Isnin, 30 September 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


How you pour your wine can affect how much you drink

Posted: 30 Sep 2013 06:36 PM PDT

October 01, 2013

Understanding environmental cues like the size and shape of a wine glass and the way it is poured can help wine lovers drink in moderation and avoid overconsumption, say researchers in a new study.

While programmes like MyPlate in the US offer consumers guidelines on portion control in food, the concept of alcohol intake is ill-defined, despite the fact that overconsumption of alcohol carries more immediate and serious consequences, said researchers in a joint study from Iowa State and Cornell universities.

To measure the influence of the size, shape and color of wine on serving sizes, scientists recruited 73 college students of legal drinking age who drank at least one glass of wine a week.

The students were instructed to pour themselves a normal serving of wine at several different stations where researchers manipulated environmental cues and measured their impact.

When glasses were wider, for example, participants poured nearly 12% more wine into their glass. The same was true when students poured wine while holding their glass aloft compared to pouring the wine into glasses which were placed on a table: participants were more heavy-handed, adding 12% more alcohol.

White wine lovers may also want to be extra vigilant when serving themselves, as researchers found that participants poured 9% more wine in their glass compared to red. The theory? A high contrast in colour – red wine in a clear glass – serves as visual aid for portion control.

"If you want to pour and drink less wine, stick to the wine glasses and only pour if your glass is on the table or counter and not in your hand – in either case you'll pour about 9% to 12% less," said researcher Brian Wansink.

The US study, published in the journal Substance Use and Misuse, builds on previous research which found that background lighting can also influence the way we taste wine. The 2009 study out of Germany found that red or blue ambient light enhanced the wine drinking experience compared to green or white light. – AFP Relaxnews, October 1, 2013.

Badger stew dish of the day for British roadkill fan

Posted: 30 Sep 2013 12:43 AM PDT

September 30, 2013

Take one dead badger, head and all, dust with flour and herbs, season and braise for five hours – that's the recipe for a perfect stew, according to British roadkill eater Arthur Boyt.

From dogs and cats to polecats and mice, Boyt insists there is nothing tastier than scooping up a dead animal from the roadside and taking it back to his remote home in Cornwall, southwest England, to skin, gut and cook.

Boyt, 74, a nature obsessive whose house is dotted with animal skulls and taxidermy, has been eating roadkill since the 1960s and thinks more people should do the same.

"People say 'oooh, do you really?' when I say I'm having roadkill. I say 'well, if you tried it, you would probably enjoy it'," Boyt said as a batch of badger stew bubbles away in his kitchen.

"It's not in the taste of the food, it's in the head.

"It's a threshold you have to step over if you're going to eat this kind of stuff. You say 'OK, this is just meat'."

The retired researcher's favourite dish is dog – he has eaten two lurchers and a labrador which were hit by cars. He insists he tried to find the owners before eating them.

Boyt compares the "smooth, round, sweet" flavour of dog meat to lamb, adding: "I'd drink a red wine with it – possibly a Chianti".

Dog may be his special treat but the chest freezer in his outhouse filled with everything from buzzards to slow worms shows his eclectic tastes.

He also has no qualms about eating rotting meat, claiming to have cooked badgers which had been dead for two weeks and picking off maggots and ticks while preparing meat for the pot.

"I've eaten stuff which is dark green and stinks – it does appear that if you cook it well, its rottenness does not hinder one's enjoyment of the animal," he says.

"I have never been ill from eating roadkill. People have been here for a meal and been sick when they got home -- but I'm sure that was something else."

"Salivary glands, mmm!"

Eating wild animals found dead in the road is usually legal for individuals in England as long as the animals have been run over accidentally, not deliberately.

Boyt says he only eats animals which were hit mistakenly, finding their remains himself or receiving tip-offs from neighbours around Bodmin Moor, a dramatic wilderness reputedly haunted by a phantom wildcat.

Breaking off from putting the finishing touches to the badger stew, Boyt explains that he only cooks roadkill when his wife, a vegetarian, goes out.

"She goes to see her mother once a week so if she stays the night, it's a grand opportunity for a big feast," he says.

This evening, he has invited an acquaintance to share the meal – 17-year-old Daniel Greenaway, who is looking forward to his first taste of roadkill.

"This will be interesting. I've been told it's nice," says the laconic construction student, sitting down at the dining room table.

Boyt lifts the lid off the heavy stew pot and ladles out the badger's head for himself, serving his companion some less recognisable body parts.

He garnishes the stew with raw spinach and opens a bottle of Rioja to go with the meal.

Greenaway tucks in nervously before declaring that the food "ain't bad".

Meanwhile, Boyt delights both in the flavour and in chomping through cuts not usually noted as delicacies.

"This is very tender, it's a coarser meat like venison," he says. "It's sweet, savoury, well-seasoned. Here is the first of the salivary glands – mmmm!" – AFP, September 30, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Rashid returns as national coach – Bernama

Posted: 30 Sep 2013 08:27 AM PDT

September 30, 2013

Rashid Sidek is returning to the Badminton Association of Malaysia (BAM) to coach national players from October 1.

This follows his decision to retract his resignation as coach.

In a statement here on Monday, BAM general manager Kenny Goh said the BAM management had officially accepted Rashid's decision.

"He will be part of the new coaching structure. He will officially return to work on October 1," he said.

Rashid, the 1996 Atlanta Olympics bronze medallist, had on September 19 tendered his resignation to BAM, citing interference from BAM's newly-appointed talent management group director Tan Aik Mong who wished to reshuffle the national badminton training structure.

Last Wednesday, Aik Mong who started work on September 7, quit his job, following dissatisfaction with BAM's decision to reverse his planned structure.

In a separate statement, Goh said BAM would sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Korean Badminton Association at its headquarters this Wednesday, aimed at further improving the understanding and cooperation between both associations.

He said under the MoU, several exchange programmes, joint training between the two associations' junior players and friendly matches would be put in place.

He said coaches from both associations would also exchange ideas and knowledge in sports science, besides planning to establish future league tournaments involving players from both countries. – Bernama, September 30, 2013. – Bernama, September 30, 2013.

Singapore gang rigged 100-plus football matches

Posted: 30 Sep 2013 07:27 AM PDT

September 30, 2013

A notorious Singaporean match-fixing gang rigged more than 100 football games worldwide in a scam worth millions of dollars, before it was busted this month, a source said today.

The source, who has direct knowledge of the case, added there were signs that the syndicate, allegedly led by Singaporean businessman Dan Tan, was involved in violent activity.

However, the source played down suggestions that the gang was responsible for a greater share of the 680 suspicious games reported by European investigators earlier this year.

And the source added that there was no evidence that the gang linked to Dan Tan, full name Tan Seet Eng, was involved in a match-fixing ring uncovered this month in Australia.

The details have emerged two weeks after Singaporean authorities rounded up 14 people in the wealthy Asian city-state's biggest operation yet against international match-fixing.

The five alleged members still in custody include Dan Tan, according to the source.

They are being held under a section of the criminal code usually employed against criminal gangs which allows for up to a year's detention without trial.

Experts say gangs in Singapore have cultivated links with foreign criminals to fix games in different countries, for the purpose of illegal gambling.

Interpol chief Ronald Noble has said the industry has revenues of billions of dollars a year.

After the arrests in Singapore, Noble said the gang was the world's "largest and most aggressive match-fixing syndicate, with tentacles reaching every continent".

Noble, who had previously called for Dan Tan's arrest, added that "the mastermind was someone many believed was untouchable".

European police agency Europol reported in February that hundreds of games worldwide, including World Cup qualifiers and UEFA Champions League ties, had been targeted by fixers.

Tan has been assisting investigators in Singapore since February. He is wanted in Italy and Hungary over match-fixing allegations.

The source said Singaporean investigators had reviewed Europol's evidence and found that much of it was "circumstantial" or included inadmissible items such as wiretaps.

The source could not confirm whether there were other Singapore-based match-fixing rings.

The city-state's links with match-fixing have been in the spotlight since the arrest and jailing of Singapore's Wilson Raj Perumal for match-fixing in Finland.

Perumal, who claims to be a former associate of Tan's, is now reportedly under police protection in Hungary.

However, reports have named him as a suspect in a multi-million-dollar fixing ring revealed this month in Australia's state league. - AFP, September 30, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Miley Cyrus aimed to “make history” with video awards performance

Posted: 29 Sep 2013 10:33 PM PDT

September 30, 2013

Former Disney star Miley Cyrus (pic) says she was out to shock and "make history" and is unapologetic for her raunchy performance at this year's MTV Video Music Awards.

In a documentary, Miley: The Movement, airing on MTV on October 2, the 20-year-old singer and actress comes across as a shrewd, ambitious performer determined to see her single, We Can't Stop, hit number one and put her roots as the wholesome Disney Channel star of Hannah Montana far behind her.

Cyrus refers to her performance during the August awards show with singer Robin Thicke and an oversized foam finger as a "strategic, hot mess".

The VMA show was "meant to push the boundaries", she says, adding she wanted the act to be memorable along the lines of pop star Britney Spears' kiss with Madonna at the same award show a decade ago.

"That's what you're looking to do, make history."

Spears, who begins a two-year stint in Las Vegas in December at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino, and other child stars faced personal struggles transitioning to adult careers. But Cyrus sees it as starting as a new artist.

"I felt like I could finally be the bad bitch I really am," she says in the documentary.

Cyrus' appearance – gold fingernails, tattoos and short, platinum hair – is a far cry from her days as the teenage star in Hannah Montana, which ran from 2006 to 2011.

Reinforcing her image, she posed topless for the cover of the October 12 issue of Rolling Stone magazine and for one of various covers for her album Bangerz, out October 8. Cyrus also shed her clothes in the music video track of the song Wrecking Ball.

Something that nobody was ready for

The hour-long documentary was shot over about three months before and shortly after the VMAs. It follows Cyrus at home in Los Angeles with her dogs, during appearances to promote We Can't Stop, and in rehearsals.

The film touches on her childhood with her country singer father, Billy Ray Cyrus, and her mother, Tish. It also includes clips with her idol, Spears, and music collaborators, producer Mike WiLL and rapper and record producer Pharrell Williams, who was featured in Thicke's summer hit, the multimillion-selling single Blurred Lines.

Notably absent is Cyrus' former fiance, Hunger Games actor Liam Hemsworth. Hemsworth, 23, and Cyrus called off their engagement this month, ending a four-year relationship.

"We decided to focus on the music and the professional side," is all that Dave Sirulnick, an executive vice president at MTV and the executive producer of the film, would say about Hemsworth's absence.

At a preview of the film, Sirulnick said the extent of the media reaction to Cyrus' VMA performance surprised everyone.

"As she said, people had this image of her as one thing and then here she came with something that nobody was ready for or expecting," he said. – Reuters, September 30, 2013.

Miley Cyrus aimed to “make history” with video awards performance

Posted: 29 Sep 2013 10:33 PM PDT

September 30, 2013

Former Disney star Miley Cyrus (pic) says she was out to shock and "make history" and is unapologetic for her raunchy performance at this year's MTV Video Music Awards.

In a documentary, Miley: The Movement, airing on MTV on October 2, the 20-year-old singer and actress comes across as a shrewd, ambitious performer determined to see her single, We Can't Stop, hit number one and put her roots as the wholesome Disney Channel star of Hannah Montana far behind her.

Cyrus refers to her performance during the August awards show with singer Robin Thicke and an oversized foam finger as a "strategic, hot mess".

The VMA show was "meant to push the boundaries", she says, adding she wanted the act to be memorable along the lines of pop star Britney Spears' kiss with Madonna at the same award show a decade ago.

"That's what you're looking to do, make history."

Spears, who begins a two-year stint in Las Vegas in December at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino, and other child stars faced personal struggles transitioning to adult careers. But Cyrus sees it as starting as a new artist.

"I felt like I could finally be the bad bitch I really am," she says in the documentary.

Cyrus' appearance – gold fingernails, tattoos and short, platinum hair – is a far cry from her days as the teenage star in Hannah Montana, which ran from 2006 to 2011.

Reinforcing her image, she posed topless for the cover of the October 12 issue of Rolling Stone magazine and for one of various covers for her album Bangerz, out October 8. Cyrus also shed her clothes in the music video track of the song Wrecking Ball.

Something that nobody was ready for

The hour-long documentary was shot over about three months before and shortly after the VMAs. It follows Cyrus at home in Los Angeles with her dogs, during appearances to promote We Can't Stop, and in rehearsals.

The film touches on her childhood with her country singer father, Billy Ray Cyrus, and her mother, Tish. It also includes clips with her idol, Spears, and music collaborators, producer Mike WiLL and rapper and record producer Pharrell Williams, who was featured in Thicke's summer hit, the multimillion-selling single Blurred Lines.

Notably absent is Cyrus' former fiance, Hunger Games actor Liam Hemsworth. Hemsworth, 23, and Cyrus called off their engagement this month, ending a four-year relationship.

"We decided to focus on the music and the professional side," is all that Dave Sirulnick, an executive vice president at MTV and the executive producer of the film, would say about Hemsworth's absence.

At a preview of the film, Sirulnick said the extent of the media reaction to Cyrus' VMA performance surprised everyone.

"As she said, people had this image of her as one thing and then here she came with something that nobody was ready for or expecting," he said. – Reuters, September 30, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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John Paul II: soon-to-be new saint

Posted: 30 Sep 2013 02:54 AM PDT

September 30, 2013

Pope John Paul II (pic), who the Vatican said today will be made a saint in April 2014 along with John XXIII, was an inspirational figure who helped topple communism but alienated many with his conservative views.

The first non-Italian pope in more than 400 years, and the first from eastern Europe, Polish Karol Wojtyla was immensely popular, eschewing the pomp that surrounded his predecessors and seeking contact with ordinary people.

The pontiff, who died in 2005, was beatified in May 2011, giving him the status of "blessed" for the world's 1.2 billion Catholics and placing him one step away from sainthood.

During a papacy lasting nearly 27 years, John Paul II travelled far and wide, often greeted by massive crowds as he championed peace, denounced human rights abuses and deplored the decadence of the modern world.

He left one of his most momentous acts for the twilight of his papacy - an attempt to purify the soul of the Roman Catholic Church with a sweeping apology for sins and errors committed during its 2,000 years of existence.

John Paul II was born in a small town near Krakow, in southern Poland, on May 18, 1920. His mother died when he was eight and his father raised him, teaching him German and football.

He studied at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow where he became fascinated by theatre and wrote a number of plays.

John Paul was never a member of the Polish resistance, but the experience of war caused him to consider the priesthood.

He became a parish priest and rose steadily through the Church hierarchy, eventually rising to cardinal.

When he was elected pope in October 1978, John Paul was 58, a robust sportsman and a relative outsider amid the vast bureaucracy of the Holy See.

His first foreign visit was to his native Poland.

Despite Soviet warnings, communist authorities were unable to head off the pope's 1979 visit, when he appeared before million-strong crowds speaking powerfully for human rights.

The upshot was a huge, reinvigorated anti-communist working-class movement, the birth of Solidarity, and the steady thaw of the Soviet glacier that lay over central and eastern Europe.

For all the pope's immense popularity, his moral teachings - notably on family values, homosexuality, birth control, euthanasia and abortion - alienated many Catholics.

Among them were reformers, the young and Third World congregations in the grip of a devastating AIDS epidemic who were disappointed at his refusal to give ground on the issue of contraception.

Dogged by the scandal of paedophile priests, the pope, at the behest of US bishops, approved new measures to punish clergymen committing sexual abuses but only after a long silence.

In 1981 he nearly died in an assassination attempt when a right-wing Turkish extremist, Mehmet Ali Agca, shot him at close range in Saint Peter's Square. One bullet went through his abdomen and another narrowly missed his heart.

Though the motives behind the assassination bid were never clear, conspiracy theories included a Bulgarian secret service hit ordered by the KGB and an attempt by radical Islamists to polish off the most prominent Christian leader.

The pope said the Virgin Mary had saved his life, and he had one of the bullets inserted into the diamond-studded crown of the Virgin of Fatima in Portugal.

He met virtually every significant head of state of government.

The United States, the Soviet Union and then Russia, the countries of the former Soviet bloc, Mexico, Israel, Jordan and the Palestine Liberation Organisation established diplomatic ties with the Vatican during his papacy.

John Paul was the first pope to pray in a synagogue, in Rome; the first to enter a mosque in an Islamic country, in Damascus, Syria; and the first to preside a meeting of the heads of all the major world religions in 1986.

He died aged 84 on April 2, 2005. – AFP, September 29, 2013.

Myanmar old guard clings to RM26.13 billion jade empire

Posted: 29 Sep 2013 11:00 PM PDT

September 30, 2013

Tin Tun picked all night through teetering heaps of rubble to find the palm-sized lump of jade he now holds in his hand. He hopes it will make him a fortune. It's happened before.

"Last year I found a stone worth 50 million kyat," he said, trekking past the craters and slag heaps of this notorious jade-mining region in northwest Myanmar. That's about US$50,000 (RM163,123) – and it was more than enough money for Tin Tun, 38, to buy land and build a house in his home village.

But rare finds by small-time prospectors like Tin Tun pale next to the staggering wealth extracted on an industrial scale by Myanmar's military, the tycoons it helped enrich, and companies linked to the country where most jade ends up – China.

Almost half of all jade sales are "unofficial" – that is, spirited over the border into China with little or no formal taxation. This represents billions of dollars in lost revenues that could be spent on rebuilding a nation shattered by nearly half a century of military dictatorship.

Official statistics confirm these missing billions. Myanmar produced more than 43 million kilogram of jade in fiscal year 2011/12 (April to March). Even valued at a conservative US$100 (RM326) per kg, it was worth US$4.3 billion (RM14 billion). But official exports of jade that year stood at only US$34 million (RM111 million).

Official Chinese statistics only deepen the mystery. China doesn't publicly report how much jade it imports from Myanmar. But jade is included in official imports of precious stones and metals, which in 2012 were worth US$293 million (RM956 million) – a figure still too small to explain where billions of dollars of Myanmar jade has gone.

Such squandered wealth symbolises a wider challenge in Myanmar, an impoverished country whose natural resources – including oil, timber and precious metals – have long fueled armed conflicts while enriching only powerful individuals or groups. In a rare visit to the heart of Myanmar's secretive jade-mining industry in Hpakant, Reuters found an anarchic region where soldiers and ethnic rebels clash, and where mainland Chinese traders rub shoulders with heroin-fuelled "handpickers" who are routinely buried alive while scavenging for stones.

Myint Aung, Myanmar's Minister of Mines, did not reply to written questions about the jade industry's missing millions and social costs.

Since a reformist government took office in March 2011, Myanmar has pinned its economic hopes on the resumption of foreign aid and investment. Some economists argue, however, that Myanmar's prosperity and unity may depend upon claiming more revenue from raw materials.

There are few reliable estimates on total jade sales that include unofficial exports. The Harvard Ash Centre, which advises Myanmar's quasi-civilian government, has possibly the best numbers available.

After sending researchers to the area this year, the Harvard Ash Centre published a report in July that put sales of Burmese jade at about US$8 billion (RM26.13 billion) in 2011. That's more than double the country's revenue from natural gas and nearly a sixth of its 2011 GDP.

"Practically nothing is going to the government," David Dapice, the report's co-author, said. "What you need is a modern system of public finance in which the government collects some part of the rents from mining this stuff."

Hiding stones

Chinese have prized jade for its beauty and symbolism for millennia. Many believe wearing jade jewellery brings good fortune, prosperity and longevity. It is also viewed as an investment, a major factor driving China's appetite for Burmese jade. "Gold is valuable, but jade is priceless," runs an old Chinese saying.

Jade is not only high value but easy to transport. "Only the stones they cannot hide go to the emporiums," said Tin Soe, 53, a jade trader in Hpakant, referring to the official auctions held in Myanmar's capital of Naypyitaw.

The rest is smuggled by truck to China by so-called "jockeys" through territory belonging to either the Burmese military or the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), both of whom extract tolls. The All China Jade Trade Association, a state-linked industry group based in Beijing, declined repeated requests for an interview.

Hpakant lies in Kachin State, a rugged region sandwiched strategically between China and India. Nowhere on Earth does jade exist in such quantity and quality. "Open the ground, let the country abound," reads the sign outside the Hpakant offices of the Ministry of Mines.

In fact, few places better symbolise how little Myanmar benefits from its fabulous natural wealth. The road to Hpakant has pot-holes bigger than the four-wheel-drive cars that negotiate it. During the rainy season, it can take nine hours to reach from Myitkyina, the Kachin state capital 110 kilometres away.

Non-Burmese are rarely granted official access to Hpakant, but taxi-drivers routinely take Chinese traders there for exorbitant fees, part of which goes to dispensing bribes at police and military checkpoints.

The official reason for restricting access to Hpakant is security: the Burmese military and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) have long vied for control of the road, which is said to be flanked with land-mines.

But the restrictions also serve to reduce scrutiny of the industry's biggest players and its horrific social costs: the mass deaths of workers and some of the highest heroin addiction and HIV infection rates in Myanmar.

There are also "obvious" links between jade and conflict in Kachin State, said analyst Richard Horsey, a former United Nations senior official in Myanmar. A 17-year ceasefire between the military and the KIA ended when fighting erupted in June 2011. It has since displaced at least 100,000 people.

"Such vast revenues – in the hands of both sides – have certainly fed into the conflict, helped fund insurgency, and will be a hugely complicating factor in building a sustainable peace economy," Horsey said.

The United States banned imports of jade, rubies and other Burmese gemstones in 2008 in a bid to cut off revenue to the military junta which then ruled Myanmar, also known as Burma.

But soaring demand from neighbouring China meant the ban had little effect. After Myanmar's reformist government took power, the United States scrapped or suspended almost all economic and political sanctions – but not the ban on jade and rubies.

It was renewed by the White House on August 7 in a sign that Myanmar's anarchic jade industry remains a throwback to an era of dictatorship. The US Department of the Treasury included the industry in activities that "contribute to human rights abuses or undermine Burma's democratic reform process".

Foreign companies are not permitted to extract jade. But mining is capital intensive, and it is an open secret that most of the 20 or so largest operations in Hpakant are owned by Chinese companies or their proxies, say gem traders and other industry insiders in Kachin State.

"Of course, some (profit) goes to the government," said Yup Zaw Hkawng, chairman of Jadeland Myanmar, the most prominent Kachin mining company in Hpakant. "But mostly it goes into the pockets of Chinese families and the families of the former (Burmese) government."

Other players include the Union of Myanmar Economic Holdings Ltd (UMEHL), the investment arm of the country's much-feared military, and Burmese tycoons such as Zaw Zaw, chairman of Max Myanmar, who made their fortunes collaborating with the former junta.

The China connection

Soldiers guard the big mining companies and sometimes shoot in the air to scare off small-time prospectors. "We run like crazy when we see them," said Tin Tun, the handpicker.

UMEHL is notoriously tight-lipped about its operations. "Stop bothering us," Major Myint Oo, chief of human resources at UMEHL's head office in downtown Yangon, told Reuters. "You can't just come in here and meet our superiors. This is a military company. Some matters must be kept secret."

This arrangement, whereby Chinese companies exploit natural resources with military help, is both familiar and deeply controversial in Myanmar.

Last year, protests outside the Letpadaung copper mine in northwest Myanmar triggered a violent police crackdown. The mine's two operators – UMEHL and Myanmar Wanbao, a unit of Chinese weapons manufacturer China North Industries Corp – shared most of the profits, leaving the government with just 4%.

That contract was revised in July in an apparent attempt to appease public anger. The government now gets 51% of the profits, while UMEHL and Myanmar Wanbao get 30% and 19% respectively.

China's domination of the jade trade could feed into a wider resentment over its exploitation of Myanmar's natural wealth. A Chinese-led plan to build a US$3.6 million dam at the Irrawaddy River's source in Kachin State – and send most of the power it generated to Yunnan Province – was suspended in 2011 by President Thein Sein amid popular outrage.

The national and local governments should also get a greater share of Kachin State's natural wealth, say analysts and activists. That includes gold, timber and hydropower, but especially jade.

A two-week auction held in the capital Naypyitaw in June sold a record-breaking US$2.6 billion (RM8.5 billion) in jade and gems. But jade tax revenue in 2011 amounted to only 20% of the official sales. Add in all the "unofficial" sales outside of the emporium, and Harvard calculates an effective tax rate of about 7% on all Burmese jade.

It is, on the other hand, highly lucrative for the mining companies, whose estimated cost of production is US$400 (RM1,305) a ton, compared with an official sales figure of US$126,000 (RM411,166) a ton, the report said.

"Kachin, and by extension Myanmar, cannot be peaceful and politically stable without some equitable sharing of resource revenues with the local people," said analyst Horsey.

The pecking order

At the top of the pecking order in Hpakant are cashed-up traders from China, who buy stones displayed on so-called "jade tables" in Hpakant tea-shops. The tables are run by middleman called laoban ("boss" in Chinese), who are often ethnic Chinese. They buy jade from, and sometimes employ, handpickers like Tin Tun.

The handpickers are at the bottom of the heap – literally. They swarm in their hundreds across mountains of rubble dumped by the mining companies. It is perilous work, especially when banks and slag heaps are destabilised by monsoon rain. Landslides routinely swallow 10 or 20 men at a time, said Too Aung, 30, a handpicker from the Kachin town of Bhamo.

"Sometimes we can't even dig out their bodies," he said. "We don't know where to look."

In 2002, at least a thousand people were killed when flood waters inundated a mine, Jadeland Myanmar chairman Yup Zaw Hkawng told Reuters. Deaths are common but routinely concealed by companies eager to avoid suspending operations, he said.

The boom in Hpakant's population coincided with an exponential rise in opium production in Myanmar, the world's second-largest producer after Afghanistan. Its derivative, heroin, is cheap and widely available in Kachin State, and Hpakant's workforce seems to run on it.

About half the handpickers use heroin, while others rely on opium or alcohol, said Tin Soe, 53, a jade trader and a local leader of the opposition National League for Democracy party. "It's very rare to find someone who doesn't do any of these," he said.

Official figures on heroin use in Hpakant are hard to get. The few foreign aid workers operating in the area, mostly working with drug users, declined comment for fear of upsetting relations with the Myanmar government. But health workers say privately about 40 percent of injecting drug users in Hpakant are HIV positive – twice the national average.

Drug use is so intrinsic to jade mining that "shooting galleries" operate openly in Hpakant, with workers often exchanging lumps of jade for hits of heroin.

Soe Moe, 39, came to Hpakant in 1992. Three years later, he was sniffing heroin, then injecting it. His habit now devours his earnings as a handpicker. "When I'm on (heroin), I feel happier and more energetic. I work better," he said. The shooting gallery he frequents accommodates hundreds of users. "The place is so busy it's like a festival," he said. Soe Moe said he didn't fear arrest, because the gallery owners paid off the police.

Moving mountains

Twenty years ago, Hpakant was controlled by KIA insurgents who for a modest fee granted access to small prospectors. Four people with iron picks could live off the jade harvested from a small plot of land, said Yitnang Ze Lum of the Myanmar Gems and Jewellery Entrepreneurs Association (MGJEA) in Myitkyina.

A 1994 ceasefire brought most of Hpakant back under government control, and large-scale extraction began, with hundreds of backhoes, earthmovers and trucks working around the clock. "Now even a mountain lasts only three months," said Yitnang Ze Lum.

Many Kachin businessmen, unable to compete in terms of capital or technology, were shut out of the industry. Non-Kachin workers poured in from across Myanmar, looking for jobs and hoping to strike it rich.

The mines were closed in mid-2012 when the conflict flared up again. Myanmar's military shelled suspected KIA positions; the rebels retaliated with ambushes along the Hpakant road.

Thousands of people were displaced. Jade production plunged to just 19.08 million kg in the 2012/13 fiscal year from 43.1 million kg the previous year. But the government forged a preliminary ceasefire with the Kachin rebels in May, and some traders predict Hpakant's mines will re-open when the monsoon ends in October.

When operations are in full swing, the road to Hpakant is clogged with vehicles bringing fuel in and jade out. Such is the scale and speed of modern extraction, said Yitnang Ze Lum, Hpakant's jade could be gone within 10 years.

"Every Kachin feels passionately that their state's resources are being taken away," a leading Myitkyina gem trader said on condition of anonymity. "But we're powerless to stop them." – Reuters, September 30, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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Italian cookbook author Marcella Hazan dies at 89

Posted: 29 Sep 2013 07:29 PM PDT

September 30, 2013

Marcella Hazan, whose cookbooks brought the rich taste of authentic Italian food into kitchens across the United States, has died at the age of 89, her family said.

Hazan lived in Longboat Key, Florida, with her husband and lifelong collaborator and writing partner Victor. Her death was announced by her daughter-in-law Lael Sara Caplan Hazan on her Facebook page.

"The world of authentic home cooking has lost a giant today. My mother-in-law Marcella Hazan, melted away peacefully, my father-in-law Victor, was at her side," Caplan Hazan wrote.

Marcella Hazan was born in Italy in 1924, moving to the United States with her husband after World War II. She claimed that she did not really learn how to cook until she was married and living in New York.

She taught her first cooking class when she was in her mid-40s and the first of her six cookbooks, The Classic Italian Cookbook, was published when she was nearly 50, according to epicurious.com.

Perhaps her most famous recipe - tomato sauce - exemplified her culinary philosophy of simplicity. It required a can of peeled plum tomatoes, five tablespoons of unsalted butter, one small white onion and salt.

Asked in an interview with epicurious.com what she believed the keys to success were for the home cook was, she replied "taste. That is very important. They don't have to do very complicated things. And good ingredients."

Among the garlands she received over a long career as both a cookery teacher and author were a James Beard Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award and a knighthood in her native Italy.


 

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Fearless in Manchester, the undoing of the Red Devils

Posted: 29 Sep 2013 06:22 PM PDT

September 30, 2013

Anand K.Pillai (a.k.a. K.Anand) is the number one Gooner (that's Arsenal supporter, for the uninformed) in Malaysia. He promises to be fair and balanced when writing about some of their rivals, but hopes readers will excuse the occasional lapse.

I write this after a weekend that has been a very good one if you are an Arsenal supporter.

Having all but one of your closest rivals lose or cancel each other out in a draw, while your team wins to strengthen its hold on the top position is always a cause for a bit of celebration... until the next round of matches comes along, anyway.

But while we Gooners raise a toast to Arsene Wenger, I cannot help but have one eye on the situation at Old Trafford. It seems dire to say the least. I believe it may actually be worse than most Manchester United fans care to admit.

Quite simply, I believe the exit of Alex Ferguson and the lack of a good game-changing signing during the summer transfer window has removed any last remnants of the air of invincibility that the Red Devils had built up over the Premiership years in English football.

Of course, Manchester United were never invincible in any given season – only the Gunners achieved that in season 2003-04 –  but that aura of fear was always present among most teams going to Old Trafford, or even hosting Fergie's lads, with a sense of wanting to avoid defeat rather playing to win.

There is no doubt that for most of the past two decades, half the battle was already won by Manchester United even before kick-off... and I am not talking about Fergie's infamous mind games here.

It is not a new phenomenon in the top flight of English football.

I will never forget what my late eldest brother told me back in the late 1970s and early 1980s about Liverpool's dominance in the then First Division, and even in Europe for that matter.

My brother was a long-suffering Manchester United supporter at the time, when the team's success was limited to the 1977 FA Cup wins and before that, the 1968 European Cup and 1966-67 First Division title. Yes, there was a 9-year gap between trophies at Old Trafford.

So, it was not surprising when he lamented to me a few times while we were following the live broadcast of English football via the BBC World Service every Saturday night, that teams were simply afraid or intimidated by the Liverpool juggernaut.

Here was a team that Bill Shankly built and Bob Paisley enhanced – among two of the greatest managers that the English game had produced. Before Ferguson, Paisley was the most successful manager in English football.

At its peak, Liverpool had seven players in the English national team, and some top Scots too, with the likes of Kenny Dalglish, Graeme Souness and Alan Hansen.

The Reds were then fortunate to have some continuity after Paisley stepped down in 1983 with a member of the famous Anfield boot room boys, Joe Fagan, taking over the reins.

That helped to maintain the status quo of winning the league title, with a European Cup and League Cup for a unique treble at the end of the 1983-84 season.

Dalglish took over in 1985, and the promote-from-within policy maintained the continuity of league success, with two more titles, including their first League-FA Cup double in 1986.

But the ascent of Souness to the manager's seat in 1991 was the beginning of the end for Liverpool. I suppose he was just not cut out for the job.

And as we all know, the launch of the English Premier League eventually brought an end to the Shankly/Paisley legacy and the start of a new era for another big team in red.

My brother, Ganesh, unfortunately, never got his chance to see his beloved Manchester United enjoy the same dominance that he envied about Liverpool.

As I recall, he was among the first to sign up for the Manchester United Supporters' Club in 1992 – it was the first supporters club launched in Malaysia, incidentally – and enjoyed the Red Devils lifting their first title in 26 years the following year.

But sadly, the second consecutive title was won on April 24, 1994, just a week before he passed away, and he missed watching them take the unique League-FA Cup double that May, too.

I am sure he has been celebrating his team's glory years from up above but I wonder what he would be telling me now, with the team making their worst start in a league season since 1989-90.

That season was the make or break season for Ferguson after finishing in positions 11, 2 and 11, respectively, in the previous three seasons the Scot had been in charge. The Red Devils ended up number 13 on the League table in 1990 and that should have cost Ferguson his job but for the small matter of winning the FA Cup, his first trophy.

The Manchester United manager added to his achievements by winning the European Cup-Winners' Cup the following year. This was followed by the league runners-up position in 1992, the last time the top tier was called the First Division.

Not for lack of effort or ability, but David Moyes is likely to have the proverbial sword of Damocles hanging over him should Manchester United fail to keep the momentum of 23 years going in his first season in charge.

Yes, it is all still early in the season and it might even be a little bit of mischievous speculation on my part, but three defeats in their first six matches is going to be telling on the players' confidence. More importantly, Moyes is no Ferguson.

He came from outside the Manchester United culture and worse still, booted out all of Ferguson's men in favour of his own group of coaches and staff from Everton. Something has got to give and it is showing on the pitch already.

These are not going to be pleasant times for the masses of Manchester United fans around but it is also going to be a great time for their true supporters to set an example as the glory-hunters start bailing out of the "sinking ship" in the coming months ahead. – September 30, 2013.

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insider.

Menterjemah minda penulis Tamil (Bahagian 1)

Posted: 29 Sep 2013 04:17 PM PDT

September 30, 2013

Uthaya Sankar SB berkarya dalam Bahasa Malaysia. Beliau adalah presiden Kumpulan Sasterawan Kavyan (Kavyan) dan pemilik tunggal Perunding Media, Motivasi dan Penerbitan Uthaya. Selain menulis, membaca dan bercakap, beliau juga suka menonton filem.

Walaupun saya secara penuh sedar – dan penuh syukur – memilih untuk menulis menggunakan Bahasa Malaysia, saya tidak ketinggalan mengikuti perkembangan bidang penulisan Bahasa Inggeris, Tamil dan Mandarin di Malaysia.

Saya percaya bahawa saya amat bertuah kerana mampu hidup, bernafas serta mewarnai beberapa "dunia" sastera tempatan. Pergaulan saya juga merentas sempadan kaum, bahasa dan bidang penulisan.

Malah, pernah wartawan sebuah akhbar arus perdana datang mewawancara saya dengan andaian bahawa saya fasih membaca dan menulis Mandarin! (Akhirnya laporan wartawan itu disiarkan dengan judul "Uthaya Sankar SB Tidak Tahu Berbahasa Mandarin" pada 3 Julai 2007.)

Semasa membentangkan kertas kerja mengenai Sasterawan Kavyan (penulis kaum India yang menghasilkan karya Bahasa Malaysia) di World Tamil Writers Conference di Singapura pada Oktober 2011, saya menggunakan Bahasa Tamil.

Saya pernah diundang menulis rencana khas mengenai sejarah dan perkembangan cerpen Tamil di Malaysia untuk siaran akhbar New Straits Times. Selepas tulisan saya bertajuk "What Tamil Writers?" tersiar pada 11 Februari 2004, muncul reaksi yang pelbagai.

Walaupun saya bukan penulis Tamil – malah bukan juga individu keturunan Tamil – saya tetap mengikuti perkembangan sastera Tamil di Malaysia menerusi pelbagai sumber.

Bidang penulisan karya kreatif Bahasa Tamil di Malaysia bermula dengan novel Karunakaran Allathu Katalin Matchi (Karunakaran atau Kesucian Cinta) pada tahun 1917. Manakala antologi cerpen pertama muncul pada tahun 1930.

Genre cerpen Tamil terus berkembang pesat mulai tahun 1950-an. Pemangkin utama dalam perkembangan ini sejak dahulu adalah kelahiran akhbar dan majalah; antaranya Tamil Nesan, Tamil Celvan, Tamil Kodi dan Tamil Murasu.

Walaupun pada mulanya tema dan persoalan penulis Tamil di Malaysia/Malaya tertumpu pada hal-hal di Sri Lanka dan India, khususnya Tamil Nadu, mulai pertengahan tahun 1940-an, sudah nampak perubahan ke arah yang positif.

Karya-karya sastera Tamil sudah semakin bercirikan masyarakat pelbagai kaum di Malaysia. Antara cerpen yang wajar disebutkan adalah "Onril Munru" (Tiga dalam Satu), "Pukkari Punita" (Punita Penjual Bunga), "Cinakkilavan" (Lelaki Tua Cina), "Kuranku Antu Palan" (Kebaikan Tahun Monyet) dan "Pavamuttai" (Bebanan Dosa).

Segala maklumat lanjut berhubung hal ini terkandung dalam buku Cerpen Tamil dan Melayu (1957-1970): Perbandingan Tema dan Struktur (1993) tulisan Dr Krishanan Maniam.

Cerpen terjemahan Tamil "ditolak" puak tertentu

Di samping menghasilkan cerpen Bahasa Tamil, beberapa penulis yang memiliki penguasaan bahasa yang baik turut terlibat dalam usaha menterjemahkan cerpen Bahasa Malaysia ke Bahasa Tamil.

Cerpen-cerpen terjemahan itu tersiar dalam akhbar dan majalah Tamil sejak tahun 1950-an lagi. Jadi, apa yang jelas adalah bahawa pembaca kaum India yang menguasai Bahasa Tamil berupaya menghayati karya penulis-penulis Melayu yang diterjemahkan ke Bahasa Tamil.

Beberapa cerpen saya juga sesekali diterjemahkan ke Bahasa Tamil dan disiarkan di media Tamil. Sebaliknya agak mengecewakan kerana cerpen Bahasa Tamil kurang diterjemahkan ke Bahasa Malaysia.

Majalah Dewan Sastera misalnya menyiarkan terjemahan cerpen-cerpen luar negara. Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (DBP) sendiri menerbitkan antologi cerpen dan novel terjemahan dari India.

Akan tetapi, agak mengecewakan kerana cerpen yang ditulis oleh penulis Tamil di Malaysia kurang diberikan perhatian. Usaha terjemahan seperti ini adalah penting bagi membolehkan kita menghayati hasil kesusasteraan, kebudayaan dan permasalahan hidup masyarakat pelbagai kaum yang mana kita sendiri menjadi sebahagian daripadanya.

Atas inisiatif dan usaha Kumpulan Sasterawan Kavyan (Kavyan), sebuah cerpen Tamil berjaya diterjemahkan ke Bahasa Malaysia dan disiarkan di majalah Dewan Sastera pada Julai 2012.

Bagaimanapun, amat mengecewakan kerana usaha itu tidak dapat diteruskan kerana terdapat kritikan hebat dan bantahan daripada pihak tertentu yang menyebarkan fitnah kononnya cerpen-cerpen Bahasa Malaysia dan Tamil yang dihasilkan oleh pengarang kaum India di Malaysia mempunyai motif menyebarkan agama Hindu.

Kekurangan usaha terjemahan (selain tuduhan dan fitnah puak tertentu) menyebabkan masyarakat Malaysia khasnya dan masyarakat Nusantara amnya tidak mengenali penulis Tamil di Nusantara.

Sebaliknya kita lebih mengenali penulis India di Benua Kecil India, Amerika Syarikat serta Eropah. Hal ini kerana mereka menulis dalam Bahasa Inggeris atau karya mereka diterjemahkan ke Bahasa Inggeris.

Pada masa ini, kehadiran beberapa penulis kaum India yang menghasilkan cerpen Bahasa Malaysia – Sasterawan Kavyan – sekurang-kurangnya dapat mengisi tuntutan yang disebutkan tadi.

Hanya sebuah antologi sehingga kini

Malangnya, pengarang seperti Saroja Theavy Balakrishnan dan M. Mahendran yang mampu menghasilkan karya Bahasa Malaysia bagi menampilkan permasalahan hidup masyarakat India di Malaysia dalam karya mereka sudah semakin jarang berkarya.

Untuk rekod, majalah Dewan Sastera keluaran Mei 1997 buat julung kali dalam sejarah sastera Malaysia telah membuat fokus tentang penulis kaum India di Malaysia; sama ada menghasilkan karya Bahasa Malaysia atau Tamil.

Usaha itu saya lihat sebagai langkah yang wajar dalam memperkenalkan kelompok penulis kaum India kepada khalayak. Malangnya, inisiatif seperti itu sudah semakin jarang. Apatah lagi ada puak yang amat prejudis terhadap karya penulis kaum India.

Di samping menggalakkan penghasilan karya Bahasa Malaysia, adalah wajar sekiranya karya sastera Bahasa Tamil diterjemahkan ke Bahasa Malaysia. Tambahan pula, tidak semua penulis Tamil yang boleh menghasilkan karya Bahasa Malaysia.

Walaupun Persatuan Penulis-penulis Tamil Malaysia dilaporkan sebagai pernah "menjalinkan hubungan yang erat dengan persatuan penulis Melayu dan Cina serta dengan Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka", tetapi sehingga ke saat makalah ini ditulis, tidak ada usaha bersungguh-sungguh dan menyeluruh dalam menterjemahkan dan menerbitkan antologi cerpen penulis Tamil di Malaysia.

Dalam hal ini, tidak dapat tidak, usaha M. Balachandran menterjemahkan sebanyak 12 buah cerpen bagi antologi Seruling Di Persimpangan (1999) harus dipuji. Saya ada menyebut tentang perkara ini pada acara "Apresiasi Sastera Kaum India" anjuran Kavyan dan Majlis Kebudayaan Negeri Selangor di Morib, Selangor pada 17 Januari 2004.

Cerpen-cerpen yang terkumpul dalam antologi Seruling Di Persimpangan mengemukakan persoalan yang pelbagai. Dari segi teknik penulisan, perlu diakui bahawa hampir kesemua cerpen dalam antologi itu memaparkan teknik penceritaan yang bersifat konvensional.

Penulis ketara campur tangan dalam "menceritakan" (telling) kepada pembaca apa yang berlaku. Begitu juga dalam beberapa cerpen, penulis ketara bercerita secara meleret-leret tentang hal-hal yang tidak membantu ke arah perkembangan cerita.

Penceritaan yang meleret-leret ini telah saya sunting semasa mengedit manuskrip versi Bahasa Malaysia semata-mata bagi menjadikan cerpen-cerpen berkenaan lebih padat dan lancar dari segi isi dan bentuk.

Saya berharap antologi kedua yang sedang diusahakan akan mampu menyajikan karya terjemahan yang lebih bermutu dan lebih membanggakan. - 30 September, 2013.

* Ini adalah pendapat peribadi penulis dan tidak semestinya mewakili pandangan The Malaysian Insider.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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ISA juga tidak seharusnya diguna kepada ahli politik, kata Karpal

Posted: 30 Sep 2013 02:27 AM PDT

OLEH MOHD FARHAN DARWIS
September 30, 2013

Peruntukan untuk tidak menggunakan akta tahanan tanpa bicara terhadap ahli politik telah sedia ada dalam Akta Keselamatan Dalam Negeri (ISA) yang telah dimansuhkan pada 2011, kata Pengerusi DAP Karpal Singh (gambar).

"Ya ... ia telah lama wujud dalam ISA, Tun Razak dah katakan perkara itu," kata Karpal ketika ditemui pemberita di Parlimen hari ini, sambil merujuk kepada perdana menteri kedua Tun Abdul Razak.

Ahli Parlimen Bukit Gelugor itu memberikan respon terhadap pindaan Akta Pencegahan Jenayah yang akan dibaca untuk kali kedua di Parlimen esok bagaimanapun percaya pindaan berkenaan akan tetap dilaksanakan.

"Mereka akan luluskannya ... saya percaya, mereka selalu lakukan begitu.

"Kita tidak boleh mansuhkan semua akta pencegahan untuk menarik undi, kemudian kita perkenalkan akta baru," katanya membidas tindakan Putrajaya meminda akta berkenaan.

Kementerian Dalam Negeri telah membuat bacaan kali pertama pindaan akta berkenaan minggu lalu yang memperuntukkan penahanan tanpa bicara atas alasan mengekang kes jenayah berat yang semakin berleluasa.

Bagaimanapun, Ahli Parlimen Pakatan Rakyat menentang pindaan berkenaan yang menurut mereka bercanggah dari aspek hak asasi manusia.

Kumpulan aktivis Gerakan Rakyat Tolak ISA 2.0 menggelarkan akta berkenaan "seiras" dengan ISA kerana memperuntukkan tahanan tanpa bicara terhadap pesalah.

Mereka telah menganjurkan demonstrasi di perkarangan Parlimen hari ini, dengan disertai kira-kira 50 peserta sebelum menyerahkan memorandum kepada Timbalan Menteri Dalam Negeri Datuk Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar.

"Amat mengejutkan apabila sebuah rang undang-undang yang mempunyai kepentingan awam dan memberi kesan yang begitu mendalam tidak melalui proses konsultansi yang telus dan menyeluruh," kata memorandum mereka.

"Pindaan ini dibuat tanpa rundingan dengan pihak berkepentingan termasuk Majlis Peguam dan masyarakat madani, apatah lagi apabila Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak sebelum ini mengumumkan bahawa hari-hari kerajaan lebih mengetahui telah berakhir."

Jelas mereka lagi, Seksyen 19A dalam rang undang-undang berkenaan turut memberi kuasa mutlak kepada Lembaga Pencegahan Jenayah untuk menahan tertuduh selama dua tahun tanpa perlu mendakwa.

"Perkara ini bercanggah dengan Perkara 10 Deklarasi Hak Asasi Manusia Sejagat yang mana menetapkan setiap orang dituduh mestilah mendapat hak untuk dibicarakan secara adil di mahkamah dan juga bercanggah dengan kedaulatan negara," kata intipati memorandum mereka yang turut diserahkan kepada media. - 30 September, 2013.

Mahkamah arah ujian umur ke atas amah bunuh majikan

Posted: 30 Sep 2013 02:12 AM PDT

September 30, 2013

Prabowo (kanan) bersama ibubapa Wilfrida di Mahkamah Tinggi Kota Bharu hari ini. - Gambar The Malaysian Insider, 30 September, 2013.Prabowo (kanan) bersama ibubapa Wilfrida di Mahkamah Tinggi Kota Bharu hari ini. - Gambar The Malaysian Insider, 30 September, 2013.Mahkamah Tinggi Kota Bharu, Kelantan telah mengarahkan pembantu rumah warga Indonesia yang berhadapan tuduhan membunuh majikan menjalani ujian di Unit Tulang Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia untuk menentukan umurnya.

Hakim Mahkamah Tinggi Datuk Ahmad Zaidi Ibrahim turut memerintahkan Wilfrida Soik menjalani penilaian psikiatri.

The Star Online melaporkan calon presiden Indonesia Prabowo Subianto dan Duta Besar Indonesia ke Malaysia, Herman Prayatino, turut hadir di mahkamah.

Terdahulu, peguam yang dilantik Subianto, Tan Sri Muhammad Shafee Abdullah membuat permohonan untuk Wilfrida menjalani pemeriksaan menentukan umurnya. Beliau dikatakan berumur 17 tahun.

Kes ini telah menarik perhatian di Indonesia kerana tertuduh mendakwa dirinya menjadi mangsa penyeludupan manusia.

Dia dituduh membunuh majikannya di Pasir Mas pada tahun 2010.

Prabowo, pemimpin dari Partai Gerakan Indonesia Raya, tiba di Kota Bharu dalam usaha keras untuk "menyelamatkan" Wilfrida dan menimbang untuk membuat rayuan secara terus kepada Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak.

Laman portal The Tribunnews.com melaporkan Prabowo pernah melanjutkan pelajaran di Kuala Lumpur semasa bapanya, Sumitro Djoyohadikusumo, bertugas di Malaysia.

Beliau mempunyai hubungan rapat dengan Najib memandangkan kedua-dua bapa mereka adalah rakan rapat.

Wilfrida, 17, telah bekerja sejak berusia 12 tahun dan dikatakan telah menjadi mangsa penyeludupan manusia.

Menurut laporan, Wilfrida pada tahun 2010 telah ditawarkan oleh beberapa lelaki yang berjaya mendapatkannya pekerjaan di Malaysia.

Untuk membantu beliau masuk ke Malaysia, mereka memalsukan sijil miliknya bagi mendapat kebenaran sebagai seorang dewasa.

Sebaik sahaja tiba di Malaysia, Wilfrida telah bekerja sebagai pembantu rumah dengan seorang wanita tua yang menghidap penyakit Parkinson. Wanita itu ditemui mati pada 7 Disember 2010, dan Wilfrida ditahan dua minggu kemudian.

Seramai 220,000 pembantu rumah dari Indonesia bekerja di Malaysia, diikuti oleh Hong Kong (152,000) dan Singapura (90,000) namun, beberapa kes penderaan berprofil tinggi mengakibatkan Indonesia telah mengkaji semula untuk menghantar rakyat mereka ke Malaysia dan negara-negara ini.

Jakarta juga telah mengetatkan peraturan untuk rakyatnya bekerja sebagai pembantu rumah di Malaysia.

Agus Triyanto, yang berkhidmat di jabatan buruh Kedutaan Indonesia memberitahu The Malaysian Insider bulan lalu bahawa bermula tahuun 2017, pembantu rumah Indonesia yang bekerja di Malaysia tidak perlu tinggal di rumah majikan mereka. – 30 September, 2013.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

Ahad, 29 September 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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Japan’s luxury fruit masters grow money on trees

Posted: 29 Sep 2013 11:11 PM PDT

September 30, 2013

With melons that sell for the price of a new car and grapes that go for more than US$100 a pop, Japan is a country where perfectly-formed fruit can fetch a fortune.

An industry of fruit boutiques has defied Japan's sluggish economy to consistently offer luscious and lavishly tended produce for hefty prices – and it is always in demand.

In July, a single bunch of Ruby Roman grapes reportedly sold for 400,000 yen (US$4,000), making the plump, crimson berries worth a staggering 11,000 yen each.

Every May, a pair of canteloupe melons grown in the north of Hokkaido is auctioned off. They regularly fetch the price of a modest new car.

The hammer fell on this year's pair at a cool 1.6 million yen.

While such cases are at the extreme end, top-notch fruit is a valuable commodity in the world of business and as a seasonal gift, signifying just how much importance the giver attaches to the relationship.

"Most of our products are for gift purposes, so we collect large and high-grade products from all around Japan," says Yoshinobu Ishiyama, manager of a branch of Sun Fruits at Tokyo Midtown, a glitzy office-commercial complex that is also home to a Ritz Carlton Hotel.

"We offer rare products. Above all, they have to be delicious," he says.

You never forget the experience

Inside his bright, white-tiled emporium, an array of mouth-watering fruits gives off a heady, brain-tingling aroma as soothing music lulls his well-heeled customers.

While Ishiyama doesn't have anything you could trade for a mid-range auto, he does have a slightly more affordable example of the Ruby Roman grapes – a snip at 31,500 yen for a bunch.

A single white peach – flavourful, perfectly round and about the size of a newborn baby's head – goes for 2,625 yen. A bunch of Muscat of Alexandria grapes has a 7,350 yen price tag.

Then, there is the unrivalled symbol of expensive gifts in Japan – musk melons.

Sitting in individual wooden boxes on the top shelf of a glass-door refrigerator at the back of the shop, they will set you back as much as 16,000 yen.

There are also square watermelons – grown in plastic boxes and usually for decoration – which start at 5,000 yen.

As with everything in Japan, presentation is key: serried ranks of cherries line up in boxes, their stalks all facing in the same direction; strawberries nestle in soft packaging, their highly-shined, deep red surface uniformly patinated by seeds.

It goes without saying that there are no blemishes. Nothing is bruised, everything is exactly the right shape, as if each fruit has been cast in wax by a master craftsman working off the original blueprints.

Of course, not everyone buys their bananas at places like Sun Fruits; much more affordable offerings are on display in the average supermarket.

But to lubricate the wheels of social exchange in a country that has a deeply ingrained culture of gift-giving, nothing matches high-end fruit.

At summer and year-end, households send packaged gifts to relatives, business associates and bosses to express their gratitude.

If the two sides of the exchange are of a broadly similar social standing the gift is reciprocated. A 4,000 yen box of cherries might be given in exchange for a 5,000 yen presentation pack of mangoes.

If the giver owes for social favours dispensed through the year, there could be no change from that 16,000 yen musk melon. But the boss who receives it will understand how grateful you are.

The giving of high-end fruits creates a lasting impression on Japanese clients, says Tokyo-based corporate trainer Farhad Kardan, who was strolling through Sun Fruits choosing possible gifts.

"You buy these delicious things and share a great time with people who are close to you," he said.

"You never forget the experience of having eaten something so delicious. What you pay for is for the quality and the value."

How can fruit cost so much?

Despite more than a decade of deflation, prices for fresh food in Japan are considered high by world standards, partially as a result of farming practices and import preferences. Consumers are accustomed to paying a premium on Japanese-grown produce, with many believing it to be safer and better quality than imports.

But even so, many open-mouthed visitors to Japan wonder: how can a piece of fruit cost so much?

Ishiyama says his master musk melon grower Toshiaki Nishihara puts a whole lot of love into each fruit he raises in his computer-controlled greenhouse in Shizuoka prefecture, southwest of Tokyo.

He hand-pollinates his crop and selects only one melon on each plant so that all the nutrients, sugar and juice are concentrated in the chosen fruit.

Like their US$16,000 cousins from Hokkaido, the best-quality melons are perfect spheres with a smooth, evenly patterned rind.

"The prices are very high because of the care and cost that go into the fruits," Ishiyama said.

The AFP team who visited Sun Fruits was about to walk away empty-handed when they spotted two regular apples by the door – a bargain at a little over US$4 for the pair. – AFP, September 30, 2013.

New website allows home chefs to sell leftovers to strangers

Posted: 29 Sep 2013 08:19 AM PDT

September 29, 2013

A food-sharing concept that began in Athens in response to the economic crisis will be expanding to London this year, allowing home cooks to sell their leftover meal to neighbours down the street.

Travel pundits are already calling Cookisto the food version of Airbnb or Couchsurfing, all part of the sharing economy or collaborative consumption movement.

Here's how it works: You've made a few trays of lasagna and misjudged portion sizes and people's appetites. You have too many leftovers and want to get rid of them. Or, you're a budding chef who loves to cook and need guinea pigs on whom to test out recipes. Whatever the scenario, users can upload photos of their food, descriptions, portions and price and wait to see who bites.

Members arrange for pick-up or delivery amongst themselves.

What began as a master's degree thesis by a business student became a runaway hit in Athens, where 12,000 people signed up to the service since its launch a few months ago, reports the BBC.

And though Londoners are far better off economically than their counterparts in Greece where the unemployment rate is a staggering 28%, the concept has already generated interest among more than 18,600 home cooks who have signed up to the service which has yet to launch.

Like services such as Airbnb and Couchsurfing, Cookisto is an exercise in the honour system requiring a level of blind trust among members: There are no food and safety standards or inspectors and the functioning of the service will depend on ratings and reviews from fellow members.

Meanwhile, Cookisto isn't the first site to serve as a digital marketplace for food exchanges.

German website Foodsharing.de was also created to allow people to share surplus foods with strangers, reduce food waste and divert garbage from landfills.

Recently adopted a gluten-free or low-carb diet? Instead of throwing out that perfectly edible loaf of bread, users can post it online.

Threw a huge dinner party and overstocked the fridge with fruits and vegetables that risk going bad? Post them online and help feed a struggling family in need. Unlike Cookisto, foods shared on the German site are free.

Cookisto.co.uk is set to launch in the coming weeks – AFP Relaxnews, September 29, 2013.

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