Khamis, 17 November 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


McLaren boss says must make quick start to 2012

Posted: 17 Nov 2011 03:27 PM PST

McLaren took months to make up the gap to its rivals from pre-season testing this year. — Reuters pic

WOKING, Nov 18 — McLaren must make a quick start to next season after being too slow off the mark this year, team principal Martin Whitmarsh said yesterday.

McLaren have won six of 18 Formula One races this year, including Lewis Hamilton's victory in Abu Dhabi last weekend, but looked way off the pace in pre-season testing and took months to be able to challenge Red Bull.

Hamilton and Jenson Button have three wins each and will be fighting hard to come out on top in the final round in Brazil next week.

"By the high standards of McLaren, this has not been a vintage year," Whitmarsh told reporters at the opening of McLaren's sportscar production centre.

"We have secured second place in the constructors' championship but clearly we want to win more races than this.

"We have got to get out of the blocks quickly, effectively, at the start of next year and make sure we are winning races. We've had a slow start to this year but we've got two great drivers and a fantastic team of men and women."

McLaren Racing managing director Jonathan Neale said next year's car was well under way.

"The carry over that we expect from the car that won on Sunday to the first test on the first of February will be around six per cent," he said.

"We need to start next year quick. We've shown that we can out-develop and stay close to everybody, we've consistently won races, we are consistently on the podium but we don't win championships enough and that's a frustration."

Red Bull and Sebastian Vettel won both titles this season for the second year in a row. McLaren's last drivers' title was with Hamilton in 2008 and they have not taken the constructors' crown since 1998. — Reuters

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UK sports minister joins call for Blatter to quit

Posted: 17 Nov 2011 03:23 PM PST

Blatter sought to play down his remarks by claiming he was misunderstood. — Reuters pic

LONDON, Nov 18 — British Sports Minister Hugh Robertson and Gordon Taylor, the chief executive of England's Professional Footballers Association, were among those calling for FIFA president Sepp Blatter to resign yesterday following his comments on racism.

The 75-year-old Swiss has faced widespread criticism following his remarks on Wednesday when he said in two separate TV interviews there was no racism in football and that players involved in any racist confrontations on the pitch should settle their differences with a handshake at the end of the match.

The comments from the head of world soccer's governing body have provoked a furore in England where the FA is dealing with two high-profile racism allegations.

Blatter has responded to one of his critics — Manchester United and England defender Rio Ferdinand — by becoming involved in a slanging match with the player on Twitter.

Robertson, asked on BBC radio if Blatter should quit, said: "Yes, we've been saying this for some time. This is incredibly serious but it is part of a pattern of behaviour."

Taylor said Blatter had now gone too far.

"This goes beyond the line. To talk like he did shows he is totally out of tune, and out of time," he told Sky Sports News.

"He should move aside for (UEFA president) Michel Platini. If one person should get it about racism it is the head of FIFA which has 200 countries in the world, which are so diverse and have different backgrounds, colours, cultures and creeds and if he is not getting it then he's got to move on."

Asked if he should resign, he said: "I think without a shadow of a doubt."

Blatter's comments were televised on the same afternoon as the English FA charged Uruguayan striker Luis Suarez of Liverpool with racially abusing Manchester United defender Patrice Evra last month. Suarez is pleading not guilty to the charge.

The FA and police are also investigating allegations of racial abuse by England and Chelsea captain John Terry towards Queens Park Rangers defender Anton Ferdinand last month. Terry denies the accusations.

There has been a predictably vehement backlash in England towards Blatter with The Sun's front page headline "Blind as a Blatt" making the tabloid's feelings known while many pundits have called on him to quit.

European newspapers were less forthright, with some major ones like Italy's Gazzetta dello Sport not mentioning the controversy at all on their website, but Switzerland's Blick talked of a "racism storm."

Rio Ferdinand — Anton's brother — was one of many critics, saying on Twitter that he was "astonished" by Blatter's comments.

"Sepp Blatter your comments on racism are so condescending it's almost laughable. If fans shout racist chants but shake our hands is that ok?" Ferdinand wrote. "I feel stupid for thinking that football was taking a leading role against racism — it seems it was just on mute for a while."

Ferdinand also implied in another tweet that a picture on the FIFA website of Blatter with a "black man" was an attempt to limit the damage caused by the FIFA president's comments.

Blatter then tweeted back: "@rioferdy5. The 'black man' as you call him has a name: Tokyo Sexwale. He has done tremendous work against racism and apartheid in Africa."

Blatter gave interviews to broadcasters CNN and Al Jazeera.

Asked if there was racism on the pitch he told CNN World Sport: "I would deny it. There is no racism, there is maybe one of the players towards another, he has a word or a gesture which is not the correct one.

"But also the one who is affected by that, he should say that this is a game. We are in a game, and at the end of the game, we shake hands, and this can happen, because we have worked so hard against racism and discrimination."

He also said on Al Jazeera: "During a match you may say something to someone who's not looking exactly like you, but at end of match it's forgotten."

Blatter attempted to play down his remarks afterwards by issuing a statement where he pledged his commitment to stamping out racism.

"My comments have been misunderstood. What I wanted to express is that, as football players, during a match, you have 'battles' with your opponents, and sometimes things are done which are wrong," he said.

"But, normally, at the end of the match, you apologise to your opponent if you had a confrontation during the match, you shake hands, and when the game is over, it is over.

"Having said that, I want to stress again that I do not want to diminish the dimension of the problem of racism in society and in sport.

"I am committed to fighting this plague and kicking it out of football."

Blatter, whose organisation has been beset by corruption allegations in the recent past, has made a series of gaffes over the years.

He called on women players to wear skimpier kits and upset homosexuals by saying they should not engage in sexual relations at the 2022 Qatar World Cup.

The Swiss also said England were "bad losers" after they missed out on hosting the 2018 World Cup to Russia and has become a figure of hate among English media despite being adored in other parts of the world such as 2010 World Cup hosts South Africa. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Beaujolais Nouveau launches extraordinary 2011

Posted: 17 Nov 2011 05:43 AM PST

Beaujolais Nouveau 2011 has arrived. ― Reuters pic

PARIS, Nov. 17 ― Wine lovers will get their first taste of the much-talked about 2011 harvest today as the "Beaujolais Nouveau" hits the bars and shelves of France and the wider world.

Proud of a 60-year tradition that has been propelled to global renown by a sleek retailing campaign, Beaujolais seeks to burnish its image as a wine to celebrate the new vintage and dampen criticism that its popularity lies more in the marketing than in the quality of the wine.

"At the start of my career, the arrival of the new Beaujolais was a pretext to share and have friendly parties," said Emmanuel Delmas, a consultant-sommelier wine-expert.

"Today, the event is out of fashion. Consumers no longer accept bad wine and are looking for drinking pleasure, even if this means paying a bit more," he added.

At an average €4 (RM17) a bottle for a wine made in less than 10 weeks, Beaujolais Nouveau remains a profitable operation for many producers.

Beaujolais Nouveau is made from the Gamay grape. The 2011 vintage, a year characterised by unusual weather leading to relatively early harvests, appears to have provided higher quality wine from fewer grapes. The 2011 Beaujolais Nouveau was harvested early and could mature a bit longer until the traditional third Thursday of November.

Christophe Pacalet is based in Ville-Morgon, part of the Beaujolais area, and produces several kinds of wine as well as some Beaujolais Nouveau. He is respectful of nature on the vineyards he acquired in 1999 with his uncle.

At a tasting today the wine had the typical Gamay smell with a whiff of banana. The first impression was of red fruit that lingers in the mouth turning towards a riper dark fruit with a hint of liquorice. A balanced wine with no acidity. Pacalet's wine sells for eight euros a bottle.

Lyon party

A decree in 1951 allowed the sale of wines from the same year. At first the starting date was in December and Beaujolais growers managed to get that pushed back to mid-November.

In the beginning, the new Beaujolais was mainly a festive event in the wine bars of the city of Lyon, just 30km south of the growing area and still the epicentre of the increasingly global Beaujolais bash with a midnight party that sees 400 litres of the wine being served in just half an hour.

In 1966, the 250 stores of the wine retail chain Nicolas in Paris started a special Beaujolais Nouveau operation and later firms such as Georges Duboeuf took the wine to export markets.

Duboeuf, born in 1933, earned the monickers "King of Beaujolais" and "Pope of Beaujolais" for his efforts in promoting the wine that makes up one third of the production of the Beaujolais area ― the rest is sold at a more mature age.

Duboeuf still runs the firm with his son Franck and will be present at a Beaujolais party in the United States, a key market.

In 2010, 35 million bottles of the wine were put on the market. Some 7.5 million were sold in French supermarkets and 15.5 million were exported, the rest went to bars, off-licence stores and restaurants.

The biggest consuming region in France is Paris with 1.3 million bottles.

Japan was the biggest export market with seven million, followed by the United States with 2.4 million and Germany with 1.2 million.

There are many other "new" wines in France or Italy, but the phrase 'Le Beaujolais Nouveau est ArrivĂ©" remains the clarion call in France for the first taste of the vintage year. ― Reuters

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Samsung to release modified tablet in Germany

Posted: 17 Nov 2011 04:48 AM PST

This handout picture released on November 17, 2011 by Samsung Electronics in Seoul shows the Galaxy Tab 10.1N. Samsung Electronics said it has modified the design of its newest tablet PC to bypass a sales ban in Germany, and would start selling it there as early as this week. ― AFP-pic

SEOUL, Nov 17 ― Samsung Electronics said today it had modified the design of its newest tablet PC to bypass a sales ban in Germany and would start selling it there as early as this week.

The Galaxy Tab 10.1N, based on the Galaxy Tab 10.1, has a different metal frame and the location of the speakers has been changed, a spokesman for the South Korean company told AFP.

Samsung was dealt a blow in September when a German court ruled that it infringed upon Apple's design patents for its iPad. The court banned sales and marketing for the Galaxy Tab 10.1.

In a spate of lawsuits, Samsung and Apple accuse each other of copying designs or technology for their smartphones and tablet computers.

Apart from Germany, they have also launched patent claims against each another in the United States, Japan, South Korea and Australia.

Apple last month won a victory against Samsung in Australia, when a judge upheld a temporary injunction blocking the sale of the Galaxy Tab 10.1.

Later in October Samsung announced it was trying to block the sale of Apple's newest product, the iPhone 4S, in Japan and Australia.

The decision to release a modified Galaxy reflects Samsung's eagerness to begin selling its tablet in Germany before the year-end shopping season.

But Apple's response to the new version would be crucial, said HI Investment and Securities analyst Song Myung-Sup.

It was not yet possible to say whether the modified tablet "will be free of any legal disputes with Apple", Song said.

Samsung Electronics's Galaxy Tab 10.1N ― AFP-Relaxnews


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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Spielberg, Fincher put big bang into holiday films

Posted: 17 Nov 2011 05:28 AM PST

Director Steven Spielberg poses during a photocall to promote his movie 'The Adventures Of Tintin, The Secret of The Unicorn' in Paris in this file photo of July 19, 2011. This holiday season will see big name movie directors with their blockbusters dominating the movie scene. – Reuters pic

LOS ANGELES, Nov 17 – Toss out the turkey and send Santa back up the chimney. The holiday movie season is upon Hollywood, ushered in by the vampires and werewolves of "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1."c

When the new "Twilight" romance debuts in theatres tomorrow, it sets the tone for a blockbuster-filled season dominated by big name movie directors such as Steven Spielberg and David Fincher and high-profile film franchises like "Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol" (Dec. 21) and "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows" (Dec. 16).

"The last six weeks of of the year play out almost like a mini-summer," said Entertainment Weekly movie writer Dave Karger. "Kids are out of school for holidays, and movies are on the brain a lot more than they were in September or October."

The period encompassing the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays make for the second-biggest moviegoing season of the year after summer. Things officially start Nov. 18 with "Breaking Dawn" – the first half of the fourth and final chapter of the mega-successful "Twilight" film series based on Stephenie Myers' novels. "Part 2" hits theatres in 2012.

"This one picks up at a place where you think, 'Where could this story go now?'" the film's star Kristen Stewart said. "I think lots of milestones are crammed in to it, and there's a very accelerated bit of life lived in this movie."

DIRECTORS TAKE SPOTLIGHT

"Breaking Dawn" is directed by Oscar winner Bill Condon, who is in high-profile company with several top filmmakers taking over the season: Steven Spielberg is a double threat, directing the performance-capture 3D film "The Adventures of Tin Tin" (Dec. 21) and the period drama "War Horse" (Dec. 25).

Joining them is Martin Scorsese with his first 3D effort, the children's period piece "Hugo" (Nov. 23), and Cameron Crowe stages a comeback with the feel-good family film "We Bought a Zoo," starring Matt Damon (Dec 23).

And lest we forget, a year after David Fincher's "The Social Network" dominated the 2010 holiday season, the acclaimed director is back on Dec. 21 with the highly-anticipated "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo."

The film is an English language adaptation of Swedish author Stieg Larsson's first installment of his popular Millennium book series, which have already launched a franchise of Swedish films with a worldwide cult following.

"It's an awkward thing to make a movie from a book that has another movie that already exists," Fincher said. "But if I didn't feel that we could do something different, or that we could bring something to it, I wouldn't have done it."

Typical of the holidays, theatres are filled with plenty of family-friendly films aimed at satisfying multiple generations. There's animated fare such as "Happy Feet Two" (Nov. 18) and "Arthur Christmas" (Nov. 23), as well as the live-action CGI film "Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chip-Wrecked" (Dec. 16).

Meanwhile, funnyman Jason Segel aims to revive a dormant franchise with the live-action musical comedy, "The Muppets," (Nov. 23), that will see actual puppets in place of animation or computer graphics.

"There's something very visceral about the idea that these puppets exists in the same world that we exist in," said Segel, who wrote, executive produced and stars in the film. "Nothing against those beautiful animated films, but you'll never meet Shrek. He lives in a computer. But you could meet Kermit and you could hug him and shake his hand."

OSCAR WATCH 2011

As the Academy Awards telecast draws closer to its Feb. 26 curtain, the holidays also mark the time studios trot out their contenders. George Clooney is touted as among those to beat for best actor, playing a widowed father of two girls in filmmaker Alexander Payne's "The Descendants" (Nov. 16).

Black-and-white silent film "The Artist" (Nov. 23) has seemingly come out of left field to capture the eyes of Academy voters, but the pest picture race appears wide open for now.

Meanwhile, a big group of women find themselves competing for the best actress slot. On Dec. 9, Charlize Theron stars as writer who tries to reclaim her married high school sweetheart in Jason Reitman's "Young Adult," and Tilda Swinton is turning heads as a distraught mother in "We Need to Talk About Kevin."

Glenn Close plays a woman passing herself off as man in order to work in the 19th century Ireland film "Albert Nobbs" (Dec. 21), and Meryl Streep is the former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in "The Iron Lady" (Dec. 30).

On Nov. 23, Michelle Williams stars in "My Week with Marilyn" where she transforms into the legendary Hollywood icon, yet tragic screen star, Marilyn Monroe.

"If I knew then what I know now about how many people have opinions about her, I don't know if I would have been brave enough to say yes to the role," Williams said.

"I'm certainly not going to please everyone. So I only felt bound by a responsibility to her, to my relationship with her, to my imagination of her. Not anybody else," she said.

And there is one key, possible contender on Academy Award watchers must-see list this season: the 911-themed family drama "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close" (Dec. 25) starring Oscar winners Tom Hanks and Sandra Bullock, written by Eric Roth and directed by filmmaker Stephen Daldry.

"The trailer looks promising so it could potentially join the list," said Karger. "But no one has seen it yet." – Reuters

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Julia Roberts in ‘Mirror, Mirror’

Posted: 17 Nov 2011 01:21 AM PST

Julia Roberts as the Evil Queen in 'Mirror, Mirror' – Photo courtesy of Relativity Pictures

LOS ANGELES, Nov 17 – The first trailer for Mirror, Mirror, the re-imagining of the Snow White fairy tale starring Julia Roberts, Lily Collins (The Blind Side) and Armie Hammer (The Social Network), was released November 15.

In a totally different vein to the dark and dramatic Snow White and the Huntsman starring Kristen Stewart, Charlize Theron and Chris Hemsworth, in theatres next summer, this version offers an amusing take on the Brothers Grimm story. The comedy is also a departure in tone for Tarsem Singh who directed the action epic Immortals.

Julia Roberts' Evil Queen makes sarcastic quips, the dwarves crack jokes and even "the fairest of them all" Snow White, played by Collins, has an ironic line.

The fantasy follows the wicked queen who has stolen the kingdom and banished Snow White from her throne. In her scheme to marry the Prince, she plans a ball which backfires when the Prince meets and falls for Snow White.

The footage features the above scenes as well as a sword fight between the Prince and Snow White, who leads a band of thieving dwarves. Stylish sets, costumes and visuals reveal "the untold adventures of Snow White" with romance and humour.

Mirror, Mirror opens March 9, 2012, in Sweden, March 16 in North America and April 5 in Germany and other markets, and then continues to roll out around the world.

Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=903BvFne8go – AFP

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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Ward, Greenblatt win at US National Book Awards

Posted: 16 Nov 2011 09:32 PM PST

NEW YORK, Nov 17 — Jesmyn Ward won the National Book Award for fiction yesterday for "Salvage the Bones," about a poor Mississippi family confronting Hurricane Katrina, while Stephen Greenblatt took the non-fiction prize for "The Swerve: How the World Became Modern."

Ward, a young, Southern writer, was honoured for her second book, published by Bloomsbury USA, which was told in the voice of a pregnant black teenager.

"I wanted to do something with my time here that would have meaning," she said, explaining she began writing partly as a response to her brother's death.

"This is a life's work, and I am only at the beginning," she told the audience at the 62nd annual awards, among the most prestigious in US publishing, presented by the National Book Foundation.

The judges cited Ward's use of "piercing metaphor and simile," saying, "This is storytelling as skilled as it wise."

Greenblatt's "The Swerve," which chronicles the 15th-century rediscovery of an ancient Roman epic by Lucretius, which subsequently fuelled the Renaissance and inspired great minds from Galileo to Freud, was lauded as "a work of intelligence, generosity and passion."

The Harvard professor said his book, published by W.W. Norton & Company, was "about the power of books to cross boundaries, to speak across" distance, space and time.

In choosing its winners, the Book Foundation honoured writers from backgrounds often among the disenfranchised. Three of the four winners were women, two of them African-American and one a Vietnam native.

Hurricane Katrina figured in two winners' work.

University of Kentucky creative writing professor Nikky Finney won the poetry prize for "Head Off & Split," which delves into African-American life from Rosa Parks to Condoleezza Rice, Katrina and family weddings.

She delivered an appropriately poetic, eloquent speech that actor John Lithgow, the show's host, called "the best acceptance speech for anything that I've heard in my entire life."

The young people's literature prize went to Thanhha Lai for "Inside Out & Back Again," a novel-in-verse based on her experience fleeing Saigon with her family during the Vietnam War and settling in Alabama.

The Literarian Award for outstanding service to the literary community was presented by writer Walter Mosley to Mitchell Kaplan, co-founder of the Miami Book Fair International, the nation's largest book fair.

Poet John Ashbery received the Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters.

The 84-year-old Pulitzer Prize winner for "Self Portrait in a Convex Mirror" said that even without the many honours he had won, "I think I would have continued writing just for the fun of it. Because it is fun, even though it's not supposed to be."

There were five finalists in each of the four categories, with each winner receiving US$10,000 (RM31,000).

Past National Book Award winners have included John Updike, Philip Roth, Ralph Ellison and rocker Patti Smith, last year's non-fiction winner for her memoir "Just Kids." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa


AUKU: Keputusan rayu dibuat hujung bulan, kata menteri

Posted: 17 Nov 2011 03:36 AM PST

SEPANG, 17 Nov – Masih ada tempoh sebulan untuk kerajaan membuat keputusan sama ada mengemukakan rayuan berhubung kes Akta Universiti dan Kolej Universiti (AUKU) ataupun tidak, kata Menteri Pengajian Tinggi Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin.

Beliau berkata masih ada masa lagi untuk kementerian menentukan tindakan selanjutnya dan pihak berkepentingan tidak perlu bimbang kerana keputusan mengenai perkara itu akan diumumkan.

"Jangan risau keputusan mengenai perkara itu akan tetap dibuat, kemungkinan hujung bulan ini kita akan maklumkan," katanya kepada pemberita selepas menutup seminar Sains Kesihatan dan melancarkan buku Kajian Hala Tuju Bidang Pengajian di sini hari ini.

AUKU menjadi isu apabila Mahkamah Rayuan baru-baru ini memutuskan Seksyen 15(5)(a) AUKU 1971 yang melarang mahasiswa berpolitik adalah tidak sah dan bercanggah dengan Perlembagaan Persekutuan.

Dalam perkembangan lain, Khaled berkata bidang Sains Kesihatan boleh diperkasakan lagi oleh universiti menerusi penerokaan disiplin baharu seperti 'Palliative Care' (Penjagaan Paliatif) dan 'Medical Technology Devices' (Peralatan Teknologi Perubatan).

"Ia boleh dikembangkan melalui jalinan kerjasama antara institusi tempatan dan luar negara seperti Ireland yang lebih dikenal pasti sebagai negara yang lebih maju ke hadapan dalam disiplin tersebut," katanya.

Selain itu, beliau berkata penawaran program Sains Kesihatan perlu dipertingkatkan dan berkualiti kerana bidang itu mampu menarik minat lebih ramai pelajar luar negara melanjutkan pengajian di negara ini.

Pada majlis sama, lima lagi buku kajian hala tuju pendidikan dilancarkan iaitu berkaitan pendidikan Sains Bioperubatan, Sains dan Teknologi Pemakanan, Pendidikan dan Latihan Sains Marin dan Maritim, Kaunseling dan Senibina.

Diharapkan penghasilan kajian hala tuju itu akan dapat mendorong kepada penghasilan lebih banyak kajian lain yang berkaitan dengan program ditawarkan di universiti, katanya.

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Pengerusi NFC pertahan beli kondo, dakwa nilainya RM6.9j

Posted: 17 Nov 2011 02:41 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 17 Nov ― Pelaburan kondominium di Bangsar bernilai RM6.9 juta seunit menggunakan wang pinjaman projek ternakan lembu Pusat Fidlot Kebangsaan (NFC) adalah keputusan perniagaan bijak, demikian menurut Pengerusinya, Datuk Seri Dr Mohamad Salleh Ismail hari ini.

Menjelaskan kontroversi yang timbul, beliau berkata, sekiranya wang itu ditempatkan di dalam bank, kadar pulangan tahunan hanya 2.6 peratus.

"Berbanding pelaburan sektor hartanah, ia mampu menjana keuntungan tahunan 12.9 peratus serta pulangan rebat tunai dan penyewaan untuk tahun pertama sebanyak RM900,000 yang disalurkan kepada syarikat dan bukannya individu," katanya di Gemas hari ini.

Kata beliau, masih ada projek membabitkan perniagaan ternakan lembu NFC yang belum dilaksanakan.

"Justeru, sambil menunggu pelaksanaan projek seterusnya, saya fikir duit geran yang masih belum digunakan itu perlu dilabur supaya mendapat keuntungan," katanya pada sesi taklimat media di pejabat ladang NFC, demikian menurut laporan Berita Harian Online.

Sebelum ini pembangkang memetik Laporan Ketua Audit Negara mendakwa syarikat milik keluarga Menteri Pembangunan Wanita, Datuk Shahrizat Abdul Jalil itu telah menggunakan dana melalui NFC untuk membeli satu unit kondominium mewah dengan bayaran berjumlah RM9.8 juta.

Salleh adalah suami Shahrizat.

Dalam pada itu, Salleh belum memutuskan sama ada akan mengambil tindakan undang-undang ke atas Pengarah Strategi PKR Rafizi Ramli ekoran kenyataannya mengenai isu NFC.

"Kami sekeluarga perlu duduk semeja dan berbincang sebelum memutuskan langkah susulan yang perlu diambil," katanya.

Peguam NFC, Datuk Seri Muhammad Shafee Abdullah, yang turut hadir pada sidang media itu berkata, beliau sudah menasihatkan anak guamnya bahawa tindakan undang-undang ke atas pendakwa boleh dilakukan kerana tuduhan yang dilemparkan tidak berasas.

Bagaimanapun katanya, beliau hanya boleh memberi nasihat dari segi perundangan dan menyerahkan kepada anak guamnya untuk membuat keputusan.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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Why English, ah?

Posted: 16 Nov 2011 04:38 PM PST

NOV 17 — Many years ago when Rick Astley was the heartthrob of many, and hairsprayed bangs were de rigeur, I was in the top science class in secondary school. Unlike my brilliant peers, however, I was not a top science student. 

I struggled for two years in Form 4 and Form 5 in abject misery, trying to figure out the mystery of science and maths. I loved the subjects, particularly biology, but my interest and love for them did not translate into high scores. 

I thus arrived at the most logical conclusion — that I was stupid. Smart enough to do well to get into science stream, but not smart enough to keep up. My teachers, angry and frustrated that I was dragging down the scores, certainly did not discourage me from this conclusion. I dreaded going to school every day to see the scorn in their eyes. 

I fell into depression, and cried every day after school. My father, always supportive, wanted to help but was not sure what was going on. I think he thought that I was possibly taking drugs because every time I entered the room, he had a book in front of his face, with the title, "What To Do When Your Child Is Taking Drugs."

By the grace of God, or possibly dumb luck, I managed to pass SPM but not very well. 

I was fortunate that despite my middling scores, I was able to study abroad. 

My father, always supportive, suggested that I study something "easier", "like business or law." 

But I had my heart set on studying science. 

Much to my surprise, I did so much better in university overseas. Suddenly, I was getting As and Bs. The mystery of science wasn't so mysterious after all. I eventually graduated with a degree in biological sciences, and pursued a wonderful career in field biology for 10 years.

I wrote to my best friend about my academic transformation with much surprise and happiness. She wrote back, simply saying, "I knew you were never stupid. It was just that you never understood the subjects taught in BM." 

I've been following the PPSMI debate with much interest because I certainly would have benefited if science and maths had been taught in English, rather than Bahasa Malaysia. 

Perhaps logically, one would assume I would support PPSMI as it would have benefited students like me whose command of English is better than Bahasa Malaysia. 

However, I don't necessarily.

I recognise that I am part of a small yet vocal segment of Malaysian society where English is the language of dominance. For some, especially in mixed-race families, it is our mother tongue, to the detriment of our own native languages. My generation, in particular, grew up with the expectation to speak and write in English well because in our parents' time, it represented future prosperity. 

But times have changed. 

These days, it is not enough to have a good command of English but to have a strong command of Bahasa Malaysia as well. Just look at all the job ads whether in national or transnational industries: "Must speak and write well in English and Bahasa Malaysia." 

We shake our heads at Malaysians who don't speak English well, but how many of us can truthfully say, "I am bilingual, and can write well in English AND Bahasa Malaysia?"

There have been some calls that the reason why Malaysians don't speak Bahasa Malaysia well stems from our frustration with racial politics. It's our sneaky way of fighting back Malay imperialism, you see, even though it disenfranchises us even further.

I'm familiar with this argument because it has been the excuse I have used for years. 

However, after working with rural communities of all races, I have realised that Bahasa Malaysia is what unites us all, especially from different economic segments of society. 

The Ibans of Sarawak and Orang Asli of Peninsular Malaysia may have their own beef with Umno but they are certainly more comfortable when we communicate in Bahasa Malaysia, rather than English. 

Now, I'm not one to say yea or nay to PPSMI but I would like those debating on the matter to consider students in the middle of the fray.

I know what it is like to go through school studying in a language I don't understand, and feeling incredibly stupid. I know what it is like to have teachers more interested in investing in academically brilliant students than students struggling to keep up. 

What I don't like to see are students being used as pawns for political gain. For whatever education policy we eventually decide upon, can we do so for the interests of students and not politicians? As well, as a top academician has said, to have the political courage and fortitude to see the education policy through? 

If I could impart advice for students, I would say, yes English is important but Bahasa Malaysia more so because we are Malaysians. Embrace the language wholeheartedly for it would open up the rest of Malaysia to you.   

Myself, these days, I'm reading more Pak Sako and Samad Said, and a little less of Roald Dahl and Margaret Atwood. 

For I have a lot of catching up to do.

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

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Busy, busy… busybodies

Posted: 16 Nov 2011 04:14 PM PST

NOV 17 — We, as a nation, are obsessed with our fellow countrymen. 

We wanted to ban the poco-poco and yoga, tell Elton John and other homosexuals to stay away from this country and if possible move those who look and think differently to a remote, uninhabited island.

While most Malaysians will be against the Americans (or any Western power) policing the world, saying how an independent country should be left alone, it is double standards when Malaysians act as the moral police in this country. 

This is, in not so many words, sheer hypocrisy.

If you ask me, every Malaysian should police their family members first before judging anyone else. All they have to do is ensure their children get a good education, speak good English, take up a third language, work hard, not become Rempits and lastly not cook up a grandiose resume for a TV cooking show. 

They should ensure their sons, daughters, grandchildren become responsible, productive and tolerant Malaysian citizens.

Unlike what some may want you to believe, Elton John and homosexuals/transgenders are not a threat to our country. We watch shows like "Glee" or "Will & Grace" which have gay characters.

Even the local TV stations are reporting explicit news about sodomy and video clips of a politician's alleged sexual escapade in Thailand. Our MPs have even requested to view those "shows" in Parliament.

So what is the big deal? You mean to say we can watch it on TV but cannot attend "live" shows by performers who happen to be gay?

Get real.

We have an oversupply of drug mules and addicts, millions of illegal foreign workers, untrained Rela officers, rampant corruption among government officials, unemployable graduates, losses by GLCs. 

Aren't these a bigger threat to Malaysia? 

These problems if left unchecked will bring the nation down to its knees faster than any gay threat

Don't you think our time will be better spent building schools, hospitals, better quality roads, putting up good and proper signages, teaching our students English, trimming the bloated, inefficient civil service, and "shooing" out the illegal immigrants?

Speaking of illegal immigrants, there are allegations that citizenships are dished out for promised votes to our hardworking foreign workers.

If it is true, this is then the biggest threat to the country, putting our future and children's future at risk.

Like most cynical Malaysians I don't know how much of that holds water, but then again like all serious accusations it needs to be looked into by the government. It is better to be safe than sorry later. 

It was apparently raised by an officer within the Bangladesh prime minister's department last September and was put up on its website. This was later removed. 

I know that the government has denied this, but I think Malaysians are way past believing everything they hear no?

Come on Mr Home Minister, we are not as gullible as your fellow MPs.

Datuk Ambiga Sreenevasan wants the setting up of a royal commission for this purpose but I, to a certain extent, disagree.

Yes, we need to get to the bottom of this but I don't think we should jump straight to the forming of a royal commission. We already had one this year and nothing was done with its findings. It takes time to form one and even then there may be elements of bias to it. 

I think an independent panel from political parties and NGOs should suffice for the moment to determine the validity of the accusation first. Should they find substantial evidence to support the claim then all we need is the next general election, no? Make fliers and start dropping them over the kampong areas, and ensure that the rural folks know what is going on in the country.

Those selling the country in exchange for votes should be given the same treatment as drug traffickers. Or maybe we can enact hudud just for this group of traitors?

This is not the 1960s anymore. We have so many political parties clamouring for a piece of power that the government has to watch its toes. Amanah and Kita were the latest to join the other side and, from the looks of it, are more than ready to hang their foes out to dry.

Malaysians going out to vote at the next GE do not want surprises at the polling stations i.e. seeing "Malaysians" casting their votes. A sudden increase in Bangladeshis, Pakistanis or Indonesians at the polling station may just cause another political tsunami.

Let's all become busybodies, people. Against those who sell this country and trample on our civil rights in the guise as our saviours.

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

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