Jumaat, 11 November 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Best assam laksa!

Posted: 11 Nov 2011 04:31 PM PST

SBread's assam laksa is thick with fish, yet it comes with the fillet of half a kembong in it. - Picture by Choo Choy May

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 12 — If there's a good assam laksa anywhere, I'll be there like a flash. It has to have the right balance of sour, salty and sweet. It has to be generous with the fish. 

A good fish stock, mostly from ikan parang boiled in assam water, with lemongrass, as we used to cook it at home, and the fish flaked into the curry, together with a good rempah and all the fragrant leaves of daun kesom and bunga kantan, makes a great assam laksa. And I must see chunks of fish in it, not just the powdery bits in the curry. 

These days ikan kembong is mostly used, but that does not detract from the sweet fish flavour of the assam curry, if enough of it is added into the curry. And I must say I found the best assam laksa so far at SBread in the Gardens, Mid Valley. It's a food stall sandwiched between Rak Thai and Pulau Ketam Yong Tau Foo, in that space between the Megamall and Gardens. 

The place has a name that you would not identify with laksa; it used to be more a bread and toast place. Toast is still served with kaya that is made every morning. You can have Yam Kaya Toast or Pandan Kaya Toast. This kaya toast is done in the style of a popular outlet in the Paragon shopping centre in Bangkok. 

But first the Penang Assam Laksa, which is served topped with fresh mint, pineapple and shredded bunga kantan, with a spoonful of prawn paste. Tip all of this into the assam laksa, and amazingly it gives the right balance of sweetness to it, besides lacing it with a distinctive taste. It's a laksa thick with fish, yet it comes with the fillet of half a kembong in it. 

According to stall owner Tan Quee Siew, all her customers like the Assam Laksa that way, with big pieces of fish.  The laksa was exceptional and I would come back again for this. 

Delectable nasi lemak with added pandan juice. - Picture by Choo Choy May

We moved on to nasi lemak. Tan is obviously a skilled nyonya cook. She had added pandan juice to the coconut milk to cook the rice. So you get a whiff of pandan aroma in the rice and the santan hugs each grain, touched with a little salt. The nasi lemak comes with sambal and hard-boiled egg, and either chicken rendang or chicken curry. We liked it better with the chicken curry which had all the lovely nyonya flavours. 

Toasted charcoal bread topped with otak-otak - Picture by Choo Choy May

SBread is also well known for its Bamboo Charcoal Bread which can be toasted and spread with kaya, or topped with otak otak. You can also buy a loaf home. The nutritious bread, which is black from Japanese edible charcoal, is rich in minerals, has cleansing properties, improves circulation and lowers acidity levels in the body. 

It's unusual to have an otak otak topping for bread, let alone charcoal bread. Pieces of fish were visible in this creamy, spicy otak otak. 

We had a drink of barley to cool down. But it was no ordinary barley water; it was tinged pink by a leaf called Rhoea Discolor that it had been boiled with.  It is shaped like a pandan leaf, and it's rich in iron and phosphorous; it's supposed to help with digestion and cleans your intestines. 

Patrons savouring their meals at the Sbread outlet in Gardens. - Picture by Choo Choy May

Sbread is a convenient brunch, lunch, tea or dinner place. There are also fried noodles, Mee Siam, Tomayam Beehoon, Instant Noodles with Dry Curry and Mee Goreng Mamak style. Then there are the breakfast and tea snacks like yam cake, chye kuih and woon chai koh. 

For Friday lunch there is Rice Wine Chicken, and on the first and 15th day of the month, there are vegetarian dishes. 

SBread serves a mean Penang coffee, thick and smooth with condensed milk. It's the place for the fragrant Thai iced tea too. 

SBread is located at LG232B, Lower Ground Floor, The Gardens Mid Valley, Tel: 03-2283 2929.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Morrison makes move at wet Singapore Open

Posted: 11 Nov 2011 03:39 AM PST

James Morrison watches his shot during the second day of the Barclays Singapore Open on the Serapong Course on Sentosa Island on November 11, 2011. ― Reuters pic

SINGAPORE, Nov 11 ― James Morrison enjoyed the best of the conditions at a rain-hit Singapore Open today, the joint overnight leader firing a second round three-under 68 to move two shots clear of the field.

Morrison, tied with Italy's Edorado Molinari on nine under par after the first round, had completed 14 holes of his second round on the more difficult Serapong Course before a weather delay forced the players off the course for almost three hours.

The 26-year-old returned to par the next three holes before a beautiful approach shot on the par-five 18th hole set up a tap-in birdie to send him into the clubhouse on 12-under for the $6 million tournament, being played over two courses.

"It was a perfect number really, 100 yards to the flag and with a sand wedge from the fairway it looked like it was about to go in, but I will take a four," Morrison told reporters of his approach at the last.

"It's definitely harder than the other course," he added. "More demanding tee shots and a well-designed course, so overall I had a good day.

Filipino Juvic Pagunsan surged up the leaderboard with a second straight five-under 66 to sit two adrift of Morrison and one ahead of Molinari, three holes into his second round, and Dane Anders Hansen, who fired a bogey-free, seven-under 64.

Morrison set the foundation for his low score on the easier Tanjong Course yesterday but with the final 36 holes being played on Serapong, the Briton will be delighted to have offset two dropped shots with a bogey-free, four-under inward nine.

"I didn't play as well as I did yesterday but did enough to get round and I finished strongly," Morrison added. "Four under for the back nine is very good here.

"I enjoy leading. It's what you play for. You play to win, to be in contention and to even be interviewed. If you don't enjoy that then there's no point in playing. I love doing all that so looking forward to the weekend."

Pagunsan put his improved display down to some minor adjustments he had made off the course that has had a positive effect on his performance on it in recent weeks.

"I have a stronger mentality now and focus on my game more. My concentration has improved and so has my fitness," the Filipino said.

"Your mental game is stronger when you are fresher. I jog a bit and play some friendly games of basketball to keep in shape."

Further down the leaderboard, Briton Justin Rose, American Anthony Kim and South Africa's Louis Oosthuizen were all making major moves into the top 10 with low scores on the Tanjong Course with a handful of holes remaining in their rounds.

Tournament drawcards Graeme McDowell (three-under with two holes to play) and Phil Mickelson (even par after three holes) are both struggling to qualify for weekend play with the halfway cut projected at three-under par. ― Reuters

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F1 rivals would welcome ‘raver’ Raikkonen’s return

Posted: 11 Nov 2011 02:50 AM PST

Kimi Raikkonen of Finland walks to his car after being introduced before the NASCAR Nationwide Series Top Gear 300 in Concord, North Carolina on May 28, 2011. ― Reuters pic

ABU DHABI, Nov 11 ― Kimi Raikkonen's possible Formula One comeback would liven up the post-race party scene as well as adding a sixth world champion to the starting grid, rivals agree.

The 2007 world champion, who quit Formula One to go rallying at the end of 2009 but remains hugely popular with the fans, has been linked to a seat next season at Williams although the team have made no public comment.

Raikkonen has confirmed to Finnish reporters that he has had talks while Williams shareholder Christian 'Toto' Wolff said this week that he was one of several options under consideration.

Some of the Finn's former rivals said at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix that they would welcome his return.

"I have no idea whether that is happening or not," said Team Lotus's Finnish driver Heikki Kovalainen.

"If Kimi decides to come back, I think the main difference for me will be that the parties after the races will be a little bit better."

Raikkonen, so often unforthcoming and monosyllabic in news conferences, had an off-track reputation as a party animal during his stint in Formula One with Sauber, McLaren and Ferrari.

Among other exploits, he once entered a powerboat race in a gorilla suit as 'James Hunt' and was also photographed asleep on a bench with an inflatable dolphin outside a Spanish nightclub.

"I had a few drinks and danced. Why not?" Raikkonen was quoted as saying afterwards.

Michael Schumacher, the seven-times world champion whose place at Ferrari was taken by the Finn at the end of 2006, enjoyed some memorable post-season parties with Raikkonen.

The German, who made his own comeback last year after three years out, was reluctant to offer any advice but could see potential for entertainment.

"I would be very happy to see him back. We have had some very good times and I look forward for some on track and off track occasions ― it will be good," he said.

Getting back into the groove after a couple of years away might not be too difficult, though.

"In the end, you think how much can you recall your potential. How much can you drive the car to its limit. That is the main concern that was answered right away at the first test," said the 42-year-old of his own case.

"It took me probably 15 laps to sort of get back and drive the car, not at its full limit but close and from then on it is just a matter of time. I am pretty sure with Kimi he is capable of doing so." ― Reuters


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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Vogue labels Olsen twins best-dressed sisters

Posted: 10 Nov 2011 07:09 PM PST

Twins Mary-Kate (left) and Ashley beat out nine other sibling pairs to take top spot.

NEW YORK, Nov 11 — They have always been in vogue, but twin actresses and clothing designers Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen are now truly in Vogue, gracing the cover of the fashion magazine's newest best dressed issue.

The widely-read edition, which was unveiled yesterday and hits newsstands on November 15, puts its spotlight on nine global sister acts from British royalty, the Duchess of Cambridge Kate Middleton and her sister Pippa, to celebrity singers Beyonce and Solange Knowles.

Also getting special mention inside the pages are the French Courtin-Clarin foursome, granddaughters of Clarins cosmetics company founder, Jacques Courtin-Clarin.

"It's been a year of sisters, most famously with Catherine and Pippa Middleton," Mark Holgate, Vogue Fashion News Director and Editor of the best dressed issue, told Reuters.

Holgate credits the Middletons with popularizing their own mid-thigh length of dress: "short enough to be impossible for an older-generation royal to wear, long enough to be decent when sitting or bending down to talk to a child."

But it was the Olsen twins, who rose to fame as child stars on US TV and as adults founded two successful high-end clothing labels, who were picked for the prestigious cover.

Holgate called the choice: "kind of a no-brainer."

"Are there any more chic, stylish, cool, and original sisters than Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen? They are incredibly stylish," he said of the twins.

The fact they have appeared on worst dressed lists in the past, including an annual one from late fashion critic Mr Blackwell, is actually a positive thing, said Holgate.

"They (the Olsens) get it right a lot of the time and then sometimes they don't get it right. That's actually great because it shows that it's their hands reaching into their wardrobes," explained Holgate. "They don't have someone telling them, 'This is cool, this is hot, this is what you should be wearing.' It comes from within them. It's instinctual.

"Look at what they've done with (their fashion labels) The Row and Elizabeth and James," said Holgate. "They are legitimate fashion forces."

The issue also highlights sisters with contrasting styles, such as the Maras — actresses Rooney of the upcoming "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" and Kate, currently seen on TV's thriller series "American Horror Story."

The magazine notes that Rooney Mara looked like "a goth Pippi Longstockings" at a recent Rodarte fashion show while Kate Mara "exudes the glamour of bygone screen sirens."

"There was just something interesting about seeing how siblings' style can be so different and unique," said Holgate. "We started thinking about all of the great sister acts who are around right now who look really good together but also look good apart." The colourful Solange Knowles, younger sister of pop superstar Beyonce, is known for taking style risks including shaving her head, donning afro wigs and mixing prints and colours. But she told Vogue in an interview that both their tastes are evolving and bridging the gap between their styles.

"I never borrowed clothes from Beyonce when we were growing up," said Solange. "But now my style is a little more tame and hers is a little more adventurous."  — Reuters

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Penang’s theatre by the sea

Posted: 10 Nov 2011 05:26 PM PST

PenangPac is a collaboration between The Actors Studio and E&O. — Pictures by Erna Mahyuni

GEORGE TOWN, Nov 11 — A theatre housed in a picturesque setting overlooking Penang's Andaman Sea?

When Straits Quay developer Eastern & Oriental Berhad (E&O) proposed the idea to The Actors Studio (TAS) founders Faridah Merican and Joe Hasham, the duo were understandably elated.

Said Hasham, laughing, "Of course we thought about it for a very long time... all of one second!"

E&O's deputy managing director, Eric Chan Kok Leong, said, "When the opportunity arose for us to work with The Actors Studio, the synergies were very clear for us."

Faridah and Hasham... simply ecstatic with the opening of PenangPac.

Given the spectacular setting of the Straits Quay retail marina fronting the Andaman Sea and the evident need for proper performing arts facilities in Penang, E&O was confident that it was an ideal avenue for the company to contribute and make a difference.

"We commenced talks with The Actors Studio and the rest is history," Chan said.

That was 18 months ago. The planning started pretty much as soon as Hasham and Faridah agreed and thus the Penang Performing Arts Centre, PenangPac, was born. It is housed within the Straits Quay retail marina on the fourth floor and officially opens today at 11.11am.

Throughout the process, TAS worked closely with Michael Tan, the architect from E&O in charge of the PenangPac. While TAS maintained a financial interest in the process, E&O funded the bulk of the start-up cost of the 22,000 sq ft centre.

Hasham stressed that while E&O and TAS were partners in PenangPac, TAS would have full control in creative and production matters.

PenangPac features two theatres — one proscenium theatre that will seat 304 and an experimental theatre that seats 150. A number of studios will be available for classes, rehearsals and practices, and there will also be a dedicated foyer, ticketing office and back-of-stage facilities.

Performances would by no means be confined to the building, with E&O providing a "floating stage" that would allow shows to be held by the sea.

Faridah and Hasham are "very happy" with the end result.

"What we are doing," said Hasham, "is decentralising theatre. Faridah's vision always has been to decentralise, to not only have theatre in Kuala Lumpur."

Spanking new...this theatre can seat 304.

With PenangPac's presence, TAS hopes that PenangPac will have ongoing theatre performances. Despite Penang's long history of the performing arts, Faridah said the scene had been close to dying off. This was due, she felt, to a lack of support and a proper space — the latter of which PenangPac hopes to address.

Like what KLPac did for Kuala Lumpur, Hasham feels that "(PenangPac) provides a meeting place for people who are interested in the performing arts and it helps in a huge way to nurture the performing arts."

To create visibility for the centre, PenangPac will have two months of free performances, starting from the date of its opening until the end of the year.

Visitors will have plenty of other reasons to visit Straits Quay. Besides PenangPac, Straits Quay has an array of F&B and retail outlets. Weekend markets as well as the newly-opened marina are also popular attractions as well as the Royal Selangor Visitor Centre, the second in Malaysia and third worldwide.

Bus shuttle services are also available connecting Straits Quay, Batu Ferringhi and George Town.

Click here for a schedule of upcoming performances.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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In-vitro meat coming soon

Posted: 11 Nov 2011 03:05 AM PST

LONDON, Nov 11 — Scientists are cooking up new ways of satisfying the world's ever-growing hunger for meat.

"Cultured meat" — burgers or sausages grown in laboratory Petri dishes rather than made from slaughtered livestock — could be the answer that feeds the world, saves the environment and spares the lives of millions of animals, they say.

File photo of people buying rabbit meat in Chongqing, China. 'Cultured meat' grown in laboratory Petri dishes could be on the dinner plate soon if scientists have their way. — Reuters pic

Granted, it may take a while to catch on. And it won't be cheap.

The first lab-grown hamburger will cost around €250,000 euros (RM1 million) to produce, according to Mark Post, a vascular biologist at the University of Maastricht in the Netherlands, who hopes to unveil such a delicacy soon.

Experts say the meat's potential for saving animals' lives, land, water, energy and the planet itself could be enormous.

"The first one will be a proof of concept, just to show it's possible," Post told Reuters in a telephone interview from his Maastricht lab. "I believe I can do this in the coming year."

It may sound and look like some kind of imitation, but in-vitro or cultured meat is a real animal flesh product, just one that has never been part of a complete, living animal — quite different from imitation meat or meat substitutes aimed at vegetarians and made from vegetable proteins like soy.

Using stem cells harvested from leftover animal material from slaughterhouses, Post nurtures them with a feed concocted of sugars, amino acids, lipids, minerals and all other nutrients they need to grow in the right way.

So far he has produced whitish pale muscle-like strips, each of them around 2.5cm long, less than a centimetre wide and so thin as to be almost see-through.

Pack enough of these together — probably around 3,000 of them in layers — throw in a few strips of lab-grown fat, and you have the world's first "cultured meat" burger, he says.

"This first one will be grown in an academic lab, by highly trained academic staff," he said. "It's hand-made and it's time and labour-intensive, that's why it's so expensive to produce."

Not to mention a little unappetising. Since Post's in-vitro meat contains no blood, it lacks colour. At the moment, it looks a bit like the flesh of scallops, he says.

Like all muscle, these lab-grown strips also need to be exercised so they can grow and strengthen rather than waste away. To do this Post exploits the muscles' natural tendency to contract and stretches them between Velcro tabs in the Petri dish to provide resistance and help them build up strength.

Supporters of the idea of man-made meat, such as Stellan Welin, a bioethicist at Linkoping University in Sweden, say this is no less appealing than mass-producing livestock in factory farms where growth hormones and antibiotics are commonly used to boost yields and profits.

And conventional meat production is also notoriously inefficient. For every 15 grams of edible meat, you need to feed the animals on around 100 grams of vegetable protein, an increasingly unsustainable equation.

All this means finding new ways of producing meat is essential if we are to feed the enormous and ever-growing demand for it across the world, Welin told Reuters in an interview.

"Of course you could do it by being vegetarian or eating less meat," he said. "But the trends don't seem to be going that way. With cultured meat we can be more conservative — people can still eat meat, but without causing so much damage."

According to the World Health Organisation, annual meat production is projected to increase from 218 million tonnes in 1997-1999 to 376 million tonnes by 2030, and demand from a growing world population is seen rising further beyond that.

"Current livestock meat production is just not sustainable," says Post. "Not from an ecological point of view, and neither from a volume point of view. Right now we are using more than 50 per cent of all our agricultural land for livestock.

"It's simple maths. We have to come up with alternatives."

According to a 2006 report by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, industrialised agriculture contributes on a "massive scale" to climate change, air pollution, land degradation, energy use, deforestation and biodiversity decline.

Post examines samples of in-vitro meat, or cultured meat, grown in a laboratory, at the University of Maastricht on November 9, 2011. — Reuters pic

The report, entitled Livestock's Long Shadow, said the meat industry contributes about 18 per cent of global greenhouse-gas emissions, and this proportion is expected to grow as consumers in fast-developing countries like China and India eat more meat.

Hanna Tuomisto, who conducted a study into the relative environmental impacts of various types of meat, including lamb, pork, beef and cultured meat, said the lab-grown stuff has by far the least impact on the environment.

Her analysis, published in the Environmental Science and Technology journal earlier this year, found that growing our favourite meats in-vitro would use 35 to 60 per cent less energy, emit 80 to 95 per cent less greenhouse gas and use around 98 per cent less land than conventionally produced animal meat.

"We are not saying that we could, or would necessarily want to, replace conventional meat with its cultured counterpart right now," Tuomisto, who led the research at Oxford University's Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, said in a telephone interview.

But she said cultured meat "could be part of the solution to feeding the world's growing population and at the same time cutting emissions and saving both energy and water."

While experts in the field agree that within several years, it may be possible to produce in-vitro meat in a processed form — like sausages or chicken nuggets — producing more animal-like products such as pork chops or steaks could be a lot more complex and may take many more years to develop.

Post, who is financed by an anonymous private funder keen to see the Dutch scientist succeed, hopes to hand the world its first man-made hamburger by August or September next year, but for the moment he admits what he has grown is a long way from a mouth-watering meal.

He hasn't yet sampled his own creation, but reviews from others are not great. A Russian TV reporter who came to his lab tried one of the strips and was unimpressed.

"It's not very tasty yet," Post said. "That's not a trivial thing and it needs to be worked on."

But with the right amounts and right types of fat, perhaps a little lab-grown blood to give it colour and iron, Post is confident he can make his Petri dish meat look and taste as good as the real thing.

He also hopes the ability to tweak and change things will mean scientists will ultimately be able to make meat healthier — with less saturated and more polyunsaturated fat, for example, or more nutrients.

"The idea is that since we are now producing it in the lab, we can play with all these variables and we can eventually hopefully turn it in a way that produces healthier meat," he said. "Whereas in a cow or a pig, you have very limited variables to play with." — Reuters

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Dubai readies for take-off of prestigious air show

Posted: 11 Nov 2011 02:25 AM PST

DUBAI, Nov 11 — Dubai gears up for its biennial air show which opens on Sunday with hopes of landing fleets of new aircraft orders after the fair's last edition was hit by the global financial crisis.

Organisers of the Dubai Airshow said this year's edition will be the biggest in the history of the 25-year-old show, with a 10 per cent increase in size, and that some regional carriers are expected to come up with new orders.

File photo of the Dubai Airshow at the airport of the Gulf emirate on November 15, 2009. — AFP pic

"The overall growth of the show will be about 10 per cent," said Alison Weller, managing director of the show organisers, F&E Aerospace.

Up to 1,000 exhibitors from 50 countries and more than 55,000 trade visitors are expected, according to organisers.

The chairman of Emirates, Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al-Maktoum, had hinted that the Dubai-owned carrier would be looking to buy new aircraft. The airline, which is one of the world's fastest growing carriers, has a fleet of 160 planes and an order book of nearly 200 aircraft.

The latest announcement it made was at Britain's Farnborough show last year, when it said it ordered 30 Boeing long-range 777 units worth US$9.1 billion (RM28.2 billion), boosting its reputation as the world's most bullish carrier, a month after ordering 32 Airbus A380 superjumbos worth US$11.5 billion.

It remains by far the largest single customer of the European manufacturer's giant airliner with 90 units, of which 15 have already entered service.

Qatar Airways chief executive officer Akbar Al Baker had also reportedly spoken of a "multi-billion-dollar aircraft order" at the Dubai Airshow.

The national flag carrier of the energy-rich Gulf state had been expected to place a massive order for 50 Airbus A320 neo-medium-haul jets and five A380 units at the Paris air show last June, but the deal did not materialise.

The fast growing carrier has a fleet of 98 planes, and some 200 aircraft on order, worth over US$40 billion, including 60 Boeing 787 Dreamliners and 80 Airbus 350s.

The long-awaited 787 Dreamliner, which made its first commercial flight last month, will be on display at the Dubai Airshow, along with many other commercial and private planes.

Fighter jets, including Rafale, the pride of Dassault Aviation that France is hoping to sell to the United Arab Emirates, will also be on display, as well as the US-made F-16 and F-18 warplanes.

The last edition of Dubai Airshow in 2009 was subdued as the global civil aviation industry was suffering a setback triggered by the global financial crisis.

Although the five-day event then ended with deals worth more than US$14 billion, it remained poor compared with the 2007 edition during which manufacturers chalked up orders valued at US$155.5 billion, mostly from Gulf operators.

The Middle East aviation industry had weathered the global crisis better than the sector in other regions, as it continued to register growth.

A number of Gulf cities are pouring billions of dollars into vast airport projects as they vie to become regional hubs for transit travel between the West and Asia and Australia.

But Dubai is by far topping the league with its Middle East's busiest airport that ranked the world's 13th last year after handling over 47 million passengers in 2010.

In terms of international passenger traffic, Dubai claimed in May the fourth rank after London's Heathrow which handled 61.08 million international passengers, Charles de Gaulle in Paris, with 53.28 million and Hong Kong, with 50.23 million.

Dubai Airports said it believed that Dubai International would become the world's busiest hub for international passenger traffic in 2015, when passenger handling is expected to exceed 75 million. — AFP-Relaxnews

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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Tg Adnan: ‘Kenapa mesti kita tukar calon menang 2008’

Posted: 11 Nov 2011 02:39 AM PST

PUTRAJAYA, 11 Nov ― Barisan Nasional (BN) mahu calonnya yang bertanding dalam pilihan raya umum ke-13 bukan sahaja boleh menang tetapi juga daripada mereka yang dikehendaki rakyat, kata Setiausaha Agungnya Datuk Seri Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor.

Beliau berkata pengumuman Perdana Menteri yang juga Pengerusi BN Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak semalam yang tidak meletakkan had umur atau jumlah pernah menjadi wakil rakyat untuk menjadi calon bertujuan memastikan calon yang bertanding nanti adalah yang dimahukan rakyat.

Tengku Adnan (gambar) yang juga Setiausaha Agung Umno dan Ahli Parlimen Putrajaya yakin dengan kenyataan Najib itu dapat melenyapkan persepsi sebelum ini yang mengatakan yang tua tidak boleh menjadi calon dalam pilihan raya umum ke-13 nanti.

"Penjelasan sudah dibuat semalam dan yakin dengan calon yang akan diketengahkan oleh BN nanti," katanya dipetik Bernama Online.

Beliau turut mengakui bahawa pilihan raya umum yang akan datang adalah sengit dan yang penting individu berkenaan adalah calon terbaik bagi BN.

Bagaimanapun, Tengku Adnan berkata daripada segi bilangan muka lama yang akan dikemukakan parti pada pilihan raya umum nanti, terserahlah kepada presiden menentukannya.

"Anda mestilah sentiasa ingat, pilihan raya umum pada 2008 adalah satu keadaan yang amat getir. Kebanyakan calon yang berjaya pada 2008 adalah calon yang boleh menang. Kenapa mesti kita menukar mereka," katanya.

Mengenai dakwaan mungkin wujud sifat 'menikam dari belakang' di kalangan ahli parti, Tengku Adnan berkata kepentingan partilah yang perlu didahulukan dan bukan individu.

Katanya, ini kerana pilihan raya umum akan datang merupakan satu pilihan raya yang begitu getir kepada parti.

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AUKU tak perlu dipinda, kata Naib Canselor UiTM

Posted: 11 Nov 2011 01:10 AM PST

SHAH ALAM, 11 Nov — Akta Universiti dan Kolej Universiti (AUKU) tidak perlu dipinda kerana politik di universiti hanya akan memecahkan perpaduan sesama penuntut sedangkan matlamat utama mereka ialah menimba ilmu dan mendapat pekerjaan bagi menjamin masa depan.

Naib Canselor Universiti Teknologi Mara (UiTM) Datuk Prof Dr Sahol Hamid Abu Bakar berkata universiti itu tidak bersetuju dengan cadangan pindaan AUKU kerana kebebasan politik hanya akan mengancam keamanan serta kesepakatan penuntut Melayu dan Bumiputera di universiti.

"Anak-anak (penuntut UiTM) saya aman harmoni berjuang bersama-sama dan menuntut ilmu untuk menjadi insan yang berguna kepada agama, bangsa dan negara.

"Apa yang penting kita semua bersatu padu dan tidak berpecah belah," katanya pada sidang media hari ini, lapor Bernama Online.

Beliau mengulas cadangan beberapa pihak yang mahu AUKU dipinda bagi memberi ruang dan kebebasan berpolitik kepada penuntut universiti.

Sahol Hamid berkata pada masa ini, penuntut telah diberi peluang untuk meluahkan pandangan dan pendapat mereka melalui persatuan yang disertai serta pilihan raya kampus yang diadakan, dan ini sudah memadai.

"Malah saya sendiri mempunyai akaun Facebook yang digunakan untuk berhubung secara terus dengan penuntut UiTM.

"Mereka boleh mengadu apa sahaja kepada saya dan tindakan yang sewajarnya akan diambil," kata beliau lagi.

"Kalaupun minat sangat dengan politik, habiskan dulu pengajian. Di UiTM, pengajian kita adalah sangat intensif, jadi tidak ada masa untuk berpolitik," kata Sahol Hamid.

Mengulas lanjut, beliau berkata politik orang Melayu pada hari ini menjurus kepada perpecahan dan bukan perpaduan.

Beliau berkata apa yang jelas masing-masing cuba memburukkan sesama sendiri sambil terlupa pihak lain sentiasa bersatu padu dalam memastikan survival mereka di masa depan.

"Jangan terlalu ghairah sampai lupa sejarah, lupa helah dan tidak nampak apa yang sedang berlaku. Melayu sepatutnya kuat dan bersatu padu," katanya.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Knowing when to quit

Posted: 10 Nov 2011 04:27 PM PST

NOV 11 — No two weekends are the same and the past week brought along some disappointment as well as excitement.  

Seeing Tottenham Hotspur struggle against Fulham in the second half, despite having a comfortable 2-0 lead, was a real letdown.

You would think that, anywhere on the continent, if a team has gotten into a 2-0 lead, they certainly will be in command of the game, playing the counter-attack, and trying to get a third goal. 

There just seems to be something about the English Premier League (EPL) where this isn't the case time and time again, don't you think?

Often, it seems to me that the teams in the lead are more vulnerable than their opponents. Where is the consistency?  

But enough about the EPL, for this week anyway. For the next seven days, it is all about international football.  

The top footballers in the world are often playing for both club and country, and there will surely come a time when they have to choose to give up one or the other. 

Nemanja Vidic has made the choice, Park Ji-Sung has made it too, and now, Rio Ferdinand has to make that choice.  

Playing for your country is indeed an honour, but when it boils down to age or injury, and you know that your form is not as good as before, there is only one way to prolong your football career. 

Some veteran players still can play, but it will only be demoralising to them when they find out that they can no longer meet the standards they set for themselves. 

If you are somebody like Luiz Suarez, and the whole team relies on you, wouldn't it be better to leave than to be a liability? 

For Ferdinand, hanging up his England boots would probably be the wisest decision.

In addition to coming under fire for his poor performance in recent weeks, especially for the game against Manchester City, the 33-year-old centreback has also been told by boss Sir Alex Ferguson that from now on, he would have to play fewer games for them so as to make way for his younger counterparts.

Sacrificing his England boots is probably the only way for him to prolong his career. 

I do respect the players who make this decision.

It may seem unpatriotic at first, but if you put yourself in the boots of a football player, the opportunities and exposure given by the clubs is much more compared with their national teams, not to mention the financial support as well. 

There is, however, one player that left me disappointed when he decided to retire from the international football scene, and he is former Japanese ace midfielder Hidetoshi Nakata. 

He achieved many feats, being awarded Asian Football Confederation Player of the Year in 1997, being made the Knight of the Order of the Star of Italian Solidarity (one of Italy's highest honours, more so for a foreigner), played for Japan in three FIFA World Cup tournaments (France 1998, Japan-Korea 2002, Germany 2006) and two Olympic Games (Atlanta 1996, Sydney 2000). 

He still had the ability to make a world of difference in international football and in a football match, but went ahead to retire despite many people persuading him not to. What a waste of talent. 

In my case, I realised that it became a lot tougher playing football internationally when I turned 31, so I decided to retire from that scene.

The benefit for me was that it enabled me to play in the domestic Malaysian league until I was 36! 

In the football world, especially internationally, you should definitely go out on a high note once you've hit your peak. If you still want to hang on to your glory days, there is only one way to go, and that is down.

So for me, leaving your national team is a very hard decision, and I respect the people who have the courage to make that choice.

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

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Doomed to be kiasu!

Posted: 10 Nov 2011 04:21 PM PST

NOV 11 — It seems like the hospital is my second home these days. And I totally blame it on the fact that my wife and I are first-time parents. Every little sniffle, cough, vomiting, sleepiness, loss of appetite, weird-coloured poop, etc, sends us revving to the paediatrician.

There was a time (some of you will remember me writing about it) my wife and I took our then-two-month-old Athena to Bukit Tinggi for a short getaway. She developed a slight fever in the middle of the night and we called the front desk of the hotel to ask for their resident doctor.

When we heard they didn't have one, we berated the hotel staff for not being responsible towards their guests.

When we rushed back to the city and to Athena's paediatrician, she informed us that slight fevers like this are common for babies who are building their immune system.

My wife and I laughed the incident off and promised ourselves that we would never be such kiasu parents again and would remain calm in future situations.

Then a few months later, little Athena started vomiting in the middle of the night. At first we tried to stay calm, but when she started to choke while vomiting, that was it!

We rushed to the hospital's emergency room. The nurse on duty started doing the necessary — taking her temperature, blood pressure, etc. My wife and I, of course, screamed at the nurse to not waste time and demanded she get the doctor over to see Athena immediately.

Then the doctor finally showed up. He looked… young! Younger than me (and we all know I'm young!)!

My wife and I looked at each other and discreetly shook our heads in disbelief. This "kid" is surely not experienced enough to treat our precious baby! The "kid" doctor took a look at Athena, thumped her tummy gently a few times and listened to us patiently as we described her vomiting.

Mind you, Athena was fine by this time. She was smiling and gurgling away, all the while trying to grab the "kid" doctor's stethoscope while he was checking on her.

The "kid" doctor spoke politely and calmly. He said not to worry and that Athena was just a little bloated. He prescribed some medicine and told us to go home.

Again, my wife and I glanced at each other in disbelief. We took the medicine and drove Athena home for the night. The next morning, we woke up early (my wife even took emergency leave from work!) and immediately took Athena to her paediatrician.

We even brought the medicine that the "kid" doctor had prescribed for her. We told her we hadn't given any to Athena because we wanted to check with her first.

She just laughed and told us the medicine was fine and that Athena was fine too. She really did have a little bit of extra gas, which does happen from time to time.

We smiled embarrassedly, shook hands and thanked her, and we were off. In the car, my wife and I, again, promised each other not to be such kiasu parents!

Fast forward to just last week. Athena is now almost eight months old. She can sit up on her own, eat solid food and laugh at people who make funny faces at her.

Now, little Athena has a small skin tag at birth that our paediatrician has recommended be removed just because it has been growing ever so slightly. So we scheduled an appointment with a plastic surgeon and he told us it would be a simple procedure that wouldn't cause any harm at all.

The day of the surgery, we admitted Athena into the hospital and the nurses started to prep her for her simple surgery. When it was time to wheel her into the operating theatre, we met with the surgeon and the anaesthetist. They told us not to worry and that Athena would be out in an hour.

So, my wife and I, who are now confirmed to be the least kiasu parents in the world, decided to go across the road to have tea at a really popular Malay kueh restaurant. After about 45 minutes of enjoying some of the best Buah Melaka and Soto Ayam in the Klang Valley, we walked back to the hospital.

We strolled by the front desk of the ward, proud of how cool we were. As soon as the nurses saw us, they all screamed at us asking where we had been all this time! Athena had come out of surgery 20 minutes ago and was wide awake, screaming her lungs off and disturbing all the patients in the recovery room!

The hospital had been trying to look for us. They went to the ward and we weren't there. They tried calling our phones but to no avail since we had conveniently left them in the ward!

We immediately rushed to the recovery room and saw a nurse there frantically walking up and down while trying to pacify a screaming Athena. The doctors and nurses there must have thought we were such irresponsible parents. And to think that we were first-time parents too!

Fast forward to today. Athena has recovered fully. And the main lesson learned? There ain't no escaping the kiasu-ness for first-time parents!

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

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