Jumaat, 9 Disember 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Tasty without being fancy

Posted: 09 Dec 2011 04:09 PM PST

The Cantonese Style Crispy Rice Noodles with Seafood is a must-try. — Picture by Eu Hoo Khaw

PETALING JAYA, Dec 10 — For the past week I have been to a wedding dinner in a hotel, lunch at the same place and a birthday dinner that had food from a caterer. So I can be forgiven for wanting to eat something with a home-cooked touch, and is tasty without being fancy.

Ben Tdi Wei at Centrepoint in Bandar Utama, Petaling Jaya, comes to mind. This newly-opened casual restaurant has roast duck, roast pork and char siu hanging from a stand, and a meal there has to have at least two of these chopped up and served.

Black Bean Pork Rib Rice is cooked and served in a claypot.

We did have some char siu, with a good balance of fat with lean meat, and sticky sweet from its maltose marination, and some roast pork that had a very crispy skin, and creamy, tender meat. And a plate of roast duck for good measure.

Have some plain kon-loh noodles with these, tossed in lovely fat from the roasting meats, and dark sauce and served with some lightly cooked romaine lettuce. Add to this wantan in soup, and lunch is complete.

It's a place where you can have a one-pot meal, such as the delicious Black Beans Pork Rib Rice. It's pork ribs fried with ginger and black beans, then tipped into a claypot of rice to finish cooking. So you have all the juices and sauce from the ribs trickling down and coating the rice grains, rendering them a little sticky, gingery, with the salty, fermented tang of black beans. Better still this comes to you with a fried egg on top, with a runny yolk.

Mui Choy Kau Yoke... very yummy.

For a great carbo fix, look no further than the Egg and Ginger Fried Rice. The young chef from Guangzhou, China, shows his wok skills with this, frying and tossing the rice with the fried ginger strips, and egg, with a little sesame oil added, till each grain is separate, a process that can take 20 minutes! The aromas of the ginger and the egg waft up as you eat the rice.

Sailor Moon (the name of the chef who's a manga fan) turns out a wonderful Cantonese-style Seafood Beehoon, which has the crispy rice vermicelli doused with an eggy sauce with seafood and pork. It has to be eaten as fast as possible to get the crunch of the noodles before they soften in the sauce.

You could also have egg noodles done in a similar way, but somehow they fall short a little in taste and texture.

The menu is also about families and small groups of people dining together and ordering dishes to go with rice. I love it that it has Mui Choy Kau Yoke, that classic Hakka dish with pork belly, that's so generous with the sweet mui choy or preserved vegetables. It just invites you to have rice with it.

Stirfried Rainbow Xue Lin... a dish begging you to have more rice!

There's also Saltfish and Pork Belly in Claypot that I would want to go back for.

I have been eating this Xue Lin "fruit" from China, that is shaped like a sweet potato with a brown skin, but peel it off and it's a crunchy, juicy fruit that is full of healthy promise. It tastes like yambean, but softer. I was surprised that you can cut the fruit into chunky strips, and stirfry with pork, shiitake mushrooms, red pepper and spring onion in the Stirfry Rainbow Xue Lin, as it is listed in the menu. In fact it tasted better cooked, with its light sweetness balanced with a soya gravy.

Chef Sailor Moon is a big fan of manga.

You could also have dishes like Pork Trotter Braised with Lam Yee (RM20) and Peanuts, Lamb in a Dry Curry (RM45), Pork Ribs Braised with Yam, Golden Prawns with Pumpkin and Potato Sauce (RM25), Petai Prawns, and soups like Watercress and Ikan Haruan (RM8) or Yok Chok and Black Chicken (RM8).

The seafood noodles and fried rice are RM15 each serving.

Dessert was a refreshing tofu jelly drizzled with gula melaka and topped with longans, and the same jelly in coconut milk with sago and topped with red beans and ice-cream. The red beans were too sweet; but this will be improved on I was told.

Ben Tdi Wei is located on Lot G1+ C2, Ground Floor, Centrepoint, Bandar Utama, Petaling Jaya (Tel: 03-7727-7733).

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Angolan kills father after ‘Clasico’ row

Posted: 09 Dec 2011 07:31 AM PST

LUANDA, Dec 9 — An Angolan teenager allegedly shot and killed his father after a row about this weekend's "Clasico" between Real Madrid and Barcelona, Angolan state news agency Angop reported.

The 17-year-old and his 48-year-old father had argued about Spanish soccer and Angolan music yesterday in the capital Luanda and the discussion ended in violence, the report said.

"That led to both parties losing control," Angop quoted Carlos Andre, an officer with the Criminal Investigation Police, as saying. "They started a big fight in the area. The youngster picked up a firearm in the yard of their house and shot twice at his father," he added.

The police officer said the father died at the scene, while the teenager escaped with the firearm and is still on the run.

Many Angolans are passionate about soccer and thanks to satellite television channels can follow top European leagues such as Spain's La Liga. — Reuters

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Dubai leader Quiros whips up desert storm

Posted: 09 Dec 2011 06:03 AM PST

Quiros checks the wind direction at the 15th hole during the second round today. — Reuters pic

DUBAI, Dec 9 — Spain's Alvaro Quiros was up to his old desert tricks again today, firing a course record-equalling 64 to storm four shots clear of the field after the Dubai World Championship second round.

While Quiros's eight-under-par effort gave him a 12-under total of 132, Luke Donald narrowed the deficit on fellow Briton Rory McIlroy in their two-horse race to finish the season as European number one.

World number one Donald followed his opening 72 with a four-under 68 to close on 140, three behind McIlroy who dropped two strokes in the last two holes to return a 71.

US PGA Tour money-list winner Donald needs to finish equal ninth here with no more than one other competitor to become the first player to land the orders of merit on both sides of the Atlantic.

At the top of the leaderboard, the fun-loving Quiros was doing his best to spoil the money-list party by once again showing how much he enjoyed golf in the Gulf.

The smiling 6-foot-3 Spaniard, winner of this year's Dubai Desert Classic and the 2010 Qatar Masters, is on track for a Middle East treble after snatching only the second eagle of the week at the par-five 18th.

Quiros did not drop a stroke all day and picked up birdies at the second, fourth, eighth, 11th, 14th and 16th to equal the Greg Norman-designed Earth course record held by Swede Peter Hanson and British pair Lee Westwood and Ross Fisher.

Asked by Reuters to explain his penchant for low rounds in the Gulf, the long-hitting Spaniard replied: "It's sunny here and I like to play in the heat.

"Also most of the time in the Middle East the greens are firm and quick so it's a bigger advantage if you are hitting shorter clubs into them as I normally do."

Big blows

Quiros, one of the longest drivers in world golf, muscled his way on to the putting surface at the 620-yard 18th with two big blows before sinking his eagle attempt.

He said he was keen to show the season-ending Dubai extravaganza was not simply about McIlroy and Donald.

"Rory and Luke are not the only two players in the tournament," added Quiros.

Donald tees off at the 16th hole during the second round today. — Reuters pic

"The rest of us are trying to spoil the party. This is good otherwise the competition would not be as stiff."

Hanson, the overnight leader, added a 72 to his opening 64 to take second place on 136, one ahead of McIlroy and his fellow Briton Robert Rock (69).

McIlroy looked tired and forlorn after finishing his round in limp fashion.

The 22-year-old Northern Irishman has been suffering with a virus for a couple of weeks and hinted he would pull out of next week's Asian Tour event in Thailand.

"To be honest I am ready for the season to be done," McIlroy told reporters. "But it's up to the doctor as well.

"If she feels like I can go then I'll make a decision whether I will or not," he added referring to his latest doctor's appointment tomorrow.

Earlier in the day a member of McIlroy's management team told Reuters the US Open champion was "exhausted" and "run down".

After his round the world number two opened up about the nature of his virus.

"They said it could have been Dengue fever which is obviously carried by mosquitoes," said McIlroy.

"It could have been that but it could also have been food poisoning. It could have been bacterial ... it could have been a number of different things.

"I've just got lasting effects and my body is trying to fight it to get back to 100 per cent." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Travel Postcard: 48 hours in Siena, Italy

Posted: 09 Dec 2011 08:15 AM PST

SIENA, Dec 9 — Often overshadowed by its bigger and more powerful ancient rival Florence, Siena has always been a jewel in Italy's rich crown of cultural heritage and an ideal place to immerse yourself in the history of Tuscan art.

Old Siena, spread over three hills in southern Tuscany and surrounded by medieval walls, is relatively small and can be easily explored on foot. But its magnificent churches and palaces contain such a wealth of art that a weekend is hardly enough to discover them all.

Pantera (Panther) parish flags are tossed into the air during a parade in Del Campo square before the Palio horse race in Siena, July 2, 2011. — Reuters file pic

Early December is a perfect time to explore Siena. The crowds of summer tourists have dwindled and the city's terracotta-coloured rooftops provide a stunning contrast to the bright autumnal foliage in the surrounding hills.

Reuters correspondents with local knowledge help visitors get the most out of a 48-hour visit.

FRIDAY

6 pm — Choose a place to stay in the historic centre where options range from modestly priced hotels such as Pensione Palazzo Ravizza (www.palazzoravizza.it) to the luxury Grand Hotel Continental (www.grandhotelcontinentalsiena.com)

If you also want to enjoy peace and quiet and reconnect with nature on your break from the stressful city life, book yourself into one of many farm resorts that dot the rolling hills around Siena. Secluded Villa Ferraia, a 13th century hamlet turned into an exclusive resort, offers star-watchers its own astronomical observatory. (www.villaferraia.com)

7 pm — Kick off your holiday with a glass of local wine, traditional Chianti or its upscale cousins known as super-Tuscans, such as Ornellaia or Sassicaia, at one of the numerous wine bars lining meandering cobbled streets of the old city.

To enjoy a stunning view while sipping your wine and nibbling on traditional Tuscan appetisers, head to Enoteca Italiana, a public wine promotion body based in the 16th century fortress overlooking Siena, whose cellar boasts more than 1,500 wines.

9 pm — Continue with a classical music concert at Accademia Musicale Chigiana. A palace that hosts the academy, a musical instrument museum and an art collection dates back to the 12th century and is worth a separate visit.

11 pm — Those looking for a wild night life could be a bit disappointed by Siena, where locals prefer to spend a night out in a cozy restaurant or wine bar. Private parties are often organised by Siena's 17 contradas, or historic districts within ancient city walls, which are still the pillars of local life.

A few bars stay open late, to the joy of visitors and university students. Casa del Boia bar, based in what used to be the local executioner's house connected to the execution site via an underground tunnel, is among the most popular hangout places.

SATURDAY

9 am — head to Piazza del Campo, Siena's main square and its beating heart since the Middle Ages. The unique, shell-shaped square is a favourite gathering place for locals and tourists and the stage of Siena's famous Palio horse race.

The race, which traces its origins back to the Middle Ages and celebrates the Virgin Mary, is held twice a year, on July 2 and August 16 with 10 of Siena's 17 contradas competing for a banner called palio. On some very rare occasions a third palio in a year has been held, and locals joke that if the euro survives Europe's unfolding sovereign debt crisis it would be a valid reason for an extraordinary Palio.

Cross Piazza del Campo to its lowest point to visit Palazzo Pubblico, Siena's old town hall, which hosts the Museo Civico with famous frescos by artists of the Sienese school, including Simone Martini's Maesta and Ambrogio Lorenzetti's series of allegories representing Good and Bad Governments.

Climb more than 400 steps to get to the top of Torre del Mangia bell tower, which rises nearly 100 meters high next to Palazzo Pubblico, to enjoy a 360-degree view of the city.

11 am — To restore energy after climbing the tower, take a creamy cappuccino or an espresso with traditional Sienese sweets, almond cake panforte and almond ricciarelli biscuits, at the elegant cafe Nannini, one of the oldest in town.

Once your batteries are recharged, keep walking along swirling narrow streets and pop into old churches full of frescoes and paintings by famous Tuscan artists and richly decorated palaces. Teatro dei Rinnovati, which is based in Palazzo Pubblico and dates back to the 16th century, opens its doors to visitors on days when there are no performances there.

3 pm — After a lunch at one of numerous small restaurants in the centre that serve pasta with hare or wild boar and grilled steak and other traditional Sienese cuisine, it's shopping time. Pop into elegant small boutiques selling locally made clothes, shoes and souvenirs that seem to be successfully competing both with omnipresent Italian fashion brands and foreign rivals.

6 pm — Grab a table at a sidewalk cafe to drink an espresso or a glass of wine and watch locals on their traditional evening stroll, or passeggiata, in the town centre. Watch entire families dressed to impress and marvel at the glamorous women who manage to remain elegantly balanced on stiletto heels while traversing Siena's steep cobbled streets.

8 pm — If you visit Siena during the truffle season in November or December, don't miss the various dishes, from pasta to chocolate, sprinkled with truffles unearthed using dogs in the nearby forests.

Head to Antica Osteria da Divo (www.osteriadadivo.it), which claims that its dining rooms are carved out of caves dating back to the Etruscan era more than 2,000 years ago, or to La Taverna di San Giuseppe (www.tavernasangiuseppe.it), which traces its history back "only" to the 12th century.

SUNDAY

9 am — Start your day by heading to Siena's cathedral, or Duomo, one of Italy's greatest Gothic churches with its towering white, green and red marble shape.

Begun at the end of the 12th century, construction of the Duomo had been largely completed in the 13th century though some works on its magnificent facade continued well into the 14th century when Siena's rulers decided to enlarge the cathedral and build the biggest church in Italy, challenging Rome's dominance.

The ambitious project to build the new Duomo that was to engulf the existing one, was stopped by the plague of 1348 that devastated Siena, but its uncompleted great facade still stands erect and visitors can climb 130 steps to get yet another stunning view from there.

The most famous feature of the original Duomo is probably 56 inlaid marble panels depicting biblical and historical scenes and known locally as picture Bible.

11 am — Cross a square in front of the Duomo to visit a vast museum complex of Santa Maria della Scala housed in a former hospital, the city's oldest with more than 1,000 years of history.

While restoration works are still under way, you can visit more than half of its 40,000-square-metre area to admire its halls, chapels and an internal church. The complex hosts several museums and various temporary exhibitions.

3 pm — After lunch, time is left for the final stroll around the old city.

If you are still close to the Duomo, head to Pinacoteca Nazionale picture gallery, which houses numerous masterpieces by famous Sienese artists such as Duccio di Buoninsegna, Simone Martini and Ambrogio Lorenzetti.

Climb a nearby hill to visit Chiesa di San Domenico, the imposing Gothic church known for its links with Italy's famous saint, Santa Caterina di Siena, whose head is on display there.

Standing next to the church, you can enjoy a magnificent view of the Duomo and the rest of the old city, an ideal place to say goodbye to Siena and make your promise to return. — Reuters

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China’s stone workshops silenced by European crisis

Posted: 09 Dec 2011 07:07 AM PST

A bust of the Chinese philosopher Confucius lies on the ground in an abandoned stone carving workshop. — Reuters pic

DANGCHENG, China, Dec 9 — Mournful ancient Roman lovers, a boy Mozart and half a dozen angels lie in weeds behind the padlocked gates of an abandoned sculpture workshop in Dangcheng town, victims of economic waves rippling across the world to this corner of northern China.

Dangcheng applied the traditional stone-carving skills of this rocky part of Hebei province to boom as an exporter of ornate statues, busts, reliefs and fountains to Europe and North America. Now the town is struggling with the deep slump in once vibrant markets, especially Italy and other euro zone countries.

"The boss ran away, they say," said Lu Jiguang, a brawny mason from a nearby workshop who stopped by the locked gate. "He went broke a year or two ago. Don't know where he went.

"There haven't been that many bankruptcies here. Most people find a way to get by, but business is certainly hard going," continued Lu, with the same stone dust-covered features and gnarled hands as nearly most other residents of the town.

"I've seen reports about the financial crisis in Europe on television," he said. "It's also had a bad effect here."

Dangcheng, a town of 20,000 people 240 km southwest of Beijing, is a microcosm of the risks that slowing exports pose for China — risks that a commerce official laid out this week.

Reuters visited Dangcheng in 2009, when the downturn was beginning to bite. A return this week showed that the extended euro crisis and US in the doldrums have mauled business, forcing some workshops to shut and many more to scale back or move.

And all surviving ones to court customers at home.

DEITIES, SAINTS AND HEROES

A woman washes a statue in an outdoor workshop. — Reuters pic

The stone workshops — many still crowded with statues of Jesus Christ, the Virgin Mary, Cupid, Zeus and legions of deities, saints and heroes from antiquity — also reflect the challenges testing growth potential across China.

Asked about their deepest worries, sculpture workshop bosses here almost always named rising wages, the growing cost of stone, and transport charges.

"I'm more worried about labour costs than about the euro," said Lu Xuhui, a 34-year-old owner of a sculpture company that has relied on orders from Italy, France and the United States.

"The European market is very, very tough. Prices we can charge are very low, but wages keep going up, and prices for stone are way up too, so our profits are tiny," said Lu, as he sat in a stuffed leather sofa bought in better times.

"We're trying to turn more to domestic buyers, but they're feeling the rising costs as well."

STATUES OF JESUS — BUT NOT FOR EUROPE

A woman washes a statue in an outdoor workshop. — Reuters pic

Lu Shaolei, a cousin of Lu Xuhui, watched as several masons in his workshop carved and polished dozens of statues of Jesus, which illustrated the economic changes coursing through China.

He started his business a decade ago, specialising in religious statues for churches in southern Europe and the United States. But this order for 40 Jesus figures was, he said, a sign of the times: they were for Chinese customers.

Growing domestic prosperity and some loosening of Communist Party controls on churches have offered an escape route from disappearing foreign orders, Lu said, above a din of electric grinding and chiselling.

"We haven't had a foreign order since summer. Europe was our biggest buyer, but not now," said Lu, who like nearly everyone in the Dangcheng sculpture trade is a local.

"We used to focus on exports, but they're no good now, so now we're focusing on domestic buyers," he added.

"I've paid attention to the European crisis. That means we'll have even fewer exports, but domestic orders keep us going."

Other workshop bosses along Dangcheng's unpaved main street said sales to Europe and North America had picked up a little this year, after a grim slide two years ago. But many feared the latest euro crisis would again sap demand for carvings.

Quyang county, where Dangcheng lies, traces masonry skills back to the Han Dynasty (202 BC-220 AD), and that tradition survived war and revolution until traders from Italy arrived in the 1990s, hunting for cut-price copies of antiquity.

Dangcheng's carvers set themselves to mastering foreign tastes, cribbing from sculpture books to recreate Renaissance and classical figures. Their skills, increasingly rare and costly in Europe, and the ease of the Internet brought plenty of orders from Europe and North America.

By 2008, exports accounted for over 90 per cent of sculpture sales from Dangcheng, a county official told Reuters in 2009.

"Italy is dead for us now," said Wu Huanzhen, a co-owner of the Shuangfei Sculpture Workshop in the town. "When business was good, we exported about 900,000 yuan (RM443,000) a year," she said, adding that most of those orders went to Italy.

"This year we might clear 300,000 yuan, if we get some more orders soon," she said in a yard strewn with statues.

GO DOMESTIC OR GO BROKE

Wang Shixiong, a deputy director of the Quyang county office for the sculpture industry, said he could not give recent statistics for exports. They had fallen so far that his office had given up trying to collect numbers, he said.

"The financial crisis has been a huge blow here," said Wang.

"The impact has been so bad that the businesses won't tell us their export numbers anymore, because they could look too bad in front of their competition. So we can't collect them."

A sculptor surrounded by uncompleted statues as he works in an outdoor workshop. — Reuters pic

Exports now account for only a few per cent of the county's sculpture trade, Wang guessed.

"Now it's basically all domestic," he said.

A dozen business owners interviewed in Dangcheng, however, also said their biggest worries have more to do with domestic pressures in the hands of Beijing, not Brussels.

"Our biggest pressure is rising wages and rising costs for materials," said Lu, the sculpture businessman making the 40 statues of Christ. "It's just hard to find and keep workers."

Masons and stone workers in the town mostly said their incomes had risen from 3,000-4,000 yuan three years ago to 5,000 to 6,000 yuan or more now, depending on their level of skill.

A cubic metre of white marble hauled from Hunan province in southern China now cost about 3,700 yuan, compared with 2,000 yuan three years ago, largely due to rising transport costs, said Lu Xuhui, the sculpture trader.

But workers, too, said they were feeling economic chills.

"Wages have gone down again, because orders are down," said Li Erhu, a 35-year-old mason taking a short break from carving a bust of an ancient Roman soldier. He explained that workers were paid piece-rate, reflecting how much work they finished.

"When business was good, I'd easily make 4,000 yuan a month. Now I'm lucky to make 3,000, even with higher piece rates."

The works sell for hundreds to hundreds of thousands of dollars, depending on their size, intricacy and quality of stone.

For now, domestic sales and a trickle of export sales had helped offset rising costs, but profit margins were dangerously thin, said the trader Lu.

"I'd guess about 10 to 20 per cent of the workshops here have gone out of business in the past three years," he said, then running through the names of neighbouring businesses that had shut their doors. "The pressure is tremendous."

Those pressures could worsen if, as some economists believe, torpid growth in rich nations reinforces slowing growth in China. Many Dangcheng sculpture traders voiced confidence that the country's growth and middle-class love of European style would keep up business. But some saw gathering clouds too, as government stimulus spending and real estate markets cool.

"In 2009 we switched our focus to domestic customers, but that's starting to fall off too," said Peng Xuefeng, as he supervised workers grinding away at seven statues of Jesus Christ. He wasn't sure if the order, made through a trading agent, was destined for home or abroad.

"Before, local (Chinese) governments and real estate developers were ordering lots, but domestic orders have been falling off too," Peng said above the screech of grinders.

But not even the latest euro crisis would end orders from Europe, insisted Lu Xuhui, the trader.

"Churches will always have orders, even if there is a financial crisis," he said. "They will always need Jesus and Mary statues." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Jolie quiets Bosnian critics with war film screening

Posted: 09 Dec 2011 04:38 AM PST

Director of the movie Angelina Jolie poses at the premiere of "In the Land of Blood and Honey" at the Arclight theatre in Los Angeles on December 8, 2011. ― Reuters pic

SARAJEVO, Dec 9 ― Victims of Bosnia's 1992-95 war had most of their anxieties over a film by Hollywood star Angelina Jolie put to rest at a private screening this week.

Objections to filming Jolie's tale of love between a Serb man and a Muslim woman in Bosnia last year forced the Hollywood star to shoot most of the film in nearby Hungary. Only some of the exterior scenes were shot in Bosnia.

But last night's screening of the film in Sarajevo to representatives of victims' associations elicited positive reactions from some of Jolie's toughest local critics.

"She has made a fantastic film for Bosnia and Herzegovina, I can really say that from the angle of a victim," Murat Tahirovic, the president of Bosnia's association of (wartime) detainees, told the Federal Television in Sarajevo.

Tahirovic was among a dozen representatives of wartime victims invited to the closed screening of Jolie's directorial debut "In The Land of Blood and Honey".

"Everybody should see this film," Tahirovic said.

In October 2010, a Bosnian minister cancelled Jolie's filming permits citing incomplete paperwork, after female victims of the Bosnian war objected to details of the plot, alleging it was about love between a rapist and his victim.

The film tells a tale of love between a Serb man and a Muslim woman before the Bosnian war, who later meet in different circumstances ― he is an army officer and she is his detainee.

Victims of sexual violence in Bosnia wrote to the United Nations refugee agency, saying Jolie did not deserve her role as a UNHCR Good Will Ambassador, and did not know enough about the Bosnian conflict.

Jolie first came to Bosnia last year as an UNHCR ambassador.

She filmed most of the feature in Budapest but asked war victims voicing their objections to the movie to reserve judgement until they had seen the finished product.

One of the loudest opponents to Jolie filming in Bosnia said she was now satisfied by the film's portrayal of the war.

"Two hours of film is not enough time to show all (the horrors of the war), but I think Angelina managed to do it," said Sadzida Hadzic of the Women-Victims of War Association.

However, Hatidza Mehmedovic, who lost her husband and two teenage sons in the 1995 Srebrenica massacre of 8,000 Muslim men and boys, said she was disappointed the film was shot elsehwere, if it was shot in Bosnia," she told Reuters.

The closed screening was organised by the Centre for post-conflict research, and was not open to media. ― Reuters

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Adele is iTunes top-seller of 2011

Posted: 08 Dec 2011 05:10 PM PST

Adele performs at the 51st annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles February 8, 2009. — Reuters pic

LOS ANGELES, Dec 9 — British singer Adele has became the first artist to secure three milestones on the iTunes music chart, scoring 2011's top-selling single, top-selling album and being named the iTunes Artist of the Year, the music company said yesterday.

The 23-year-old singer's single "Rolling in the Deep" beat stiff competition from Katy Perry, Bruno Mars, LMFAO and CeeLo Green in the top-selling songs category, while her album "21" was able to surpass records from Mumford & Sons, Lil Wayne, Coldplay and Kanye West and Jay-Z.

The iTunes Rewind list highlights the year's most downloaded items from Apple Inc's iTunes stores but the company did not give sales figures.

Rock group Foo Fighters' seventh studio album "Wasting Light" was named Album of the Year, while rapper Nicki Minaj was given the Breakthrough Artist of the Year title, while Los Angeles indie rock group Foster The People achieved the Song of the Year title with "Pumped Up Kicks."

David Fincher's 2010 film "The Social Network" topped the best-selling film list, while BBC's "Doctor Who" series was the top-selling television series, and the "Angry Birds" game was named the top-selling paid app for iPhone and iPad. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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Ted Hughes honoured with Poets’ Corner memorial

Posted: 09 Dec 2011 07:26 AM PST

LONDON, Dec 9 — It may seem like a long 13 years after his death that Ted Hughes was honoured in Poets' Corner at Westminster Abbey, but compared with other literary greats like Shakespeare and Byron, the wait was relatively short.

A service was held on Tuesday to unveil the memorial stone, which features an extract from his poem "That Morning": "So we found the end of our journey, So we stood alive in the river of light, Among the creatures of light, creatures of light."

Byron, whose lifestyle caused a scandal though his poetry was much admired, died in 1824 but was only given a memorial at the famous site in 1969.

Even Shakespeare, buried at Stratford-upon-Avon in 1616, had to wait until 1740 before a monument appeared in Poets' Corner.

At Tuesday's ceremony, fellow poet and Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney gave an address, and six of Hughes' poems were read, three by actress Juliet Stevenson and three by Heaney.

Worshippers also heard an extract from a letter Hughes wrote to his then wife, the American poet Sylvia Plath, in 1956, shortly after they married and seven years before she took her own life, aged 30.

Hughes' legacy has always been closely intertwined with Plath's, with his part in their relationship a source of widespread criticism.

Edward Hughes (picture) was born in 1930 in Yorkshire, northern England and decided on a career as a poet when he was in his teens.

He met and married Plath in 1956 and the following year published "The Hawk in the Rain," still considered one of his best and most important collections.

When Plath committed suicide, some feminists blamed a devastated Hughes, who had started an affair with another woman, Assia Wevill, the year before.

That was not the end of the tragedy — Wevill killed herself and her four-year-old daughter in 1969, leaving Hughes unable to complete a collection of verse entitled "Crow."

In 1970, he published a selection of poems under the title "Crow: From the Life and Songs of the Crow," and the same year married Carol Orchard with whom he remained until his death.

He was appointed British poet laureate in 1984, and in 1998, shortly before his death, published "Birthday Letters," considered his clearest response to Plath's death 35 years earlier. It became a bestseller and scooped several top prizes.

Hughes joins a pantheon of great British authors honoured in Poets' Corner, including Geoffrey Chaucer, William Wordsworth and John Keats.

Westminster Abbey said his memorial lies at the foot of that to T.S. Eliot, Hughes' "hero and champion." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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Demokrasi di udara

Posted: 08 Dec 2011 04:33 PM PST

9 DIS — Tanggal 8 Disember 2001? Apa signifikan tanggal ini? Bagi sebahagian besar rakyat Malaysia, ia mungkin tidak memberi makna apa-apa walaupun secara langsung atau tidak langsung sebahagian dari mereka sesungguhnya tidak terlepas dari tempias sebuah revolusi.

Ketika politik global masih di dalam kemelut pasca 911 dan politik domestik masih memanas ekoran keluarnya DAP di dalam koalisi Barisan Alternatif, Tune Air Sdn Bhd membuat kejutan dengan membeli 99.25 peratus ekuiti Hicom Holdings di dalam AirAsia seterusnya menguasai dan memberi nafas baru kepada dunia aviasi di Malaysia dan serantau yang masih terkesan hebat akibat peristiwa 911.

Tanggal 8 Disember 2001 merupakan kelahiran baru sebuah syarikat bernama AirAsia yang menawarkan penerbangan kos rendah kepada seluruh warga dengan slogan "Now Everyone Can Fly". Kehadiran AirAsia pada mulanya disambut skeptikal para warga yang masih curiga dan mengandaikan slogan-slogan AirAsia hanyalah retorik seperti mana retorik yang kerap dimainkan parti politik di televisyen mahupun di pentas ceramah.

Sepuluh tahun ke hadapan, AirAsia semakin membesar luar biasa dengan penambahan bilangan pesawat dan pembukaan jalur penerbangan ke pelbagai destinasi menarik. Subsidiari AirAsia juga dibentuk di beberapa negara mulai dari Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Filipina dan yang mutakhir, Jepun. Tidak seperti parti politik, AirAsia di kebanyakan masa mampu menerjemahkan slogan mereka di dalam bentuk aksi dan seterusnya mengukuhkan nama mereka sebagai juara demokrasi di udara.

Sempena ulang tahun ke 10 AirAsia, saya ingin menceritakan dua hal positif yang dimunculkan dengan kehadiran AirAsia yang memberi impak besar kepada kehidupan saya sebagai seorang individu dan juga di sebuah komuniti seni bernama Kolektif Frinjan yang saya usahakan bersama-sama teman lain. Sebelumnya saya harus mengakui banyak kritikan dilemparkan terhadap AirAsia di mana ada yang berasas dan ada yang tidak dan saya memilih untuk tidak berbicara soal itu di sini.

Hal yang pertama adalah perhubungan dua hala dan kadangkala pelbagai hala yang berjaya dibentuk di antara individu atau kelompok dari Malaysia dengan individu atau kelompok yang sama dari negara-negara yang dikunjungi pesawat AirAsia terutamanya di rantau Asia Tenggara.

Jika dahulu untuk menjalin hubungan dan kerjasama serantau, hal ini sepenuhnya didominasi institusi rasmi beratasnama sebuah kerajaan kerana keupayaan kewangan yang dimiliki mereka. Nah! berkat demokratisasi harga yang dipelopori AirAsia, semakin hari semakin banyak individu atau kelompok menjalin hubungan yang lebih asli bentuknya tanpa perlu menghabiskan dana rakyat yang pada kebiasaannya segala titik hitam di antara dua negara akan ditutup demi penerusan kestabilan kekuasaan kedua-dua negara.

Maka tidak menghairankan di kala permusuhan hebat terjadi di pelbagai arena di antara Malaysia dan Indonesia kebelakangan ini, hal serupa tidak terjadi di tingkat individu dan kelompok yang sudah terjalin ikatan dan saling memahami positif dan negatifnya tingkah kedua-dua negara. Peranan duta negara pasca-AirAsia tidak sepenuhnya dimiliki kerajaan kerana individu dan kelompok dari bermacam bidang baik muzik, sastera, filem, masyarakat sivil dan bermacam lagi telah berjaya meruntuhkan tembok "rasmi" yang sinonim dengan kekuasaan. Solidariti individu atau kelompok berbeza negara ini mengkedepankan persamaan dari segi perjuangan mereka baik sosial mahupun politik berbanding soal ganyang dan memperlekeh satu dengan yang lain yang selamanya menjadi hobi penguasa untuk mempermain emosi rakyat yang kebingungan.

Sebagai contoh, baru-baru ini saya bersama teman-teman dari Kolektif Frinjan mengadakan kunjungan ke Indonesia dan seperti yang dijangka kami disambut dengan penuh persaudaraan ke mana saja kami semua bersua muka.

Hal yang kedua pula sangat menyangkut kepada pemikiran iaitu bagaimana cara berfikir dan melihat dunia yang berjaya didinamikkan dengan kehadiran AirAsia. Jika dahulu untuk kita rakyat Malaysia memahami rakyat dan negara seperti Indonesia, Thailand, Filipina, Kemboja, Vietnam, India, China dan lain-lain, sumber utama kita hanyalah media-media arus perdana yang kredebilitinya sangat diragukan terutama Utusan Malaysia. Maka menjadi kelaziman untuk kita terlalu memandang rendah atau terlalu memandang tinggi akibat terlalu mempercayai apa yang dilapor dan paling hodoh lagi adalah kesukaan berfikir di dalam kotak baik mereka itu orang tua mahupun orang muda.

Bayangkan ramai rakyat Malaysia yang pertama kali ke Jakarta merasa terkejut dengan banyaknya pusat membeli belah di sana kerana pada bayangan mereka Jakarta itu seperti yang sering dilapor koresponden Utusan Malaysia di sana. Bayangkan juga ramai rakyat Malaysia berbangsa Melayu yang automatik Islam di sisi perlembagaan merasa terkejut bahawa di Filipina majoriti rakyatnya berbangsa Melayu tetapi beragama Kristian. Mereka merasa hairan bagaimana muka yang sangat khas Melayunya berbondong-bondong ke gereja tanpa rasa segan silu kerana mereka memahami selama ini Melayu adalah Islam dan Islam adalah Melayu. Untuk pengetahuan, di Filipina 91.5 peratus penduduknya adalah Melayu Kristian dan 4 peratus Melayu Islam.

Dua hal ini saja menurut saya telah merubah perlahan demi perlahan pemikiran rakyat Malaysia khasnya dan rantau Asia Tenggara serta belahan dunia lain amnya ke suatu keadaan kosmopolitan yang menurut kisah pernah terjadi di rantau ini ratusan tahun yang lampau. Tolak ke tepi kos-kos yang harus dibayar untuk pemeriksaan masuk di kaunter, kerusi lebih ruang, kelewatan penerbangan dan tiket mahal bagi pembelian akhir-akhir minit kerana pada akhirnya AirAsia telah membawa banyak perubahan yang tidak kita nampak secara mata kasar kerana pemikiran tidak boleh diukur dengan hasil perbelanjaan barangan di Kuta, Pasar Baru dan Platinum Mall.

Ada elit yang berkata AirAsia telah merendahkan kualiti manusia yang menaiki pesawat di mana yang berbaju kot duduk sebaris dengan mereka yang memakai baju bundle. Nah! Itulah dia sebenarnya AirAsia! Pejuang demokrasi di udara!

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

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Kebebasan bersuara, Internet dan fitnah

Posted: 08 Dec 2011 04:23 PM PST

9 DIS — Kebebasan bersuara adalah diantara isu penting dan seringkali menjadi perdebatan di Malaysia.

Ini kerana walaupun perlembagaan persekutuan menjamin hak ini bagi setiap warganegara, terdapat pelbagai undang-undang dan akta yang menyekat rakyat daripada menikmatinya.

Perlembagaan persekutuan Malaysia dalam Perkara 10 (1) (a) dengan jelas menyatakan bahawa setiap warganegara berhak untuk bersuara dan menyatakan pandangan secara terbuka.

Akan tetapi, terdapat undang-undang dan akta secara langsung menafikan hak yang telah dijamin oleh perlembagaan persekutuan seperti Akta Keselamatan Dalam Negeri (ISA), Akta Universiti dan Kolej Universiti (AUKU) dan Akta Media dan Mesin Cetak.

Malaysia mempunyai sejarah yang unik dalam isu kebebasan bersuara. Jika kita bandingkan kebebasan bersuara semenjak dari merdeka sehingga hari ini, kita akan dapati grafnya semakin lama semakin menurun.

Dari masa ke semasa pemerintah mengekang kebebasan bersuara. Tujuannya tidak lain dan tidak bukan adalah untuk terus mengekalkan kuasa. Kongkongan demi kongkongan terpaksa dihadapi oleh rakyat Malaysia walaupun negara sudah 54 tahun merdeka.

Tidak hairanlah mengapa Malaysia masih lagi belum pernah menukar parti pemerintah semenjak pilihanraya pertama dijalankan di negara ini.

Di negara-negara maju seperti United Kingdom, bertukar pemerintahan adalah perkara biasa dan tidak pula berlaku huru-hara. Malahan ianya menyebabkan negara tersebut terus maju oleh kerana parti-parti politik yang ada sentiasa berusaha keras untuk memastikan program mereka dapat diterima oleh rakyat.

Revolusi Internet

Kehadiran Internet merubah keadaan semasa. Jika pada satu masa dahulu, rakyat Malaysia hanya menerima maklumat dari sebelah pihak kerana terdapat kongkongan yang ketat terhadap media.

Internet telah memecahkan dominasi maklumat yang selama ini dikawal oleh pemerintah. Internet turut menjadi ancaman kepada negara-negara kuku besi.

Dominasi maklumat oleh pemerintahan kuku besi seperti di negara-negara Timur Tengah dapat dipecahkan.

Revolusi Mesir adalah contoh bagaimana Internet menjadi senjata untuk melawan regim kuku besi Hosni Mubarrak.

Facebook, Twitter dan blog menggantikan senjata-senjata tradisional seperti AK-47 dan "Molotov cocktail" bagi memenangkan revolusi di Dataran Tahrir.

Di Malaysia, kita dapat menyaksikan bagaimana Internet telah merubah lanskap politik negara.

Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi terpaksa disingkirkan lebih awal daripada pemerintahannya oleh kerana serangan dari Internet terutamanya blog.

Dalam pilihanraya umum (PRU) ke 12, kebanyakkan kawasan-kawasan bandar yang mempunyai akses kepada Internet dimenangi oleh parti pembangkang.

Di Wilayah Persekutuan kita dapat menyaksikan Barisan Nasional (BN) hanya mampu mempertahankan kerusi parlimen Setiawangsa dan Putrajaya.

Selebihnya disapu bersih oleh Pakatan Rakyat (PR).

Sebelum PRU 12, hanya ahli politik PR dan penyokong meraka menggunakan Internet secara agresif, dalam bahasa mudahnya, pada ketika itu majoriti blog-blog dikuasai oleh pihak yang menentang kerajaan.

Pasca PRU 12 telah merubah dunia Internet di Malaysia. Hari ini, kebanyakkan ahli-ahli politik BN juga telah mempunyai blog, Facebook dan Twitter masing-masing. Kini terdapat banyak juga blog-blog dari golongan menyokong pemerintah.

Ini adalah satu perkembangan yang baik. Ertinya, perdebatan di ruang Internet di Malaysia tidak lagi didominasi oleh satu pihak.

Rakyat Malaysia terutamanya golongan muda dapat menilai maklumat-maklumat yang mereka perolehi dengan seimbang.

Tidak lama lagi, media-media tradisional yang berat sebelah seperti Utusan Malaysia akan ditinggalkan oleh kerana tidak mengikut perkembangan zaman. Akhbar sebegini masih boleh terus hidup hari ini kerana masih terdapat golongan tua yang membaca.

Jika tidak melakukan perubahan drastik dalam corak penulisan berita, tidak mustahil akhbar seperti Utusan Malaysia akan pupus bersama-sama golongan tua di Malaysia.

Fitnah dan tohmahan menjadi budaya

Dalam keghairahan berjuang di alam siber, terdapat juga segelintir kecil yang menyalahgunakan Internet. Internet dijadikan medan untuk menyebarkan fitnah untuk menjatuhkan pihak-pihak tertentu.

Terdapat juga blog-blog yang menggunakan kata-kata kesat dan lucah untuk memaki hamun pihak lawan mereka. Fitnah direka untuk mensensasikan penulisan mereka.

Lebih aneh lagi, mereka-mereka ini berbangga dengan penulisan yang menggunakan kata-kata kesat dan lucah. Jika dikaji penulis-penulis sebegini kebiasaannya tidak berani mendedahkan identiti mereka.

Mereka berlindung disebalik nama-nama samaran yang pelik-pelik dan kadangkala lucu juga. Untuk membela tuan-tuan politik mereka, fitnah dan tohmah digunakan untuk mematahkan hujah lawan.

Yang lebih pelik lagi apabila aktiviti sebegini dihalalkan oleh pemimpin-pemimpin politik yang tidak sedar satu hari nanti mereka juga bakal menjadi mangsa kepada penulis-penulis sebegini.

Kita seharusnya mengambil iktibar tentang apa yang berlaku kepada bekas Ketua Polis Negara (KPN), Tan Sri Musa Hassan.

Jika dizaman beliau menjadi KPN tindakan diambil keatas laporan-laporan polis yang dibuat terhadap penulis-penulis lucah dan fitnah tanpa memilih bulu, sudah tentu fitnah seperti yang berlaku kepada beliau baru-baru ini tidak terjadi.

Baru-baru ini, bekas KPN difitnah di Internet — menggunakan gambar "super impose" yang mengatakan kononnya beliau berkahwin dengan seorang artis.

Penulis-penulis fitnah dan lucah terus berleluasa. Aktiviti sebegini mungkin sudah tidak dapat dihentikan oleh kerana ianya telah menjadi budaya sesetengah pihak.

Akan tetapi, sepandai-pandai tupai melompat, pasti akan jatuh ke tanah jua. Kita tidak akan dapat bersembunyi selama-lamanya. Nama samaran yang digunakan tidak dapat melindungi diri selama-lamanya.

Kekuasaan tidak akan memayungi diri selama-lamanya.

Percayalah, langit tidak selalunya cerah.

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

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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Hudud: ABIM serah Soi Lek memo, gesa minta maaf dalam 48 jam

Posted: 09 Dec 2011 01:59 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 9 Dis― Angkatan Belia Islam Malaysia (ABIM) menyerahkan satu memorandum kepada Datuk Seri Chua Soi Lek hari ini, mengulangi gesaan agar presiden MCA itu memohon maaf secara terbuka kepada semua umat Islam di negara ini ekoran kenyataannya mengenai hudud minggu lalu.

Setiausaha Agung ABIM Mohamad Raimi Ab Rahim berkata pihaknya kesal di atas kenyataan prejudis beliau yang merendahkan martabat perundangan hudud sekiranya dilaksanakan di negara ini.

"Adalah jelas bahawa kenyataan beliau bersifat tohmahan, prejudis dan tidak langsung disandarkan kepada sebarang fakta atau perangkaan emprikal yang boleh menjustifikasi dakwaaan beliau.

"Namun sehingga hari ini, beliau masih belum membuat sebarang permohonan maaf secara terbuka kepada umat Islam berhubung dengan kenyataan tersebut," kata beliau dalam satu kenyataan.

Justeru kata beliau, ABIM terpanggil untuk sekali lagi menggesa beliau berbuat demikian dalam tempoh masa 48 jam menerusi saluran-saluran media di negara ini.

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Mahathir: Orang Melayu hadapi dilema baru

Posted: 09 Dec 2011 01:49 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 9 Dis ― Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad yang terus lantang melahirkan pandangannya mengenai pelbagai isu selepas bersara berkata, beliau telah 'mengunjungi semula' buku kontroversi tulisanya The Malay Dilemma kerana ada perkara-perkara yang merungkaikan dilema baru orang Melayu.

Dalam memoirnya yang dilancarkan Mac lalu, bekas perdana menteri itu berkata, "bila anda miskin anda akan ada dilema dan bila anda kaya, anda ada dilema yang besar."

"Saya harus mengakui bahawa saya telah melihat semula The Malay Dilemma. Banyak perkara sudah berubah, jadi kebanyakan perkara yang saya tulis dalam Malay Dilemma yang pertama, mereka akan kata ia sudah tidak relevan lagi," kata beliau.

"Bagaimanapun ada perkara yang merangkumi dilema baru orang Melayu," kata beliau ketika berucap melancarkan portal buku elektronik MPH yang akan membawa kandungan buku autobiografinya.

Buku Malay Dilemma mencetuskan kontroversi hebat ketika diterbitkan pada 1970, sejurus selepas Dr Mahathir dipecah dari Umno.

MENYUSUL LAGI

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