 2011 05:19 PM PDT

6 NOV — Mutakhir ini, begitu banyak stesen televisyen yang tumbuh bagaikan cendawan di negara kita.

Daripada stesen televisyen satelit, dalam talian, televisyen mudah alih dan kini kabel, semuanya bersaing untuk merebut pasaran penonton. Dalam merebut pasaran penonton, pelbagai pakej saluran TV ditonjolkan dan datang dalam harga yang murah pada permulaannya. Segalanya cukup cantik, berpatutan dan menjanjikan kepuasan terbaik.

Tidak dinafikan, rakyat Malaysia amat bertuah kerana mempunyai pilihan yang banyak khususnya dalam pemilihan stesen televisyen yang ingin ditonton. Pada awal 1990-an, kita hanya ada TV1, TV2, TV3, Metrovision dan Mega TV. Namun dalam dekad akhir-akhir ini pelbagai saluran muncul dan semakin kukuh seperti ntv7, 8TV, TV9, TV Alhijrah, Hypp TV dan sebagainya, serta tidak ketinggalan TV satelit Astro.

Nama Astro mula meletup sebagai sebuah rangkaian televisyen yang berpengaruh sekitar pertengahan 1990-an dan memasuki abad ke-21 jenamanya kian teguh dan sukar ditandingi. Kehadirannya ada di mana-mana. Sebut sahaja Liga Perdana Inggeris, siarannya boleh ditonton menerusi saluran Astro 812, 813 dan 817.

Sudah tentu perkembangan ini merupakan berita baik buat Astro dan pelanggan-pelanggannya. Namun kelahiran lebih banyak rangkaian televisyen berbayar seperti yang bakal berlaku pada tahun hadapan mampu menggoncang sedikit dunia penyiaran tanah air.

Justeru, apabila berita bahawa sebuah lagi rangkaian televisyen berbayar baru akan muncul tidak lama lagi (dikhabarkan akan diusahakan syarikat Nilamas Corporation), ia menjanjikan satu sinar harapan baru kepada penonton-penonton yang sudah bosan dengan kerenah segelintir rangkaian televisyen berbayar.

Oleh sebab kewujudannya sudah begitu lama di negara ini, maka ada rangkaian televisyen berbayar barangkali merasakan mereka boleh melakukan apa sahaja yang dirasakan sesuai hinggakan adakalanya perubahan dilakukan mereka itu terang-terang tidak mesra-pelanggan.

Walaupun masih kabur dengan visi sebenar Nilamas ketika ini, adalah menjadi harapan agar kelahirannya akan menjadi titik-tolak kepada peningkatan dari segi mutu dan kandungan rancangan yang disampaikan. Apa yang disajikan dalam rangkaian televisyen berbayar seperti Unifi dan Astro ketika ini tidaklah sehebat seperti yang diuar-uarkan sebelumnya.

Malah terdapat kelemahan-kelemahan yang cukup ketara hingga membuatkan pengguna tertanya-tanya sejauh mana berbaloinya yuran bulanan yang mereka bayar itu.

Dalam konteks ini, di sinilah mungkin Nilamas boleh memainkan peranan. Nilamas boleh menampilkan dirinya sebagai sebuah penyiar yang lain daripada yang lain. Apa yang dimaksudkan dengan kelainan Nilamas ialah ia diharap mampu menonjolkan dirinya sebagai sebuah rangkaian yang sentiasa peka kepada citarasa, sensitiviti penonton dan meletakkan dirinya teladan kepada penyiar yang lain.

Dalam usaha menjadi sebuah pembekal televisyen berbayar yang disegani, Nilamas tidak harus mengikuti jejak langkah sesetengah pembekal lain yang mengenakan bermacam-macam bayaran yang membebankan penonton tanpa mengutamakan kualiti.

Bagi kebanyakan pengguna, kualiti adalah segala-galanya. Mereka membayar sesuatu yuran mencecah ratusan ringgit bukan sekadar pakej rancangan yang ditawarkan bahkan juga kualiti perkhidmatan yang diberikan. Aspek inilah yang tidak wajar diketepikan.

Oleh itu, adalah diharapkan sebagai orang baru dalam dunia penyiaran Nilamas mampu membuktikan bahawa kehadirannya dalam persada dunia penyiaran bukanlah sekadar satu jalan penyelesaian sementara. Sebaliknya, kelahiran Nilamas ini seelok-eloknya dilihat dalam konteks yang lebih positif yakni melihatnya sebagai sebuah lagi rangkaian televisyen yang akan memberikan nilai tambah dalam perkhidmatan sedia ada.

Apatah lagi dalam visi negara mencapai tahap negara maju kelak, saingan seperti ini mampu memberikan pelbagai manfaat kepada pengguna. Sudah tentu dalam hal ini, kemunculan Nilamas dalam dunia penyiaran di Malaysia akan memberikan lebih banyak pilihan kepada pengguna untuk memilih rancangan-rancangan yang lebih berkualiti. 

Dengan itu, pengguna bukan sahaja tidak perlu didesak atau tunduk kepada tekanan yang digunakan sesetengah rangkaian televisyen berbayar kerana kononnya rancangan berkenaan hanya disiarkan oleh mereka. Kini, pengguna boleh menggunakan kuasa mereka untuk membuat pilihan yang terbaik.

Yang pasti juga, era yang mana hanya sebuah rangkaian televisyen berbayar yang mendominasi dunia penyiaran sudah berakhir. Jika dahulunya kita ada hanya Astro yang boleh ditakrifkan sebagai abang kepada dunia penyiaran, tetapi kelahiran Nilamas kini sekurang-kurangnya mampu memberi saingan hebat kepada gergasi penyiaran itu. Mungkin juga mengatasinya satu hari nanti. Segalanya adalah mungkin.

Yang ingin kita lihat juga ialah situasi menang-menang membabitkan kedua-dua pihak: penonton (pengguna) dan rangkaian-rangkaian televisyen berbayar. Tidak dapat tidak, monopoli sesebuah rangkaian TV dalam dunia penyiaran bukanlah satu trend yang sihat. Ini kerana keadaan tersebut hanya membuka ruang bagi rangkaian tersebut melakukan apa sahaja yang mereka suka tanpa menghiraukan maklum balas pengguna.

Pihak pengusaha rangkaian televisyen berbayar seperti Astro harus ingat bahawa kejayaan mereka menjadi sebuah penyiar yang begitu dominan sekarang adalah kerana sokongan padu penontonnya. Bagaimanapun, sekiranya kepercayaan itu tidak dibuktikan dengan sebaik-baiknya, para penonton masih mempunyai pilihan alternatif untuk memilih penyiar atau pembekal lain.

Adalah menjadi harapan umum bahawa Nilamas tidak akan terikut-ikut rentak rangkaian televisyen berbayar lain dalam merebut pasaran penonton. Sebaliknya, mereka harus berpegang teguh kepada matlamat asal yang direncanakan serta usaha murni membekal hak mendapatkan maklumat dan hiburan melalui platform televisyen ini kepada semua rakyat Malaysia.

Persoalan sama ada rangkaian televisyen seperti Nilamas mempunyai kaitan dengan tokoh politik ternama, itu tidak begitu penting tetapi yang lebih mustahak adalah komitmen dan kejituan perjuangan pihak pengusaha untuk menjadikan Nilamas sebagai penyiar alternatif kepada penonton.

* Segala pandangan yang diluahkan di atas adalah pandangan peribadi penulis.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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Aziz Bari: Menteri bias, saya sedia muncul di pentas Umno

Posted: 06 Nov 2011 01:25 AM PST

Oleh G. Manimaran

KUALA LUMPUR, 6 Nov — Pensyarah undang-undang Universiti Islam Antarabangsa (UIA) Prof Dr Abdul Aziz Bari menyifatkan Menteri Pengajian Tinggi seolah-olah bertindak bias sambil menegaskan, beliau juga sanggup untuk muncul di pentas Umno jika parti itu bersedia mendengar pandangannya.

Malah tegas Aziz, apa yang diperkatakan beliau selama ini masih "dalam kerangka dan idea" yang sering dibawa timbalannya Datuk Saifuddin Abdullah, yang mengetengahkan pandangan progresif berkenaan pembaharuan politik tetapi tidak diterima banyak pihak dalam Umno sendiri.

Dalam satu kenyataan semalam, Menteri Pengajian Tinggi Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin menasihatkan Aziz (gambar) meletakkan jawatan sebagai ahli akademik jika benar-benar mahu bercakap di atas pentas politik.

Khaled berkata, Aziz, yang sedang disiasat oleh tiga pihak termasuk UIA sendiri, tidak perlu menunggu tindakan universiti tersebut.

Tambah Khaled, universiti adalah institusi yang mengutamakan pencapaian akademik dan perlu berada dalam keadaan neutral demi mencapai matlamat menjayakan bidang pendidikan.

Sehubungan itu, Aziz menyoal apa sikap menteri berkenaan dalam kes-kes ada profesor yang menyediakan ucapan dasar presiden Umno.

"Apa sikap menteri ke atas profesor yang secara terbuka menuduh DSAI (Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim) meliwat? Apa sikap menteri kepada profesor yang menjadi penceramah BTN (Biro Tata Negara) dan Islam Hadhari yang kesemuanya adalah dasar dan politik Umno," kata Aziz dalam satu kenyataan kepada The Malaysian Insider hari ini.

Malah Aziz juga berkata, "tidakkah Umno memberi beberapa orang profesor anugerah parti, tidakkah itu bermakna telah mempolitikkan akademik?"

Tambah Aziz, beliau hanya bercakap mengenai dasar-dasar dan politik yang selaras dengan ideal dan tuntutan Perlembagaan Persekutuan.

"Kalau ini dituduh berpolitik, saya fikir kita buang saja Perlembagaan ini dan jadikan negara ini negara diktator atau negara satu parti," kata pakar perlembagaan ini sambil menegaskan, "saya fikir apa yang saya lakukan masih dalam kerangka dan idea yang sering dibawa oleh timbalan Khaled."

Aziz menambah, Saifuddin yang juga anggota Majlis Tertinggi Umno sudah lama membawa idea seumpama.

Dengan merujuk kepada keputusan Mahkamah Rayuan awal minggu lalu dalam kes bekas pelajar berkaitan dengan Akta Universiti dan Kolej Universiti (AUKU) 1971, Aziz berkata, beliau fikir Khaled sedia mengetahui bahawa di sisi undang-undang berpolitik, sebagaimana yang diputuskan oleh mahkamah pada 31 Oktober lalu, dibenarkan dan peruntukan AUKU yang melarang diisytihar tidak sah.

"Kalau mahasiswa boleh berpolitik, takkan pensyarah tidak?" katanya lagi.

Aziz juga berkata, beliau bukan berpolitik secara aktif, sebaliknya hanya memberi pendapat yang kebetulan ada orang mahu dengar dan bersedia untuk muncul di pentas Umno jika sanggup mengaturkan kemudahan sedemikian.

"Saya alu-alukan jika orang Umno mahu dengar," katanya lagi.

"Walaupun menteri tidak setuju dengan apa yang saya dan mungkin timbalannya Saifuddin, saya rasa apa yang saya kata dibenarkan oleh Perlembagaan dan tidak menyalahi Akta Hasutan," kata Aziz lagi.

Dalam kenyataannya semalam, Khaled yang juga Ahli Parlimen Pasir Gudang menambah, beliau sedar Aziz memasuki kawasannya dan menyampaikan ceramah di Taman Saujana dekat Johor Baru kelmarin, tetapi yakin penduduk tidak akan termakan dengan perkara yang disampaikan.

Aziz pula menjawab, "saya pun tidak tahu itu adalah kawasan Khaled."

Aziz berucap pada ceramah anjuran Parti Keadilan Rakyat, komponen Pakatan Rakyat.

Ia bukan kali pertama Aziz menghadiri ceramah dan forum anjuran parti pembangkang dan pertubuhan bukan kerajaan.

Tambah Khaled, antara yang hadir adalah ahli Umno Pasir Gudang sendiri yang mahu mendengar hujah profesor itu yang kini dalam siasatan UIA berikutan kenyataannya mempertikaikan titah Sultan Selangor berhubung pemeriksaan Jabatan Agama Islam Selangor ke atas sebuah gereja awal Ogos lalu.

Aziz juga disiasat polis dan Suruhanjaya Komunikasi dan Multimedia Malaysia.

Siasatan polis dan UIA dilaporkan sudah selesai.

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Seksualiti Merdeka: Ketua Polis Negara sedia temu penganjur

Posted: 06 Nov 2011 01:10 AM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR, 6 Nov — Ketua Polis Negara Tan Sri Ismail Omar sedia bertemu dengan penganjur program Seksualiti Merdeka 2011 untuk mendengar penjelasan mereka berhubung penganjuran program itu.

"Saya tiada masalah untuk berjumpa (dengan penganjur). Saya boleh berjumpa dengan sesiapa sahaja asalkan ada tujuan... sebab kita bercakap soal keamanan. Saya tidak mahu tanggung apa-apa risiko yang boleh gugat keamanan negara," katanya dipetik Bernama Online.

Ismail (gambar) berkata polis bagaimanapun tetap akan menyiasat penganjuran program itu mengikut sistem dan lunas undang-undang yang sedia ada.

Beliau ditemui pemberita selepas menghadiri Majlis Korban Hari Raya Aidiladha di Masjid Bukit Antarabangsa di sini hari ini.

Dalam satu kenyataan media semalam, penganjur program berhasrat untuk berjumpa dengan Ismail bagi menerangkan tujuan sebenar program berkenaan.

Menurut kenyataan itu, penganjur sedih dan terkilan apabila orang ramai termasuk wakil rakyat memilih untuk terus menganiaya, mencaci dan bersangka buruk berhubung acara-acara anjuran mereka.

Mengulas mengenai penganjur program itu termasuk membabitkan bekas presiden Majlis Peguam, Datuk S. Ambiga yang akan diambil keterangan, Ismail berkata pihaknya akan tetap mengambil keterangan daripada mereka dalam masa terdekat bagi melengkapkan siasatan berhubung program terbabit.

"Ambiga dan lain-lain penganjur diarah untuk diambil keterangan. Saya telah menyerahkan kepada pegawai saya untuk siasat," katanya.

Program yang diadakan buat kali keempat sejak 2008, sepatutnya bermula 2 hingga 13 November tidak diteruskan oleh penganjur selepas mendapat tentangan hebat pelbagai pihak ekoran program terbabit didakwa memperkasakan hak golongan lesbian, biseksual, gay dan transeksual di negara ini.

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