Khamis, 8 November 2012

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


India emerges as fastest growing market for chocolate

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 09:32 PM PST

NEW DELHI, Nov 9 — Consumers in India are increasingly developing a sweet tooth for the Western confectionery chocolate, with sales doubling in the span of three short years to make India the fastest growing market for chocolate in the world.

That's according to a new report by market research group Mintel, which highlighted the fact that sales of chocolate grew from US$418 million in 2008 to US$857 million in 2011.

In th lead-up to the Hindu holiday Diwali, when the country fetes the festival of lights for five days with lavish banquets and feasts that include sweets and desserts, chocolate is likewise becoming increasingly popular as a seasonal gift, as many Indian consumers consider boxed chocolates a luxurious, more hygienic offering with a longer shelf life compared to traditional Indian desserts, the report adds.

This year, Diwali starts on November 13.

Chocolate is also being pitched as a premium, luxury item in India:  the 'premiumisation' claim, for instance, has seen a 100 per cent growth over the last three years, from 4 per cent of launches in 2008 to 6 per cent in 2011.

And while per capita consumption of chocolate remains low in India compared to other countries at 70 grams in 2011, that just means the potential for growth is high in this booming economy where consumers have disposable income to spend, points out Mintel.

By comparison, in Germany the average per capita consumption of chocolate is 8kg a head, while the Brits and French tuck into 6kg per capita a year.

Mature chocolates facing slow meltdowns

Meanwhile, growth in more mature chocolate markets across Europe is experiencing a slowdown.

In Germany, volume consumption declined from 770,000 tonnes in 2008 to 700,000 tonnes in 2011, while the same pattern was observed in the UK, where consumption fell from 362,000 tonnes from 2008 to 350,000 last year.

In contrast, Italy posted modest growth, with consumption increasing to 104,000 tonnes in 2011 from 98,000 tonnes in 2008.

But it's not just the Western confectionery that's influencing Indian consumers — it also works the other way around.

India's culinary and cultural influence is also spilling over into the chocolate world, with innovative and daring chocolatiers such as Cacobean infusing pralines and bonbons with punchy spices like cumin, cardamom, clove and mace.

Another boutique in the UK, Devnaa, also creates Indian-inspired chocolates laced with flavors such as coconut and cardamom, saffron, cinnamon and ginger packaged in tiffin boxes. — AFP/Relaxnews


Germany boosts top-ranked Michelin restaurants

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 06:02 PM PST

BERLIN, Nov 9 — Germany has increased its tally of top-ranked restaurants in next year's prestigious Michelin guide, unveiled here on Wednesday, and has a record number of eateries with star status.

The ten German three-star chefs on November 7, 2012 in Berlin on the occasion of the announcement of the new Michelin Guide Germany 2013. — AFP/Relaxnews

In bestowing three stars on La Belle Epoque restaurant in the northern town of Luebeck-Travemuende for 2013, Germany now has 10 restaurants in the top Michelin category and is placed only behind France within Europe.

Its chef Kevin Fehling, 35, wowed Michelin guide authors. "He skilfully combines intelligence and maturity in his blending of flavours, while also adding a distinctly personal touch," they said.

Germany's gourmet cuisine is "extraordinarily varied" with those restaurants chosen offering a wide array of styles from traditional to contemporary, Asian to regional, they added.

A female head chef features for the first time in Germany among seven new two-star restaurants — Douce Steiner, together with her husband Udo Weiler, heads up the kitchen at Hirschen restaurant in Sulzburg, in the south-west of the country.

In total, Germany now counts its highest ever number of restaurants of either one, two or three star status, numbering 255. — AFP/Relaxnews


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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Hearts director says Edinburgh club can be saved

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 06:14 AM PST

LONDON, Nov 8 — Scottish Cup holders Hearts can be saved, a director said on Thursday, after the Edinburgh club issued an appeal to supporters for emergency financial backing.

"I don't believe that this is the end of Hearts. I am confident a solution will be found," Sergejus Fedotovas told STV after arriving in Edinburgh to try to broker a rescue for the Scottish Premier League (SPL) club.

Money has long been tight in Scottish soccer and Rangers, champions a record 54 times, were demoted to the fourth tier this year after collapsing under the weight of their debts.

Hearts, founded in 1874, warned that they could go out of business this month after being issued with a winding-up order over a tax bill for almost 450,000 pounds (US$719,400).

The club, owned by Lithuanian businessman Vladimir Romanov, are urging fans to support a share issue that aims to raise 1.795 million pounds and to ensure the club's Tynecastle stadium is sold out for forthcoming games.

Tynecastle has a capacity of just over 17,000. Hearts have average attendances of around 12,000 - modest by most standards but the third highest in Scotland where Glasgow rivals Celtic and Rangers have long been dominant.

Celtic beat Barcelona 2-1 in the Champions League on Wednesday in what is being described as the greatest night for the club since they won the European Cup in 1967.

That was a rare bright spot for the game in Scotland.

One in five clubs in the top three divisions are showing signs of financial distress, according to a survey released on Thursday by business rescue and restructuring specialists Begbies Traynor.

"The relegation of Rangers has had some impact but lower attendances and falling revenues, especially reducing TV money, has given rise to the distress that has spread across the SPL and divisions one and two," said Ken Pattullo of Begbies Traynor in Scotland. — Reuters

Southampton’s Boruc back after water bottle investigation

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 06:14 AM PST

LONDON, Nov 8 — Southampton goalkeeper Artur Boruc is available for selection after the club decided to take no action against him following allegations he threw a water bottle into the crowd in a Premier League match.

Manager Nigel Adkins said an investigation into Boruc had been concluded after it was alleged he tossed the bottle into the stands during the first half of Tottenham Hotspur's 2-1 win on Oct. 28.

The Poland international can now play in Saturday's match against Swansea City.

"We've had a thorough investigation into the situation against Tottenham," Adkins said on the club website (www.saintsfc.co.uk.).

"I didn't select him for the West Bromwich Albion game, but the investigation has now been concluded to the satisfaction of the football club.

"Artur is now back in contention for the remaining fixtures."

Southampton are bottom of the Premier League with four points from their opening 10 matches. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Self-control need a boost? Gargle sugar water, researchers say

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 07:30 AM PST

WASHINGTON, Nov 8 — A new study finds that you can give your self-control a boost simply by gargling sugar water.

Gargling sugar water may give your self control a boost, researchers find. — AFP/Relaxnews

A research team from the University of Georgia in the US enlisted 51 students to perform two tasks of self-control. The first involved students meticulously crossing out the letter E on a page from a statistics book. Then subjects endured another tedious task: they were asked to identify the colour of various words that flashed on a screen, with the words spelling out the names of other colours.

Half of the students rinse their mouths with lemonade sweetened with sugar for three to five minutes while performing the tests, while the other half rinsed with lemonade made with the artificial sweetener Splenda. Turned out, the students who gargled with sugar were "significantly faster" in their responses than the Splenda group.

Glucose boost

"Researchers used to think you had to drink the glucose and get it into your body to give you the energy to [have] self-control," says coauthor Leonard Martin, professor of psychology. "After this trial, it seems that glucose stimulates the simple carbohydrate sensors on the tongue." He adds: "This, in turn, signals the motivational centres of the brain where our self-related goals are represented." And it's these signals, he adds, that wake your body up and tell it to start paying attention.

Have to work late when you'd rather be heading home? Martin suggests gargling a bit of sugar water may not only help you focus better on the task at hand but help strengthen your resolve to do something you'd rather not be doing. "It is the self-investment," Martin adds. "It doesn't just crank up your energy, but it cranks up your personal investment in what you are doing."

Martin suggested that while more research needs to be done, gargling with sugar water might even aid those trying to lose weight or stop smoking, at least in the short run.

The study, announced yesterday, appears in the journal Psychological Science.

http://pss.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/10/19/0956797612450034 — AFP/Relaxnews

Ancient Thracian gold hoard unearthed in Bulgaria

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 05:51 AM PST

SOFIA, Nov 8 — Bulgarian archaeologists unearthed ancient golden artefacts, including bracelets with snake heads, a tiara with animal motifs and a horse head piece during excavation works at a Thracian tomb in northern Bulgaria, they said today.

Gold artefacts are seen after they were unearthed from an ancient Thracian tomb near the village of Sveshtari, some 400km (248 miles) north-east of Sofia, November 7, 2012. — Reuters pic

The new golden artefacts are dated back to the end of the fourth or the beginning of the third century BC and were found in the biggest of 150 ancient tombs of a Thracian tribe, the Getae, that was in contact with the Hellenistic world.

The findings also included a golden ring, 44 applications of female figures as well as 100 golden buttons.

"These are amazing findings from the apogee of the rule of the Getae," said Diana Gergova, head of the archaeologist team at the site of the ancient Getic burial complex situated near the village of Sveshtari, some 400 km northeast from Sofia.

"From what we see up to now, the tomb may be linked with the first known Getic ruler Cothelas," said Gergova, a renown researcher of Thracian culture with the Sofia-based National Archaeology Institute.

One of the tombs there, known as the Tomb of Sveshtari, is included in the World Heritage List of UN education and culture agency, UNESCO, for its unique architectural decor with half-human, half-plant female figures and painted murals.

The Thracians, ruled by a powerful warrior aristocracy rich in gold treasures, inhabited an area extending over modern Romania and Bulgaria, northern Greece and the European part of Turkey from as early as 4,000 BC.

They lived on the fringes of the Greek and Roman civilisations, often intermingling and clashing with the more advanced cultures until they were absorbed into the Roman Empire around 45 AD.

Archaeologists have discovered a large number of artefacts in Bulgaria's Thracian tombs in recent decades, providing most of what is known of their culture, as they had no written language and left no enduring records. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views

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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views


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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Jared Leto to join McConaughey in AIDS drama

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 05:31 AM PST

Jared Leto — AFP/Relaxnews

LOS ANGELES, Nov 8 — Jared Leto is headed back to the silver screen in "The Dallas Buyers Club", according to Deadline.com. Three years after "Mr Nobody", Leto will join Matthew McConaughey and Jennifer Garner in the AIDS-related drama.

Leto will have to take time out from his rock band 30 Seconds to Mars to shoot "The Dallas Buyers Club", in which he replaces Gael Garcia Bernal in the role of Rayon, a transvestite with HIV in the late '80s.  McConaughey and Garner are also part of the cast of the film, directed by Canadian filmmaker Jean-Marc Vallée ("CRAZY").

"The Dallas Buyers Club" will start production on November 11. It will revolve around the fate of HIV-positive Texas electrician Ron Woodroof. McConaughey shed 30 pounds for the role of the Texan who was given six months to live yet managed to survive much longer by helming a drug smuggling network when the FDA had yet to make HIV drugs legal. — AFP/Relaxnews

British ‘Dad’s Army’ star Dunn dies aged 92

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 02:27 AM PST

[unable to retrieve full-text content]LONDON, Nov 8 — Comic actor Clive Dunn, who played the bumbling Lance-Corporal Jack Jones in the hit British sitcom “Dad’s Army”, has died aged 92 after a short illness, his agent said yesterday. Dunn, who also scored a number one hit in Britain with the song “Grandad”, made his career playing men several decades his senior. The actor died on ...


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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books


Why vampires? Book looks at science behind monsters

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 06:27 AM PST

TOKYO, Nov 8 — The suave and sensitive Edward Cullen of "Twilight" may be the norm for vampires these days, but fictional monsters such as Dracula originally sprang from the fear of inexplicable diseases and the mysteries of death in the natural world.

So argues science journalist Matt Kaplan in "Medusa's Gaze and Vampire's Bite: The Science of Monsters," an examination of monsters around the world and throughout history - the science behind their origins, and why they matter to us even now.

"When our kids ask for monster stories around the campfire, they are behaving in a way that is not dissimilar to lion cubs," Kaplan said in an email.

"Lion cubs play fight so they can test out their skills in a safe place where nobody is going to get maimed or killed. Monster stories serve a similar purpose, they allow us to face our worst fears without the risks that are normally associated with them."

Some are simple. The Kraken tales of mammoth monster squid, along with the Leviathan of the Bible, are most likely based upon the existence of real creatures such as whales.

The terrifying Medusa of Greek myths, with her hair made of snakes and a gaze that could turn things to stone, may have been distantly connected to the idea of fossils for ancient people, with the snakes in her hair an example of pure fear.

Though mentions of vampire-like creatures exist as early as ancient Greece, it took hundreds of years for tales of the creatures to gradually evolve into the haunting undead of more recent history.

Accounts of people found in their graves with blood on their lips and their stomachs seemingly full, as if they had just eaten, may be explained by simple decay, with gas buildup throughout the body sometimes pushing blood up from the lungs. Elongated canine teeth and fingernails was due to skin shrinking after death and pulling away, making both more prominent.

Later, greater awareness of contagious diseases such as influenza and tuberculosis - which could cause people who came in contact with the ill person to also sicken and die - further contributed to the myth. This was especially true due to incubation periods that weren't understood at the time, making it unclear how the diseases were being spread.

"One death would follow another in a dominolike progression," writes Kaplan. "In a morbid sense, these patients were literally killing their friends and relatives, but from their deathbeds rather than the hereafter."

But vampires have now undergone a radical transformation, a process that began with the publication of Bram Stoker's "Dracula" but has speeded up in recent years.

"If tuberculosis, influenza, rabies and bloated bodies are the human experiences from which Dracula came, how have we now ended up with the kind, honorable and handsome Edward Cullen?" Kaplan said.

For one thing, modern science has uncovered the mechanism of various diseases, which remain a fear but now appear as their true selves, as in stories such as "The Andromeda Strain."

Vampires have also become increasingly charming, transforming their original monster nature into something else.

"In a world where the seemingly most virtuous individuals all too often fall prey to vice, public interest in good souls battling their own bestial natures is higher than ever, and vampires provide exploration of this," Kaplan added.

In the future, fears are likely to focus on things like genetic manipulation - think Jurassic Park - and also from technology, with worries about what computers might do with true artificial intelligence looming large.

"What I find most interesting here is that these monsters really require human participation in their creation," he said, noting the popularity of films like "Avatar" and "Planet of the Apes," where monsters are the heroes and the humans, monsters.

Why are we so comfortable with feeling elated as inhuman beasts rip apart people? I think a long, hard look in the mirror can provide a lot of answers," he said. — Reuters


Dinosaur digger disappearance sparks murder mystery

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 02:26 AM PST

NEW YORK, Nov 8 — Medical examiner Kay Scarpetta receives a short video clip by email but the closing image of a severed ear is enough to start her investigating the disappearance of a woman paleontologist from a dinosaur dig 2,000 miles away in Alberta, Canada.

Patricia Cornwell's new book, "The Bone Bed", which was released this month, is the 20th novel featuring the currently Massachusetts-based Scarpetta and her cast of supporting characters.     

Scarpetta is initially puzzled by the video but soon suspects a connection to gruesome crimes much closer to home even as she deals with problems in her closest personal circle.     

Award winning Cornwell, 56, is the former director of applied forensic science at the National Forensic Academy and a member of the Advisory Board for the Forensic Sciences Training Program at the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, New York City.    

The author of 19 previous Scarpetta novels and five non-Scarpetta books, the Miami-born Cornwell lives in Boston with her partner and their four-year old British bull dog "Tram".     

Cornwell talked to Reuters about her affection for Scarpetta and the inspiration and ideas for her books.     

Q: How did you arrive at the Scarpetta series?    

A: "Scarpetta walked into my life in the 1980's at a time no one wanted to write about these things and she has evolved over the years. She is a character I enjoy working with and I am not bored with her."     

Q: What prompted this particular plot?     

A: "I got a call from Dan and Donna Akroyd, saying they were going on a dino (dinosaur) dig and they asked us to go. I said to my partner, 'How do you say 'no' to that?' It was in Alberta, Canada very close to Alaska. No electricity, very muddy, very rainy. I thought, 'Oh boy, someone could get murdered here,' and, of course, that is what happened."    

Q: How do you bring in perpetrators?    

A: "It's an organic thing. I don't know who it's going to be. I work a story as if I am working a case and not all the answers are up. A great deal of the suspense for the reader comes as the reader is feeling what I am feeling."     

Q: Why crime writing?    

A: "I became immersed in it after graduation. I worked for the Charlotte Observer and they promoted me to the police beat. I had no exposure and I didn't even want the job. Bad hours, in your car at all hours of the night but I got into it. Today, if Scarpetta dons a dry suit to untangle a body, I don a dry suit. Whatever it is, within reason, I try to do it."    

Q: Is anything autobiographical in your books?     

A: "There is always something, some experience of mine. Something I like to cook is something Scarpetta is cooking. When I went to the dinosaur dig, I didn't have any idea of writing about it. It's a tapestry woven in by life and what I know about other people."    

Q: Who was your biggest influence as a writer?    

A: "Hemingway. I think he's so physical in how he describes the world he inhabited. I like to have one of his books on my desk. I want my reader to have that palpable experience —  to be in the rain or on a boat. I try to learn from people who are really good at what they do."     

Q: Why do you write?    

A: "I started writing as a little kid. It was a coping mechanism for me. I loved my imagination. I loved drawing pictures, making little books as a kid, writing poetry. It was only when I went to college I thought, 'It's right under your nose what you love to do.' If I don't do it for long periods of time, I am really not happy."     

Q: Do you still enjoy book tours and signings?    

A: "I do. I get tired. You do 25 interviews in a one day, you fight not to lose your voice. But it's validation to meet these people. I am very fond of my fans and thank them for reading my books."      


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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Re-elected Obama looking for ‘Egypt of Asia’?

Posted: 07 Nov 2012 04:00 PM PST

NOV 8 — President Barack "Peace" — as no new wars in last four years — Obama may be less beholding to special interests during the second term. He will now want to leave a legacy behind, both domestically and on foreign policy. However, his legacy will now be held hostage to the court of public opinion.

The re-election of Obama, both on popular (50 per cent to 48 per cent) and electoral (303 to 206) votes, is a message sent by the American people to work smarter (not only harder), longer, faster, and with partners, to "fix" what is broken, "mend" what needs fixing, "push" forward what is working and a "probation" to try new initiatives.

The post-election comments for the peaceful president from world leaders, from secular to spiritual, have been positive, glowing, and extending an open hand to assist in the hard work ahead as all of us are in the same "boat" called humanity wanting dignity.

In the second term, Obama needs to focus on Asia, generally, before China's once-in-decade political make-over starts execution (no pun intended), and possibly, a leading Muslim country, specifically, as an example a country which closely represents US ethnic, religious, and cultural diversification and "tolerance."

Maybe it's time for the president and the US to find and get behind an "Egypt of Asia", as the oil and (perceived) regional influence of certain countries of recent past did not pan out as expected.

Omnipotence?

Will there be peace and stability in the Middle East within the next four years? It may be easier to have an Olympic gold medal winner in badminton from Malaysia than find the elusive peace in a region of piecemeal countries united and, yes, divided by tribalism.

The omnipotence of the US as the voice of reason and calming stability backed by her economic and military might has been downgraded (let's leave S&P out of the equation) by the misadventures of George "Bring it on" Bush and the systemic risk to global economy by the sub-prime fiasco (also under George Bush), and the corresponding rise of the BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China and newcomer South Africa. Clearly, the power has shifted away from the US. Where it has shifted to is another issue, as it's not debt battered and financially bleeding Europe.

Hotspot

The Arab Spring flushed out the regional diminishing US influence, including the unflinching support of entrenched poster child ally, Hosni Mubarak/Egypt, a benevolent dictator. 

However, the Middle East remains important mainly because of black gold, oil, and the havoc a price escalation can play on industries and capital markets in an already weakened global economy.

The Middle East also remains a region of "unknown knowns", composed of a complicated jigsaw puzzle of Egypt (controlled chaos), Libya (chaos), Lebanon (proxy chaos), Palestinian/Israel (two-state solution), Syria (civil war), Yemen (drones), Iran (nuclear), Al-Qaeda (stateless terrorism) and so on.

Although not mentioned on any geographical or topical defining map, Pakistan and Afghanistan are an extension of the region for the United States' earlier intervention and on-going challenges. To put it differently, "they broke it, and have to buy it," and with no return policy.

Thus, it will take more than four years of precision focus, shuttling negations, wisdom patience, printing press of money and, possibly, divine intervention to have an acceptable "normality" i.e. absence of conflict, not necessarily peace.

Expanding attention

The primary focus will continue on the Middle East, but, much like five-year business plans looking for new business opportunities in different geographies, the US needs to remove the "horse blinders" and see the Muslim world not as one, but as many countries with rich histories, cultures and influences. Thus, oil/gas reserves, military bases and large domestic population will continue to be important, but possibly not outcome determinative.

To make Obama's second term more interesting on foreign policy, vis-à-vis the 57-country Muslim world, selected Muslim countries need to "pitch" themselves as representative of democratic and religious principles (is this possible?). There are three Muslim countries in the G-20, Turkey, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia, and these are only a starting point.

Other countries worthy of consideration, based upon metrics-like population, GDP growth and 2020/2030 vision, capital markets, democratic principles, OIC influence, etc include Egypt, Pakistan, Nigeria and Malaysia. As mentioned above, the court of public opinion will also matter for Obama, hence, from the above-mentioned destinations, the American public has a "challenging" opinion about these countries, except one.

The Malaysian elections are around the corner next year, and the incumbent and opposition can expand their platform to pitch about Malaysia to both the White House and Congress.

Winning the Nobel Peace Prize early in his first term is a tough benchmark act to follow for the second term for any democratically elected leader. His second term may be an extension of hope that transforms to trust that brings change, hence, actually earning the Prize that he accepted in the first term.

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

The happy sad news

Posted: 07 Nov 2012 03:48 PM PST

NOV 8 — Can't be bothered to read or catch mainstream media's political coverage? Can't blame you, but I have to for work (Oh, the toil of the penitent man).

There is plenty out there, the news I mean, looking like it came from the left field of an unnamed solar system — where truth depends on if you can shave your armpits with your right leg.

There is no such thing as just reporting. It is all context-rich and there is only one underlying message, two actually: Barisan Nasional (BN) god sent; everything else evil and full of Ewoks.

Well, as one of the spawns of hell, do indulge me as I simplify some of the news you might be getting on your telly but well, does not make sense.

So here's the news, what should be on your radar. Why, course it is spin. So lay off the Ewoks for the remainder of this column.

Nazri "hums" along

I'll give you dessert first.

In what is the most ingenious reply to an accusation of improper conduct ever to be uttered by an Umno politician — even shoving aside the maestro Mahathir Mohamad, so it was quite special — Nazri Aziz says that he does not know anything about his son's relationship with another man because the minister claims he himself is not an incestuous homosexual.  

Though there are several enterprising "websites" unhindered by Malaysian firewalls arguing visually otherwise [N1], I am incredibly heartened to hear that the highly erratic minister is not a household predator.

Equally reassuring is that son Nedim's relationship with the man other than his father was also not sexual. I am happy to report this because I was not entirely sure what a "Hummer" was until I looked it up. My fear was that a "Hummer" was another nasty euphemism born in the arid and desolate sands of Iraq during Desert Storm I. Fortunately for the Malaysian people it is only an expensive vehicle most Malaysians need not know about since we folks can't afford it. [N2]

AES is not the new

Not since they closed the bar at Parliament have both government and opposition MPs drunk from the same tap.  

The Automated Enforcement System (AES) is firmly opposed by politicians who do not abhor votes. Because on this issue, the citizen actually does care.

The MPs are raising the exact same questions; like why are two companies profiting per summons issued, how come some hotspots seem to be entrapping drivers rather than encouraging better road etiquette and are the speed limits really in order and relevant.

The answers have been almost the same from proponents: Are you being lackadaisical about road accidents, the implementation of AES elsewhere has lowered road tragedies and back to how come you are comfortable with people dying on the road, they are dying man and some of them have pets who can't live in shelters if their master becomes a paraplegic.

I love the populist argument, it is one of those, "I am going to avoid dealing with the policy points you raise and keep pointing to the fact you don't have a heart".

Policymaking cannot just be about us against them, or even all or nothing.

Some of us have begun to ask, why is the government and its agencies unwilling to respond to the queries by tempering the policy to something more tolerable?

Some of us are looking where the smartphone app available to spot where the cameras are located.

Some of us are wondering if the system had a better name, more of us could accept it.

PKFZ

The only thing going for the whole PKFZ scandal is that it is in "Port Klang", which is incidentally the first two letters. I rarely meet adults in Malaysia, blue or white collar, struggling to comprehend that there is a place called Klang and within that place is an area with ports.

Mention the phrase "Free Trade Zone" and people start to phase out, and when you put the PK and the FZ together almost everyone is utterly befuddled.

Only two things stick with people, PKFZ was a project that ended up costing RM12.5 billion and that the regular rakyat never got anything out of it. It's like taking a million bags filled with RM12,500 each [N3] and chucking them into the deep sea as fair as the voters are concerned.

It went on and on, from one transport minister to another giving an account of how things were so sensible and reasonable over in Klang that people should commend those involved for saving billions of ringgit by only limiting the losses to the lower end of what could have been actually chucked to sea.

Eventually a few lads in the crowd picked up solar-powered complimentary calculators [N4], the kind you find in a night market, and worked out that there were not enough digit space in the machine for that figure.

So they decided rather than upgrade their calculator or use a PC, they'd just call the whole thing "too expensive to ignore and the situation had to be upgraded to a full-fledged scandal".

One transport minister chose not to play ball, and he since lost both his minister's post and as a bonus also his presidency of his party. But he is not the worst-placed ex-president of the MCA since the longest-serving one, Ling Liong Sik, is on trial for his role in the PKFZ scandal.

Do you know more about PKFZ now? Probably not, and I think the real strategy at play is to report sporadically about the scandal in the most unintelligible manner until wishes the matter went away to save them the headache.  

"Maid" our economy look bad

Malaysia may be the third largest economy in ASEAN, but the disparity of incomes is no more fearsome that everyone needs to serve the man with the ringgit for a pittance.

The maids have made up their mind on the Malaysian economy. Though there are those who say it is the Indonesian, and now the Filipino, government which is getting in the way of the maids pipeline, little is said about the fact that those wanting to work as domestic helpers — with any knowledge of wage rates for the work they do worldwide — don't fancy Malaysia anymore [N5].

Singaporeans are Malaysians with more mullah and better lifts. Sure, when they clean the outside of the windows from the 18th floor they have moments of concern and no time to fall down in laughter. But the money is far better than in Malaysia. Saudi, Bahrain, Hong Kong, Singapore and several others come ahead of our country.

Those advantages we have taken for granted are slipping, and those economies we head to as our holiday escapes are beginning to catch up, fast.

But if local wage rates are kept depressed and the rich-poor divide continues its march back to the age of Dickens, then the new reality would be local maids in local homes, just like how it is in Indonesia and the Philippines.

Don't get upset, at least it will keep the national unemployment rates low as low.

Worn out spinner

So that's some of the news you might need. Yeah, not cheerful, but at least you were not robbed during the time taken to read this column. Count your blessings and love your government, there is very little else to do in contemporary Malaysia, unless you want some trouble.  

Look at it as a 50-50, the news here is all about perspective. You might be sad all the time, but the elite are happy enough for the rest of us, they've taken our quota. So, it is actually happy sad news.

Life has these ironies. Like me going to court to settle my traffic violation only to find the country's main court complex is a chaotic site of rampant illegal parks. The magistrate was telling all of us we should respect traffic laws while outside everyone parked anywhere they fancied.

Happy sad news is the Malaysian way of saying news is not for everyone.  

Notes:

[N1] I'm told also that the videos argue even better.

[N2] At RM500,000, each BR1M household, which is more than half the households in the country, has to work 14 years — at RM3,000 or less monthly per home — to buy the Hummer.  

[N3] We could have gone with bags of peanuts rather than actual banknotes, storage space aside.

[N4] Granted abacuses would have been more dramatic.

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

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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Pekerja Lynas sambut keputusan mahkamah dengan linangan air mata gembira

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 12:32 AM PST

KUANTAN, 8 Nov — Tiada ungkapan yang mampu dilafazkan sebilangan besar pekerja kilang Lynas Advance Material Plant (Lynas), Gebeng dekat sini selain mengalirkan air mata gembira tanda kesyukuran selepas Mahkamah Tinggi memutuskan kilang tersebut dibenarkan beroperasi hari ini.

Hakim Datuk Mariana Yahya dalam keputusannya hari ini menolak permohonan injunksi interim ke atas Lesen Operasi Sementara (TOL) yang diberikan kepada Lynas sebelum ini, oleh tiga penduduk Kuantan sekaligus membolehkan Lynas memulakan operasinya setelah digantung sementara waktu ekoran injunksi berkenaan.

Kumpulan yang terdiri daripada kira-kira 500 orang itu berkumpul di perkarangan Kompleks Mahkamah Kuantan di sini sejak awal pagi dan laungan takbir bergema sejurus seorang wakil memberi perkhabaran gembira tersebut.

Suasana di kompleks tersebut menjadi sayu seketika apabila ada di kalangan mereka mula menangis dan manadah tangan berdoa tanda bersyukur di atas 'kemenangan' kecil tersebut.

Dengan memakai pakaian seragam berwarna kuning manakala penyokong pula memakai baju berwarna biru muda, mereka turut membawa kain rentang tertulis 'jangan kacau periuk nasi kami', 'siapa nak bagi anak kami makan', 'hentikan fitnah terhadap Lynas', 'saya memang sayang Lynas' dan 'Lynas Kuantan bakal Pusat Teknologi Hijau Negara'.

Keputusan itu bagaimana pun disambut dengan keadaan yang berbeza oleh pihak anti-Lynas yang hanya dianggarkan sekitar 200 orang sahaja hadir.

Kumpulan anti-Lynas seperti Save Malaysia Stop Lynas (SMSL) yang sebelum ini begitu ghairah hadir ke mahkamah bagi mengikuti kes berkenaan seperti tidak dapat menerima kenyataan apabila beredar meninggalkan mahkamah sebaik sahaja mengetahui permohonan mereka ditolak.

Dalam pada itu, Naib Presiden Lynas Corporation Datuk Marshal Ahmad berkata kepada pemberita, beliau bersyukur dengan keputusan mahkamah hari ini kerana kesusahan yang dialami oleh pihaknya sejak sekian lama berakhir.

"Kami sekarang akan menumpukan segala usaha untuk memulakan operasi kilang secepat mungkin kerana ia adalah pelaburan yang terbesar. Mudah-mudahan dengan keputusan ini pelabur-pelabur asing akan kembali yakin dan melabur di Malaysia yang kita kasihi," katanya.

Beliau juga berharap dengan keputusan itu segala tohmahan dan fitnah yang dilemparkan ke atas Lynas dapat dihentikan segera.

"Saya juga ingin menjemput semua pihak termasuk kumpulan anti-Lynas untuk datang sendiri ke kilang kami dan membawa pakar masing-masing supaya mendapat fakta yang betul," katanya.

Seorang pekerja, Muhammad Syafiq Sukri, 24, berkata kebenaran telah terbukti dengan keputusan mahkamah hari ini dan berharap yang menentang dapat berhenti daripada terus menabur fitnah ke atas 'periuk nasi' beliau dan rakan-rakan sekerja yang lain. — Bernama

Pas hanya retorik politik mengegakkan syiar islam

Posted: 08 Nov 2012 12:26 AM PST

PASIR MAS, 8 Nov — Kerajaan Kelantan pimpinan PAS yang dikatakan berteraskan kepada perjuangan Islam dilihat lebih kepada retorik politik dalam menegakkan syiar Islam dan membawa pembangunan kepada rakyat.

Timbalan Perdana Menteri Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin berkata walaupun negeri ini dipanggil Serambi Mekah dan PAS sudah 22 tahun memerintah negeri ini, masih banyak yang boleh dilakukan bagi tujuan tersebut tetapi tidak dilakukan oleh kerajaan negeri.

"Orang Kelantan boleh saksikan sendiri ia dibuat atau tidak, telah terbukti masih banyak yang boleh dilakukan di Kelantan tetapi tidak dilakukan oleh kerajaan negeri," katanya kepada pemberita selepas merasmikan Majlis Jamuan Rakyat 1Malaysia di Kolej Kemahiran Tinggi Mara, Lubok Jong di sini, hari ini.

Turut hadir Menteri Perdagangan Antarabangsa dan Industri Datuk Seri  Mustapa Mohamed, Timbalan Menteri Kewangan Datuk Dr Awang Adek Husin dan Ketua Umno Bahagian Rantau Panjang Datuk Abdullah Md Zin.

Muhyiddin yang juga Timbalan Presiden Umno berkata tempoh 22 tahun  memerintah negeri ini bukan suatu tempoh yang singkat tetapi tempoh yang  panjang itu sepatutnya diisi dengan pelbagai perkara untuk meningkatkan syiar  Islam dan kemajuan rakyat.

Beliau berkata usaha meningkatkan syiar Islam ini bukan sekadar  lambang tetapi perlu diterjemahkan dengan pelaksanaan program dan inisiatif  tertentu yang menunjukkan hakikat sebenar perjuangan dan ia mampu dirasai oleh rakyat.

Katanya manifestasi kesungguhan kerajaan Barisan Nasional (BN) meningkatkan syiar Islam dan membela nasib rakyat, memberi perubahan besar terhadap perkembangan Islam di negara ini serta taraf hidup rakyat yang lebih baik.

Katanya di samping kemajuan dalam bidang infrasruktur untuk kemudahan rakyat, kerajaan BN berjaya mengurangkan jumlah rakyat miskin melalui pelbagai program yang dilaksanakan.

"Apabila kita membuat perbandingan bukan dari segi politik sahaja tetapi rakyat hari ini hendak menilai sesuatu itu betul-betul diterjemahkan secara konkrit, rakyat nak rasa sendiri perubahan hidup," katanya.

Beliau mengajak rakyat Kelantan membuat perubahan dengan memberi mandat kepada BN untuk kembali memerintah negeri ini supaya apa yang tertinggal dalam tempoh 22 tahun itu dapat dilakukan oleh kerajaan BN yang berkeupayaan.

"Inilah (pilihan raya umum ke-13) peluang terbaik, 22 tahun bukan tempoh yang pendek. Saya di Johor menjadi Menteri Besar 9 tahun 6 bulan (13  Ogos 1986 hingga 6 Mei 1995), banyak benda boleh buat," katanya.     

Beliau berkata kerajaan BN serius untuk melakukan perubahan sebagaimana yang dikehendaki rakyat Kelantan termasuk menyelesaikan masalah bekalan air bersih yang berlarutan sekian lama, dan semua perkara itu akan dimasukkan dalam manifesto BN dalam PRU Ke-13 bagi negeri ini.

Mengenai projek pembangunan yang melibatkan kerajaan Kelantan dengan syarikat swasta yang mendapat teguran dalam Laporan Ketua Audit Negara 2011, Muhyiddin berkata kerajaan negeri perlu memastikan perjanjian yang dimeterai dipatuhi supaya kepentingan rakyat tidak terjejas.

Terdahulu semasa berucap, Muhyiddin mengingatkan Umno Kelantan supaya  sentiasa bersiap sedia untuk menghadapi PRU Ke-13, memperkukuhkan perpaduan, mendekati rakyat dan menyelesaikan masalah mereka. — Bernama

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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