Jumaat, 26 Oktober 2012

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Food to combat conflicts at global fair in Italy

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 07:43 PM PDT

TURIN, Italy, Oct 27 — In a world dogged by conflicts and wars, the key to peace and reconciliation lies in food, say chefs, small-scale producers and Slow Food campaigners at the world's biggest food fair in Turin.

Among the thousands of stalls which line the fair with spices, fruits, wines and delicacies from 100 countries in Europe, North America, Asia and Africa, springs a huge African food garden with pumpkins, berries, bananas and trees.

Italian cheeses are displayed on a stand at the Slow Food's Salone del Gusto and Terra Madre on October 25, 2012 in Turin. — AFP-Relaxnews pic

The plot represents the 25 countries involved in the "Thousand Gardens in Africa project," which aims to preserve traditional foods and unite communities in the continent where civil wars and conflict often aggravate food crises.

"The Thousand Gardens is helping bring about conflict resolutions," says Noel Nanyunja, a young regional coordinator for the project from Uganda.

"It brings communities together and changes attitudes, especially among the young. We have lots of initiatives to make people self-sufficient and help them fight off hunger - often one of the biggest sparks for bloodshed," she said.

Rogers Sserunjogi, who cheerfully shows the garden off to visitors wearing a traditional Ugandan costume, said: "where slow food is concerned there is unity: people forget about politics, their religion and discrimination."

The project was launched two years ago by Slow Food, a movement founded in the northwestern Italian region in 1986 in reaction to the rise of fast food.

"There cannot be peace without a good agricultural model throughout the world," said Slow Food founder Carlo Petrini, adding that the 2012 fair brings together small-scale producers from vastly different or conflicting cultures.

"This event is an event of peace: seeing Palestinian farmers alongside Israeli farmers, Syrian ones alongside Turkish ones, has a significance that goes beyond tensions, wars and conflicts between governments," he said.

In an international tasting hall across from the garden, Sri Lanken chef Duminda Abeysiriwardena rustles up spicy chicken and chutney with a sumptuous vegetable side for visitors which include a gaggle of curious school children.

After nearly three decades of a devastating war in Sri Lanka, he says the country's young are enthusiastic and ready to grasp new cultural ideas - but warns that rapid modernisation has led to a boom in fast, cheap and poor food.

"When a country develops quickly people forget about qualities and traditional values and think about the money aspects," Abeysiriwardena said in the fair's bustling kitchen, cooking alongside chefs from Tunisia and Algeria.

"After everything that's happened in Sri Lanka, we need to go back to basics, to nutritional food. That is the real value which bonds communities."

Slow Food does not only inspire hopes of conflict resolution among its members, it also gives small-scale producers from countries shaking off the dust of dictatorship or state control the chance for international exposure.

Jamilya Ekeyewna, 39, who works for a family-run company producing dried melon in Turkmenistan, smiles shyly as she hands out samples of the fruit to passing visitors, many of whom come back for a second helping.

Turkmenistan suffered a period of political and economic isolation until 2006 but has since grasped the chance to develop trade links, she said. "We are a poor country, but our food is simple and good. Here we show what we offer."

Slow Food can be revolutionary, Petrini says, if people at a local level use the movement's networks to share knowledge and build bridges with neighbours.

"This edition of Slow Food is about foods which change the world," he said.

It's no one-answer-fits-all approach, but "if every country has the strength to act," then food can be a key to bettering relationships on a wider scale.

Or as Sserunjogi puts it: "everybody loves to think about food. They're excited, it brings them together. They become proud of local and regional foods and culture and want to protect them, so they begin collaborating for peace." — AFP-Relaxnews


Just Heavenly dishes up more than just desserts

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 05:16 PM PDT

The Soba Salad is light and full of flavors. – Pictures by Eu Hooi Khaw

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 27 — The mushrooms were almost bursting out of the Monster Mushroom Quiche at Just Heavenly Café in Bangsar Shopping Centre.  It was as if the "monstrous" filling of three types of mushrooms – shiitake, button and oyster – could hardly be contained in the egg, cream and milk mixture. The quiche with its thin shortcrust pastry which crumbled as it was cut was delightful. 

Then there was the Quiche Lorraine baked with beef brisket, onions and cheese, that had a custardy texture and a rich cheesy aroma. The quiches come with a light salad with a balsamic vinegar dressing.

Although these two quiches may sound rich, the owners of the newly-opened Just Heavenly Café – Nigel Skelchy and Allan Yap – have intentionally kept the food light. "This is so that everyone can enjoy desserts," said Allan. "We are known for our cakes after all."

Salads may be on most café menus, but sometimes they turn out sadly unimpressive. But at this café, the Coconut Chicken Salad and the Soba Salad stood out. The chicken had been cooked in a laksa broth, so you had all these lovely nyonya flavours of bunga kantan, kaffir lime leaves and lemon grass clinging to it. The salad of chicken, lettuce, cucumber, onions, pineapple, fried tofu, peanuts, slivers of bunga kantan and lemon grass is all brought together with a hot, sweet and tart chilli jam. I couldn't stop eating this salad; it was so good.

BLT Burger is totally yummy but not too heavy.

The Soba Salad has the Japanese buckwheat noodles, ulam raja, bangkuang, watercress and carrots tossed in a very nice ginger and garlic dressing and showered with sesame seeds. It could be a light meal in itself. It has been a hit at the cafe right from the start.

Nigel and Allan explained that they have deliberately kept their price point low by using local vegetables for salads instead of the more expensive arugula.  "We also make our own flatbreads, muesli, Greek yoghurt and ricotta," said Nigel.

I had a bite of the BLT Burger – a deliciously juicy Australian beef patty topped with a chunky mushroom sauce, sitting on lettuce and tomato. I'm not usually fond of burgers, but this one got me. 

It also came with crispy chunky fries that had been blanched first, fried and fried again. The blanching and double frying render these super crispy, without drying them out. It wasn't a heavy burger and will just leave you comfortably full.

Monsieur Bullseye  is a perfectly poached egg sitting on a cheese toast with a few layers of turkey ham and drenched with béchamel sauce. It's what you would want for breakfast.

Sphagettini Con Gamberi... perfectly al dente and delicious.

The Spaghettini Con Gamberi is pasta with prawns in a tomato basil sauce. It's always a challenge to make sure the thin pasta stays al dente. On a previous lunch here, I had the Crab Aglio Olio, and could have sworn from the appearance the angel hair  pasta would be soft. It wasn't.  It was the same with the spaghettini. The sauce was fresh and light, with natural sweetness from the firm prawns.

The Penne Carbonara is also a lighter version here, with beef bacon and mushrooms.

The desserts looked promising: Key Lime Pie, Chocolate Durian, Lemon Meringue and Chocolate Eclairs. The Chocolate Durian was just heavenly. You break through the smooth chocolate casing into the creamy durian filling bursting with that unmistakable aroma and flavour.

I liked the Key Lime Pie for the biscuity pastry, the buttery cake layer at the bottom, a generous mousse and cream topping gorgeously balanced with the tartness of lime.

Key Lime Pie... not too tart, just nice.

The Lemon Meringue was lovely too, for the sharp, lemon curd layer at the bottom, and the frothy and not too sweet meringue on the top.

Children would love the Chocolate Eclairs that spurt out either cream or chocolate at the bite.

Earlier, we had a taste of some refreshing drinks like the Mojo Jojo of fresh lime, mint, soda and orange syrup and Mint Magic that had iced tea, fresh mint and honey.  There was the Lemongrass Passion of lemongrass, pandan and soda and Charlie's Angels that had red dragonfruit, apple, lemon and soda. I liked the last, the best.

Here's the place to have breakfast too as on weekends and public holidays it serves The Ridiculously Large Breakfast of two eggs, two sausages, ricotta hotcakes, garlic mushrooms, toast with citrus ginger marmalade, Greek yoghurt with honey, juice, coffee and tea, for RM32.

The Coconut Salad is RM20, Spaghettini RM24, quiches RM15 to RM16, BLT Burger RM25. Desserts are from RM12 to RM14.

Just Heavenly Café is located on Level 2, West Wing of Bangsar Shopping Centre, Tel: 03-2011 4866.

Just Heavenly Cafe... always room for dessert at this cafe.


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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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No Tour de France winner from 1999-2005, says UCI

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 08:11 AM PDT

Armstrong waits in front of the pack of riders for the start of the 192.5km first stage of the 89th Tour de France cycling race in Luxembourg in this July 7, 2002 file photo. — Reuters pic

PARIS, Oct 26 — No one will replace Lance Armstrong as winner of the Tour de France from 1999-2005 after the American was stripped of the titles for doping, the International Cycling Union (UCI) said today.

The decision, supported by Tour organisers, was widely expected given so many riders finishing behind Armstrong have also been associated with doping offences.

"With respect to Lance Armstrong and the implications of the USADA sanctions which it endorsed on Monday October 22, the Management Committee decided not to award victories to any other rider or upgrade other placings in any of the affected events," the UCI said in a statement.

Armstrong was formally stripped of his seven titles on Monday when the UCI ratified the US Anti-Doping Agency's decision to ban the 41-year-old Texan for life and nullify his results from August 1998 onward.

"The committee also called on Armstrong and all other affected riders to return the prize money they had received," the statement added.

The UCI also said it was setting up an independent commission to investigate allegations made against the UCI over the Armstrong affair.

The governing body agreed that part of the commission's remit would be to find ways to ensure that anyone caught doping would no longer be able to take part in the sport, even as a non-rider in a team.

It also announced it was suspending legal action against journalist Paul Kimmage pending the findings of the commission.

Former professional rider Kimmage had alleged the UCI covered up a suspicious Armstrong test.

On October10, the United States Anti-Doping Agency published a report into Armstrong which said the now-retired rider had been involved in the "most sophisticated, professionalised and successful doping programme that sport has ever seen".

Armstrong, who has always denied doping, had previously declined to contest the charges, prompting USADA to propose his punishment pending confirmation from cycling's world governing body which came on Monday.

Former Armstrong team mates at his US Postal and Discovery Channel outfits, where he won his Tour titles, testified against him and themselves and were given reduced bans by the American authorities. — Reuters pic

Napoli charged with rigging Seria A match

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 06:23 AM PDT

Napoli's Edinson Cavani reacts after missing a goal opportunity against Udinese during their Serie A match in Naples in this April 17, 2011. — Reuters pic

ROME, Oct 26 — Napoli have been charged over alleged match-fixing in a game against Sampdoria on the final day of the 2009-10 season, the Italian football federation prosecutor said in a statement today.

The club, their former third choice goalkeeper Matteo Gianello and ex-footballer Silvio Giusti will go before the federation's disciplinary committee after information was passed from a criminal investigation in Naples.

Sampdoria won the game and entered the preliminary stage of the Champions League.

Current Napoli defenders Paolo Cannavaro and Gianluca Grava have also been charged for failing to report the alleged fix.

The development is part of a wide-ranging criminal and sporting probe into illegal betting and match-fixing in Italy which have already led to several arrests and bans. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Italy’s top bank turns vaults into Milan art museum

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 07:06 AM PDT

MILAN, Oct 26 — Italy's biggest retail bank has turned its historic headquarters in Milan's central La Scala square into a majestic modern art museum displaying Italian post-war works from the likes of Lucio Fontana and Renato Guttuso.

Palazzo Beltrami, a superb Milanese building which blends Neoclassical style with eclectic features, was built in 1911 as a prestigious new head office for Banca Commerciale Italiana, now part of domestic bank giant IntesaSanpaolo.

Nearly 200 works of art, all from IntesaSanpaolo's huge art collection, are on display as of this week in the same early 20th century halls where clerk desks and cash counters stood for 100 years.

Even the bank's restored vaults will be turned into exhibit halls, hosting a rotating selection of paintings and sculptures.

"The main bank hall is now the key museum hall," said architect Michele De Lucchi, who directed the project.

"We have left portions of the original cash counters, that are now an integral part of the exhibition space."

The newly inaugurated Cantiere del '900 exhibition is part of a broader museum complex called Gallerie d'Italia that belongs to IntesaSanpaolo and is set across from famed opera theatre La Scala and by the elegant shopping street Via Manzoni.

From Informalism to Pop Art, the collection aims to represent all the leading artistic movements from the 1950s to the 1990s. It is entirely made up of Italian works, many from the Lombardy region where Milan is based.

A whole section is dedicated to the emblematic Fontana, known for his Spatial Concept series, monochromatic paintings and other works with deliberate holes or slashes in them.

Other masterpieces include abstract paintings from Emilio Vedova, one of the most important Italian painters of the post-War era, collages from Alberto Burri or works by MAC (concrete art) movement founder Bruno Munari.

"For Italian banks, even the smaller ones, it has been a tradition to collect art and documents from their local area," said Giovanni Bazoli, Supervisory Board Chairman of IntesaSanpaolo.

"These masterpieces were however enjoyed by just a few people. I had two works of Umberto Boccioni in my office, that are now on public display."

The modern art collection complements a selection of works from the 19th century also from the bank that opened to the public last year and is hosted in the adjacent Palazzo Anguissola and Palazzo Brentani. — Reuters

Gloved-up Hong Kong city slickers fight ‘mid-life crisis’

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 01:29 AM PDT

Andrea "Glynn-sanity" Glynn (left) from Bank of Montreal fights with Danielle "Steely" Midalia from Operation Smile during the Hedge Fund Fight Nite. — Reuters pic

HONG KONG, Oct 26 — Adam Gazal trained for six months to stand in the ring for six minutes of live boxing. He remembers the noise, and not much else, and said he'd like to try it again, though he realises that the time in the gym took time away from home.

"I think my wife will divorce me if I go through another six months of training," Gazal, 35, said after the fight.

Anthony "The Tank" Carango from Nomura Holdings is greeted by fans. — Reuters pic

The managing partner of National Australia Bank was one of 14 contenders who took part in Hong Kong's sixth annual IronMonger Hedge Fund Fight Night, a fundraising event that is now a staple of the city's financial community.

Attended by 550 people, last night's event raised just over HK$500,000 (RM200,00), nearly matching last year's total. Proceeds go to children's charities Operation Breakthrough and Operation Smile.

Gazal, who fought his pal Grant Livingston, 35, an executive director at JPMorgan with a long reach and quick jab, won by a unanimous decision. In a pre-match video aired before Gazal and Livingston's fight, "mid-life crisis" was among the reasons given for wanting to take on the six-month challenge.

A survey of the crowd found more bankers than hedgies in attendance, perhaps a sign of the industry's struggles in the region. Asian-focused hedge funds as measured by the Eurekahedge index rose 3.8 per cent through September this year, falling short of a seven per cent rise in the MSCI Asia index. At least 73 Asia hedge funds have shut down this year.

The city's bankers and financiers aren't faring much better, though the sector's woes failed to impact attendance. At more than HK$2,000 a seat, the black-tie crowd filled every chair inside the makeshift boxing tent.

Bikini girls stand in the ring. — Reuters pic

American Anthony Carango, 40, an executive director at Nomura Holdings, had a focused plan going into his match - a plan that he said "went out the window" as soon as the bell rang.

Carango, who squared off against Craig Barnish, 30, a managing director at BAH Partners Ltd, said it came back to him occasionally - "head, body, head, body" - enough to allow him a unanimous-decision victory.

HSBC fielded three fighters on the night. Richard Rouse, an account manager at the bank, held steady in his match against Andrew Wylde, head of sales and operations at Hatstand consultancy. Wylde, 28, fought hard, needing to stop twice to mend a bloody face, but Rouse held on to win.

Blair Crichton, an assistant vice president of HSBC, and Brad Moreland, a director of prime services at the bank, each won their matches, pulling off a clean sweep. Crichton defeated Stephen Taw, a director at South Ocean Management Ltd, while Moreland won against 36-year-old Frenchman Nicolas Boulay, a derivatives broker at Louis Capital.

"As the fight goes on, you get tired, you tend to lose form, which was obvious," said Boulay, who noted his strong crowd support from friends and clients.

Danielle Midalia, 30, a creative manager at Operation Smile, defeated Andrea Glynn, 28, an associate at the Bank of Montreal, in the night's only female match-up.

Bikini girls carry "Long Life" by Chinese artist Shen Jingdong for auction during the charity boxing event. — Reuters pic

Mark O'Reilly, 36, a managing director at Astbury Marsden, lost to 29-year-old George Radford, a consultant at IP Global.

Mark's wife Ashley said she hopes he keeps his fitness level maintained, but that may be a tall order.

"He says after it's all over, he's going to eat a lot of pies and sit on the couch," she said.

Taw, 53, was the eldest boxer and crowd favourite, known as the "Wizard of Wanchai". With grey hair protruding from his red headgear, he went down in the first of three rounds, then held tough throughout.

"My strategy was simple: do not get hit in the face," he said, a strategy that quickly fell apart. Standing near the ring in his boxing outfit after the fight and holding two glasses of beer, Taw reflected on his performance.

"I think I won the third round," said Taw, his face now cleared of blood. "But I didn't land my jabs." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Iranian lawyer and filmmaker win EU’s Sakharov Prize

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 06:39 AM PDT

BRUSSELS, Oct 26 — The European Union's prize for human rights and freedom of thought was awarded to two Iranians today, a lawyer and a filmmaker who have both been cut off from the outside world for defying the country's leadership.

Imprisoned human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh, 49, and filmmaker Jafar Panahi, 52, were awarded the European Parliament's Sakharov Prize for their courage in defending their own and others' basic freedoms, the parliament said.

Named in honour of Soviet scientist and dissident Andrei Sakharov, the prize has been awarded by the European Parliament annually since 1988. The first recipients were Nelson Mandela and Russian author and dissident Anatoly Marchenko. Russian punk group Pussy Riot was also nominated this year.

"The award... is a message of solidarity and recognition to a woman and a man who have not been bowed by fear and intimidation and who have decided to put the fate of their country before their own," said European Parliament President Martin Schulz as he announced the winners.

Marietje Schaake, a Dutch liberal member of the parliament who nominated Sotoudeh for the prize, said the recipients should draw attention to the repressive action carried out by the Iranian authorities towards human rights' activists.

"These winners are true symbols of the long struggle the Iranian people face every day. The systematic repression, use of violence and censorship are felt by the entire population," she said.

"This prize gives support to all those Iranians that pay a high price for their struggle for freedom, justice and dignity."

Sotoudeh was arrested in September 2010 on suspicion of spreading propaganda and conspiring to harm state security. She is now serving a six-year jail sentence in solitary confinement.

She has defended journalists and rights activists, including Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi and Dutch national Zahra Bahrami, who was hanged in January 2011 on drug trafficking charges.

"Law and justice"

"I know that you require water, food, housing, a family, parents, love, and visits with your mother," Sotoudeh began in a letter written from prison to her children, who were prevented from seeing after she refused to wear a chador, a full length traditional garment.

"However, just as much, you need freedom, social security, the rule of law, and justice."

Sotoudeh began a hunger strike on October 17, according to the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. She is protesting against a travel ban placed on her daughter and authorities' limits on visits with her family, ICHRI said.

Sotoudeh's husband, Reza Khandan, told ICHRI that she appeared "very thin and weak" during his visit on October 21, but that she refused to break the hunger strike, in which she is refusing food but not water.

The UN special rapporteur on human rights in Iran, Ahmed Shaheed, has urged the Iranian authorities to consider releasing Sotoudeh.

Panahi began his career working as a cinematographer for the Iranian army and became a prize-winning director, winning at the Venice Film festival for "The Circle" in 2000.

Panahi ignored state censors to make films about ordinary people coming to terms with the country's religious and cultural codes, the citation said.

In 2006 he made "Offside", which depicted a group of young women dressing up as men to attend a World Cup qualifying match.

The state's censors were also under the impression that the women were men but nevertheless withheld a film licence unless Panahi was prepared to re-edit his four previous films.

In December 2010, Panahi was convicted by Iran's Islamic republic of making anti-government propaganda and was placed under house arrest.

An additional 20-year ban on filmmaking did not deter him and in 2011 he made "This Is Not a Film" about a day in his life. The film was transported out of Iran on a USB stick hidden inside a cake and has since been shown to the world.

Film critic Roger Ebert called the work "an extraordinary act of courage," and American director Steven Spielberg and French actress Juliette Binoche have been among other film luminaries who have spoken up for Panahi.

Among other candidates for the prize this year was Belarussian opposition activist Ales Bialiatski. — Reuters

Herman Munster returning to TV, sans neck bolts

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 05:51 AM PDT

Actor Jerry O'Connell. — AFP pic

NEW YORK, Oct 26 — When actor Jerry O'Connell moves into 1313 Mockingbird Lane, he will leave behind the green make-up and neck bolts from the classic 1960s TV comedy, "The Munsters."

O'Connell, 38, who stars as Herman Munster in a new version of the TV series, is taking a more subtle approach to the tale of the family of monsters and ghouls living in the crumbling mansion.

"Mockingbird Lane", due to air today as a one-hour NBC special, features Portia de Rossi as Lily and Eddie Izzard as Grandpa.

Reuters spoke with O'Connell about stepping into the shoes of late actor Fred Gwynne.

Q: Doing a reboot of a popular television series can often be a risky venture. Do you worry about fan reaction?

A: "I actually prefer the term 're-imagining.' That being said, it's really scary doing it. I had to stay away from Twitter for a few days after it was announced that I was playing Herman Munster because people were upset. People have very specific ideas about this show. I drop my kids off at school, and this teacher said to me, 'So you're going to be the new Herman Munster, right? My husband and I really love that show, so please don't mess it up'."

Q: How do you think fans will receive executive producer Bryan Fuller's darker, edgier version?

A: "I have a feeling that Munster fans will be pleasantly surprised and that new fans will come around as well. Bryan Fuller is a crazy Munster fan. I believe a large chunk of his salary goes toward buying Munsters collectibles, and he has a huge shrine of Munsters memorabilia in his home."

Q: "Mockingbird Lane" is airing as a Halloween special. Will it be scary?

A: "There are very scary elements. It's a pretty graphic show. There are two scenes where Grandpa performs open-heart surgery, and you see pretty much every detail of that. Grandpa is a vampire, and he does eat some of our neighbours. My kids, who are both three, did see the show. And I know you're probably calling child services now, but it was a little too much for them."

Q: So what genre does "Mockingbird Lane" fall under?

A: "That's what so tricky. It's a horror movie, a family show with comic elements, and at the same time, a heartfelt sort of drama. It's really like no other show out there. My storyline is all about my relationship with my son. But Grandpa (Izzard) is always interjecting, 'We're Munsters and we should feel pride.' And I'm trying to offer my son guidance, telling him, 'You're just going through puberty where you're turning into a werewolf. You have to try to control this power and try to be as normal as possible.' And Grandpa's storyline is 'No! We shouldn't have to try to control it. He's a monster, and he's a Munster, let him be free and wild!' There's a really touching sort of storyline about the old school versus the new school of parenting. And at the same time, Eddie Izzard is eating mountain lions. It's just crazy! Nothing like this has been done on TV before."

Q: The show coincides with recent jokes about the likeness between Republican vice presidential contender Paul Ryan and young werewolf Eddie Munster. What's your take on this?

A: "I think it's just the widow's peak. When we were shooting, Mitt Romney hadn't picked Paul Ryan as his running mate yet. But I thought it would have been a really great cross promotion. Maybe we could do an episode when Eddie is older - like a flash forward - with Paul Ryan doing a guest spot."

Q: At the age of 11, you landed the role of Vern in Rob Reiner's "Stand By Me." Was this your first acting role?

A: "No, one of my first jobs was a Duncan Hines chocolate chip cookie commercial. The other kids had this spit bucket, so they didn't get sick. But I never used the spit bucket, and I remember thinking, 'I can totally do this.' 'Stand By Me' was my first big acting role and just a wonderful experience ... I was a kid with a lot of energy and a bit hyperactive, who was often told to be quiet and calm down in class. I remember doing 'Stand By Me,' where my hyperactivity was actually encouraged on the movie set. I have very fond memories of it." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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UK spy diaries offer glimpse of Cold War life

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 02:18 AM PDT

LONDON, Oct 26 — Cold War spy Klaus Fuchs was told to throw a magazine into a London garden to set up a rendezvous with his Russian contact, a slice of everyday espionage life revealed in diaries released today of one of Britain's top intelligence officers.

Fuchs, a nuclear physicist who was one of the Soviet Union's most valuable spies before being jailed in 1950, had to mark page 10 of the magazine to show he wanted to meet his contact, who would answer with a chalk-mark on a local lamp post.

The 10 diaries by Guy Liddell, then deputy director-general of the MI5 domestic spy agency, offer an insider's perspective at the dawning of a political system that would dominate the world for decades to come.

Liddell tirelessly documented his dealings between 1945 and 1953 with the UK government and other intelligence officials, including the government of Clement Attlee, and the "Cambridge Five" now-notorious double agents whom Liddell mentions with affection.

Experts say the new diaries, which pick up where Liddell's previously released World War II diaries left off, contribute to the understanding of the period because they come from an authoritative source with a sharp mind and high-level access to classified information.

"We're getting a picture of what was going on at the centre of the intelligence world, very much as it happened, from a person at the top, writing with complete candour, and someone who knew a lot of the individuals involved," said Andrew Lownie, a journalist and author on the intelligence world.

"We've got the whole beginning of the Cold War."

The bizarre dealings of intelligence agencies lead Liddell to tell stories of Charlie Chaplin, "flying saucers" and a "luminous man" who "shines in the dark" after his exposure to plutonium at a nuclear facility, which he stayed up late into the night dictating to his secretary.

The diaries also offer details of what was happening inside the intelligence agencies when Donald Maclean and Guy Burgess, two of the "Cambridge Five" double-agents who passed secrets to Moscow, fled the UK.

"It seems pretty clear that the pair of them have gone off," Liddell writes wryly in May, 1951.

A few weeks later, he is still grappling with the new reality: "It seemed to me unlikely that a man of Burgess's intelligence could imagine that he had any future in Russia."

In one previously unknown case, another "Cambridge Five" agent Kim Philby, who in 1950 was stationed in Washington for MI6 while also passing information to the Soviet Union, sought to persuade Liddell to appoint him MI5 representative as well.

"I certainly gave him no encouragement," Liddell wrote.

Bond of secrecy

Liddell described how the discovery the Russians had tested the atomic bomb in 1949 was announced to the Joint Intelligence Committee by Foreign Office chairman William Hayter, under a "melodramatic bond of secrecy".

"Hayter cleared the room of secretaries and then said that if there was anybody present who could not keep what was going to be said to himself, would he kindly leave the room," he records in September 1949.

The discovery had "thrown everyone's calculations out of date," he wrote on New Year's Day in 1950, saying it was unclear if this was still an experimental bomb.

"It is, however, clear, that by 1957 at any rate the Russians should have sufficient atomic bombs to blot this country out entirely."

Some experts believe the Russians were able to develop atomic weapons at least one year ahead of schedule because of the information passed to them by UK-based physicist Fuchs.

The Fuchs scandal strained relations with the United States, furious the leakage had taken place.

In 1950, an exasperated Liddell writes the Americans "are utterly incapable ... of seeing anybody's point of view except their own. And that they are quite ready to cut off their noses to spite their faces!"

Liddell, who experts say would have been astonished to know the diaries he dictated every night to his secretary were published, also makes personal observations on world events such as the assassination of Gandhi.

Winston Churchill, Josef Stalin and West German leader Konrad Adenauer also lurk in the background of his writing.

He held especially frequent meetings with Prime Minister Attlee, showing how the government was preoccupied with the risk of links between Attlee's Labour Party and Communists, said Christopher Andrew, a professor of modern and contemporary history at Cambridge and official historian of MI5. — Reuters


‘Fifty Shades’ brings grey to top of French bestseller list

Posted: 25 Oct 2012 07:12 PM PDT

PARIS, Oct 26 — The French translation of the sado-masochistic romance Fifty Shades of Grey has shot to the top of the bestseller list, shifting 100,000 copies in just a few days despite getting abysmal reviews.

"Fifty Shades of Grey" has in the first five days since its October 17 release in France scored the highest sales since the last instalment of the Harry Potter series. — AFP/Relaxnews

The book, already a literary phenomenon with 40 million copies sold worldwide, has in the first five days since its October 17 release in France scored the highest sales since the last instalment of the Harry Potter series.

By comparison, Potter author J K Rowling's first novel for adults, A Casual Vacancy, took three weeks to reach 100,000 sales and is currently fourth on the top 20 list, the French weekly Livres-Hebdo reported yesterday.

The "mommy porn" book's success comes despite devastating criticism from France's literary establishment.

"The book is as close to literature as Whiskas cat food is to gastronomy," L'Express magazine wrote, while the French edition of Cosmopolitan magazine called it, "insipid" and "dull".

The novel by British author E L James, which follows the relationship of college graduate Anastasia Steele and business magnate Christian Grey, was first published in 2011.

The two other books in the trilogy, Fifty Shades Darker, and Fifty Shades Freed, will be released in France early next year. — AFP/Relaxnews


Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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Pembinaan kondo ancam struktur Batu Caves, dakwa aktivis

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 03:06 AM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR, 26 Okt — Persatuan Pencinta Alam Malaysia (MNS) mendakwa rancangan pembinaan kondominium oleh pemaju Dolomite Properties Sdn Bhd di sebelah Batu Caves akan mengancam struktur bukit tersebut selain memberi kesan buruk kepada alam  semulajadi dikawasan tersebut.

Wakil MNS, Lim Teck Wyn yang ditemui wartawan pagi ini di Batu Caves berkata tiga faktor utama perlu diambilkira jika  pembinaan tersebut diteruskan dan tidak dihalang.

"Pembinaan kondo ini merbahaya memandangkan ia terletak betul-betul disebelah puncak bukit, bayangkan jika tiba-tiba batu kapur ini runtuh menimpa kondo yang dibina? Insiden ini pernah berlaku pada 1973 di gunung Cheroh, Ipoh.

"Perkara kedua ialah habitat flora dan fauna di bukit ini akan terjejas memandangkan terdapat pelbagai jenis tumbuh-tumbuhan  dan haiwan yang jarang ditemui di dunia terdapat disini. Ketiga, struktur Batu Caves yang cantik ini akan terganggu kerana kondo ini akan menghalang pemandangan bukit yang terletak betul-betul dihadapan jalan," kata Teck Wyn.

Teck Wyn juga menegaskan kehadirannya pada hari ini bukan petanda mereka memihak kepada mana-mana parti tetapi berharap kerajaan negeri Selangor lebih bertanggungjawab ke atas isu ini.

"Kami (MNS) tidak memihak kepada mana-mana parti dalam isu ini, cuma saya berharap kerajaan negeri lebih bertanggungjawab dalam menangani isu ini.

"Kami juga pernah membuat permintaan kepada kerajaan negeri untuk melantik ahli majlis di kalangan pihak yang profesional dalam alam semulajadi tetapi hingga sekarang tiada daripada aktivis dilantik sebagai exco dalam kerajaan negeri," tambah Teck Wyn.

Dalam pada itu, rata-rata tinjauan wartawan The Malaysian Insider yang menemubual pelancong dan peniaga di sekitar Batu Caves mendapati kebanyakan mereka tidak bersetuju dengan projek kondo 29 tingkat itu.

Rata-rata menimbulkan kebimbangan projek tersebut akan menambah kesesakan di kawasan tersebut selain bimbang pada masa depan bukit tersebut akan runtuh akibat kesan daripada getaran proses mengerudi.

"Saya sokong bantahan oleh pihak jawatankuasa kuil yang membantah pembinaan projek kondo itu kerana ia akan hanya menambah kesesakan memandangkan keadaan disini seperti yang diketahui sudah sesak.

"Bila kondo ini siap ia akan menghalang pemandangan bukit ini sekaligus menjejaskan kecantikkan Batu Caves," kata Prem, 35 tahun, seorang pengusaha restoran sejak tahun 1970.

Pelancong dari California yang enggan mendedahkan namanya didedahkan juga berkata pembinaan tersebut jika diteruskan bakal mencacatkan bukit tersebut selain keaslian Batu Caves juga mungkin akan lenyap.

"Ia pasti menyedihkan. Saya sudah menetap di Malaysia selama 10 tahun dan hampir setiap bulan berkunjung ke sini.

"Saya sudah melihat banyak perubahan yang berlaku di sekitar kawasan Batu Caves, tetapi pembinaan kondo 29 tingkat adalah bukan suatu langkah yang baik kerana banyak kesan buruk akan berlaku pada masa depan," kata pelancong tersebut yang juga seorang arkitek kepada The Malaysian Insider.

Sebelum itu, pada pagi ini jawatankuasa kuil Mahamariamman Batu Caves telah menganjurkan himpunan "Selamatkan Batu Caves" bertujuan untuk membantah pembinaan kondo 29 tingkat atas alasan ia akan memberi kesan kepada struktur bukit batu kapur  tersebut serta tidak menolak ia bakal runtuh.

Antara yang hadir dalam perhimpunan tersebut antaranya ialah bekas menteri kerja raya, Datuk Seri S Samy Vellu dan bekas ahli majlis Majlis Perbandaran Selayang (MPS), A Kohillan Pillay.

Dalam ucapannya, Samy menjelaskan bahawa kerja-kerja pembinaan kondominium tersebut telah dilakukan tanpa kajian dan tidak merujuk kepada pihak yang bertanggungjawab sambil berkata tindakan undang-undang akan diambil ke atas MPS.

Kohillan pula berkata kerajaan Pakatan Rakyat di Selangor seharusnya bertanggungjawab ke atas perkara tersebut memandangkan mereka adalah pihak yang mentadbir sekarang ini serta mendakwa memiliki bidang kuasa untuk memberikan kelulusan serta menarik balik projek kondo tersebut.

Ahli exco kerajaan negeri, Ronnie Liu baru-baru ini telah mengadakan satu lawatan ke tapak projek berkenaan dan mengeluarkan kenyataan mendakwa kerajaan BN yang beertanggungjawab memberikan kelulusan awal kepada pemaju Dolomite.

"Kami juga mengetahui Jabatan Geo-Sains dan Mineral turut memberikan kelulusan ke atas projek tersebut selepas menjalankan kajian ke atas tanah berhampiran kuil," kata Liu semasa bermesyuarat dengan jawatankuasa kuil, MPS dan pemaju baru-baru ini.

Selain itu, seorang lagi ahli exco turut mengeluarkan kenyataan mengenai rancangan pembinaan projek tersebut dan menegaskan kerajaan negeri tidak akan menurut permintaan jawatankuasa kuil tersebut.

Dalam pada itu, presiden MIC Datuk Seri G Palanivel telah menggesa menteri besar (MB) Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim supaya menghentikan projek kondo 29 tingkat tersebut kerana bimbang ia akan memberikan kesan buruk kepada struktur bukit tersebut serta berisiko tinggi memandangkan kawasan itu adalah terdiri daripada batu kapur.

Polis tahan tiga lelaki, seorang wanita warga Thailand, rampas pistol

Posted: 26 Oct 2012 02:03 AM PDT

PETALING JAYA, 26 Okt — Polis menahan tiga lelaki yang dipercayai pengedar dadah dan seorang wanita warga Thailand serta merampas sepucuk pistol jenis revolver di sebuah hotel di Dataran Sunway di sini semalam.

Ketua Polis Daerah Petaling Jaya ACP Arjunaidi Mohamed berkata dalam serbuan pada 11 pagi itu, polis turut menemui empat butir peluru, dua butir kelongsong peluru, dua komputer riba, lima paket dadah jenis syabu seberat 23 gram, lapan biji erimin 5 dan beberapa peralatan menghisap syabu.

"Kesemua suspek berumur dalam lingkungan 20-an hingga 30-an dan siasatan awal dibuat kesemuanya positif dadah. Mereka ini juga dipercayai terlibat dalam kes jenayah senjata api dan beberapa kes jenayah lain," katanya kepada pemberita di sini hari ini.

Beliau berkata dua daripada suspek berkenaan juga mempunyai rekod kesalahan lampau berkaitan dadah.

Kes disiasat mengikut Seksyen 8a, Akta Senjata Api 1960, Seksyen 8, Akta Senjata Api (Penalti Lebih Berat) 1971, Seksyen 39A, Akta Dadah Berbahaya 1952 dan Seksyen 12(2), Akta Dadah Berbahaya 1952.   

Dalam kes berasingan, Arjunaidi berkata polis merampas 94 gulungan kabel pengalir tembaga dan aluminium milik sebuah syarikat kabel di Bandar Sunway yang bernilai lebih RM100,000 dalam serbuan di sebuah premis barangan lusuh di Taman Desa Ria pada 19 Okt lepas.

Katanya dalam serbuan pada 1 pagi itu, polis turut menahan lima lelaki berumur lingkungan 30-an dan 40-an di situ dan seorang daripadanya dipercayai majikan premis tersebut.

"Empat lagi yang ditahan adalah pekerja, dua daripadanya warga India dan selebihnya warga Indonesia dan kesemuanya tidak memiliki dokumen yang sah. Kami juga menemui 1100 kilogram pengalir kabel tembaga dan aluminium yang sudah diproses menjadi bahan lusuh.

"Pada mulanya siasatan dilakukan terhadap kes lain yang berlaku di Kota Damansara namun hasil siasatan mendapati kes tersebut berkaitan dengan kes curi kabel di Bandar Sunway," katanya.

Beliau berkata kesemua suspek kini ditahan reman di Ibu Pejabat Daerah Subang Jaya untuk siasatan lanjut.

"Hasil siasatan awal mendapati suspek membeli gulungan kabel tersebut daripada orang lain dengan harga RM40 ribu," katanya.

Siasatan mendapati premis tersebut beroperasi tanpa lesen.

Kes disiasat mengikut Seksyen 457 Kanun Keseksaan dan Seksyen 29(1) Akta Kesalahan Kecil. — Bernama

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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Kau tetap di hati ku

Posted: 25 Oct 2012 07:04 PM PDT

26 OKT — Aku merindui mu

Tiada ungkapan yang lebih baik untuk diucapkan kepada sesuatu yang kita anggap bernilai melainkan rindu untuk bertemu. Rindu adalah perasaan hanya kepada yang merasainya, tiada rindu pada seseorang yang tiada merindui, ia hanya bertepuk sebelah tangan. Apatah lagi jika jarak semakin dekat ia menjadikan rasa rindu semakin membuak, hanya lambaian tangan dengan jeritan batin memahami bahasa rindu ini. Rindu saya kepada bumi Palestine dan mereka yang berjuang kerana mahukan kebebasan adalah rindu sejati walaupun banyak rindu yang datang dalam  hidup saya.

Jatuh hati

Walaupun saya mengenali Palestine dan pejuangnya namun kasih kepada Palestine menambah dengan kenalan saya terhadap Palestine. Persahabatan saya dengan pelajar Palestine di Mesir semasa menuntut mengeratkan lagi penghayatan saya terhadap perjuangan Palestine. Mendengar kisah mereka menjadi pelarian kerana dihalau oleh penjajahan gila Zionist Israel membuatkan perasaan saya semakin kasih kepada mereka. Paling hampir pertemuan saya dengan bumi Palestine ialah di sempadan Rafah Mesir untuk masuk ke Gazza tahun 2009. Malangnya kami disekat masuk untuk menyampaikan bantuan. Kami terpaksa ke Lebanon dan Syria untuk menyampaikan bantuan. Di Lebanon kami dapat berjumpa dengan kepimpinan Hamas untuk menyerahkan bantuan. Saya jatuh hati dengan pejuang-pejuang Hamas melihatkan kesungguhan mereka, wajah mereka membayangkan kecekalan dan di sebalik senyuman manis dan jambang yang dicukur rapi ada kegerunan tercampak di hati-hati musuh mereka.

Pencetus semangat

Palestine mencetuskan ruh kebangkitan pada jiwa yang longlai di saat kita rebah di pangukan dunia dan keseronokkannya. Penderitaan Palestine menyentak lena panjang umat Islam lalu dikejutkan dengan jeritan dan tangisan rintihan isteri yang kehilangan suami dan anak yang merindui ayah dan ibunya. Palestine menjadi tajuk kebangkitan rasa harga diri dan maruah yang dirobek, menuntut maruah dan harga diri dengan menebus nyawa adalah dendangan irama lagu hasil sentuhan semangat Palestine. Iramanya menyentuh jiwa lalu terasa mahu bangkit dan menyalahkan kelemahan kita, itu satu muhasabah yang tidak boleh dilakukan oleh mana-mana motivator terhebat sekalipun.

Demi Palestine kita mendengar Al Aqsa dan dengungan kata semangat bebaskan Al Aqsa berkemundang di langit seiringan dengan azan yang tidak berhenti-berhenti di zon angkasa. Demi Palestine kita mendengar erti menjadi syahid untuk maruah dan harga diri, siapa sahaja yang berada dalam keadaan maruah diinjak pasti Palestine menjadi sumber kebangkitannya. Tiada mana-mana perjuangan di zaman ini yang tidak menjadikan Palestine sebagai modelnya kerana konsisten seruannya adalah paling lama dan mendapat tempat dalam senarai agenda krisis terpenting di dunia. Kalau dulu nama Arafat, kini Syeikh Ahmad Yassin, Aziz al Rantisi dan Khalid Mesy'al menjadi dendangan pejuang seluruh dunia. Kalau dulu PLO tapi kini orang berbicara tentang Hamas dan keberaniannya, itulah silsilah perjuangan yang hebat ini.

Dekat tapi jauh

21 Oktober saya dan rombongan Zakat Pulau Pinang dan Cakna Palestine dari Kelantan mengorak langkah kami beribu batu untuk pijak di bumi Ghazzah, Palestine. Umat Islam mewakilkan kami untuk menyampaikan rasa takzim kami dengan sedikit bantuan kepada mangsa perang di Ghazzah. Rindu saya akan terasa terubat dengan perjalanan ini yang sudah terpendam lama.

Namun Allah menguji kami kerana isu keselamatan, kami dilarang masuk sebab tiada kelulusan keselamatan yang begitu ketat prosedurnya. Apatah lagi beberapa hari sebelum itu, rombongan haji Palestine diserang hendap yang menyebabkan prosedur keselamatan menjadi semakin ketat dan rumi. Di Kaherah kami merancang dan meminta nasihat Kedutaan Malaysia yang berbaik hati membantu kami bagaimana cita-cita perjalanan kami boleh tercapai walaupun agak sukar dari gaya percakapannya.

Walaupun demikian, rindu kami ke bumi Palestine adalah semangat perancangan kami. Hari ini kami akan bertolak setelah terkandas satu hari di Kaherah. Doakan supaya kami selamat sampai membawa salam rakyat Malaysia di bumi Ghazzah dan lebih penting adalah buat saya mengubat rindu biarlah walau seminit kami memijakkan kaki di bumi jihad ini. Kami masih merancang walaupun Ghazzah dekat tapi masih jauh tetapi ketahuilah ianya dekat di hati kita semua. Viva Palestine!

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

My cost of living

Posted: 25 Oct 2012 05:19 PM PDT

OCT 26 — Recently, my employers gave out pink forms after they re-listed and made an initial public offering (IPO). I was pleasantly surprised to see that I was allocated a relatively generous amount.

I thought I was in for a nice bonus once the share prices go up and I get to cash in. Unfortunately, things don't always work out as we plan and the market went down.

I had also recently moved into a new house, and normal people out there who have experienced this know that quite a lot of money is spent in the process.

Aside from the initial purchase and renovation costs, there are the other miscellaneous costs of moving such as movers, arrangement of utilities, etc.

A baby also tends to up the cost of living too. There's the medical bills, milk, diapers, music and play classes, trips to Aquaria KLCC and Kizsports, etc.

To make matters even worse, I had to carelessly "bump" into a car in front of me at a junction while I was driving home a couple days ago. Thank god the damage was very minimal.

But I'm not complaining. Such is life and I'm working hard (and quite thankfully, loving what I do) to make a living along with my wife.

Still, certain events in the news seem to be making a mockery out of everything that I strive and work hard for.

Now, money is always an issue for everyone. Those who don't have it want it. Those who have it want more of it. And those who have a lot of it are just ridiculous!

Finding out how ridiculously rich people spend their money ridiculously is just annoying. And thinking about how they got that ridiculously rich just makes me furious.

Those who work hard and smart and get what they deserve is fine by me. And, honestly, how do we really judge if they are deserving of it or not?

But how are you supposed to feel when you hear that politicians — who are supposed to serve the people — can spend RM600,000 for their child's wedding (some claim that it was closer to RM13 million)?

How would you feel about some other politician's child who can actually have an accumulated cash worth of over RM1 billion and can rack up a RM750,000 bill on a single credit card?

As much as I get annoyed and angry to see things like this in the news, I have to say that I wouldn't trade my life for theirs.

The life that my family and I have is pretty cool. Our daughter Athena is the best thing to ever happen to us and I would even recycle tin cans if I had to provide for her.

We get to spend a lot of time together as a family and, seriously, we're having the time of our lives. 

But I'm still very annoyed when I think of those politicians and their money.

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

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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