Jumaat, 18 November 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Of hairy crabs and an Iberico pig

Posted: 18 Nov 2011 04:30 PM PST

Braised noodles with hairy crabmeat and roe... sinfully good. — Pictures by Eu Hooi Khaw

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 19 — I did not have much use for cutlery at my most recent meal at Chef Choi. It had started with steamed hairy crabs that demanded more than the inefficient use of a small fork.

There was the crushing and tearing with the fingers and teeth, picking out the super sweet and delicious bits, the slurping up of the velvety, almost liquid roe that tasted like half-boiled egg yolk, but infinitely better, and finally the clean pulling of meat from the crab legs.

The hairy crabs with their luscious roe.

The satisfying, messy eating over, I loved the warming ginger tea that followed and had my cup refilled. The hairy crabs appeared again towards the end of the meal in the Braised Ee Fu Noodles with Hairy Crabmeat. These were noodles with the roe clinging to each strand, and the crabmeat infusing them with its sweetness. The roe of three crabs had gone into frying these noodles.

The hairy crab season ends about December 15, so there's not much time left to enjoy them.

Chef Choi now has the Iberico pig on its menu. The acorn-chomping black pig from Spain is much prized for its meat, and we got to taste how good it is with first the BBQ Iberico Suckling Pig.

The skin was crispy, but for once the incredible taste of the meat with very little fat overshadowed it. Every bite was so tender, moist and bursting with flavour. It didn't need five-spice salt or the plum sauce that Chinese love to serve suckling pig with.

Sweet and sour pork... the luxe version with Iberico pork.

The BBQ Iberico Short Ribs had this aromatic whiff as it was brought near us. The ribs had only been rubbed with salt and pepper before the grilling. The meat fell off the bone, with bits of tendon sticking to it, which made the eating so much more enjoyable.

You would have thought it sacrilegious to mince Iberico pork with waterchestnut, and steam it in a classic home-style dish. But no, the meat turned out super smooth and creamy, and oh so lovely with the sweet crunch of juicy, chopped waterchestnuts.

"It looks and cuts like butter," someone remarked. This was also when a request for rice went out, all the better to spoon the sauce of the minced pork over and consume with relish.

Roast pigeon... a must try at Chef Choi.

It was exactly as what chef-owner Chan Tai Seng had said in the middle of dinner: "It's a taste adventure, in the casino concept of different food in the same restaurant. A meal in Chef Choi is not a meal but an experience!"

And he followed these words by serving us Roast Pigeon next. It was just so yummy — the skin paper-thin and crispy, the aroma of rose wine in its marinade so evident. Again, the fingers did the work, leaving the bones clean.

Then it was back to Iberico pork again, this time slivers of the top loin, the fatty part, flash fried to get rid of the fat, and tossed with asparagus in XO sauce that's generous with dried scallop. "Wow" we went again on tasting.

There was then a diversion, from the short and fat green pea shoots fried with garlic, and even this drew appreciation for being so green, crunchy and sweet.

Red bean broth with 18-year-old mandarin peel... superb.

The restaurant strangely (in view of all the meat dishes we had) is known for its Sweet and Sour Vegetarian Pork (or go lou yook). It has something to do with the finely balanced sweet and sour sauce, and the sticky but not floury texture of the deepfried meat, that has a delightfully springy bite.

The dinner hit a climactic crescendo with the Sweet Red Bean Paste with 18-year-old mandarin peel. The peel has been aged like a good wine but it hits its peak at that age. "There's also 80-year-old mandarin peel, but it's paper-thin, with no scent and used for medicinal purposes," said Tai Seng.

No sugar had been added to the red bean, just dried longan, all blended to a silky broth. The fragrance of the peel wafts up as you drink it, giving a slight citrusy zing. After two spoonfuls I waited to catch the flavours slowly developing and evolving on my palate. It was a fitting end to a dinner of diverse experiences.

Chef Choi is located at 159 Jalan Ampang, Kuala Lumpur (Tel: 03-2163-5866). The website is www.chefchoi.com.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Man United’s Cleverley out for longer than expected

Posted: 18 Nov 2011 03:36 PM PST

MANCHESTER, Nov 19 — Manchester United midfielder Tom Cleverley is still several weeks away from a return after his ankle injury turned out to be worse than thought, manager Alex Ferguson said yesterday.

The 22-year-old player, whose energy and distribution skills allowed him to break into the first team this season, picked up the injury during last month's 1-0 win at Everton.

Everton's Phil Jagielka (back) challenges Cleverley during the English Premier League match in Liverpool on October 29, 2011. — Reuters pic

"It's unfortunate, it's worse than we thought," Ferguson told a news conference.

"We did further scans...we're going to have to give him a break till maybe Christmas time."

Cleverley's return was not the only date on Ferguson's mind as his second-placed side seek to make up ground on Premier League leaders Manchester City by the start of the new year, starting with today's trip to Swansea City.

"By January 1 we hope we'll be in the right position in the league, which is always an important time for me," said Ferguson, whose side trail their neighbours by five points after 11 games.

"It's always crucial in my diary and calendar that we get there."

His mission will be helped by the return of winger Ashley Young, who has recovered from a toe injury and will be fit for this weekend's match.

Despite Cleverley's longer-than-expected recovery time, Ferguson was confident he had plenty of midfield options and backed England manager Fabio Capello's confidence in teenage defender Phil Jones's ability to play a centre-of-the-park role.

The Scot deployed the 19-year-old in midfield against Liverpool earlier this season, while Capello did the same thing in this month's international friendlies against Sweden and Spain and likened Jones to former Italy great Franco Baresi.

"Since he's joined us his improvement has been really eye-catching in the sense that we know he's 19 years of age, we know it's a big step up from Blackburn to Manchester United," Ferguson said of his close-season signing.

"He's been fantastic, he can play anywhere. He's versatile, he's two-footed, he's quick, he's got good perception of the game so I'm not surprised at what Fabio is saying.

"I think he can be a really influential player for us and England in the next few years."

Ferguson has not been afraid to make some bold selections this season when injuries have hit, even selecting striker Wayne Rooney in the centre of midfield where he excelled against Otelul Galati in the Champions League this month.

However, he pointed out that with Michael Carrick fit, as well as Darren Fletcher, Ryan Giggs and Park Ji-sung, he was not short of options involving players more used to the territory.

Defender Chris Smalling will miss the game in Wales but may return for Tuesday's Champions League match at home to Benfica, while striker Danny Welbeck is still recovering from a muscle strain sustained on international duty with England.

Champions United are second in the table with 26 points and Ferguson was expecting a tough encounter with fearless Swansea.

"I think everybody has been taken by Swansea, the way they have played," he said. "They have kept their philosophy of playing attacking football." — Reuters

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Boycott by black players would force Blatter out, says Warnock

Posted: 18 Nov 2011 03:14 PM PST

LONDON, Nov 19 — The only way to get Fifa president Sepp Blatter to resign after his controversial comments about racism is if every black player boycotts the next round of international matches, Queens Park Rangers manager Neil Warnock said yesterday.

Blatter has apologised but said he would not quit after sparking outrage, notably in England where the FA is dealing with two high-profile racism allegations, for saying instances of racist abuse on the pitch should be settled by a handshake.

"Racism does happen on the field of play and the shaking of a hand just doesn't put it right," Warnock (picture), whose defender Anton Ferdinand is at the centre of a police investigation after Chelsea's John Terry was accused of racially abusing him during a game, told a news conference.

"But who is going to sack him? I don't see that anybody is going to sack him.

"I think the only way we could get him out of the situation that he is in if every black player in the country, in every country, refused to play in the next international game.

"That's the only way. Nothing else is going to get him out until he wants to go."

While the English FA and other managers welcomed Blatter's apology, Warnock questioned his sincerity.

"He's a clever old man. You can make any apology sound sincere if you want to," Warnock said.

"I don't think he'll give two hoots if I'm honest. Not about England. Some of the other countries put (racism) under the carpet.

"I look at Spain and it is not as vital or major an issue over there like it is in England."

FA chairman David Bernstein said in a statement that Blatter's apology had been "necessary."

"His initial comments were wrong and irresponsible," he said on the English governing body's website (http://www.thefa.com).

"As I have said many times in the past, with power comes responsibility and I — with others in prominent positions in the game — have to make sure we live up to the values of which we speak.

"I am mindful that — this week's comments aside — Fifa as an organisation does much good work around the world. The organisation has made great strides in fighting racism as have many national football federations."

Blatter's comments were widely condemned by players and managers and even Prime Minister David Cameron before yesterday's apology.

"Sepp Blatter has apologised and that's fine," Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson told a news conference.

Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas said Blatter would never have needed to say sorry if he had thought before speaking in the first place.

"When somebody asks sorry, first you have to avoid saying those things, if you say sorry it's because you made a mistake," he told a news conference.

"We all agree that Sepp Blatter has made mistakes in his comments and doesn't set a good standard but has (been) humble in his actions to retract his words." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Mother of actor Hugh Grant’s baby wins injunction

Posted: 18 Nov 2011 06:41 AM PST

LONDON, Nov 18 ― The mother of actor Hugh Grant's baby daughter has won an injunction from London's High Court "prohibiting harassment" of her and the child after she said paparazzi had made her life "unbearable".

The injunction comes amid a high-profile British inquiry into media standards, in which Grant is a leading figure, and a phone-hacking scandal in Rupert Murdoch's News Corp media empire.

Chinese actress Tinglan Hong was granted the order last week and details were made public today when the judge, Justice Michael Tugendhat, explained his reasons in a written ruling, the Press Association reported.

Tugendhat said that, while Grant (picture) was very well-known, Hong had "never sought any publicity or been known to the public for any reason".

He added that she and Grant, star of films such as "Notting Hill" and "Four Weddings And A Funeral", had done their best to keep private the fact the baby was their child. But Hong had stated that since the birth "her life has become unbearable".

"She cannot leave her home without being followed and there are constantly photographers waiting outside her home," the judge said.

In April, the News of the World published a front-page story entitled "Hugh's Secret Girl", which speculated on whether she was pregnant. After that she was regularly followed and photographed without her consent.

Threatening phone calls

The judge also referred to an incident in July when 51-year-old Grant appeared on a BBC TV programme and talked about phone-hacking, of which he is a suspected victim.

That evening Hong, 32, who was seven months pregnant, received phone calls from anonymous callers.

"After first ignoring such calls she did answer one," the judge said. "The person calling said 'Tell Hugh Grant to shut the fuck up.'"

The ruling said Hong had been terrified and had since changed her mobile phone. Since the birth of her child, she had not been able to take her daughter outside and was "unable to look after her daughter in a normal way", the judge said.

Next Monday, Grant will be one of the first of the "core participants", who say they have suffered unreasonably at the hands of newspapers, to give evidence at a public inquiry.

This was set up by Prime Minister David Cameron in July after it was revealed journalists from Murdoch's News of the World weekly had hacked the phone of missing schoolgirl Milly Dowler, who was later found murdered.

Dowler's parents will also give evidence on Monday.

The inquiry has heard there were as many as 5,800 hacking victims, and accusations of unethical behaviour by some of Britain's notoriously aggressive newspapers.

News International, News Corp's British newspaper arm, has admitted to the inquiry that hacking could have continued beyond 2007, when its former royal correspondent was jailed for the practice. ― Reuters

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Tale of many cities as Dickens anniversary nears

Posted: 18 Nov 2011 05:01 AM PST

LONDON, Nov 18 ― Charles Dickens will be feted around the world next year in literature, film, theatre, music and art, underlining his international cultural impact two hundred years after his birth.

The author of classics like "Oliver Twist," "Great Expectations," "Bleak House" and "A Tale of Two Cities" is considered one of the greatest novelists to have written in English.

Sales of his books, which are still in print, run into hundreds of millions of copies, and during his lifetime his works were turned into theatre.

With the advent of cinema in the late 19th century and television decades later, Dickens became the most adapted novelist of all time, with more than 100 films ― short and feature length ― made in the silent era alone.

"The prose style of Dickens is a foreshadowing of cinematic technique," said Michael Eaton, co-curator of what is billed as the largest retrospective of Dickens on screen ever staged.

Dickens on Screen, part of the broader, global Dickens 2012 initiative (www.dickens2012.org), will be held at the British Film Institute (BFI) in London from January to March 2012.

Movie adaptations will also be screened next year in the United States, Germany, the Philippines and China thanks to the state-funded cultural agency the British Council.

"When we think of all Dickens's extraordinary characters and nail-biting cliffhangers it is not surprising he's the most adapted author of all time," said Heather Stewart, the BFI's creative director.

Tapping its own archive, the BFI will screen a rarely seen silent work from 1901 called "Scrooge ― or Marley's Ghost" and "David Copperfield" from 1913.

At the programme's centre will be David Lean's "Great Expectations" (1946) and "Oliver Twist" (1948), considered by many to be the greatest film versions of Dickens, as well as Carol Reed's popular musical "Oliver!" (1968).

New film, books, shows

Five major television adaptations will be screened in their entirety, while director Mike Newell is making a film based on "Great Expectations" possibly for release next year.

"Dickens was my first adult author and he was very much my way into literature," said bestselling novelist David Nicholls, who wrote the screenplay for the new version.

"I certainly wouldn't be a writer if it hadn't been for Dickens."

Exhibitions dedicated to the Victorian author have already begun opening in Britain, with many more planned in the run-up to the bicentenary of his birth on February 7, 2012.

The Victoria and Albert Museum launched its display this week featuring the original manuscript of "David Copperfield."

The British Library is advertising "A Hankering after Ghosts: Charles Dickens and the Supernatural" which opens on November 29, while on December 9 the Museum of London opens "Dickens and London."

Overseas shows include one at the Museum Strauhof in Zurich due to open in December and another at the Chateau D'Hardelot in northern France which was visited by the author many times.

The British Council has organised events in more than 50 countries from Armenia to Zimbabwe involving theatre, film and educational programmes.

Biographies have begun hitting book stores, including Claire Tomalin's "Charles Dickens: A Life" which was shortlisted for the Costa Book Awards 2011, and Robert Douglas-Fairhurst's "Becoming Dickens: The Invention of a Novelist."

And the publishing house Penguin has produced a deluxe box-set of six clothbound Dickens novels costing 100 pounds. ― Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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As Khmer Rouge cadres face trial, truth eludes Cambodia

Posted: 18 Nov 2011 07:22 AM PST

Former Khmer Rouge soldier Lim Sambath, told Reuters that "he was just following orders" during year zero. — Reuters pic

PALIN, Cambodia, Nov 18 — Battle-hardened former Khmer Rouge guerrilla Lim Sambath echoes the words that have become a mantra for the servants of the ultra-Maoist regime that tore Cambodia apart three decades ago.

"We had to follow orders," he said of his role in the bloody "year zero" revolution that wiped out 1.7 million Cambodians — a quarter of the population — from 1975-1979, marking one of the darkest chapters of the 20th century.

Battle-hardened Lim Sambath said for anyone who defied the rules, their fate was death. — Reuters pic

"Almost all Cambodians are victims. Everybody had to follow the regime's policy," he said. "Those who defied the rules, their fate was death."

As a UN-backed court prepares for the trial of three senior leaders on Monday, the truth about the "killing fields" could be lost forever in the rugged mountains and impenetrable jungles of this former Khmer Rouge stronghold.

Like "Brother Number Two" Nuon Chea, ex-President Khieu Samphan and former Foreign Minister Ieng Sary, Lim Sambath, 58, distances himself from the killings and says his recollection of the harrowing era is vague.

He tells stories of his battlefield heroics to repel Vietnamese invaders but denies responsibility for any of the hundreds of thousands of men, women and children who died of torture, starvation, disease and execution in the rice fields and makeshift jails run by Pol Pot's black-clad disciples.

"I don't know how many people were killed," Lim Sambath, a former guerrilla commander, now a community leader, told Reuters at his home in Boyakha village on the western border with Thailand.

"We had to follow orders. We had little knowledge. We saw no light. It was like living on another planet. But that was the only planet we knew."

Almost every Cambodian alive lost a family member under the Khmer Rouge and many fear the multi-million dollar Extraordinary Chambers in the Court of Cambodia (ECCC), established by the United Nations in 2005 to try those "most responsible" for the killings, will fail to bring justice.

Almost every Cambodian alive lost a family member under the Khmer Rouge. — Reuters pic

Vow of silence

Pol Pot, the French-educated architect of the revolution, died in 1998 and the defendants facing trial next week in what is known as "Case 002" not only appear unwilling to cooperate but face widespread criticism for stalling the proceedings.

Ieng Sary, for instance, tried to have his case thrown out and last month issued a statement saying he would refuse to answer questions, or speak at all, during the trial.

Another blow to the proceedings took place yesterday when a fourth defendant, French-educated former Social Affairs Minister Ieng Thirith, was declared mentally ill, unfit for trial. She will be released if no appeal is lodged.

The defendants are charged with committing crimes against humanity and genocide, and accused of crimes ranging from murder to enslavement, religious and political persecution, inhumane treatment and unlawful imprisonment.

They are all in their 80s and in poor health. Given the slow pace at which the joint UN-Cambodian tribunal moves, many fear they won't live to see the verdict delivered.

The court has handed down just one sentence so far, a 35-year jail term, commuted to 19 years, for former prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, alias "Duch", over the deaths of more than 14,000 people. His appeal is set for February 3 next year. He has repeatedly said he was "just following orders".

Cambodians who saw Duch sentenced reacted with anger and tears and complained it was too lenient. Many just want the top commanders to come clean and explain the motivation and ideology that fuelled the Khmer Rouge's unrelenting killing spree.

"They're all guilty," said Kim Sokhon, a street vendor who lost his mother, sister and two nieces. "They know what happened — they were the ones who enforced Pol Pot's policies."

The closest any of the former cadres have come to disclosure is seen in the documentary film "Enemies of the People", in which Nuon Chea, during six years of interviews with journalist Thet Sambath, admitted threats to the party line were "destroyed" if they could not be "corrected or re-educated".

For tens of thousands of Cambodians, being "destroyed" meant being blindfolded, then bludgeoned to death and thrown into one of the hundreds of mass graves across the country.

Chum Mey, a survivor of the Khmer Rouge regime, greets students during a presentation of information leading up to Monday's trial in Phnom Penh. — Reuters pic

The film is expected to be used as evidence against Nuon Chea, who denies the charges.

Chhang Youk, director of the Documentation Centre of Cambodia, which has compiled evidence to use during the trial, said it was unlikely defendants would confess but he was confident justice would eventually prevail.

"Everyone wants a final judgement of what happened," he said. "We've seen the Khmer Rouge hasn't changed its attitude. They won't admit anything, so the tribunal is really important."

Credibility crisis

The ECCC itself is in crisis. Despite its big budget, expected to reach US$150 million (RM474.8 million) by year-end, it is beset by resignations and public acrimony over its reluctance to pursue cases beyond 002.

It also faces allegations of UN apathy and political interference by members of the Cambodian government, some of whom are former Khmer Rouge cadres.

Theary Seng, a prominent survivor of the Khmer Rouge era and the first plaintiff to register in case 002, withdrew her complaint against Nuon Chea on Tuesday because of what she called "toxic shenanigans" in the court.

Her letter to the ECCC, typed in a large, bold font, said simply: "ENOUGH!"

Buddhist monks wait for morning alms in the former Khmer Rouge stronghold of Pailin near the Thai border November 14, 2011. — Reuters pic

That same day, the Open Society Justice Initiative, a private legal and human rights group, urged the UN to conduct an independent inquiry into allegations of judicial misconduct, incompetence and lack of independence, accusing Cambodian and international judges of thwarting investigations.

Tribunal monitor Clair Duffy said the ECCC now had a "credibility crisis" and it was crucial more indictments were made so the real story of the Khmer Rogue was not left untold.

"We know these institutions cannot prosecute everyone ... but we also know that 1.7 million people were not tortured, starved, enslaved and executed by one torture centre commander and up to a handful of people at the top," she said.

Independent experts say a big problem is the politicisation of cases and stonewalling by Cambodia's government to limit the scope of investigations.

Many former Khmer Rouge members hold top positions in the bureaucracy, legislature and the government, including parliament president Heng Samrin, Finance Minister Keat Chhon, and long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen.

Hun Sen last year told UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon that more indictments were "not allowed" and has previously said he would be happy if the court packed up and left, warning of a return to civil war if more cases were pursued.

Ven Dara, a provincial councillor in Palin and niece of a late Khmer Rouge military chief, Ta Mok, admitted she was horrified by the killings and said indictments should go to the very top.

"If the Khmer Rouge leaders are accused of being the killers, then what about our current leaders? They didn't even dare to show up to testify," she told Reuters. — Reuters

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Pakistan’s Imran Khan — playboy cricketer to PM?

Posted: 18 Nov 2011 05:02 AM PST

Pakistani cricketer-turned-politician, Imran Khan. — Reuters pic

BANI GALA, Pakistan, Nov 18 — The road to Imran Khan's palatial spread in the hills above Pakistan's capital is a perfect metaphor for his vision of his political career: twisty and pot-holed, but ending in a grand estate.

Alone in the beginning but now surrounded by smaller buildings, the house itself is cool and pleasant, with Mughal-era swords arrayed on a coffee table and two playful dogs — one a German shepherd named Sheru — romping about the carefully manicured lawn.

"I built this house," Khan said as he sat on the shaded veranda eying the sweeping vista overlooking the city. "There was nothing here. It was scrub jungle all around. There was only a dirt track here."

For Khan, creating something from nothing could be the slogan for a much-chequered life.

A graduate from Oxford and very much a man-about-town in London in the late 1970s, he became one of the world's most admired cricketers. He was captain of Pakistan's team of talented but wayward stars and, with many whispers of autocracy, led them to win cricket's World Cup for the first and only time in 1992.

In the last 15 years, Khan's party has only briefly held one seat in parliament — his. — Reuters pic

After years of fund-raising, Khan opened a cancer hospital in the memory of his mother in his native Lahore in 1994.

He is a conservative Muslim but was married to a Jewish heiress and then divorced, joined politics and for years been somewhat of a joke in Pakistan's unruly democracy.

But in the past 15 years, through sheer force of will and a reputation for personal integrity, he has gone from political punch line to a superstar now attracting heavy-hitting politicians to his party, Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (Pakistan's Movement for Justice).

He — and a lot of other people — believe he could very well be Pakistan's next prime minister.

Khan's confidence stems from what he sees is a tsunami of support for the PTI in Pakistan as traditional parties falter amid charges and counter-charges of corruption and petty jealousies. On Oct 30, he staged a gigantic rally in Lahore that observers said pulled between 100,000 and 200,000 people, one of the largest political rallies ever in Pakistan.

But Khan remains relatively untested. In the last 15 years, his party has only briefly held one seat in parliament — his. He has had tumultuous relationships with the established political parties as well as the military, the real decision maker in the nuclear-armed nation of 180 million people.

He does not openly criticise the military but in a book on Pakistani politics published in September, he walks the line, saying: "Only a credible government can save and strengthen the Pakistan army by making sure it stays within its constitutional role. We have no other choice: in order to survive, we have to make Pakistan a genuine democracy."

Khan also has a touchy relationship with the United States, Pakistan's ally in the war on militancy and its biggest aid donor. He says that if he's elected prime minister, he would end Pakistan's cooperation in the fight against militants based in its tribal areas, end the American drone campaign and refuse all US aid, which totals some US$20 billion (RM63.3 billion) since 2001.

Khan is a conservative Muslim but was married to Jewish heiress, Jemima Khan. — Reuters file pic

Revolutionary

It may be all pie-in-the-sky, but Khan, 58, is nothing if not charismatic. Still athletic and craggily handsome with darting eyes and an intense demeanour, he can rarely sit still for long. He fidgets and twists, almost as if he were about to leap to his feet and launch into his fearsome pace bowling.

"For a lot of people who don't have hope in their political system, in a democratic system, he's the one person they seem to have hope in," said a senior Western diplomat, who requested anonymity to speak about internal Pakistani politics.

"I think he's an important phenomenon because he articulates the very real frustration of the country at a time when they need articulation."

And articulate he does. In an interview, Khan quickly lists Pakistan's very serious economic problems: electricity shortages, crumbling railways, a crisis in education, massive unemployment and endemic corruption.

"We've hit rock bottom," he said. "It doesn't get worse than this, where to qualify for any position of important public office, you have to have committed a crime."

For Khan, the current government headed by Asif Ali Zardari, the widower of Khan's old Oxford classmate Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated in 2007 after returning to Pakistan from self-imposed exile, is the most corrupt government Pakistan has ever seen. Transparency International, which listed Pakistan as the 143rd most corrupt country in its 2010 corruption index, might agree.

As such, Khan believes in a fresh start for Pakistan, a country that, like his home above Islamabad, is a jungle ready to be cleared out and made anew. He believes Pakistan should wipe out the past and rebuild from a clean slate, with he as architect-in-chief.

Khan says the idealised Islamic state he would build in Pakistan would focus on justice, fairness and equality for all its citizens before the law. — Reuters pic

"You only get out of this by a complete U-turn and what we call a New Pakistan."

He is calling not only for a new government, but a new political order, one based on what he says are the real ideals of Pakistan's founding father, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, who worked to forge a homeland for South Asia's Muslims before the bloody partition in 1947 that created India and Pakistan.

Instead of fighting the Taliban militants, Khan said, Pakistan should enter into dialogue with them. He says if he were in power, he could end militancy in 90 days.

A senior Taliban commander and spokesman contacted by Reuters laughed off this idea and said they would continue the fight. "He is, in fact, living in a fool's paradise," the commander said.

And yet, Khan is no fundamentalist. The idealised Islamic state he says he would build in Pakistan would focus on justice, fairness and equality for all its citizens before the law. It would, above all, be "humane."

Khan often veers between shrewd political calculations — "as a political party, you can't rule out alliances" — and what seems to be naive idealism.

His plan to raise revenue for Pakistan is to "inspire" people to pay their taxes through his personal example and somehow rooting out all corruption, boosting the country's pitiful tax-to-GDP ratio of about 10 per cent, one of the lowest in the world.

Some of the parties he has associated himself with in the past are notably lacking in democratic and liberal bona fides, such as the conservative Jamaat-e-Islami, which has cheered the murder of blasphemers and campaigned against laws that would grant women and religious minorities equal status to Muslims.

A supporter of political party Pakistan Tehreek-e- Insaf (PTI) waves the national flag during an anti-government rally in Lahore October 30, 2011. — Reuters pic

Poll?

But how might Khan do in the election? Given the current flux in Pakistani politics, few analysts would hazard a guess. Many think he could split the right-leaning, nationalist vote currently dominated by the former Prime Minister Nawaz Shari's Pakistan Muslim League and keep Zardari's Pakistan People's Party in power.

"He seems to have inspired more people to join the political process," said Brian Katulis, a senior fellow at the Centre for American Progress in Washington. "But to date, his political organisation has seemed weak and not well managed, particularly in contrast to his charity."

Khan himself believes his time has come.

"I have this very clear vision, as I say in the book," he said. "This has been a 15-year struggle which no one has conducted in Pakistan before. And now I feel I'm closer to my destiny."

But all that's really clear right now is that Khan reflects the yearnings of a deeply disillusioned and frustrated country that has seen 63 years of military and civilian governments repeatedly fail it — all in the service of a national ideology looking for a nation.

It is this ideology — a home for South Asia's Muslims and a shining beacon of Islamic democracy — voiced by Allama Iqbal, considered the spiritual founder of Pakistan and the man who coined the name of the country, that motivates Khan.

"He says your vision or your destiny for your dream, it should be so great, it should be so noble and selfless that rather than you asking God that God grant you this destiny, that God would be so impressed by your dream, that he asks you: What do you want?"

He paused to consider this. "In other words, our destiny is in our hands. We have to dream; the bigger the dream, the bigger the man." — Reuters

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NFC: Rafizi Ramli ajak Khairy debat pada 12 Disember

Posted: 18 Nov 2011 02:20 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 18 Nov ― Pengarah Strategi PKR Rafizi Ramli mengesyorkan debat antara beliau dengan Ketua Pemuda Umno Khairy Jamaluddin berhubung isu projek kontroversi Pusat Fidlot Kebangsaan (NFC) diadakan pada 12 Disember ini.

Perkara itu dinyatakan dalam satu surat dihantar kepada Khairy oleh Rafizi hari ini.

Salinan surat diedarkan kepada media petang ini.

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NFC: PKR gesa Putrajaya dedah minit mesyuarat Kabinet

Posted: 18 Nov 2011 02:09 AM PST

PETALING JAYA, 18 Nov ― PKR kini menuntut agar pentadbiran Najib mendedahkan minit mesyuarat Kabinet sejak 2006 kepada umum bagi menentukan sama ada Datuk Seri Shahrizat Abdul Jalil tidak terlibat secara langsung dalam penganugerahan projek Pusat Fidlot Kebangsaan (NFC) kepada syarikat suaminya.

Pengarah Strateginya Rafizi Ramli berkata kenyataan NFC semalam hanya mengesahkan kesemua pendedahan dibuat oleh parti komponen Pakatan Rakyat itu ke atasnya.

Oleh itu kata Rafizi, Pengerusi Eksekutif NFC Datuk Seri Dr Mohamad Salleh Ismail, yang juga suami Shahrizat, tidak menafikan sebarang dakwaan sebaliknya menawarkan penjelasan kepada pelbagai percanggahan terbabit dalam projek ternakan lembu RM250 juta dibiayai kerajaan persekutuan itu.

"Beliau (Mohamad Salleh) menjawab sembilan pendedahan. Tetapi tidak satu pun adalah penafian ataupun menolak dakwaan kami.

"Setiap apa yang dikatakan olehnya hanylah untuk menjelaskan, memberi alasan kepada apa yang kami dedahkan," kata Rafizi pada sidang akhbar di sini petang ini.

Tambah beliau PKR akan mendedahkan lagi isu berkenaan projek itu.

Rafizi berkata dalam kenyataan dengan Berita Harian hari ini Salleh ada mengakui bahawa perjanjian pinjaman RM250 juta "tidak menyatakan jadual pembayaran balik."

"Ini mengesahkan pendedahan PKR sebelum ini bahawa walaupun dana RM250 juta disebut sebagai pinjaman, ia lebih berupa geran kerana NFC tidak dikenakan sebarang jadual pembayaran atau caj faedah seperti pinjaman biasa.

"Saya juga kesal dengan kenyataan Datuk Seri Dr Mohamad Salleh yang bukan sahaja tidak menyangkal pendedahan PKR mengenai pembelian kondominium mewah menggunakan dana rakyat, malah mengesahkan bahawa dana yang diselewengkan adalah lebih tinggi dari yang didedahkan minggu lepas," katanya.

Tambah beliau, pembelian dua unit kondominium mewah di unit B1-1 dan B1-2 di Tingkat 1, Blok B One Merenung sebenarnya membabitkan perbelanjaan RM13.8 juta.

Kata beliau, ketiga-tiga pengakuan NFC ini mengingatkan rakyat bahawa isu pokoknya adalah soal kebertanggungjawaban menteri dan kerajaan menjaga wang rakyat.

Tambah beliau, ketiga-tiga pengakuan tersebut mendedahkan bagaimana projek negara diberikan kepada keluarga menteri yang langsung tidak mempunyai latar belakang dan kepakaran dalam bidang penternakan komersil; dana RM250 juta diberikan begitu sahaja tanpa ada syarat-syarat ketat dan pemantauan walaupun ia dipanggil pinjaman; dan dejumlah RM13.8 juta diselewengkan sewenang-wenangnya untuk membeli hartanah yang akhirnya menjadi milik keluarga menteri kerana NMLC milik keluarga Shahrizat sepenuhnya.

"Oleh itu, PKR menggesa supaya Perdana Menteri bertindak segera menjawab sama ada berlaku penyelewengan semasa penganugerahan projek ini kepada NFC dan menerangkan penglibatan Datuk Seri Shahrizat Jalil dalam proses membuat keputusan kerajaan bersabit projek ini.

"Kesemua keterangan lain yang dibuat NFC semalam akan dihuraikan dalam satu sidang media khas di lobi Parlimen hari Isnin ini melibatkan YB Saifuddin Nasution Ismail, YB Zuraida Kamaruddin dan saya sendiri, untuk membolehkan kami meneliti semua maklumat dan dokumen yang kami ada setakat ini," katanya lagi.

MENYUSUL LAGI

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It’s a mad, mad world

Posted: 17 Nov 2011 04:04 PM PST

NOV 18 — Those whom the gods wish to destroy, they first make mad. So goes the ancient phrase that has, throughout the millennia, remained an appropriate and relevant dictum to this very day.

The systemic trait of madness has been an inherent hallmark of declining autocratic regimes since time immemorial. Take, for example, the story of the Roman emperor Caligula, whose reign began with much promise and great popularity, but who quickly succumbed to the luxuries of power and who, towards the end of his short-lived rule, attempted to appoint his favourite horse as a consul of the Roman Senate.

And then of course there is the late totalitarian President Saparmurat Niyazov of Turkmenistan who, apart from styling himself Turkmenbashi (Leader of Turkmens), also deigned to rename calendar months after members of his own family, in addition to outlawing long hair and beards for Turkmen men and advising the citizenry to gnaw on bones in order to strengthen their teeth, because apparently it works for dogs.

History is rife with more examples of self-aggrandising eccentricities and excesses by leaders inebriated by power. Of the African and Middle Eastern variety, we have colourful characters such as the tyrannical Ugandan President Idi Amin, who insisted on being called the King of Scotland and Conqueror of the British Empire, and of course the recently-deceased erratic demagogue Colonel Muammar Gaddafi and his coterie of 40 virgin Amazon bodyguards.

Closer to home, who can forget the epitome of public extravagance, Imelda Marcos? The Filipino Iron Butterfly was the pillar supporting her husband's iron-fisted rule, while making headlines for her multi-million dollar shopping sprees and famed collection of 2,700 pairs of shoes.

The lesson to bear in mind, however, is the fact that every single one of the above megalomaniacal regimes eventually found themselves pulled, almost willingly, into an inescapable whirlpool of self-destruction. Truly, delusion and egomania are signs of a waning regime.

In our own country, 54 years of single-party incumbency is now unravelling and showing similar symptoms. After many failed attempts, a scheme to construct a monolithic dam in Bakun, Sarawak was put into motion, with the outlandish idea of sending hydroelectricity to the peninsula via 670 kilometres of undersea cables.

A decade later, after billions of ringgit in cost overruns and the successful displacement of 10,000 indigenous people, we have a spectacular white mammoth (an elephant in this case an unbefitting term) that can produce 2,400 MW of electricity for a state that would be hard-pressed to consume even half that amount.

At the very least, the untenable idea of sending electricity through cables on the seabed has been safely buried, along with a crooked bridge that an infamous prime minister wanted to build halfway to Singapore. Remember that one?

Another rampant scam involving public funds is the Port Klang Free Zone fiasco, where at least RM12.5 billion of public funds has been squandered in an elaborate scheme that involves a trail of prominent characters leading all the way to the federal Cabinet. False claims, payments for imaginary works and ministerial "support letters" are all part of the unfolding drama.

Daylight robbery in this country is also often accompanied by grandiose acts of personal extravagance, such as a late Selangor state assemblyman who (illegally) built a 16-bedroom palatial mansion in the midst of a low-income working-class neighbourhood, complete with a tower that loomed condescendingly over his fiefdom.

But he was really only trying to emulate his boss the former mentri besar who, besides constructing an even larger palace, also spent millions of state funds on purported "study trips" to Europe, Hawaii and Disneyland with his family.

With the very public exposure of such brazen acts of abuse of power and shameless showboating of ill-gotten wealth, one would think that there would at least be an attempt to exercise more caution and stealth. But of course, madness is necessarily irrational.

And so we come to the latest mind-boggling scandal, in which public money in the form of a RM250 million soft loan and a large expanse of state land have been directly awarded to a Cabinet minister's family for the purpose of developing a mega cattle-rearing project.

Lurid details emerging from this scandal are shocking to say the least. Not only has the Auditor-General's Report exposed the failure of the company to achieve its targets and, at the very least, to upkeep its land and facilities, it now appears that money has instead been used to purchase a premium condominium in the city.

Allegations also abound of numerous personal transactions and even family holidays at the company's expense. Indeed, the term "family business" in this case also takes on a wholly literal meaning, with the minister's husband sitting as chairman, her eldest son as CEO and the rest of her kids as executive directors.

Yet the issue at hand is not so much the gross mishandling of public funds, which is standard fare, but the blatant manner in which it has been carried out and the unabashed audacity of the minister's response, having been quoted as saying that her family "deserves it because they work very hard."

The wanton madness of power is now taking its course on the rulers of our country. Purchasing luxury condos with money meant for cattle may not quite compare to appointing a horse to the Senate, but the symptoms are veritably obvious.

In Barisan Nasional's mad, mad world, it would seem that the end is nigh.

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

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PPSMI: Berpijaklah di alam nyata

Posted: 17 Nov 2011 03:39 PM PST

18 NOV — Malaysia adalah sebuah negara yang mempunyai iklim panas dan lembab sepanjang tahun. Sebulan dua ini, hujan turun hampir setiap hari. Kadang kala hujan terlalu lebat dan angin kuat hingga menyebabkan pokok-pokok tumbang.

Apa pun yang kita lakukan, kita tidak akan dapat mengubah Malaysia dari realiti ini. Malaysia tidak mungkin akan menjadi sebuah negara empat musim. Itulah realitinya. Itulah kenyataan yang tidak dapat kita ubah.

Baru-baru ini isu Pengajaran dan Pembelajaran Sains dan Matematik dalam Bahasa Inggeris (PPSMI) kembali bergema.

Sebelum ini, isu PPSMI senyap seketika selepas Gerakan Anti PPSMI menganjurkan demonstrasi besar-besaran yang dihadiri oleh puluhan ribu rakyat di ibukota dan berjaya mendesak kerajaan untuk memansuhkan PPSMI.

Isu ini muncul kembali apabila dua organisasi seperti Jaringan Melayu Muda (JMM) dan Persatuan Ibu Bapa Untuk Pendidikan (PAGE) membantah tindakan kementerian pelajaran untuk tidak meneruskan PPSMI dan menggantikannya dengan dasar Memartabatkan Bahasa Malaysia dan Memperkukuh Bahasa Inggeris (MBMMBI).

JMM dan PAGE mendakwa mereka mewakili ibubapa-ibubapa yang mahukan anak-anak mereka terus mempelajari matapelajaran sains dan matematik di dalam Bahasa Inggeris.

PAGE mengemukakan keputusan bahawa kajian yang dijalankan oleh JMM membuktikan lebih separuh daripada lebih 50,000 responden tidak boleh menerima MBMMBI dilaksanakan di sekolah-sekolah bagi menggantikan PPSMI.

Kajian JMM

Timbalan Menteri Pelajaran, Dr Mohd Puad Zarkashi memperlekehkan kajian JMM tersebut dan menyifatkan kajian tersebut sebagai tidak mewakili pola pemikiran dan pendapat umum yang boleh dipercayai.

Sebagai Timbalan Menteri Pelajaran, Dr Puad sudah pasti terdedah dengan data-data tentang bagaimana PPSMI telah menyebabkan peratusan untuk lulus terpaksa diturunkan dengan begitu rendah sekali untuk memastikan majoriti pelajar lulus dalam kedua-dua matapelajaran ini.

Dari maklumat yang saya perolehi daripada "orang dalam" Kementerian Pelajaran, pernah satu ketika peratusan untuk lulus bagi matapelajaran tersebut terpaksa diturunkan sehingga 20 peratus!

Seperti biasa, penghujahan pro PPSMI yang digunakan sama, mereka (baca: JMM dan PAGE) percaya, dengan mempelajari Sains dan Matematik di dalam Bahasa Inggeris, lebih mudah untuk anak-anak mereka menguasai kedua-dua bidang tersebut. Selain itu mereka juga percaya PPSMI akan memantapkan lagi penguasaan bahasa Inggeris anak-anak mereka.

Mungkin JMM, PAGE dan golongan pro PPSMI terlepas "pandang ke Timur". Di negara seperti Jepun dan Korea Selatan, tanpa PPSMI, mereka telah berjaya melahirkan ramai rakyat yang mempunyai kemahiran sains dan matematik sehingga mampu untuk mengangkat martabat negara mereka ke persada antarabangsa.

Malahan mereka mampu menewaskan Barat dari segi sains dan teknologi dalam pelbagai bidang. Tidak perlulah dihuraikan dengan lebih lanjut lagi tentang ini oleh kerana sudah ramai yang tahu.

Jika kita "pandang ke Barat" sekalipun, kita akan melihat negara seperti Jerman yang tidak melaksanakan dasar PPSMI akan tetapi berjaya melahirkan rakyat yang cerdik pandai menguasai sains dan matamatik.

Di jalanraya-jalanraya di Malaysia boleh terlihat banyak kenderaan-kenderaan yang dihasilkan oleh negara Jerman seperti Volkswagen, BMW, Porshe dan banyak lagi. Ini juga tidak perlu saya nyatakan satu persatu oleh kerana ramai yang sudah tahu.

Adalah dangkal pemikiran jika kita berfikir penguasaan bahasa Inggeris akan menjadi mantap dengan adanya PPSMI.

Jika benar-benar ghairah untuk memastikan pelajar-pelajar di Malaysia mahir dalam bahasa Inggeris, panjangkan waktu pembelajaran bahasa Inggeris dan perkenalkan matapelajaran sastera Inggeris di sekolah-sekolah. Ini sudah tentu lebih berkesan untuk memantapkan penguasaan bahasa Inggeris.

Sejarah PPSMI

PPSMI dilaksanakan satu ketika dahulu secara tergesa-gesa pada tahun 2003 sebelum bekas perdana menteri, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad meletakkan jawatan. PPSMI dilaksanakan tanpa percubaan dan kajian yang mendalam. Di katakan belanjanya juga agak mahal sehingga mencecah berbelas billion.

Pelaksanaan PPSMI ini menunjukkan kontradiksi di dalam pemikiran Dr Mahathir. Beliau yang memperkenalkan dasar "pandang ke Timur" juga adalah orang yang memperkenalkan PPSMI. Tidak nampakkah percanggahan dalam pemikiran?

Jika kita "pandang ke Timur", kita akan melihat Jepun dan Korea Selatan seperti yang saya nyatakan diatas dan tidak perlu PPSMI. Yang mana sebenarnya dimahukan Mahathir?

Apakah PPSMI diperkenalkan semurni-murni niat untuk meningkatkan kemahiran pelajar dalam Sains dan Matematik serta memantapkan penguasaan bahasa Inggeris atau kontrak dan projek untuk melaksanakan dasar ini yang dikejar?

Hanya tuan punya diri yang tahu niat sebenar pelaksanaan dasar ini.

Pengkritik filem, saudara Mansor Puteh di dalam penulisan di blognya turut mengkritik PPSMI. Dengan sinisnya Mansor melabelkan golongan pro PPSMI ini sebagai "lebih Inggeris daripada orang Inggeris".

Dalam isu ini, seelok-eloknya kita berpijak di alam nyata. Dasar pelajaran tidak boleh di buat bercampur-campur.

JMM dan PAGE masih mempunyai pilihan, jika tetap berkeras mahukan PPSMI, hantarlah anak-anak ke sekolah antarabangsa atau lebih baik lagi, hantar sahaja anak-anak untuk bersekolah di London.

Sudah pasti penguasaan bahasa Inggeris anak-anak mereka setaraf atau lebih baik lagi dari penduduk London.

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

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