Khamis, 21 Februari 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Food


French restaurant in Singapore tapped as ‘The One to Watch’

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 06:31 PM PST

SINGAPORE, Feb 22 — A small, modern French restaurant on the 70th floor of the Swissôtel in Singapore helmed by a young chef from central France has been tapped as "The One To Watch" by Asia's 50 Best Restaurants.

File photo of the JAAN at Swissôtel The Stamford. — Picture courtesy of Swissotel

In the inaugural edition of the awards, to be held on Monday, the Asian arm of The World's 50 Best Restaurants awards singled out JAAN at Swissôtel The Stamford for making an impact on Asia's culinary landscape in a short time and pushing the limits of fine dining through creativity and innovation.

Helming the sky-high eatery is French-born chef Julien Royer, who filled the vacuum left by chef André Chiang in 2011.

Before taking over the kitchens of JAAN, which is derived from the ancient Sanskrit word for "bowl", Royer cooked under triple Michelin-starred French chef Michel Bras, at Bras in Laguiole, France, and Bernard Andrieux, both of whom he credits for influencing his current cooking philosophy which emphasises the importance of quality, organic ingredients and maintaining the purity of flavour in dishes.

Dishes on his à la carte menu include Confit Arctic Char with hazelnuts, and Oscietra caviar from Russia and Romanesco, also known as Roman cauliflower, or Bresse pigeon, a hay-roasted breast with confit legs, beet roots and jus d'abats (or jus of offal). Royer has also worked in the French Indies, in the kitchens of Jean Georges Vongerichten restaurants, at Greenhouse Restaurant in London, and Brasserie Les Saveurs at the St Regis, Singapore.

The inaugural Asia's 50 Best Restaurants awards will be held at the Marina Bay Sands in Singapore. — AFP-Relaxnews

A Chinese New Year reunion dinner in Paris

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 04:25 PM PST

Eiffel Tower at night (left); the Parisian Chinatown (right). – Pictures by CK Lim

PARIS, Feb 22 — As we step out of the Porte de Choisy Métro stop into the chilly winter air, we are greeted by a boulevard decked out in red lanterns and the occasional scroll of Chinese calligraphy. We walk past a McDonald's with its name in Chinese characters next to the more familiar Golden Arches.

Welcome to Chinatown in Paris.

A troupe of young lion dancers (a mix of mostly Asian teens and a couple of blond-haired French apprentices) nearly run into us as they hurry by with a fire-truck-red pedestal. There are the usual Chinese hair salons found in every decent-sized Chinatown in the world. (I've learned the hard way that European hairdressers tend to mangle our more delicate hair, being used to feistier Caucasian curls.)

Traditional steamed fish in soy sauce.

There are dim sum shops and restaurants specialising in roast meats. Half of the younger Chinese pedestrians stroll by with a French partner hanging on their arm. Ah, to be young and to be in love! It's the same wherever we find ourselves. Love is love is love.

While it's already dark, our watches confirm it's only six in the evening. We're having dinner very early by Parisian standards, where some restaurants don't begin seating diners till after eight. Our venue tonight is Li Ka Fo, an old Cantonese stalwart in Avenue de Choisy, the main road cutting through this French Chinatown.

From the outside we observe a few occupied tables with the patrons happily digging in already. This may be Paris but the Chinese can be trusted to have a meal at any time of the day. There's never a bad time. Early to eat, early to reap (wealth, one assumes).

We are greeted at the entrance by the fragrant salute of fried duck tongues with spices and braised beef tripe. It may be bad manners to stare at what others are having but fortunately no one bats an eye here. We are all here for good food; this everyone understands.

Mixed vegetables (left); roast duck (right).

The tables are square and smallish, squashed against each other like peas in a rather uncomfortable pod. Paper sheets are spread on top of every emperor-yellow tablecloth. The aesthetics aren't really a concern here; speed and efficiency is.

The menus are in Chinese, French and English; the last a nod to those among us who are nominally Chinese but can't read a single Chinese character to save our lives. Even "bananas" have to eat, and eat well given it's the eve of the Lunar New Year.

It is fun to read our favourite dishes in French; the tongue-twisting encornet sautées poivres turns out to be salt and pepper squid while the demonic-sounding gambas ailées à la vapeur are merely harmless king prawns steamed with garlic. Given how poorly the English translations fared in the menu, we wonder how accurate the French versions are.

The proprietors are Cantonese — we guess this from the instructions the silver-haired maître d' gives to his son who takes most of the orders. Our server for the evening is from mainland China, probably the northern part given her accent. While she is warm and polite with us, she soon showed that she wasn't to be messed around with when another table reservation for six pax dared to turn up late and with only two diners at that. Let's just say the cacophonous din had another voice raised several decibels above it in righteous admonishment.

Vermicelli and crabmeat soup (left); scallops with pine nuts (right).

We have steamed fish with soy sauce as you can't have a reunion dinner without fish ("yu" in Mandarin, which also sounds like the word "surplus"): the classic New Year greeting "nian nian you yu" assures us that there will be abundance throughout the year. Topped simply with julienned ginger and a generous toss of chopped chives, the firm flesh of the fresh fish is both a luxury and a comfort.

There is also vermicelli and crabmeat soup, aromatic with sesame oil. Soup is a must for the Cantonese and we are all Cantonese at this table, born or "honorary", shall we say. It's a safety blanket for when the world around is so uncertain. We have vegetables for fibre and a full year; scallops and pine nuts for bite. Lastly roast duck with dripping, succulent fat. Decadent and probably not healthy, but this is a time to indulge.

There is no loh sang. We have already done our fair share of that courtesy of brisk pre-Chinese New Year celebration business in every restaurant back home. To be honest, I've had my fill of yee sang and this seasonal, semi-artificial salad only feels appropriate in Southeast Asia for some reason. There is part of me which longs to be part of the greater Chinese diaspora and to experience what they experience.

I tell Patrick, our sole non-Chinese family member (he's from Ireland), that there wasn't a Chinatown in Munich when I was studying there more than a decade ago. All we had was a tiny street with an Asian food store which carried ancient-looking durians at astronomical prices and a Hong Kong-style restaurant.

Hungry patrons waiting outside Li Ka Fo on Chinese New Year's Eve.

One year I took my friends there for our reunion dinner of sorts. There was no yee sang, of course, and it was fun witnessing my friends — a few Italians, two Americans, one Greek and some Germans, natürlich — attempt "Kung Hei Fatt Choy" with their various accents.

They watched as I ordered the dishes in German and asked me why I didn't use Chinese instead. My reply: "The waiter wouldn't understand because he's from Hanoi and I don't speak any Vietnamese."

Patrick laughs at this anecdote so I tell him it's an old one I reserve for occasions like this. When family from afar gather and have a good meal in each other's company. It's like Thanksgiving or Hanukkah, except with Chinese matrons replacing the Jewish mamas.

We raise our glasses (made from shock-proof Perspex; no decent Chinatown restaurant would use real glass) and toast the Year of the Snake with hot tea. A fresh year and precious time with those we call our family — these may be all the wealth we need to reap.

Li Ka Fo, 39 Avenue de Choisy, 75013 Paris, France (Tél: +33 145 842 045).

Métro: Porte de Choisy

* Kenny prays every family is united this new year. Read more stories at http://lifeforbeginners.com/

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Manchester United’s Jones to miss QPR game

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 08:00 AM PST

LONDON, Feb 21 – Manchester United's Phil Jones will miss Saturday's Premier League match at Queens Park Rangers, the club website said today.

The versatile defender or midfielder suffered an ankle injury during Monday's FA Cup fifth-round win over Reading and is struggling to be fit for the Champions League last-16 second-leg match against Real Madrid on March 5.

"Phil Jones is the one we are really concerned about in terms of the Real Madrid game," manager Alex Ferguson told reporters.

"We're working hard on it and I'd say he has an outside chance – no more than that. He won't be fit for the weekend."

Jones man-marked Real forward Cristiano Ronaldo during the 1-1 draw in the first leg in Madrid.

"He did an incredible job against Real Madrid," Ferguson said.

"The great thing Phil has got is that he doesn't care who he is playing against. There is no fear about playing against anyone. We will have to wait and see. The Madrid game is two weeks away. A lot can happen in that time."

United travel to bottom club QPR 12 points clear at the top of the Premier League with 12 games left.

"QPR are fighting for survival and we know it is going to be a hard game," Ferguson said. "That is what we need anyway. We need to keep the awareness on making sure we do our job right." – Reuters

Barca’s Abidal cleared to play after liver transplant

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 06:03 AM PST

MADRID, Feb 21 – Barcelona's dismay at losing 2-0 at AC Milan in yesterday's Champions League last-16 first leg was offset today by the news that defender Eric Abidal had been cleared to play after almost a year out to undergo a liver transplant.

"After this morning's training session Eric Abidal (picture) has received the welcome news that he has the medical all-clear and is therefore available to the team for the final part of the season," Barca said in a statement on their website (http://www.fcbarcelona.es).

The 33-year-old left back had the transplant in April 2012 and last featured in a 2-1 win at Atletico Madrid just under a year ago. He returned to training in December.

Barca's next match is a La Liga clash at home to Sevilla on Saturday and they play Real Madrid twice next week.

They host their arch rivals in Tuesday's King's Cup semi-final second leg after last month's first leg at the Bernabeu finished 1-1, and play at Real in La Liga on Saturday. The return game against Milan is at the Nou Camp on March 12.

Barca are 12 points clear of Atletico at the top of the league with 14 games left, with champions Real a further four points back in third. – Reuters

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Federer plays big brother to village children

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 04:24 AM PST

Roger Federer of Switzerland poses with the Qatari Tennis team children during the opening of the Qatar Open tennis tournament in Doha in this January 3, 2011 file photo. The Roger Federer Foundation spends over US$3 million a year on educational projects in South Africa, Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Ethiopia and Federer's home country Switzerland. – Reuters pic

GOVHU, Feb 21 – "Big brother Roger," as the village schoolteachers call him, smiles at the small children and asks them to guess which sport he plays.

Most of the bright-eyed three-year-olds have no idea who their visitor is but one, quicker than the rest, pipes up: "You play tennis!".

Delighted, Roger Federer turns his palms up to reveal a badly calloused right hand punished by 23 years of holding a racquet, showing the children the difference from the smoother left one.

There are few parts of the world where the man considered as the greatest ever tennis player and holder of a record 17 grand slam titles is not instantly recognised.

Here, in rural South Africa where he is visiting one of the village pre-schools his charitable foundation supports, the Swiss is unfamiliar to the children but commands their attention and curiosity.

In a small, cool, classroom, the toddlers sheltering from the heat stand with heads tipped upwards and eyes fixed on the towering champion as he hits a tennis ball against a wall, demonstrating how to swing a racquet.

Federer looks composed in the sweltering heat of Limpopo province, on the border with Zimbabwe, even though his bright red shirt, wet with sweat by noon, gives him away.

Deep in the densely vegetated village some 20 kilometres from the nearest paved road, the ground is parched and dust flies into the air as brightly-costumed Venda women dance to entertain their world-famous guest.

"My heart is in South Africa, through my mum," Federer, the son of a Swiss father and a South African mother, said.

"My mum being from here, me spending a lot of time here as well, I feel most connected to this part of the world."

The Roger Federer Foundation supports 40 pre-schools in the area and spends over US$3 million (RM9.34 million) a year on educational projects in South Africa, Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Ethiopia and Federer's home country Switzerland. Over 50,000 children benefited from the foundation's efforts in 2012 to improve quality education in pre-schools and primary schools.

BROKEN EDUCATION SYSTEM

"When I travelled the world, I definitely saw poor countries, people who told me it was so hard for them to get an education," said Federer, who was visiting two pre-schools in the Limpopo province with his mother this week to mark the 10th anniversary of his foundation being founded.

"I always liked the idea of education because in our world going to school is the most normal thing in the world. We sometimes forget what a privilege it is, to go to school."

South Africa has a broken education system, inherited from decades of inferior education for the majority black population under the apartheid system.

Nineteen years into democracy and the new government is still overwhelmed by the task, with some high-school leavers managing pass rates of only 30 per cent.

In this place, a decent education remains beyond the reach of many children and some 80 per cent of the community is unemployed, the villiage chief's representative said.

For a man who has earned close to US$80 million in prize money alone thanks to his exploits on a tennis court, Federer has never forgotten the value of a good education.

Federer admits he did not always do his best at school, saying: "I used to have many more regrets when I was younger, because I was a bit crazy.

"At school, I wouldn't always learn for my tests as much as I should have. I think that's why today I'm so dedicated to both things, so people don't do the same mistakes as I did, even though I was able to turn the corner in time."

The father of twin daughters, Federer added: "I like to be an idol for kids, I do. For me it's important to be a good role model and I live accordingly.

"But I'm not changing for it, I do it because I believe in it and because it is natural."

During his three-hour visit to the pre-school in Govhu, Federer held a captive audience as he read the story of the 'Gingerbread Man' out to the 30 or so children who sat around him.

As his visit comes to an end, Federer leaves with the words of the village school principal echoing in his ears: "If it is possible, please, come back to us again." – Reuters

Syrian violence threatens ancient treasures

Posted: 20 Feb 2013 09:42 PM PST

AMMAN, Feb 21 — Syrian museums have locked away thousands of ancient treasures to protect them from looting and violence but one of humanity's greatest cultural heritages remains in grave peril, the archaeologist charged with their protection said.

Aleppo's medieval covered market has already been gutted by fires which also ripped through the city's Umayyad mosque. Illegal excavations have threatened tombs in the desert town of Palmyra and the Bronze Age settlement of Ebla, and Interpol is hunting a 2,700-year-old statue taken from the city of Hama.

In a country that also boasts stunning Crusader castles, Roman ruins and a history stretching back through the great empires of the Middle East to the dawn of human civilisation, the task of safeguarding that heritage from modern conflict is a daunting responsibility.

Maamoun Abdulkarim, head of Syria's antiquities and museums, says it is a battle for the nation's very existence.

"We emptied Syria's museums. They are in effect empty halls, with the exception of large pieces that are difficult to move," Abdulkarim told Reuters during a visit to neighbouring Jordan.

Tens of thousands of artefacts spanning 10,000 years of history were removed to specialist warehouses to avoid a repeat of the storming of Baghdad's museum by looters a decade ago, in the wake of the US invasion and overthrow of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, he said.

Syria's own 23-month-old conflict is tearing the country apart and has raised international concerns over the fate of one of the richest and most diverse historical collections of any single nation.

The UN cultural body UNESCO says it is concerned for the fate of six World Heritage sites including the old cities of Damascus, Aleppo and Bosra and the imposing Crusader castle, Crac des Chevaliers.

Many have become battlegrounds between rebels taking cover among ruins and troops who shell indiscriminately, the damage recorded in relentless video images of the fighting.

If looters ever got their hands on the museum treasures, that would mark the final demise of Syria, Abdulkarim said.

"If they reach these places then my conviction is that Syria would no longer exist... It would signal the end of the end," said the 46-year-old French-educated archaeology professor who took over as Syria's Director General of Antiquities and Museums six months ago. "Syria as we know it would then be over."

Bronze statue

A lion-headed eagle, made of gold and tar dated to the third millennium B.C., on show at an exhibition at the national museum in Damascus in this January 30, 2011, file photo. — Reuters pic

Numerous Bronze Age civilisations left successive marks on Syria including Babylonians, Assyrians, and Hittites. They in turn were replaced by Greeks, Sassanians, Persians, Romans and Arabs, many choosing Syrian cities for their capitals.

European Crusaders left impressive castles and the Ottoman Empire also made its mark over five centuries.

Abdulkarim said the most significant pieces to go missing since the start of the conflict were a gilt bronze statue from around 2,000 years ago that was stolen from the city of Hama — and placed on Interpol's "Most Wanted" list of art works a year ago — and a marble piece looted from the garden of Apamea museum.

But priceless artefacts in the northern town of Maarat al-Noman were saved when the local community ensured the museum's famous mosaic portals were kept safe during fierce clashes.

In Hama, local neighbourhood youths protected the museum's Roman and Byzantine statues from looters until they were taken to safety, Abdulkarim said. "They closed the doors of the museum and were able to protect it from disaster."

Dozens of archaeological sites have been targeted by illegal excavation and trafficking, though they account for less than one percent of the 10,000 sites across the country, he said.

The diggers concentrate mainly on sites which have long been the focus of illicit trafficking, such as the ancient city of Apamea, north of Hama, that flourished during Roman and Byzantine periods, and is famous for its 1,850-metre colonnade.

"Vandalism in the city is an old phenomenon and is not related to the crisis, but the thieves who are active in this area have found greater freedom to operate during this crisis," Abdulkarim said.

Video footage from March last year, documented in a report by archaeologist Emma Cunliffe at Britain's Durham University, also appears to show tanks stationed alongside the Apamea colonnade.

Abdulkarim appealed to the warring parties to spare the country's many Crusader castles, some of which have been in the thick of the conflict and even been converted into army barracks or rebel hideouts.

Crac des Chevaliers, the supreme example of Crusader castle building, has suffered minor damage while Aleppo citadel's main gate was slightly damaged along with its northern tower, he said.

Gutted souks

The greatest damage had been to a collection of seven old markets in Aleppo, unsurpassed in the Middle East, that were gutted by fire that also damaged the city's Great Umayyad Mosque, Abdulkarim said.

"We have lost the seven souks completely, forever," he said, although the continued fighting had prevented any mission from assessing the full extent of the structural damage.

In northeastern Syria, major ancient sites in Tell Mozan near Qazmishli were well protected by Kurdish groups that have taken control in the region, Abdulkarim said.

US historian Giorgio Buccellati, who has worked at Tell Mozan and checks photos of the site daily on the Internet, told Reuters there had been "absolutely no looting" there.

In southern Syria, army shelling had damaged some ancient homes but not the ruin of Bosra, which contains one of the best preserved Roman theatres and a major monument, Abdulkarim said. His comments were confirmed by a refugee who spoke to Reuters this week after fleeing the town.

"The army had shelled the old quarter where rebels had dug in and there has been damage to an old church," Abdullah Zubi said after crossing into Jordan. But the Roman theatre, in an army-controlled sector, suffered no damage although army troops are dug in nearby, he said.

The ruins of what may be the world's first city, a mound near the Syrian-Iraqi border town called Tell Brak, have so far been spared, while illegal excavation of unexplored tombs in the ancient desert city of Palmyra had halted, Abdulkarim said.

In some cases those illegal digs stopped simply because thieves failed to locate any treasures, as happened at the Bronze Age site at Ebla after they dug holes in an ancient courtyard at the royal palace.

More than 4,000 items, including beads, coins, statues and mosaic panels, were turned over by Syrian customs last year to Abdulkarim's department, although nearly a third of those turned out to be counterfeit.

The department is also working with UNESCO and Interpol to track down 18 mosaic panels smuggled to Lebanon.

Combined losses so far remained just a modest fraction of Syria's priceless collection, Abdulkarim said, but added that protracted and escalating violence could usher in anarchy and more brazen theft.

"So far the gangs and thieves are small scale operators and no organised international gangs have surfaced," he said. "But what could be terrifying is that column heads and columns and large stones could be stolen... and smuggled out of Syria."

"If this happens, God forbid, then we are approaching the start of the tragic demolition of our past and future." — Reuters

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Russian film director Alexei German dies at 74

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 05:26 AM PST

Russian director Alexei German. — AFP pic

ST. PETERSBURG, Feb 21 — Russian film director Alexei German, known for his hard-hitting dramas portraying the Stalin era and WWII including "My Friend Ivan Lapshin" and "Twenty Days Without War," died on Thursday at 74, his son said.

"Today my father died without regaining consciousness... his heart simply stopped," the director's son, also a film director, Alexei German Jr wrote in a statement posted on the Moscow Echo radio station's website.

German was born in Leningrad, now Saint Petersburg, and made his films at the city's Lenfilm studio.

He completed just four films as a sole director, but his sombre, brutally honest style was hugely influential on the current generation of directors.

"He was unique. What else could I say about the artistic talent of such a man?" said fellow Saint Petersburg director Alexander Sokurov, quoted by the Interfax news agency.

German's drama about WWII partisans, "Trial on the Road" was censored by the Soviets and though made in 1971 not released until 1985 during Mikhail Gorbachev's perestroika era because of its unvarnished portrayal of the partisans and Soviet POWs.

"My father lived his life in a worthy way. He did not betray his ideals. He did not sell himself. He did not waste himself on nonsense," his son said.

At the time of his death, he was completing a film based on a science-fiction novel called "It's Hard to be a God," a project that he had begun in 1999 but struggled to finish due to financial, technical and health problems.

"I've got serious heart problems and it has become difficult to work actively. Before I always worked extra hours, doing 12-hour days, now I can't do this," German said in a 2011 interview with Saint Petersburg news website 812 Online.

His son vowed Thursday that the film based on the novel by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky would be finished in the "foreseeable future."

"The film 'It's Hard to be a God' is practically finished. All that's left is re-recording the sound. The rest is ready. My father shot this film when he was already seriously ill, sacrificing his life for it." — AFP-Relaxnews


UK’s BRIT Awards slammed as celebration of bland

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 05:13 AM PST

Emeli Sande reacts after being awarded the best British Album award during the BRIT Awards, celebrating British pop music, at the O2 Arena in London February 20, 2013. – Reuters pic

LONDON, Feb 21 — "Sensible" and "sober" are words not normally associated with rock and roll, but they summed up how music critics viewed Wednesday night's BRIT Awards ceremony at the London O2 Arena.

Viewing figures for commercial broadcaster ITV1, which aired British pop's biggest night live, were the highest for a decade, so organisers, advertisers and the acts who performed were unlikely to care too much about what experts thought.

Gordon Smart, showbusiness editor at the Sun tabloid, summed up the mood, writing: "Well, rock'n'roll is officially dead. Where have all the rock stars gone?"

The big winner on the night, one that was widely predicted, was Scottish singer-songwriter Emeli Sande, who picked up the coveted British album award for "Our Version of Events", her debut which was the UK's top seller of 2012.

She also won the best British female honour, and English singer Ben Howard was the only other multiple winner, claiming the male solo artist and breakthrough categories.

"Welcome to the new boring," said Daily Telegraph music critic Neil McCormick, describing Howard, Sande and other winners Mumford & Sons (best group) and One Direction (BRITs Global Success Award).

"All - to different degrees - extremely talented, vibrant, emotional, committed, entertaining musical performers beloved of enormous audiences," he wrote. "And all as dull as dishwater."

He concluded his review with a rallying cry: "I just hope there is some young punk out there, watching that, thinking the music business needs a right royal kick up the posterior."

Cash before cutting edge

The BRITs have long had a reputation for putting commercial success above artistic originality, and 2013 was no exception.

Will Hodgkinson of The Times newspaper said the lack of spark at the glitzy ceremony perhaps reflected broader economic and social concerns in Britain.

"When times are hard people behave well and hang on to their jobs, which is why the high jinks and chaos of the past, like Jarvis Cocker wiggling his bum at Michael Jackson, was sadly absent," he said.

In one of the most frequently recalled moments of BRITs history, Cocker invaded the stage while Jackson was performing in 1996 before being escorted away by security.

Even last year had a frisson of controversy, when Adele's speech was cut short to make way for Blur to perform, prompting her to raise her middle finger.

Adele picked up another award in 2013 - best single for Bond theme tune "Skyfall" - but she did not attend, preferring to rehearse for her upcoming performance at the more widely viewed Oscars ceremony on Sunday.

Nick Hasted, writing in the Independent, said what was most "depressing" about the BRITs was how they were dovetailing with other awards like the Mercury Prize and the BBC's "Sound of..." poll identifying up-and-coming talent.

"As it shrinks, the music industry is becoming ever more adept at controlling what enters the mainstream," Hasted said. "The moribund album charts, lacking inspiration and challenge, show how well they've succeeded."

Critics did have more positive things to say about many of the performances, which included Justin Timberlake and Taylor Swift from the United States and Sande, Howard, Mumford & Sons, One Direction, Muse and Robbie Williams from Britain.

And there was good news on the TV viewing front. According to the Guardian, the average audience was just over 6.5 million, a 27.8 percent share and the highest since 2003. — Reuters

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views


Manchester United’s Jones to miss QPR game

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 08:00 AM PST

LONDON, Feb 21 – Manchester United's Phil Jones will miss Saturday's Premier League match at Queens Park Rangers, the club website said today.

The versatile defender or midfielder suffered an ankle injury during Monday's FA Cup fifth-round win over Reading and is struggling to be fit for the Champions League last-16 second-leg match against Real Madrid on March 5.

"Phil Jones is the one we are really concerned about in terms of the Real Madrid game," manager Alex Ferguson told reporters.

"We're working hard on it and I'd say he has an outside chance – no more than that. He won't be fit for the weekend."

Jones man-marked Real forward Cristiano Ronaldo during the 1-1 draw in the first leg in Madrid.

"He did an incredible job against Real Madrid," Ferguson said.

"The great thing Phil has got is that he doesn't care who he is playing against. There is no fear about playing against anyone. We will have to wait and see. The Madrid game is two weeks away. A lot can happen in that time."

United travel to bottom club QPR 12 points clear at the top of the Premier League with 12 games left.

"QPR are fighting for survival and we know it is going to be a hard game," Ferguson said. "That is what we need anyway. We need to keep the awareness on making sure we do our job right." – Reuters

1,487 anggota tentera naik pangkat

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 07:54 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 21 Feb —  Kira-kira 8,000 anggota Angkatan Tentera Malaysia akan mendapat kenaikan pangkat tahun ini, kata Menteri Pertahanan Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi.

Katanya kerajaan akan mengkaji serta menambahbaik skim perkhidmatan untuk menentukan kebajikan anggota tentera dan keluarga mereka terus terjamin.

Ahmad Zahid berkata demikian selepas menyempurnakan majlis pemakaian pangkat bagi 1,487 anggota Lain-lain Pangkat di Kem Perdana, Sungai Besi di sini.

Kenaikan pangkat itu melibatkan prebet dinaikkan pangkat kepada Lans Koperal dan Lans Koperal dinaikkan kepada Koperal.

Mereka telah berkhidmat lima tahun atau 10 tahun ke atas. Ahmad Zahid berkata majlis pemakaian pangkat seumpama itu adalah pertama kali diadakan dalam sejarah ATM.

Turut hadir dalam majlis itu ialah Panglima Angkatan Tentera Jeneral Tan Sri Zulkifeli Mohd Zin, Panglima Tentera Darat Jeneral Tan Sri Zulkifli Zainal Abidin, Panglima Tentera Laut Laksamana Tan Sri Abdul Aziz Jaafar dan Panglima Tentera Udara Jen Tan Sri Rodzali Daud. — Reuters

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa


Tiada sebab untuk penjawat awam tukar kerajaan, kata presiden CUEPACS

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 03:16 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 21 Feb ― Penjawat awam tidak mempunyai sebab untuk menukar kerajaan Barisan Nasional (BN), kata Presiden Kongres Kesatuan Pekerja-Pekerja Di Dalam Perkhidmatan Awam (CUEPACS) Datuk Omar Osman hari ini dan menambah pertukaran pemerintah belum mampu menjanjikan kemajuan kepada negara.

Dalam majlis bersama Timbalan Perdana Menteri Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin di ibu kota, Omar (gambar) berkata Putrajaya telah menunaikan hampir kesemua tuntutan mereka membuktikan kerajaan yang dipimpin oleh Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak sentiasa peka dan dekat dengan penjawat awam.

"Tidak ada sebab untuk menukar kerajaan yang sedia ada kepada pihak yang belum tentu dapat menjamin apa-apa.

"Tidak pernah satupun cadangan yang dikemukakan oleh CUEPACS kerajaan menolak. Sebagai contoh ialah tuntutan kenaikkan dua peratus wang pencen kepada pesara penjawat awam," kata Omar kepada pemberita.

Menurut Omar lagi, sokongan hampir 1.4 juta orang penjawat awam dan 500 ribu pesara sentiasa tidak berbelah bagi kepada kerajaan yang dipimpin oleh Najib dan yakin perkara tersebut akan diterjemahkan dipeti undi dalam Pilihan Raya 2013 yang dijangka diadakan dalam masa terdekat.

"Saya yakin 1.4 juta penjawat awam bersama dengan hampir 500 ribu pesara CUEPACS akan sentiasa menyokong kerajaan sedia ada.

"Penjawat awam dan CUEPACS adalah tiang seri (asas kukuh) kepada kerajaan dan yakinlah sokongan mereka akan sentiasa utuh kepada kerajaan," ujar beliau lagi.

Selain itu, Omar juga menegaskan penjawat awam berhak untuk terlibat dalam politik secara langsung tetapi perkara itu mestilah dengan kebenaran oleh Jabatan Perkhidmatan Awam dan tidak melanggari undang-undang yang termaktub bagi penjawat awam.

"Ya, mereka mereka boleh berpolitik tapi mestilah dengan kebenaran oleh JPA.

"Dan penjawat awam yang berpolitik juga mestilah mengikuti undang-undang yang telah ditetapkan, antaranya tidak boleh berpolitik di dalam pejabat atau semasa waktu bekerja," ujar beliau lagi.

Dalam pada itu, Muhyiddin yang juga berucap semasa perhimpunan hari ini menggesa penjawat awam supaya memainkan peranan aktif dan berkesan memandangkan kumpulan tersebut juga bertanggungjawab dalam menyampaikan polisi dan dasar kerajaan kepada masyarakat serta kunci utama kepada kemajuan dan pembangunan negara.

"Penjawat sektor awam adalah imej kerajaan, jadi mereka haruslah memainkan peranan yang penting dan berkesan terutamanya dalam menyampaikan polisi dan dasar kerajaan," tambah beliau.

Penjawat awam merupakan sebahagian daripada 13 juta pengundi berdaftar pada pilihan raya kali ini, serta antara penentu sama ada Barisan Nasional (BN) atau Pakatan Rakyat (PR) untuk menawan Putrajaya.

PRU ke 13 yang perlu diadakan selewat-lewatnya pada Jun dan dianggap paling sengit dalam sejarah oleh kerana BN yang memerintah Malaysia semenjak 1957 dicabar hebat oleh PR yang terdiri daripada PKR, DAP dan PAS.

Selangor gantung semua projek kerajaan pusat hingga selesai rayuan AES

Posted: 21 Feb 2013 02:43 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 21 Feb —  Kerajaan negeri Selangor memutuskan menggantung semua projek kerajaan pusat di negeri tersebut sehingga selesai rayuan di Mahkamah Tinggi ekoran kekalahan dalam permohonan semakan kehakiman kepada kontraktor kontroversi Sistem Penguatkuasaan Automatik (AES) Beta Tegap Sdn Bhd.

Keputusan tersebut dinyatakan oleh Menteri Besar Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim dalam satu kenyataan media hari ini yang mengganggap keputusan oleh Hakim Datuk Zaleha Yusof tersebut sebagai sangat mengecewakan.

"Pada masa yang sama mana-mana kebenaran pembangunan yang telah diberikan kepada jalanraya dan prasarana persekutuan hendaklah digantung buat sementara waktu sehingga proses rayuan selesai.

"Kerajaan negeri kesal dengan keputusan Mahkamah Tinggi Kuala Lumpur hari ini bahawa pihak berkuasa tempatan (PBT) tidak mempunyai kuasa terhadap struktur yang dibina diatas jalan persekutuan," kata Abdul Khalid (gambar).

Dalam keputusan hari ini, Zaleha menyatakan kerajaan pusat adalah penguatkuasa sebenar untuk meluluskan pemasangan kamera AES dan bukannya kerajaan tempatan.

"Berdasarkan hujah di atas, saya berpendapat tempat dimana struktur AES dibangunkan adalah terletak di jalan persekutuan dan tidak jatuh di bawah bidang kuasa responden.

"Permohonan dibenarkan," kata beliau sambil menambah tiada arahan untuk membayar kos oleh kerana ini adalah kes berkait dengan kepentingan awam.

Abdul Khalid juga berkata arahan dikeluarkan kepada agensi kerajaan negeri Selangor untuk menyemak dan meneliti semula daripada sudut perundangan keatas keputusan yang telah diputuskan oleh Mahkamah Tinggi tersebut.

"Sehubungan itu, kerajaan negeri melihat perkara ini amat serius dan telah merangka beberapa tindakan susulan termasuk mengarahkan kamar Penasihat undang-undang Negeri Selangor dan jabatan undang-undang Majlis Perbandaran Sepang (MPS) untuk menyemak nota kehakiman dan memfailkan rayuan," kata Abdul Khalid lagi.

Selain itu, satu semakan semula oleh Mesyuarat Majlis Kerajaan Negeri juga akan dilakukan keatas semua senarai cadangan pembangunan persekutuan samada lebuhraya atau Prasarana Transit Aliran Ringan (LRT) demi memastikan kepentingan rakyat Selangor dan kerajaan negeri terjamin.

Jabatan Peguam Negara, yang bertindak sebagai pencelah dalam kes itu, minggu lepas berhujah bahawa Akta Pengangkutan Jalan 1987 menyatakan menteri kerja adalah pihak berkuasa sepatutnya yang mempunyai bidang kuasa untuk meluluskan permohonan untuk mendirikan AES di lebuh raya.

Hakim juga berkata hakikat tanah itu adalah tanah kerajaan tidak bermakna MPS adalah pemilik tanah.

"Kerajaan tempatan adalah satu entiti yang berbeza daripada kerajaan negeri," katanya.

Hakim juga berkata isu tidak mendedahkan perjanjian konsesi tidak relevan dalam kes ini.

Beliau merujuk kepada undang-undang kerajaan tempatan, sebelum mengatakan tiang AES adalah dianggap sebagai "bangunan".

Peguam Beta Tegap Alex de Silva minggu lepas berhujah tiada seorang pun yang munasabah akan mentafsir tiang AES dan kamera untuk menjadi sebuah "bangunan", apabila mencabar kesahihan notis MPS '.

MPS telah mendakwa "tiang" termasuk dalam takrif "bangunan" dalam Akta Jalan, Parit dan Bangunan 1974.

Jabatan Peguam Negara menafikan definisi dalam Akta, mendakwa tiang perlu disambungkan ke rumah, pondok, bangsal atau mana-mana kepungan beratap sebelum ia dianggap "bangunan."

Pada November tahun lepas, MPS telah mengeluarkan dua notis untuk mengarahkan Beta Tegap membuat permohonan rasmi untuk kebenaran perancangan bangunan, mendakwa penggunaan tanah negeri.

Ahli Dewan Undangan Negeri (ADUN) Selangor, Ronnie Liu memberitahu pemberita MPS akan merayu keputusan ini, mengatakan terdapat keperluan untuk memastikan keselamatan struktur yang didirikan di atas jalan raya.

"Jadi, kita tentu ingin merayu kepada mahkamah yang lebih tinggi," kata Liu, mengatakan mesyuarat akan diadakan dengan MPS.

Pada 12 Disember tahun lalu, Beta Tegap memohon penangguhan keputusan MPS dan kemudian mendapat penangguhan dari Mahkamah Tinggi pada 19 Disember.

Dalam permohonan semakan kehakiman, Beta Tegap berkata MPS, melalui surat bertarikh November 19 tahun lepas, meminta syarikat memohon kebenaran untuk memasang tiang dan kamera AES di Km 301.7 Lebuhraya Utara-Selatan dan di Km 6.6 Lebuhraya Lembah Klang Selatan, kedua-duanya terletak di Dengkil, Sepang.

MPS, dalam surat bertarikh 6 Disember, mengarahkan syarikat itu untuk melupuskan semua kamera dalam tempoh 14 hari dari tarikh notis.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Safe Malaysia through the ballot box

Posted: 20 Feb 2013 04:49 PM PST

FEB 21 — Three months before my first trip to Cape Town, I learnt that it was the most dangerous city in the world. Drug lords and the local community were sorting out differences with street shootouts.

It does disconcert a person, but I went anyway and came home without incident. That did not, however, shield me from the knowledge that a friend of mine was mugged at gunpoint. Neither did it stop me from laughing that the friend gave his money but only after posing for a photo with the thief.

My sister lives in Vétraz-Monthoux in France. Across the Swiss border and with a view of Mont Blanc. I honestly can't pronounce the town's name, and I am fairly sure my four-year-old niece will tease me relentlessly for not being able to, the next time she sees me. 

A quiet commune, the town council would have to import a socially ill-adjusted miscreant from Hulu Langat if they needed a riot. I'll fly Qatar Airways or Etihad.  

The two extremities notwithstanding, "Are we safe or not?" is the real question one wants answered in a crime debate.

In Election 2013, Malaysians decide who will set the tone, policies and implementation to meet that objective. That those they pick can represent and defend the moral fortitude to — in Kipling's words — "keep your head when all about you are losing theirs." For that, voters have to ask themselves, today at a governance level, is crime fighting good enough today?   

I concede that is difficult to calculate.

I am mindful of what was said to me before by a friend "How many dark empty alleys are safe at 3am?" when I told him I'll just walk from the club to his London flat.

It is quite convenient to point at the failings of any system, primarily the police, in keeping its citizens safe. For the "dark alley" argument is applicable to any city in the world, and I've walked in enough of them during those hours. The commentary has to be fair, and our voters must proceed with their evaluation in that vein.

Additionally, I'll posit my contention so that there is fair consideration of my bias. To me, crime is getting out of hand in Malaysia, and politics is a major impediment to an improvement in the matter.

Voters have been asked by this column to weigh the direction of education in the country, how to keep our people alive and well, and means to livelihoods.

Today, I want us to look at crime without being purely anecdotal. Because it is an election issue.

Police and thief

If police forces around the world are being compared as boxers, ours would be an overweight unprized fighter who thinks skipping was what he did to classes when he was in school.

I've written about it, but here I want to pursue the incisive points.

The crime index debate is long dead. It's beyond dead, it's waiting for a movie studio to buy the rights so a zombie flick can be produced. Except for a few executives in PEMANDU, no voter is remotely convinced. 

The policy of continuing to assert crime has gone down, because this crime index they've come up with says so, tells the voters that the police believe their opinion overrides all others.

That you are safe, whether you like it or not, if the police say so is utterly ridiculous. With no respect to the Inspector-General of Police and home minister, I submit that that is not the definition of "safe", that is the definition of an Orwellian nightmare.

If I were to assist the men in blue, the only way out of this quagmire is for the police to agree with the people. Agreeing is not a sign of weakness, it is a sign of strength, but more importantly it is a sign of a start to deal with the reality.

Plus it gives a genuine chance for the police to reconstitute processes, of how grievances are received and responded to. There are more people likely to appreciate those humbly fighting an impossible situation than those sticking their noses to the electorate

This suggests also more community input to law enforcement. The best way for that to have bite is through the decentralisation of authority.

Most funding has to go directly to what makes people really feel safe globally, committed patrols and dedicated investigations of criminal acts.

Policemen are civil servants, but they are a unique sub-category. They may seek the affirmation of politicians and agree to the policies of politicians, but only as far as they are parallel to police charter they are sworn to protect. A bit of remembering is necessary, to those days in the training centre.

Meanwhile in a separate and distant development, the home minister continues to refuse answering why there is so much funding for the surveillance of opposition politicians, perhaps his voters in Sembrong should ask him.

It is a qualitative dilemma

Crime prevention is the easiest thing to lie about. Line up enough men, pick a few, beat them up till they confess and rely on the fact the law does allow for coerced admissions, then some sorry sod will see jail time.

When in a system, some people never go to jail whatever they do, and others cannot help but head to jail due to their social class, there is a rot in the soul of the system. And yes, in the country too.

The issues of crime are multiple and connected: selective prosecution, convenient prosecutions, urban renewal, community programmes, mental healthcare, education, rehabilitation, childcare facilities, income suppression, housing, gender stereotyping, behaviour intervention, information technology and communal apathy.

It is for that very reason, the slow erosion of law and order slips off all our radars until one day you don't want to walk to an empty parking lot at 10pm. That day, you know.

So in simpleton speak, it begins with the people in charge of it to exhibit one true attribute, to lift it as their guiding light.

That they must care. They must care that the higher ideals of protection are met without undermining the rights of any individual. It is damn hard, and it gets harder as society's become more heterogeneous.

Malaysia took its feet off the pedal for decades and today everyone is feeling the tremor.

No decision today or on polling day will reverse things immediately, or lift our sense of being safe to the stratosphere. These days are hard. We get to choose which direction the steps are taken, no more.

The recovery plan is not hurt if the policemen respond to the rakyat before the politicians. In fact, that's a great start.

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist.

How much is enough?

Posted: 20 Feb 2013 03:42 PM PST

FEB 21 — How many TVs in your house? How many mobile phones? How many shoes? How many shampoos, outfits, bags and accessories? How many cars, how many bikes? And then, how many hours spent playing with a gadget, how many meals eaten alone, how many hours of overtime and how much time spent worrying about expenses versus salary?

Marketing and new product development has long evolved from solving basic problems to focusing on more intangible, smaller wants and emotional rewards through products. 

Take a watch, for example. Is it sold on its ability to sell the time anymore? Or is it about looks, ability to help you look like a man of substance or a connoisseur? Is one enough? Are bags about how much they store or about how they help your mood? Is one enough? Or shoes, how many colours, for working out or working, for hiking or partying? Is one enough?

Not so long ago, a newly-employed adult was told to plan for the long term. For marriage, children, education and retirement. Work hard now, save as much as you can, stay clear of debt and never waste food. 

The current generation of young working adults don't earn enough to move out of their parents' house, their car downpayments are paid and income topped up for expenses by their parents. But is their money being spent wisely? How many credit cards do they have, how often are their mobile phones changed for the latest models, how many meals eaten in expensive restaurants, how many sales attended?

Indulgences come in every size, every price point today. From a pampering spa experience to a mini break in Phuket, from a Vincci shoe to a Birkin bag, the exhortation to spend is everywhere, accessible to everybody.

In the age of instant gratification and last chance sales, it is hard to focus on long-term goals of savings and insurance. In a gym, it is about crafting the body for maximum effect for the next night out clubbing rather than prolonging life. Ditto for diets. 

Consequently as they approach their thirties and the age of responsibility, large numbers of them are realising that they are not equipped for the austerity and sacrifices family life with their own children demands. Growing up in a consumerist culture of me first, making marriages work is increasingly hard, taking care of ageing parents too troublesome, doing the chores without the help of a maid simply impossible.

Waiting for an inheritance is not a financial plan. Nor is hoping for massive raises and bonuses two years into a career to help pay for personal loans, credit card debt, car and housing loans. Upgrading your skills at work is, as is matching expenses with income and saving for the future.

The larger issue here might be one of education and parenting. It is naïve to expect the choices out there to evaporate or objects of desire to magically disappear, but is fairly easy to demonstrate at a much younger age the consequences of living beyond your means. It is not in the interests of the marketplace to tell us that, but unequivocally in the interests of the long-term future of our children.

Leading by example, not caving in to every demand made by our children as soon as it is made and laying greater emphasis on values rather than keeping up with the neighbours may sound old fashioned, but still remain the best tools to prevent their future bankruptcies, divorces and eventually dissatisfied and unhappy lives.

Teach them well, for their own sake. And because nobody else will.

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

Malaysia Insider Online

Copyright 2010 All Rights Reserved