Rabu, 5 Disember 2012

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Food


The wrong coffee, the right café

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 04:01 PM PST

AMSTERDAM, Dec 6 — Some cafés look like they've existed since forever, confident of its own place in their neighbourhood. Others look brand new, as though they had just sprung up overnight, bright and cheerful like a Willy Wonka-style, fun-filled fungus.

And there are those who manage the fine balance of being both established yet fresh — the sort of café you look forward to spending time in, whether for a few quick minutes before heading to the office in the morning or a leisurely weekend afternoon reading an engrossing book.

The café entrance in the Negen Straatjes neighbourhood. – Pictures by CK Lim

As I look outside the window at the narrow, centuries-worn buildings leaning against each other like old friends, the light drizzle adding to the gone-back-in-time feeling, I am grateful to be inside where we have our cups of coffee to warm. Amsterdam's an amazing city but seemingly prone to sudden, surprise showers, especially in autumn.

The interior of the café — Kaldi Koffie & Thee — is a soft contrast to the city outside with its canals and cobblestone walkways; here we are surrounded by an invigorating palette of orange and white, where the shiny stainless steel of moka pots and clean ceramic of coffee drippers give off a cool, modern feel. As though a nod to the season, there are maple leaves and pine cones scattered over the windowsill, and bottles of water holding gerberas in fall colours.

It's time for coffee (or as they say in Dutch, koffietijd) and here in Amsterdam there's really no bad time for it. While Kaldi Koffie & Thee prides itself on an equally decent selection of organic and fine teas, the coffee is why most are here. Certainly other customers at the tables around us are nursing their espressos and macchiatos.

Soraya Broekhuizen, our dark-tressed barista, tells us that café au lait is very popular in the Netherlands, only it is called koffie verkeerd (translated as "the wrong coffee"). Here it consists of equal parts coffee and milk. I tell Soraya my coffee is equal parts warmth and comfort, which makes her smile.

Koffie verkeerd (or "the wrong coffee") is actually café au lait.

Tucked away in a corner in the lively and fashionable Negen Straatjes neighbourhood, Kaldi Koffie & Thee gets its fair share of local actors, architects and artists dropping by for their daily shot of caffeine. It helps being from out of town, then: we are no longer shamelessly celebrity-spotting as we are merely people-watching. Soraya tells us the café gets all sorts but it's hard to be in fan-girl awe when the customers end up becoming regulars and even friends in some cases.

We know the feeling.

The barista Soraya Broekhuizen.

Like a scene out of the TV series "Cheers" (I wonder how many of us are old enough to remember?), there's nothing quite like walking into a café and have the barista or siphonist (or whatever café folks call themselves these days) ask you if you've finished your long work project yet or if you've returned from a holiday because you're more tanned than usual.

Why does this matter?

Given the large number of cafés we visit on a regular basis, not to mention the quantity of coffee we consume, wouldn't it be better if we kept café-hopping?

It is fun, I have to admit; we can get caught up in our growing appreciation for the variety of ways a café can be designed (as many as there are owners, I suspect, all different and eccentric in their own fashion), the environment or atmosphere they evoke (from cosy and quiet to crowded and electric), and the care some take in brewing their coffee and tea for customers.

Coffee and sanctuary.

There is a sense of pride.

But there is a sense of home too, for their faithful and frequent visitors. In fact, one is no longer a visitor, but part of the family.

This is why we love cafés — they are spaces where we can stop by for a while, for coffee and sanctuary, and share our café  stories. There is a café out there that is just right for every one of us.

I look outside the window again. The rain has stopped and as we say goodbye to Soraya and step outside into a beautiful autumnal morning, we count our blessings. May we always have good coffee – and great cafés in which to have our coffee.

The colours of autumn.

Kaldi Koffie & Thee

Herengracht 300, 1016 CD Amsterdam, Netherlands

Tel: (+31) 20 428 6854

Website: http://www.kaldi.nl

* Kenny can't survive without coffee (or would like to believe so). Read more of his caffeinated musings at http://lifeforbeginners.com

Kaldi Koffie & Thee: Coffee & Tea by Kaldi.



Alain Ducasse hosts chef and culinary ally Yoshihiro Murata

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 05:42 AM PST

Yoshihiro Murata and Alain Ducasse in the kitchens of the Hotel Plaza Athénée. — Pic by Vivian Song

PARIS, Dec 5 — A dish of silken tofu arrives in a hollowed out yuzu cup, glazed with an earthy layer of miso and spiked with the delicate acidity of the Japanese citrus fruit. The appetizer is just as advertised: tofu au yuzu et miso. Minimal manipulation, easily recognizable.

It's the kind of cookery championed by French chef titan Alain Ducasse, and the reason why he invited the author of the dish, Japanese chef Yoshihiro Murata to finish off his special invitation luncheon series, "Essential Encounters" at the iconic Hôtel Plaza Athénée in Paris Tuesday.

Murata is one of four international chefs who were cherry-picked by Ducasse to cater a gourmet luncheon over the year, a meal that was to embody his own culinary philosophy, one that calls for simple, honest cooking and relinquishes the spotlight back to the ingredients - and away from the chef.

When introducing Murata to his guests, Ducasse describes the chef — and one of his oldest friends — as the biggest champion and ambassador of traditional, Japanese cuisine both in Kyoto and for the outside world.

Indeed, Murata's influence in the international culinary landscape is undeniable. He's mentored some of the hottest young chefs today including Heston Blumenthal and René Redzepi in his triple Michelin-starred Kyoto restaurant Kikunoi.

Spanish chef Ferran Adrià, whose Catalan restaurant El Bulli (now shuttered) has been called the best in the world five times by Restaurant magazine, has likewise been vocal about his admiration for the chef and acknowledged Murata's influence in his own avant-garde cuisine.

In an interview with Murata before the luncheon, the chef expresses his disbelief at the fact that he's been invited to cook in Ducasse's restaurant, more than 40 years after arriving in France as a young, chef apprentice when few were familiar with Japan at all.

Back then, Japanese cuisine was virtually unknown among the French and Europeans at large. But it was precisely this realization that prompted the chef to derail his plans of becoming a master chef of French cuisine, and pursue the mastery of his own culinary heritage instead, he said.

In the end, despite his decision to cook Japanese fare, Murata says that French and Japanese cuisines aren't that different, a commonality that could explain for instance, the wild popularity of sushi restaurants in Paris which now outnumber pizza joints.

According to Ducasse, there is no other country in the world that places the same level of importance on their culinary history, as Japan.

"They share the same sense of ceremony with food," he said. "Historically and culturally, they are the closest with us."

Like the ritualistic French meal, where the choice of tableware, glasses and cutlery are of importance, Ducasse points out that harmony, balance, environment and esthetics play an equally important part in the overall dining experience in Japan as well.

Perhaps the best dish to embody this culinary and diplomatic alliance from Tuesday's luncheon?

A traditional Japanese soup or bouillon called an 'owan' with lily bulbs, quail, foie gras and black truffle. — AFP-Relaxnews


Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Formula One set for 20 races in 2013

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 07:06 AM PST

LONDON, Dec 5 — Formula One could have 20 races again next season after the sport's governing body said today it had pencilled in an unspecified European race to make up for a postponed grand prix in New Jersey.

The International Automobile Federation (FIA) said in a statement that the German Grand Prix had been moved from July 14 to July 7, with July 21 now "reserved for another F1 European event" subject to approval of national bodies.

That date would be back-to-back with Hungary on July 28 while Germany would follow on immediately from the British Grand Prix at Silverstone on June 30, according to the previous provisional calendar.

Istanbul, where the FIA is currently meeting, would be one likely option, with renewed talk in recent days of the Turkish Grand Prix making a return to the calendar after being dropped this year.

France, which has returned to the frame with either its Magny-Cours circuit or Le Castellet in the south, could be another possibility.

Formula One had a record 20 races this season but the absence of New Jersey, which had been due to make its debut with a race on June 16 while Valencia dropped off the list, had reduced that to 19. — Reuters

Rolex to become official F1 timekeeper

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 05:15 AM PST

LONDON, Dec 5 — Rolex will be Formula One's official timekeeper and timepiece from next season after agreeing to a global partnership, the Swiss luxury watch brand announced today.

"This partnership is something that many people interested in Formula One will have been waiting for and should rightly be excited about," said the sport's commercial supremo Bernie Ecclestone in a statement.

As part of the deal, the Rolex logo will be positioned around grand prix circuits and at certain corners during races, with the Swiss company saying its presence would develop over coming seasons.

South Korean elecronics group LG, which signed a five-year deal in 2008 to be the official data processor, have had their branding on timekeeping systems in recent seasons.

Swiss brand Hublot has been Formula One's official watchmaker, with a black-eyed Ecclestone famously appearing in an advert for the brand after he had his watch stolen in a mugging in London in 2010. — Reuters

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Features

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Guilt or gratitude? Tales of the holiday tip

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 05:52 AM PST

Tipping someone like your doorman is not compulsory but it is a nice way to show your respect and appreciation financially for a job well done. — Reuters pic

NEW YORK, Dec 5 — After seven years as a New York City hotel concierge and 10 years running a concierge firm, Michael Fazio certainly has his opinions on how to appropriately tip during the holidays. But if you think he recommends playing Santa Claus with every service employee who crosses your path, guess again. (Neither does he espouse a Scrooge philosophy.)

As you come to grips with how much to tip people for the holidays, your own finances should be the main consideration. To keep control of spending and give appropriate gifts to the right people in your life, you need to plan ahead.

Fazio suggests making a tipping budget first, just as with any line item in your family finances. "Ask yourself if you have US$500 (RM15,200) or US$5,000, and work backward from there," he says. He suggests applying a rule of thumb based on tipping tiers rather than throwing money around willy-nilly: US$20 gets a smile, US$100 gets somebody's attention, and US$200 gets what he calls "insurance."

That last category is for people who interact with your most valuable assets. "I love the guys in my garage, and they park my car upstairs in a very good spot. I don't want anyone who has access to a US$50,000 piece of my equipment to be angry at me," Fazio says.

Guilt or gratitude?

The one thing Fazio's formula does not take into account is the quality of service he received over the past year. That is typical, says Holona Ochs, a political scientist at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

As co-author on a book about gratuity giving, Ochs interviewed postal workers, bartenders, strippers and even prostitutes — more than 425 tip-earners in 50 occupational categories — to get their views on tipping and compensation. "Tips are generally a weak signal of quality of service," Ochs says. "People appear to tip rather for social and emotional reasons, because we care about how others perceive us."

If the amount you tip is aligned with your emotions, you could end up spending out of control, especially on tips for personal service providers like nannies, housekeepers and dog walkers. Looking for a good amount? Tip them up to one week's salary, Ochs says.

Try not to be ruled by guilt, adds Fazio. "We should all treat each other pretty nicely, so it's great that the doorman is nice," he says. "But is he proud of his profession? Does he take pride in his service? Does he look engaged? Being nice is just one ingredient of many, and a tip is showing respect and appreciation financially for a job well done."

That view resonates with Jason Haber, the CEO of Rubicon Property, a real estate firm in New York City. "Doormen, porters and maintenance staff deserve a generous hand, but I think it's important to ask friends and neighbours what they give, and then decide accordingly," Haber says. "Every building has their own internal protocols and customs."

Even so, an element of insurance tipping comes into play: "There are many stories of how failure to tip resulted in a staff that became less attentive and helpful in the following year," Haber says.

Don't try to keep up

Holiday tipping isn't a contest, either. "It is more important to maintain your financial security than to out-tip the Joneses or blindly follow a neighbour or relative's advice," says Kevin Gallegos, a Phoenix, Arizona-based vice president of operations with the Freedom Financial Network, a consumer debt resolution service provider.

"Tips can add up, so if a cash tip is outside your budget, take the gift route or say thank you with a batch of cookies. The most important element is to let your caregivers know you appreciate their work all year round."

Some holiday tips work out better if you pool resources. Colleen Rickenbacher, an etiquette expert and author of "Be On Your Best Business Behavior," suggests that parents at a school organize to give one nice gift to a teacher at the holidays. Cold cash is out. "You don't want to look like your children are bribing them," Rickenbacher says. But gift cards can work. Check with your school's policies to see what's permissible.

How about cash for the trash man? Why not, Rickenbacher says: "If they work for a privately-owned company, then tip US$10 to US$20 for each trash collector that may service you throughout the year."

Technically speaking, you're not supposed to tip a US Postal Service mail carrier, but no one's likely to complain if you adhere to the government's "20/50 rule," which limits single gifts to US$20 and total gifts in a calendar year to US$50.

And while newspaper carriers represent the last heralds of print news in an electronic age, enough of them remain to make a holiday stocking stuffer worth pondering. Rickenbacher suggests between US$10 (for Sunday subscriptions) to US$25 (weekly subscriptions) for your local paper person, adding that you should include a full name and address in the tip card so that they know who's delivering them some good news.

As for Fazio, he's never met his newspaper delivery woman, which would normally rule her out on his list. But he has reconsidered her contribution to his daily life.

"She has to get up at the crack of dawn to get my paper," Fazio notes. "I need that person, I appreciate what they do, and I wouldn't want to wake up at 3 a.m. to get my own newspaper." — Reuters

After parent’s cancer death, teens twice as likely to self-injure

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 03:15 AM PST

A study finds that teens who have lost a parent to cancer are twice as likely as those who have not to cut or burn themselves. — AFP pic

STOCKHOLM, Dec 5 — Teens who have lost a parent to cancer are twice as likely as those who have not to cut or burn themselves, according to a new Swedish study.

About 20 per cent of those with one surviving parent said they hurt themselves compared with about 10 per cent of teens with both parents.

"We were very surprised to find that so many did it," said lead researcher Tove Grenklo, a behavioral scientist at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm.

Earlier research showed that children who lost a parent were more likely to have psychiatric problems, depression, drug and alcohol abuse and anxiety. Grenklo and her colleagues wanted to see if they also were more likely to hurt themselves.

For the study, which was published in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, they used Sweden's national death databases to find 851 teens who lost one of their parents to cancer between 2000 and 2003, when they were between 13 and 16, and 451 who had not.

"This study is one of the first to establish that (losing a parent to cancer) might be a unique risk factor for this behaviour," said Stephen Lewis, who was not involved with the new study but has studied self-injury at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada.

The researchers said teens may injure themselves after a parent's death because of increased emotional stress and less parental attention but communication can help prevent the behaviour. "Children need to know the facts of what happened and why," said Grenklo. "And that it's OK to be sad and talk about the diseased parent." — Reuters

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views


37,947 prisoners at 43 prisons nationwide

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 07:54 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 5 – A total of 37,947 people are currently detained at 43 prisons nationwide as of November this year, the Dewan Negara was told today.

Deputy Home Minister Datuk Lee Chee Leong said the number was 25.2 per cent below the actual capacity of the prisons concerned.

He said 77 per cent or 29,215 of the prisoners were convicts, while the remaining were remand prisoners.

"The total capacity of the 43 prisons is 50,700. Only four prisons – Kajang, Tawau, Sandakan and Kota Kinabalu – are full," he said in response to a question from Senator Chiew Lian Keng. – Bernama

Postmen to work five-day week from Jan 1

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 07:49 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 5 – Some 8,500 postmen nationwide will work a five-day week from Jan 1 next year compared to the six working days presently.

Information Communications and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim said the postmen are part of 16,500 employees of Pos Malaysia Berhad (Pos Malaysia) who deserve to enjoy the new working hours.

However, for postmen in Sabah and Sarawak, the new working hours would only be effective on Feb 1 as Pos Malaysia requires more time to make the adjustment.

"For these two states (Sabah and Sarawak) Pos Malaysia will need four weeks more than peninsula to prepare for operation and administration and taking into account the geography," he told reporters after a 'Ramah Mesra' programme with representatives of Pos Malaysia Workers Union here, today.

Rais said employees who need to work on weekends especially, in shopping malls could claim for reasonable overtime. – Bernama

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Netflix stock climbs on Disney film deal

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 05:17 AM PST

SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 5 — Netflix shares jumped Tuesday with word that the online television service struck an exclusive deal to stream live-action animated feature films from The Walt Disney Studios.

"It's a bold leap forward for Internet television and we are incredibly pleased and proud this iconic family brand is teaming with Netflix to make this happen," said Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos.

"Disney and Netflix have shared a long and mutually beneficial relationship and this deal will bring to our subscribers, in the first pay TV window, some of the highest-quality, most imaginative family films being made today."

Netflix shares were up more than 10 per cent to US$83.92 (RM255.22) on the news.

Beginning in 2016, theatrically released films from Disney and subsidiaries including Pixar Animation Studios will be instantly available for viewing on-demand for a price at Netflix, according to the companies.

"We are thrilled to take our highly valued relationship with Netflix to the next level by adding Disney's premier films to their programming line-up," Disney-ABC Domestic Television president Janice Marinelli said in a release.

Disney and Netflix said they reached a separate agreement to bring an archive of classic films such as "Dumbo" and "Alice in Wonderland" to US members of the California-based online video streaming service.

Financial terms of the agreements were not disclosed. — AFP-Relaxnews

Latest James Bond movie breaks UK box office record

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 03:07 AM PST

Spanish actor Javier Bardem, actress Berenice Marlohe, actor Daniel Craig and director Sam Mendes pose for photographers during a photocall for the film "Skyfall" in Paris, October 24, 2012. — Reuters pic

LONDON, Dec 5 — "Skyfall", the 23rd official James Bond movie, has become the most successful film in British box office history, earning 94.3 million pounds ($152 million), its producers said on Wednesday.

The tally, earned over 40 days, surpasses the previous record of 94.0 million pounds set by 2009 3D adventure film "Avatar" over its 11 month run in UK cinemas, although the figures do not take inflation into account.

Skyfall, which has been well received by critics, stars Daniel Craig in his third outing as 007, and is directed by Sam Mendes.

In it Bond and British spymaster M, played by Judi Dench, are pitted against technological wizard Silva (Javier Bardem) who is bent on revenge.

"We are very proud of this film and thank everybody, especially Daniel Craig and Sam Mendes, who have contributed to its success," said co-producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli in a statement.

Globally, Skyfall has some way to go to match Avatar. It has earned $870 million in ticket sales around the world, according to movie tracking site Boxofficemojo.com, compared with Avatar's record $2.8 billion.

According to the same website, Avatar's adjusted box office total comes in at 14th in cinema history, with the 1939 classic "Gone With the Wind" in pole position. — Reuters

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Books

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Books


Final edition of British comic The Dandy after 75 years

Posted: 04 Dec 2012 07:14 PM PST

LONDON, Dec 5 — Britain's longest-running comic The Dandy produced its final print edition on its 75th anniversary on Tuesday and will relaunch as a purely online publication.

In its 1950s heyday, The Dandy, featuring Desperate Dan, Bananaman and Korky the Cat, sold two million copies a week, but circulation has dwindled and is now around 8,000.

Publisher DC Thomson admits the move online is a leap into the unknown. The Dandy will be available to download and as a smartphone and tablet application.

The final printed edition features a cameo by Beatles star Paul McCartney, who said in 1963 it was his ambition to appear in the comic, and a pull-out of the first issue from December 4, 1937.

The website has new animated strips, featuring voiceovers and sound effects. Users will also be able to play interactive games and watch videos.

While access to the website is free, online issues are priced at £1.49 (RM7.31) each, with a yearly subscription costing £29.99.

"I appreciate it's almost a deliberately naive venture into the unknown for a publisher that's been cutting down trees for 75 years, squishing them flat and smearing ink all over them," said D.C. Thompson chief executive Ellis Watson.

"We're not super-slick, we're not Silicon Valley, but what we are is some pretty talented animators and storytellers that are really excited about seeing if we can introduce these wonderful characters to another couple of generations." — AFP/Relaxnews 


McDonald’s seeks place in Australian dictionary

Posted: 04 Dec 2012 07:10 PM PST

SYDNEY, Dec 5 — The Australian arm of McDonald's has urged the national Macquarie Dictionary to include "Macca's" — the brand's local nickname — in its next edition.

The hamburger giant said Macca's was second only to "footy" among recognisable words in local slang, according to a branding survey it commissioned that found 55 per cent of Australians referred to the golden arches in the abbreviated form.

"The research findings have shown that Macca's is Australia's favourite brand nickname and that half of the population use the iconic Australianism," said McDonald's Australia's chief marketing officer Mark Lollback.

"Knowing this, we think it's time that Macquarie Dictionary Publishers added our moniker to their dictionary of Australian English."

Lollback said Australia was the only country in the world that referred to McDonald's as Macca's and the abbreviation "reflects our place in the Australian community", which has a penchant for jocular nicknames.

The restaurant has formally submitted the word to the Macquarie Dictionary for consideration in their 2012 update and said it hoped to hear back in the next few weeks.

The Macquarie Dictionary accepts submissions for new words and phrases and runs an annual word of the year poll on new inclusions.

Last year's addition was burqini, a swimsuit for Muslim women, with the popular vote going to fracking — shorthand for hydraulic fracturing, a process using chemicals and water to split rock-beds to extract gas or oil. — AFP/Relaxnews 


Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa


Jenain minta maaf kepada keluarga Aminulrasyid

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 02:35 AM PST

SHAH ALAM, 5 Dis — Walaupun Mahkamah Tinggi di sini hari ini membebaskan beliau daripada tuduhan menyebabkan kematian Aminulrasyid Amzah, dua tahun lepas, Koperal Jenain Subi tetap merendah diri memohon maaf kepada keluarga remaja lelaki itu.

"Saya minta maaf kepada keluarga Aminulrasyid atas apa yang berlaku," katanya ketika ditemui pemberita di luar mahkamah. Jenain yang ditemani peguam belanya, M.Athimulan, Salim Bashir dan Halim Ashgar Mohd Hilmi berkata keputusan mahkamah juga telah membuktikan bahawa beliau tidak bersalah.

"Alhamdulillah...semua ini kuasa Tuhan dan selama ini saya berserah kepadaNya. Hari ini telah terbukti siapa salah dan siapa tidak salah dan akhirnya saya mendapat keadilan yang sewajarnya," katanya yang tidak dapat menahan tangisan.

Terdahulu, Hakim Datuk Abdul Rahman Sebli membuat keputusan membebaskan Jenain daripada tuduhan selepas menerima rayuan anggota polis itu terhadap sabitan dan hukuman penjara lima tahun yang dijatuhkan ke atasnya oleh Mahkamah Sesyen di sini pada September tahun lepas.

Sejurus hakim membacakan keputusannya, Jenain yang memakai kemeja dan berkopiah putih mengalirkan air mata dan tersenyum. Isteri serta seorang anak perempuannya yang berada di galeri awam turut menangis kegembiraan.

Beliau yang pernah bertugas sebagai polis mahkamah turut menerima ucapan tahniah daripada beberapa anggota polis yang hadir memberikan sokongan moral. Jenain, 49, yang ketika kejadian bertugas di Unit Kereta Peronda, Ibu Pejabat Polis Daerah Shah Alam, didakwa menyebabkan kematian Aminulrasyid, 15, antara 1.10 pagi dan 2 pagi, 26 April 2010 di Jalan Tarian 11/2, Seksyen 11 di sini.

Pertuduhan mengikut Seksyen 304(a) Kanun Keseksaan itu memperuntukkan hukuman penjara sehingga 30 tahun dan boleh dikenakan denda. Aminulrasyid disahkan meninggal dunia akibat luka tembakan di kepala.

Ditanya sama ada beliau masih ingin meneruskan khidmat dalam pasukan polis, Jenain yang kini digantung tugas berkata kejadian itu tidak mematahkan semangatnya untuk terus berkhidmat sebagai anggota polis.

"Saya tetap akan teruskan perjuangan dan berkhidmat untuk pasukan polis serta kerajaan," kata bapa kepada empat orang anak yang telah berkhidmat selama 25 tahun dalam pasukan polis.

Sementara itu, ibu Aminulrasyid, Norsiah Mohamad, 62, berkata keluarganya tidak berpuas hati terhadap keputusan Mahkamah Tinggi yang membebaskan Jenain daripada tuduhan menyebabkan kematian anaknya.

Beliau berkata keluarganya akan berbincang dengan peguam untuk membuat semakan terhadap keputusan itu.

"Sudahlah keputusan awal ke atas tertuduh sebelum ini hanya menjatuhkan hukuman penjara lima tahun dan kali ini dalam keputusan rayuan tertuduh dibebas daripada kesalahan itu.

"Saya sebagai seorang ibu mahukan hukuman setimpal dikenakan terhadap tertuduh kerana anak saya bukan penjenayah tetapi hanya tidak memiliki lesen memandu semasa kejadian berlaku," katanya ketika ditemui pemberita di rumahnya di Seksyen 11 di sini hari ini.

Norsiah berkata beliau hanya mengetahui mengenai keputusan pembebasan Jenain selepas dihubungi anak sulungnya, Nor Azura, 42, yang membaca berita di Internet.

Beliau berkata keluarganya tidak dapat hadir di mahkamah untuk mendengar keputusan kerana semua anaknya sibuk bekerja dan hanya mampu berdoa di rumah supaya anggota polis itu dijatuhi hukuman setimpal.

"Bagaimanapun saya amat terkejut dan terkilan dengan keputusan ini. Saya juga rasa sangat sedih kerana kematian anak saya seolah-olah tidak mendapat pembelaan sewajarnya," katanya. — Bernama

LFL bantah mahkamah bebas Jenain, gesa A-G rayu keputusan

Posted: 05 Dec 2012 02:07 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 5 Dis — Keputusan mahkamah membebaskan Korporal Jenain Subi daripada tuduhan menyebabkan kematian remaja lelaki berumur 15 tahun, Aminulrasyid Amzah dibantah oleh kumpulan "Lawyers for Liberty (LFL)", malah menggesa Peguam Negara (A-G) supaya merayu semula keputusan tersebut atas alasan wujudnya kelemahan pihak berkuasa dalam menguruskan kes tersebut.

LFL menegaskan, terdapat beberapa perkara dalam penyiasatan tersebut mewujudkan keraguan seperti 21 das tembakan dilepaskan untuk menghentikan kereta Proton Iswara yang dipandu Aminulrasyid, dan juga masih lagi tiada penjelasan berkenaan parang yang dikatakan dijumpai di dalam kereta yang dipandu kanak-kanak 15 tahun itu.

"Bagaimana seseorang itu boleh melepaskan 21 das tembakan hanya untuk menghentikan kereta tanpa mengetahui ia akan menyebabkan kematian ... malah, ia turut diakui Junain ketika perbicaraan di mahkamah.

"Kemudian, pihak pendakwaan juga mempunyai saksi keseluruhan insiden tersebut, Azamuddin yang juga bersama Aminulrasyid ketika kejadian.

"Ketua Polis Selangor, Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar yang kini merupakan Timbalan Ketua Polis Negara juga tidak memberikan penjelasan berkenaan parang yang dikatakan ditemui di dalam kereta berkenaan," tegas Penasihat LFL, Eric Paulsen.

Paulsen melihat keseluruhan proses perbicaraan kes itu tidak diurus dengan baik dan menunjukkan ada cubaan pihak polis untuk melindungi kes tersebut.

Justeru itu, LFL menggesa campurtangan A-G untuk merayu keputusan kes tersebut, dan membentuk IPCMC, serta undang-undang pihak berkuasa termasuk prosedur operasi standard dikemukakan kepada umum.

"Termasuklah Perintah Arahan Tetap Ketua pada garis panduan polis mengenai pelepasan senjata dan penahanan dan soal siasat," katanya.

Mahkamah Tinggi hari ini membebaskan Jenain daripada tuduhan menyebabkan kematian Aminulrasyid Amzah, dua tahun lepas setelah hakim Datuk Abdul Rahman Sebi memutuskan menerima rayuan Jenain, 49, terhadap sabitan dan hukuman penjara lima tahun yang dijatuhkan ke atasnya oleh Mahkamah Sesyen di sini pada September tahun lepas.

Dalam penghakimannya, Abdul Rahman berpuas hati anggota polis itu melepaskan tembakan hanya untuk memberhentikan kereta proton Iswara dipandu Aminulrasyid dan bukan dengan niat untuk membunuh remaja lelaki itu.

Jenain didakwa mengikut Seksyen 304(a) Kanun Keseksaan yang memperuntukkan hukuman penjara maksimum 30 tahun.

Abdul Rahman juga berkata tiada kes prima facie dibuktikan ke atas Jenain dan anggota polis itu tidak sepatutnya dipanggil membela diri.

Pada 13 Sept tahun lepas, Hakim Latifah Mohd Tahar menjatuhkan hukuman penjara lima tahun selepas mendapati Jenain bersalah melakukan kesalahan itu.

Dia didakwa melakukan kesalahan itu di Jalan Tarian 11/2, Seksyen 11, di sini antara 1.10 pagi dan 2 pagi pada 26 April 2010.

Jenain didakwa mengikut Seksyen 304(a) Kanun Keseksaan yang memperuntukkan hukuman penjara maksimum 30 tahun dan denda jika sabit kesalahan.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


On Sabah’s ‘racism’

Posted: 04 Dec 2012 06:02 PM PST

DEC 5 ― "So it strikes me to ask, is Sabah as racism-free as it seems?" That's what a LoyarBurok columnist asked, after a (brief) visit to Sabah and noting the distaste many locals have towards illegal immigrants.

The first problem I have is with the notion of Sabah being "racism-free." No place in the world is free from racism, unless said place is filled with people of the same race. Even then, we human beings will find other reasons to oppress our fellows. Because we can.

Sabah has a higher degree of tolerance. A higher tolerance of other religions and more widespread acceptance of intermarriage among the races sets us apart from most states in the Peninsula but we never pretended that we are "racism-free."

I have relatives who are racists. Which makes things slightly tricky because I happen to be a "mongrel" with Dusun and Bajau blood and have ancestors from China and Pakistan.

So that means I hear about the "lazy, stupid" Dusuns, the "bloodthirsty, manic" Bajaus, the "miserly, selfish" Chinese and the "untrustworthy" Pakistanis from my own family.

If all their stories were true, by virtue of my mixed race I am destined for infamy or, at the very least, a long prison sentence.

Despite our differences, what sets Sabah apart is that the races just get along better.

The point is that racial stereotypes are common everywhere, even in Sabah. But the LoyarBurok columnist chose to harp on local Sabahan's attitudes towards illegal immigrants from the Philippines and Indonesia.

My god, man, do you expect us Sabahans to embrace them as brothers? Roll out the red carpet? Have feasts for them?

The ugly truth is most Sabahans don't want them around.

PBS head Tan Sri Joseph Pairin Kitingan is but one of many Sabah politicians who have called on the mainland to address the problem of illegal immigrants who are frankly unwelcome in the state.

It's unfair that many Sabahans see illegals as criminals and parasites, when some people are genuinely fleeing harsh conditions at home. But the reality is that many illegals do turn to crime.

There are areas in Kota Kinabalu that are "black areas" controlled by illegals, where locals fear to tread. Even our local law enforcement is forced to turn a blind eye. Some due to lack of manpower, some because they're paid off by the illegals.

Many Sabahans are afraid of illegals. They have good cause to be. My neighbourhood doctor was killed with parangs by Indonesians. Two-thirds of the women I know, including myself, have been molested by illegals.

Just behind my house, a neighbour started an illegal immigrant-staffed brothel and my family had to put up with the circus of whores and their seedy clientele, literally in my own backyard. 

My stories are just anecdotes, some of you will scoff. But my "anecdotes" are the reality that non-Sabahans will not be able to appreciate.

Then we have people like Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad who say that we should just give illegals citizenship, no matter what Sabahans have to say about the matter.

So we blithely give these 3.2 million (as of 2010 ) people citizenship? Really, Dr Mahathir?

Another truth is, as my mother says, that we may despise them but we also need them. Sabah's backward economy is dependent on cheap labour. So much so that locals are forced to go to the Peninsula to seek better-paying job opportunities.

The illegals drive the buses. They monopolise the cheap boat services to the islands. They are the ones manning the stalls at the Filipino Market. Some call them industrious, some call them opportunistic. Yet they're here and now they just won't leave.

Is it really racism to be unhappy that foreigners come onto your land, monopolise your commerce, threaten your feeling of safety while you are also powerless to get rid of them?

I guess Sabahans know too well what the Orang Asli must feel.

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

The case for decentralisation

Posted: 04 Dec 2012 03:38 PM PST

DEC 5 ― The official name of our country ― the Federation of Malaysia ― denotes that we are a federation, a political entity that is typically constituted by a union of partially autonomous or self-governing states united under the umbrella of a central government.

A federation is also often defined in contrast to another political structure ― the unitary state. In such a system, the state is governed as a single, politically-contiguous unit with the central government as the supreme arbiter of power.

As opposed to a federation, in which the division of power is constitutionally entrenched, subnational authorities within a unitary state can only exercise power that is delegated (and which can be abrogated) by the central government.

In the case of Malaysia, though we are in theory and structure a federation, we are in practice more akin to a unitary state, with power over areas such as utilities, public transport, public housing, social welfare, education and even religion being regulated and controlled by the central government. This has led a few political observers to somewhat oxymoronically label our country a "centralised federation."

I would go one step further to say that not only are we a centralised federation, but in fact a "super-centralised" one. This is because even within the federal government, power has been increasingly consolidated under one office ― the prime minister's.

For example, the federal budget for 2013 reveals an allocation of RM14.6 billion (nearly RM18 billion if every commission or department is included) for the Prime Minister's Department, while our country's most developed state, Selangor, recently announced a total state budget of RM1.6 billion for 2013. In other words, the budget for the Prime Minister's Department alone is big enough to run nine Selangors or 13 Penangs (RM1.1 billion budget for 2013).

This trend has been on an incline. Five years ago, in 2008, the prime minister (then a different one) had a much smaller budget at RM6.9 billion. In the course of one term alone, the figure has doubled.

In terms of staffing numbers, it was last reported in 2010 that the Bangunan Perdana Putra employed 43,544 people. In contrast, US President Barack Obama runs the most powerful office in the world with a whopping 468 staffers in the White House (as of 2012).

This irrationally disproportionate allocation of resources is the result of an increasing super-centralisation of power. Today, public transport is no longer run by the Transport Ministry but in fact by the Land Public Transport Commission (SPAD) which falls under the purview of the Prime Minister's Department.

The same goes for public housing which is now spearheaded by Perumahan 1 Malaysia (PR1MA), another Prime Minister's Department agency, even though we have a Housing and Local Government Ministry.

Even our national early child care and education programme is implemented by the Prime Minister's Department and not, as one would think, the Women, Family and Community Development Ministry (although technically they now share the same minister).

In total, there at least 52 agencies under the Prime Minister's Department, including the Attorney-General's Chambers, the Election Commission, the Education Service Commission, the Judicial Appointments Commission, the Department of Statistics, the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, and even Parliament. And this list does not even include government-linked companies directly controlled by the prime minister.

Therefore, to say that we need to decentralise our system of governance is to make a gross understatement. Not only is it utterly inefficient for the central government to manage what are essentially local services such as public transport, waste management, welfare, housing and some would say even education and healthcare, but what's worse, the last few years have seen the systematic emasculation of many key functions of various federal ministries through a sinister usurpation of powers by the super-ministry known as the Prime Minister's Department. Let us also not forget that the current prime minister also concurrently holds the portfolios of Finance as well as Women, Family and Community Development.

Clearly, power (both legal and fiscal) needs to be rationally dispersed, not only within Putrajaya but more importantly to the state and local levels where appropriate. Legal, political, fiscal and administrative decentralisation is needed to ensure operational efficiency as well as to prevent the dangerous concentration of power at the centre.

At the same time, decentralisation will also better fulfil the democratic rights of the people by empowering their state and local authorities. In the current system, state governments are helpless in so many regards, as not only are they starved of financial resources (in 2011, Penang received only RM152 million in total federal grants despite contributing billions in tax revenue), it is also beyond the powers of a state government to make simple improvements in areas such as public transport and education.

It also doesn't help when most development grants are disbursed directly to federal agencies at the state level instead of to the state government. In some cases, such grants are arbitrarily distributed along political considerations.

For example, the heritage conservation grant for Penang is managed by a federal government entity while the same grant for Malacca is given directly to the federal-friendly state government. And to top it off, state governments can only borrow money with federal approval. Hence, Sarawak is able to raise billions while Penang can only watch in frustration.

Finally, decentralisation will also foster competition at subnational level. To illustrate this point, I like to use the Indonesian example. After nearly half a century of authoritarian dominance, the fall of Suharto in 1998 led to a sudden dispersal of authority in what is now termed as "big bang decentralisation."

The devolution process in Indonesia was a furious one, involving the abrupt transfer of substantial resources and decision-making responsibility from an omnipotent central government to elected authorities at provincial, regional and city levels.

What followed, besides an initial chaos, was the cultivation of competition between sub-national regions. Governors and mayors now have more control over public services and direct accountability requires them to perform if they want to keep their jobs.

The result has been nothing short of a dynamic growth model that has seen the prospering of many sub-national cities, each relishing the fact that they are now in control of their own destinies.

Simply put, a rationally decentralised system is one that adheres to the basic principles of empowerment, accountability and sharing of responsibility. Not only would a properly decentralised structure encourage greater competition, productivity and creativity amongst the various states in Malaysia, it will also allow the central government to focus on national policies rather than waste their time resolving issues such as the collection of garbage, the running of child care or controlling buses by remote control from hundreds of kilometres away.

Of course, it would be overly optimistic to expect the present federal government to understand this as they have never had to run a state government whilst in opposition. However, I can at least assure that the future federal government will definitely be committed to the ideals of decentralisation.

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

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

Malaysia Insider Online

Copyright 2010 All Rights Reserved