Selasa, 29 Januari 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


World Pastry Cup crowns best pastry chefs

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 10:05 PM PST

LYON, France, Jan 30 — For 10 hours, chefs from 22 countries mixed, melted, tempered and moulded, hoping to take home bragging rights to being the best pastry maker, chocolatier and sugar sculptor at the World Pastry Cup in Lyon, France.

With home-team advantage, France took the gold medal, beating Japan and Italy.

These are their desserts and sugar sculptures that wowed the judges.

Gold medal: France

Vive la France: The sugar sculpture inspired by the Le Mans 24 Hours classic.©Sirha

Making up the team in the Coupe du Monde de la Patisserie competition were Quentin Bailly, Mathieu Blandin and Joffrey Lafontaine.

They won the €21,000 (RM85,930) cash prize and bragging rights.

The team also won for its entremet au chocolat dessert, or layered chocolate cake.

Helping to steer it to victory was its sugar sculpture, themed on the oldest active sports car race in the world — the Le 24 Hours.

Silver medal: Japan

Japan's silver medal winning team was made up of Tetsuro Akasaki, Daisuke Tomita and Koh Moriyama. They developed a recipe flavoured with Kiyomi orange, meringue and whipped cream.

Their second offering was a chocolate layered cake, also known as an entremet au chocolat, flavoured with Kiyomi orange.

They created a sugar sculpture dedicated to music.

Bronze medal: Italy

Francesco Boccia, Marcello Boccia and Lucca Cantarin made up Team Italy. Their plated dessert Alegria was made with crème Anglaise, hazelnuts, mandarin and chocolate.

Their chocolate offering was an entremet au chocolat, or layered cake.

The colour, spectacle and movement of the circus was the inspiration for their sugar sculpture.— AFP/Relaxnews

Most powerful chefs in the world throw party for Paul Bocuse

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 05:04 AM PST

Diner des Grands Chefs in Lyon, France. — Picture by Studio Eric Bergoend

NEW YORK, Jan 29 — When you're throwing a tribute dinner to the grand master chef Paul Bocuse, founder of perhaps the most prestigious culinary competition in the world and one of the most influential players in the development of nouvelle cuisine, you make sure it's prepared by a star-studded cast.

That means bringing together 200 of some of the biggest names in the world of gastronomy who collectively boast a constellation of Michelin stars between them.

On Monday night, the "Dîner des Grands Chefs du Monde" threw a party for Bocuse in the city hall of Lyon, France, site of the Bocuse d'Or competition and Sirha, one of the biggest food trade fairs in the world.

Culinary luminaries who attended the event included French chefs Yannick Alleno, Eric Frechon, Pierre Gagnaire, Anne-Sophie Pic, Thierry Marx, Guy Savoy, Pierre Troisgros and Emmanuel Renaut.

In a gold-gilded room, under rows of crystal chandeliers, chefs in their spotless chefs' coats sat amongst guests in suits and ties, clinking glasses to a decadent Michelin-starred meal.

Under Alain Ducasse's direction, Swedish chef Matthieu Viannay of two Michelin-starred restaurant La Mère Brazier in Lyon and triple garlanded chef Emmanuel Renaut of Flocons de Sel in the French Alps prepared the appetizers.

American chef titan Thomas Keller, meanwhile, was put in charge of the first dish, while Ducasse took over for the remainder of the meal.

Keller is also the president of Bocuse d'Or USA.

Meanwhile, teams from 24 countries around the world will be competing for the gold trophy at the Bocuse d'Or, known as the culinary Olympics of the food world, January 29 to 30. — AFP-Relaxnews

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Beckham trains with Arsenal to maintain fitness

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 06:50 AM PST

Football star David Beckham is now a free agent, after leaving LA Galaxy last month. — AFP pic

LONDON, Jan 29  — Former England football captain David Beckham is training with Arsenal in a bid to maintain his fitness, manager Arsene Wenger said today.

The 37-year-old midfielder is a free agent after leaving LA Galaxy at the end of the Major League Soccer (MLS) season in December.

"He has asked to come here and to work on his fitness. He has not done anything for a long time," Wenger told reporters.

"He called me. It is purely for fitness there is no speculation about him signing.

"We get nothing out of it, just to help somebody who we think deserves it and has made great service for English football."

The former Manchester United and Real Madrid player was linked by British media with moves to French club Paris St Germain or Premier League sides Queens Park Rangers and West Ham United earlier in the season.

Beckham trained with Arsenal for a short period in 2008 and with north London rivals Tottenham Hotspur two years ago. — Reuters

Coach La Volpe quits Atlante for surgery on major artery

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 06:31 AM PST

Former Mexico coach Ricardo La Volpe. — AFP pic

MEXICO CITY, Jan 29 — Former Mexico coach Ricardo La Volpe has quit his job with Mexican side Atlante because he needs an operation on a major blood vessel, the club said.

"Atlante's management confirms Ricardo La Volpe's departure for health reasons. Tomorrow (Tuesday) we will reveal the new coach of the Colts," a club statement said yesterday.

"It's an aneurism of the abdominal aorta," La Volpe told the football website http://www.mediotiempo.com. "I have already had studies and it requires an operation. It's nothing grave but it's a fact that I need to have an operation.

"It's the only way to be sure; my health comes first and then football," said the chain-smoking, 60-year-old Argentine, nicknamed Bigoton because of his big moustache.

La Volpe, who has spent most of his coaching career in Mexico, steered the national team to the 2003 Concacaf Gold Cup and the second round at the 2006 World Cup in Germany.

He was in his third spell at Atlante, with whom he won a league title in 1993, and leaves them in 15th place in the Clausura championship with three points from four matches.

La Volpe, a goalkeeper in Argentina's 1978 World Cup-winning squad, has also coached Boca Juniors, Velez Sarsfield and Banfield in his home country. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Oscar nod for protest film cheers Palestinians

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 04:03 AM PST

RAMALLAH, (West Bank), Jan 29 — Oscar-nominated documentary "5 Broken Cameras" screened for Palestinians for the first time on Monday, leaving locals hopeful that their struggle with Israel for land and statehood will gain a global audience.

The low-cost film is based on five years of amateur camera work by journalist Emad Burnat as he documented weekly protests against land seizures by Israeli forces and Jewish settlers in his village of Bil'in in the occupied West Bank.

Neighbours are killed in the protests and demolition equipment mars the landscape while the filmmaker captures his infant son's rapid loss of innocence, heralded by his first words: "wall" and "army."

"This is a film for those who were martyred. It's bigger than me and bigger than Bil'in. More than a billion people follow the Oscars and they will know our struggle now," Burnat said after the viewing.

His work will compete at next month's Oscar ceremony against four other films, including a documentary called "The Gatekeepers" that looks at the decades-old Middle East conflict through the eyes of six top former Israeli intelligence bosses.

Although the perspective is very different, both movies share a surprisingly similar message -- the Israeli occupation of the West Bank is morally wrong and must end.

Burnat's film received a standing ovation at its premier in Ramallah, the Palestinians' administrative capital, with the audience excited to see their seemingly endless conflict splashed on the big screen.

"The film shows the whole world what occupation is. It wiped the happiness off the boy's face at too young an age. This has been the experience for all of us," said taxi driver Ahmed Mustafa, who brought his wife and child to the viewing

"It's not all bad though. It shows that there is progress, there are victories, and that our cause is still alive and moving," he said.

In 2007, Israel's High Court ruled that the separation barrier built on Bil'in lands was illegal and ordered it rerouted, cheering activists. The ruling was finally implemented in 2011, but the protests continue.

Israeli co-direction

Humble villagers in black-and-white chequered Palestinian scarves and smartly dressed city dwellers shared the same visceral reaction to scenes in the film that are much chronicled but seldom appear in feature-length film.

A shot of olive trees reduced to glowing embers after being torched by Jewish settlers coaxes an audible gasp from viewers.

"Oh God!" said one man.

But as Burnat's camera captures defiant chants in the protagonists' village accent, or rocks being hurled at fleeing Israeli jeeps, ecstatic applause filled the hall.

The film was co-directed by an Israeli activist and filmmaker, Guy Davidi. This close association has led some people to classify 5 Broken Cameras as an Israeli movie and it was rejected by a Morocco film festival for this reason.

However, Burnat said it had been shown in Iran and other Middle Eastern countries and denied that the joint production reflected any meaningful "normalisation" of relations between Israel and the Palestinians.

"(Davidi) is a solidarity activist who came to the village to show his support. He was shown our material and agreed to help. This doesn't represent Israeli-Palestinian collaboration," Burnat said.

But the film's action shows many examples of cooperation between Israeli solidarity activists and locals.

An Israeli photographer gives Burnat one of his five cameras, which are progressively shot or crushed in protests over the years, giving the film its name, and Israeli solidarity activists are shown helping to plan protests in Hebrew.

"Working jointly with an Israeli doesn't diminish this work, it enhances it," Palestinian student Amira Daood told Reuters.

"They're not all against us. Some are opposed to what Israel is doing and the movie demonstrates that," she said. — Reuters

Justin Bieber strips down voice, heartache on ‘Believe Acoustic’

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 01:38 AM PST

LOS ANGELES, Jan 29 — Justin Bieber is stripping down. Musically, that is.

The Canadian pop phenomenon showcases his vocal and song-writing talents with a new acoustic album, out on Tuesday, that also features three new tracks including a heartbreak ballad thought to be about his former girlfriend Selena Gomez.

"Believe Acoustic" sees Bieber, 18, change up the arrangements of songs from his fourth chart-topping album "Believe," released last June, singing with only a guitar or piano-driven melody.

Uptempo songs such as "Boyfriend," and "Beauty and the Beat," which roped in electronic sounds with fast-paced dance beats, are slowed down as the singer uses his vocals to manipulate the vibe of the song.

"Believe Acoustic" sees Bieber return to his acoustic roots five years after he was discovered on YouTube, singing on the streets of Canada accompanied only by a guitar.

It was released following Bieber's failure to pick up a single Grammy nomination this year, despite having a chart-topping album and a sold-out world tour.

Bieber often performs acoustic versions of his hits, most recently at the American Music Awards in November, where he delivered a stripped-down version of dance song "As Long As You Love Me."

The teen singer released "My Worlds Acoustic," in 2010, featuring alternative versions of tracks from his debut studio record "My World."

But most ears now are turned to new track "Nothing Like Us", which follows Bieber's widely reported split from former Disney Channel star Gomez.

It features Bieber singing a raw and emotion-filled ballad over a piano melody, with lyrics such as "Girl, why would you push me away?/Lost in confusion, like an illusion...But that is the past now, we didn't last now."

Simple love songs

Bill Werde, editorial director of Billboard music magazine, who interviewed Bieber a few months ago, said the song was "directly about Selena" and that fans were anticipating the singer sharing "his feelings about something this personal."

The new track is not dissimilar to the heart-break odes written by country-pop darling Taylor Swift or British soul-pop singer Adele.

Werde said he hoped people would take notice of Bieber's song-writing and vocal production skills on the new album.

"Some of the best songwriters that are working out of our pop space are the ones that can take these very, very specific feelings that you would expect a teenager or a young adult to have and then sing and write about them in a way that makes them universal," Werde told Reuters.

"That's a skill that needs to be respected. It's not easy to write great, simple love songs."

The other new songs are "I Would," a sweet love song, and "Yellow Raincoat," a mellow survival song with the singer crooning softly "cause the fame and the money and the girl will drive you crazy...I'm thinking maybe just put on my raincoat."

Bieber may not be winning Grammys just yet, but the singer could make chart history if "Believe Acoustic" reaches No. 1 in the Billboard 200 album chart next week.

The singer will become the youngest artist to have five No. 1 albums under his belt, and one of few artists, including The Beatles and Jay-Z, to have a No. 1 album each year for four consecutive years.

Bieber, who surpassed Lady Gaga earlier this month to become Twitter's most-followed person, will make his television hosting debut on "Saturday Night Live" on Feb. 9, the night before the Grammy awards.

Bieber told Billboard he would not be attending the Grammy awards ceremony in Los Angeles. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views

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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views


Indonesia may miss investment goal, must improve infrastructure

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 07:54 AM PST

An aerial view of flooding inundating a business district in Jakarta in this handout picture provided by the Indonesian National Agency for Disaster Management on January 18, 2013. — Reuters pic

JAKARTA, Jan 29 — Indonesia may struggle to meet its investment target this year and money needs to be diverted from costly fuel subsidies to improving weak infrastructure, which risks deterring investors, a senior Finance Ministry official said today.

The head of the ministry's think-tank urged the country's energy ministry to be "more aggressive" in dealing with the fuel subsidy issue, which last year cost the government 211 trillion rupiah (RM67 billion), or 54 per cent more than the budgeted target of 137.4 trillion rupiah.

"(The target for) investment might be challenging," head of ministry's fiscal office, Bambang Brodjonegoro, told Reuters in an interview. He pointed to potential obstacles including problems related to infrastructure, labour issues and the broader investment climate.

For 2012, Indonesia reported receiving a record 221 trillion rupiah in foreign direct investment (FDI), up 26 per cent from a year earlier, with increased spending in mining, transport and chemicals.

For this year, the government hopes to get 23 per cent more FDI than in 2012.

But there have been repeated warnings that insufficient improvements in critical infrastructure areas such as ports and roads could eventually make investors turn away from Indonesia.

Infrastructure woes were on stark display earlier this month when the capital Jakarta came to a virtual standstill after torrential monsoon rains.

LEARN FROM THAILAND

"We need to learn from the floods in Thailand in 2011. If we don't learn from what happened in Thailand, it will be dangerous for Jakarta," said Brodjonegoro. Flooding in the Thai capital in late 2011 caused massive damage and forced a contraction in the economy in the last quarter of that year.

The recent investment levels have been helping make Southeast Asia's largest economy be one of the world's fastest growing. For this year, growth is predicted by many to reach around 6.6-6.8 per cent.

The government has allocated 196.9 trillion rupiah on infrastructure this year, or more than 11 per cent of its expenditure, up from 174.9 trillion rupiah in 2012.

However, the figure is less than the former OPEC member is spending on fuel subsidies, and that expenditure is likely to rise.

The government of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has shown little appetite for addressing the socially sensitive issue in the run-up to next year's general and presidential elections.

"We need a better budget spending by switching the subsidy into the infrastructure. The floods (in Jakarta) emphasise the needs of right-sizing the subsidy," Brodjonegoro said, adding it needed the energy ministry's support.

"Now, they (the energy ministry) are trying to avoid the main problem ... not going to the heart of the problem itself, unfortunately." — Reuters

Motorcyclist flees with two money bags as security men transfer cash to bank

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 07:50 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 29 – The police have arrested five employees of a security services company after a motorcyclist helped himself to two bags containing RM540,000 from the firm's van as five employees were busy transferring money bags to a bank in Kelana Jaya here early today.

Petaling Jaya police chief ACP Arjunaidi Mohamed said the incident happened at 2am when four staff of the company were transferring the money bags, and the driver was unaware that the motorcyclist had taken the two bags.

"Preliminary investigations showed that the van driver was unaware of the robbery while the four other employees were busy transferring the bags.

"As the motorcyclist was fleeing with the loot, one of the staff realised what was happening and raised the alarm," he said when contacted.

Arjunaidi said following the robbery, the police arrested five employees of the company, one of them a supervisor, to help in their investigation.

He said the police did not rule out the possibility of an inside job.

"We are studying the CCTV in front of the bank and elsewhere to get leads," he said.

He also appealed to anyone who had information on the robbery to contact any police station. – Bernama

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features


For most children’s migraines, placebos as good as pills

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 05:02 AM PST

CLEVELAND, Jan 29 — A drug-free placebo pill prevents migraines in children and teens just as well as most headache medicines, according to a US study.

Researchers published in JAMA Paediatrics found that only two drugs known to help migraine-plagued adults reduced the frequency of children's headaches better than a placebo. Even in those cases the effect was small — a difference of less than one headache per month compared to the dummy pills.

A study finds that only two drugs known to help migraine-plagued adults reduced the frequency of children's headaches better than a placebo. — AFP pic

According to data from the Cleveland Clinic, about 2 per cent of young children and 7 to 10 per cent of older children and teenagers up to age 15 get migraines.

No drugs have been rigorously tested and approved for preventing migraines in children, so doctors have to rely on medicine for adults, experts said.

"All the drugs in our analysis have been found effective in adults with migraine headaches, but few were beneficial among children," wrote study leader Jeffrey Jackson from the medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, and colleagues.

"This suggests there may be something different about paediatric migraines or that the response to treatment differs between children and adults."

In the study, Jackson and his colleagues looked at 21 trials comparing headache drugs to each other or to placebos. They found that only topiramate (marketed as Topamax) and trazodone (Oleptro and Desyrel) significantly reduced the frequency of headaches in children and teens who got regular migraines.

Other adult headache prevention medicines, including flunarizine, propanolol and valproate, were of no help.

"Parents should be aware that our medication choices aren't as good as they should be," said Jennifer Bickel, a neurologist and headache specialist at Children's Mercy Hospitals and Clinics in Kansas City, Missouri, who was not part of the study.

Placebo pills alone led to a drop in children's headache frequency from between five and six headaches per month to three per month, which might have to do with the effect of seeing a doctor and being reassured the pain isn't due to anything serious, Bickel said.

She said there is the least research on the one per cent of children who are most severely affected by migraines, those with chronic daily headaches.

For those youth, "we don't have any evidence to suggest that the medications are enough," she said.

According to a report from the US Food and Drug Administration published in the same journal issue, two drugs — almotriptan malate (Axert) and rizatriptan benzoate (Maxalt) — are approved to treat, but not prevent, headaches in children and teens.

For children who get headaches once a week or less, Bickel said the pain can be treated with over-the-counter painkillers, or even just wait it out in a quiet place. — Reuters

EU needs more electric, hybrid cars to reach carbon goals, say study

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 04:37 AM PST

The 2014 Cadillac ELR plug-in hybrid is introduced at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan January 15, 2013. — Reuters pic

BRUSSELS, Jan 28 — The European Union needs a leap in the number of electric and hybrid cars on the road over the next decade to succeed in cutting auto carbon emissions significantly by 2025, a British consulting firm found.

The study by Ricardo-AEA will stoke already difficult debate over how to implement a 2020 vehicle emission standard of 95 grams of carbon dioxide per kilometre (g/km).

The Commission has said it will publish a document later this year on low carbon car standards beyond 2020.

The consultancy, which advises governments and companies, looked at a set of scenarios for 2025 in the study, commissioned by campaign groups Greenpeace and Transport & Environment and seen by Reuters prior to official publication.

It found that an average of 70 g/km across the bloc could be achieved by 2025 if new car sales were divided roughly equally between hybrid and conventional cars. The resulting extra manufacturing costs of around 1,615 euros (RM6,777) for a hybrid car could be paid back in less than three years through fuel savings.

The same goal could be reached if new car sales included 7 per cent electric vehicles and then only 22 per cent hybrid cars, the study found.

Environmental campaigners want an ambitious goal of 60 g/km for 2025 to be agreed alongside the implementation debate on reaching the 2020 goal. That would give vehicle manufacturers, who say product cycles are between five and seven years, enough time to adapt and prevent Europe from losing any innovative edge.

A 60 g/km target could be achieved if up to 24 per cent of new vehicles were electric, which is "well within the range of credible market projections and scenarios", the study said.

Hybrid vehicles — part powered by electricity and part by fossil fuels — in 2010 made up around 1 per cent of the EU fleet and electric cars around 0.1 per cent, according to figures from the International Council for Clean Transport.

Although renowned for gas guzzling, the United States has already set a standard for 2025 that requires the doubling of fuel economy in cars from 2011.

The EU argument over implementing 2020 goals is highly technical. Luxury carmakers in Germany, for example, argue for loopholes, known as supercredits, that would allow them to continue producing more polluting cars if they also make some cars with very low emissions such as electric vehicles.

To try to spur the uptake of greener transport fuel, the European Commission, this month proposed a law to establish a minimum number of electricity, hydrogen and natural gas refuelling stations. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Say what, liberal arts?

Posted: 28 Jan 2013 03:49 PM PST

JAN 29 — So the most common misconception about a liberal arts education is that people are at university (college in American) to pursue the arts like music or painting. Slightly nearer guesses would be that people in these colleges pursue degrees in the humanities, that they are there to pursue the social sciences like politics or economics.

As I myself am in a liberal arts college in the United States I would rectify some misconceptions. While it is true that I am pursuing the social sciences, know that that is not representative of what a liberal arts education is. Instead, a liberal arts education is actually an education model that focuses on holistic learning.

There have been criticisms of how graduates, particularly local graduates, these days are very myopic in their world views, and know nothing of the world other than what they pursued in university.

The trend is that universities in the world are moving towards including breadth learning into their curriculum, as there is an increasing consensus that there is a need for a rounded people. The introduction of an elite American education system in typically rigid countries shows a paradigm shift towards the need for a holistic approach towards education. For example, Singapore has introduced a liberal arts education model via the Yale-NUS College to its choice of tertiary education spots, despite her longstanding history of being academically rigid.

The reason why liberal arts colleges are relatively unknown among Malaysians, I suspect, is due to the fact that these colleges are never listed on any university ranking. Considering that this is often a benchmark for many Malaysians to even consider a university, it is unfortunate that many liberal arts colleges in the US become relatively unknown.

Why aren't these colleges on the list? Very briefly, most rankings are dependent on the amount of research that is pumped out by universities and colleges. As most liberal arts colleges are not heavily geared towards research the way bigger universities are, they are effectively left out from these rankings. Professors at colleges like mine are not as bound by the "publish or perish" motto the way traditional universities are, and they are thus able to devote majority of their time to teaching.

The caveat is this: it is extremely easy to get lost in a system like this, to be constantly excited by intellectual prospects to the extent that you want to learn everything. Admittedly, it takes great discipline and clear goals to master the system.

It ultimately really depends on what you want to do. With the market being overly saturated by professional and highly specialised graduates, a liberal arts education is really just a sweet alternative. Armed with an artillery of broad knowledge and life skills such as speaking, writing and critical thinking, graduates of liberal arts colleges have the potential to be highly sought-after employees.

Yet another misconception about such graduates is that they spend too much time in doing breadth subjects that they do not graduate with the same solid knowledge as their counterparts from more traditional systems.

The market, especially American media, seems to portray two very divergent views about liberal arts graduates: that they are either highly employable or that they are doomed with prospects of unemployment. We have to understand that the job market and needs of America are really different from the needs in Malaysia. In the US, there seems to be a demand for employees with strong quantitative skills and given the general aversion of Americans from quantitative classes, therein lies the gap. In Malaysia, the reverse is true.

At the end of the day, it really boils down to what type of education one is looking for. As for me, I can only say that I am immensely grateful for the opportunities to pursue both the humanities and mathematics, because I can see the connections between the two where no one else can.

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist.

Women in the combat frontline

Posted: 28 Jan 2013 03:41 PM PST

JAN 29 — If your country is attacked by an army of women combatants, how would the Commander-in-Chief respond?

A. Send out the military which is dominated by males;

B. Enrol more females, hence, a mix of soldiers to respond;

C. Send out an all-female military response; or

D. Assume no response is necessary as the attack will not be successful.

News flash: US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta announced that the Pentagon will end the long-standing prohibition on women serving in direct combat.

What exactly is a frontline war zone?

The news flash has created a flashpoint of debate on women in combat; however, the issue is actually deeper. It is about the roles of women in society, especially during war time.

Much research and many articles have been published on the relative strength of women and the associated issues and effects of women operating in an all-male unit combat zone. Even calorific intake is said to be strictly controlled in battle zones: 3,950 calories a day for men, 2,700 for women. But perhaps there has been less focus on the exact conditions that frontline combatants live under in the gruelling war zones especially in today's global landscape.

A former marine, Ryan Smith, wrote in the Wall Street Journal on January 23, 2013: "Most people seem to believe that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have merely involved driving out of a forward operating base, patrolling the streets, maybe getting in a quick firefight, and then returning to the forward operating base and its separate shower facilities and chow hall … I served in the 2003 invasion of Iraq as a marine infantry squad leader. We rode into war crammed in the back of amphibious assault vehicles. They are designed to hold roughly 15 marines snugly; due to maintenance issues, by the end of the invasion we had as many as 25 men stuffed into the back. Marines were forced to sit, in full gear, on each other's laps and in contorted positions for hours on end. That was the least of our problems … Sometimes we spent over 48 hours on the move without exiting the vehicles. We were forced to urinate in empty water bottles inches from our comrades."

Is it a sign of progress?

History has recorded many women who participated in the battlefront. There was Queen Boudica, who led the Britons against Rome; Joan of Arc of France. Women fought in the First World War and in the Second World War, British and German women served in combat roles in anti-aircraft units. They were in the hundreds of thousands and said to have shot down thousands of enemy fliers. This was then widely accepted as they were not at risk of capture. But can we guarantee this today?

It's well acknowledged the important role women play in society. Women are deemed less susceptible to temptation (corruption), they are also seen as better leaders in organisations, better at raising children, and, often, are the glue that keeps a family together, be it in a least, less, or developed world. The adage, educate a woman you educate a community was not said for no reason.

But will increasing the number of women in the military result in a more effective and efficient military? Follow-up question: is it a sign of "progress" for a country (or society or, even, civilisation) if women are given same option responsibility as men in protecting the country from the frontline? Will it in any way increase the fortunes of a society or a country?

Two schools of thought

Although women are built differently, the first school of thought on this debate is about "separate but equal" treatment and their talking points include:

● It is about objective standards, and if a soldier passes the various tests, physical, emotional, mental, etc., then they have earned the right to represent their country on the frontlines. However, it is rare to have the same people talk about the actual frontline experience of women under sustained fire and its impact over time.

● It is an opportunity to move up (fast track) the chain of command, and with women in higher places, women issues are better represented for informed solutions, hence, advancing career opportunities. This is the same argument put forth of need to have affirmative action quotas, be it the Bumiputera favourable treatment, a minimum set aside for board positions for women, and so on. Have such arguments prevailed in having Bumiputeras gain the targeted levels of economic parity? Or have boards recruited women based on competence or quota incentives? 

The second and competing school of thought includes many former/present frontline combatants, and they have aired arguments against ending the prohibition, including:

● The physical demands of carrying 22kg of body-wear may be fine during training exercise, but under duress of conflict in hostile weather may result in lagging soldiers.

● Being able to carry injured colleagues (or retrieving killed soldier), weighing more than the carrier, to safer places for treatment. This actually places her directly in harm's way.

● Stress and "distractions" of being in a fox-hole for extended period of time with male soldiers.

● The rate of suicide among men in combat, from Iraq to Afghanistan, has increased significantly, what of single mothers returning home?

● That time of month for women and the conditions in frontline battle fields.

● Being caught by enemy and torture includes rape and sexual assaults.

● Being bought back home in body bags.

Finally, it is well known that countries, like Israel, known to be on heightened alert of conflict, have banned women in combat as result of this experience.

History of women in conflicts

In Islam, according to narrations from the various historic accounts, Muslim women are exempted but are not prohibited to fight to defend their communities.

Muslim women can participate in battle zones with the Muslim army if the latter is a strong and powerful army and if there is no fear that Muslim women would be taken prisoners. Ibn Abdel Bar, an Islamic scholar, said: "They (the women) can go with the army if the army is strong enough to take hold of the enemy's army." 

This is the opinion of all scholars and it is an imitation of a Sunnah that the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) did and his companions followed.

The Prophet took his wives and some of the wives of the Muslims in several holy battles in the company of the Prophet (pbuh) as narrated in a sound hadith. But it was also narrated that the role of women was mostly limited to looking after the wounded and providing food and drink to the men. Where she is required to travel, it is narrated that she should only do so within the limits of her nature. During the Prophet Muhammad's lifetime, Aisha (RA) participated in the early battles. During the Battle of Uhud, for example, Aishah distributed water bags to the Muslim combatants on the battlefield.

Amazon's ancient warriors?

The Amazon warriors were said to be a group of warrior women who belonged to an all-female culture and society in Greek mythology. They were reputed for their fearsome battle and fighting skills. These women are said to be as strong as any man, and tall and powerful. The Amazon warriors' exact location is unknown, although recent evidence has found some Amazon remains are located in Cumbria, England. Most sources do concur that the Amazonians were around in Roman times from around 27 BC to 1400 AD. Whether the Amazon women warriors were a myth or a reality, what was prevalent in their tradition and said existence is that they were warriors who lived in all-female communities.

My daughter

In the final analysis, we ask ourselves if we will let our daughters, sisters, wives draft for frontline battle.

Would I encourage my daughter to become a combatant in the frontlines? I wonder if the defence secretary's boss, President Barak Obama, would also encourage his two daughters to participate in direct combat. Or, put differently, if they wanted to serve their country as frontliners, would the president or the first lady discourage them?

There are cases recorded even in the US military where women in frontline combat have been kidnapped by enemy soldiers and sexually assaulted. This, despite the training they received in how to avoid these things. When women take on frontline combat roles, their male colleagues may put themselves in harm's way to protect the honour of their female colleagues in a way they never would for fellow male officers.

Obviously, one is patriotic to the country that has given them life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. But surely there other ways to demonstrate patriotism. Must we place women in the most dangerous lines of fire to demonstrate this in the name of equality? Can there not be better roles for women in light of their genetic predispositions and special talents?

My views cannot be better represented than by a 2007 article which John Piper wrote in World magazine:

"If I were the last man on the planet to think so, I would want the honour of saying no woman should go before me into combat to defend my country. A man who endorses women in combat is not pro-woman; he's a wimp. He should be ashamed. For most of history, in most cultures, he would have been utterly scorned as a coward to promote such an idea. Part of the meaning of manhood as God created us is the sense of responsibility for the safety and welfare of our women."

How would you react to the following comment?

"It ain't combat until the lead is coming at you!"

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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Putera raja Negeri Sembilan jelaskan tawaran DAP

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 02:04 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 29 Jan — Tunku Zain Al-'Abidin, putera raja Negeri Sembilan yang dipujuk DAP menyertai politik, mengesahkan memang wujud perbincangan mengenai tawaran daripada parti itu.

Tunku Zain Al-'Abidin, anakanda Yang Dipertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan Tuanku Muhriz Tuanku Munawir, turut melahirkan rasa kecewanya apabila butiran tawaran itu menjadi pengetahuan umum walaupun ia seharusnya kekal sebagai perbincangan peribadi.

"Ahli politik seharusnya mampu berhubung dan berkomunikasi dengan semua lapisan warga Malaysia dalam apa jua situasi termasuk perbincangan sulit asalkan masih dalam batasan perundangan negara," kata beliau dalam satu kenyataan hari ini.

Kenyataan itu dikeluarkan apabila bekas Naib Pengerusi DAP Tunku Abdul Aziz Tunku Ibrahim mendedahkan bahawa Pengerusi DAP Negeri Sembilan Loke Siew Fook pernah meminta beliau memujuk Tunku Zain Al-'Abidin untuk menjadi calon parti itu dan bertanding kerusi Dewan Undangan Negeri.

Tunku Abdul Aziz berkata beliau telah menyampaikan hasrat DAP itu kepada Tunku Zain Al-'Abidin namun ditolak.

"Namun begitu nasi sudah menjadi bubur. Oleh kerana perkara tersebut telah dibawa kepada pengetahuan umum, saya boleh mengesahkan bahawa butiran perbincangan dengan DAP beberapa bulan sebelum ini adalah hampir tepat," kata Tunku Zain Al-'Abidin. Memandangkan ia adalah perbincangan tidak rasmi, jadi tiada minit perbincangan dicatatkan, kata beliau lagi.

"Ingin saya nyatakan di sini bahawa saya juga pernah dijemput untuk bertemu dan berbincang secara tidak rasmi dengan wakil-wakil parti politik yang lain," kata beliau.

Tunku Zain Al-'Abidin berkata beliau amat menghormati dan mengagumi ahli politik tanpa mengira kepartian yang berprinsip dan bekerja keras.

"Namun, pada pandangan saya tiada satupun parti politik pada hari ini yang mampu menyamai kejituan dan kesaksamaan visi Ayahanda Kemerdekaan yang boleh mempengaruhi saya untuk menyertai mana-mana parti," kata beliau.

Katanya walaupun ada pihak yang memperkatakan tidak wajar seorang putera Raja melibatkan diri dalam politik, namun sejak 1957, terdapat lima putera Raja yang telah berbuat demikian.

Mereka ialah Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj dari Kedah yang menjadi Anggota Parlimen Kuala Muda 1955-1970 dan Perdana Menteri dari 1957 hingga 1970 (Umno dan Semangat 46), Tunku Panglima Besar Tunku Abdullah dari Negeri Sembilan (Anggota Parlimen Rawang 1964-1974, Umno); Tengku Seri Paduka Raja Tengku Ibrahim dari Terengganu (ADUN Ajil 1990-1995, Semangat 46 dan PAS), Tengku Datuk Seri Azlan Sultan Abu Bakar dari Pahang (Anggota Parlimen Jerantut 1999 hingga kini dan Timbalan Menteri Pengangkutan 1999-2008, Semangat 46 dan Umno) dan Datuk Seri Diraja Syed Razlan Jamalullail dari Perlis (Anggota Parlimen Arau 2004-2008 dan ADUN Pauh 2008 hingga kini, Umno).

 Tunku Zain Al-'Abidin berkata beliau sudah pun terlibat dalam 'persekitaran' politik lama sebelum ayahandanya ditabal menjadi Yang Dipertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan ke-11. Putera Raja itu menjelaskan beliau akan meneruskan penyertaannya dalam Institut Hal Ehwal Demokrasi dan Ekonomi dan beberapa yayasan lain untuk terus menyambung bakti. — Bernama

Polis minta masyarakat jangan spekulasi kematian William

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 02:02 AM PST

JOHOR BAHARU, 29 Jan — Polis meminta masyarakat supaya tidak membuat sebarang spekulasi berhubung kes kanak-kanak enam tahun William Yau Zhen Zhong, yang telahpun diklasifikasi sebagai kematian mengejut.

"Saya tidak mahu mengulas panjang isu ini kerana semua orang tahu ibu bapa mangsa kini masih bersedih atas kehilangan anak mereka," kata Ketua Polis Negara Tan Sri Ismail Omar.

Beliau berkata demikian selepas majlis perasmian bangunan Ibu Pejabat Polis Daerah (IPD) Kulaijaya oleh Sultan Ibrahim Sultan Iskandar hari ini.

Bagaimanapun, Ismail berkata polis sedia menerima maklumat tambahan berhubung kejadian itu dan akan menjalankan siasatan lanjut.

"Kes ini dianggap sebagai satu kejadian malang menimpa kanak-kanak terbabit dan perlu dijadikan ingatan kepada orang ramai dan kami sudah berusaha 100 peratus untuk mengesannya selain mendapatkan kerjasama daripada orang ramai," katanya.

Anak kedua pasangan Yau Kok Kang, 32, dan Goh Ying Ying, 28, itu dilapor hilang pada 16 Jan di Jalan Putra Mahkota, Putra Heights, Subang Jaya selepas dipercayai keluar dari kenderaan untuk mencari ibu bapanya yang singgah di sebuah kedai barangan elektrik.

Sementara itu, Ismail berkata bangunan IPD Kulaijaya yang dibina dengan kos RM119 juta itu merupakan bangunan pejabat tiga tingkat dengan 318 unit kediaman dan mula beroperasi sejak Mei 2011. — Bernama

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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