Rabu, 13 Mac 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Kate Moss collaborates with French sushi chain

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 07:15 PM PDT

Jimmy Choo you can eat in Hong Kong

HONG KONG, March 11 — Designer Jimmy Choo has teamed up with the luxurious Mandarin Oriental Hong Kong for a fashionably delicious offering.From April, tourists will be able to eat pastries created by ... Read More

Two for tea

By Lydia Koh

KUALA LUMPUR, March 10 ― When asked to suggest a place in KL for high tea outside of hotels, a friend was stumped. Sure, many places serve tea and cakes but a dedicated high tea is something else. If ... Read More

Mushroom omelette for brekkie

By Elaine Ho

KUALA LUMPUR, March 10 ― I cannot stress the importance of having a good nutritious breakfast before starting off your day. Eggs are a good source of natural, high quality protein so it helps keep you ... Read More

Fritter frenzy

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 05:48 PM PDT

Jimmy Choo you can eat in Hong Kong

HONG KONG, March 11 — Designer Jimmy Choo has teamed up with the luxurious Mandarin Oriental Hong Kong for a fashionably delicious offering.From April, tourists will be able to eat pastries created by ... Read More

Two for tea

By Lydia Koh

KUALA LUMPUR, March 10 ― When asked to suggest a place in KL for high tea outside of hotels, a friend was stumped. Sure, many places serve tea and cakes but a dedicated high tea is something else. If ... Read More

Mushroom omelette for brekkie

By Elaine Ho

KUALA LUMPUR, March 10 ― I cannot stress the importance of having a good nutritious breakfast before starting off your day. Eggs are a good source of natural, high quality protein so it helps keep you ... Read More

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Chelsea v Man Utd FA Cup replay to be played on April 1

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 08:40 AM PDT

March 13, 2013

Sports Chelsea fight back to cause more hurt for United March 11, 2013 Manchester United's Nani is challenged by Chelsea's Frank Lampard (left) for the ball. — Reuters picLONDON, March 13 — Holders Chelsea and Manchester United will replay their FA Cup quarter-final at Stamford Bridge on April 1, the Football Association said in a statement on Wednesday.

The match, on the Easter Monday holiday, will kick off at 12.30 local.

Chelsea came from two goals down to draw 2-2 with the Premier League leaders at Old Trafford last Sunday. The winners will play Manchester City in the semi-finals.

The replay has imposed a busy schedule on the West Londoners, who said a league match scheduled at Southampton on March 31 would now be played on March 30 instead.

The European champions are also still in the Europa League and have a last 16 second leg at home against Steaua Bucharest on Thursday that could lead to a quarter-final first leg on April 4. — Reuters

Brazil probes bribery allegations around 2001 national team

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 04:51 AM PDT

March 13, 2013

FIFA general secretary Jerome Valcke at a Brazil stadium building site. — Reuters picSAO PAULO, March 13 — Brazil's Supreme Tribunal of Sports Justice has opened an investigation into allegations the president of a top soccer club paid a bribe to get one of his players called up to the national team in 2001.

Luciano Bivar, a three-time president of northeastern side Sport, last week said he paid an unspecified sum to ensure midfielder Leomar got capped at international level.

"You need to be careful with football executives because many of them are there to do business, not to help their team," Bivar said in one interview. "We have used that kind of measure. We pushed Leomar into the national team. We paid a commission for him to play in the team."

He did not say who he paid or reveal any other details of the alleged transaction.

Bivar had a professional relationship with Emerson Leao, Brazil's manager at the time. Leao had managed Bivar's club, Sport, before being appointed Brazil coach.

Leao called Leomar into the squad for the Confederations Cup tournament in Japan and Korea. He played four times in that competition and also made an appearance in a World Cup qualifier against Peru, a year later.

Questions over the appropriateness of Leomar's call-up were raised at the time but such disagreements over selections are common in Brazil.

Although rumours have long circulated that some players were called up in such a manner, this is the first time a top official has openly said such deals took place.

The scheme was based on the idea that players with Brazilian caps are worth more on the transfer market than uncapped colleagues.

Coincidentally or not, Leomar was transferred to South Korean side Jeonbuk Motors the year after he made his Brazil debut.

Concrete evidence

Prosecutor Paulo Schmitt said he opened an inquiry after Bivar "affirmed categorically that there are corruption schemes in operation to ensure athletes serve in the Brazilian national side".

He said he would seek to question both Leao and his assistant coach Antonio Lopes, as well as search for concrete evidence of wrongdoing.

Both could be banned from the sport for two years if found guilty. Bivar could also face sanctions if the allegations are deemed to be unfounded. If they are proven, criminal procedures could follow, Schmitt told Reuters.

Leao and Lopes denied the allegations and challenged Bivar to provide proof. Leomar said he had no knowledge of any such schemes.

Schmitt said: "I want to believe that there is a certain bravado behind this. I don't want to believe it happened. But we have to investigate, we can't leave this as a 'he said, she said' situation."

Brazil's 1994 World Cup winner Romario, one of the sharpest critics of the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF), said Bivar's comments "prove what we've been hearing for a long time" and he called on others to come forward and present evidence.

The former Barcelona and Vasco da Gama striker, now a congressman, called for a parliamentary inquiry into the CBF.

Critics like Romario say the CBF is one of Brazil's most poorly managed institutions. The organisation's former president Ricardo Teixeira resigned last year citing health reasons. His departure followed a wave of corruption allegations.

The CBF's planning for the World Cup, which will be held in Brazil next year, has been criticised for being late and over budget. — 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


Egypt does not allow screening of film on Egyptian Jews-producer

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 08:51 AM PDT

March 13, 2013

CAIRO, March 13 — Egyptian authorities have failed to issue a permit to screen a historical documentary about the country's Jewish community, the film's producer said today, one of a series of disputes over freedom of expression under the Islamist government.

Egypt already had restrictions on film makers under president Hosni Mubarak, requiring them to seek approval from the Censorship Bureau to screen their work. After his overthrow in 2011, film makers were hoping for more artistic freedom, but critics of the government say little has changed.

Producer Haitham al-Khamissi said Censorship Bureau officials had told him State Security had requested to view his film "The Jews of Egypt" before it could be cleared to be shown in cinemas.

But a security source denied State Security was blocking the film, saying permits were granted by the Censorship Bureau. Officials at the Censorship Bureau were however not immediately available to comment.

Khamissi said renewing the permit for the film, which was first shown with official permission at a film festival in Egypt in 2012, would normally take a matter of hours, but he said he had been waiting for a week.

The film depicts changes in Egyptian society's acceptance of its ancient Jewish minority in the first half of the 20th century. Most Jews fled the country due to attacks on their community, particularly after the 1956 war, when Israel invaded Egypt along with Britain and France, which were trying to regain control of the Suez Canal.

"The authorities had already approved my film ... I'm only asking for a renewal of the permission but until now I haven't received it," Khamissi said. "They are worried about us, the people who think ... The content is controversial, politically."

"After the creation of Israel in 1948, the world view of Jews changed," he said. "There were worries that any Jewish Egyptian could be an Israeli spy."

Last month Egyptian prosecutors questioned an award-winning novelist over accusations that he had insulted religion, in the latest of a string of cases to cause concern over freedom of expression.

Khamissi said the screening last year lasted only one day and was for a limited audience, whereas the permission he is seeking now is to show the film to the public for several days. — Reuters

Tale of troubled teens takes SXSW film prize

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 03:37 AM PDT

March 13, 2013

Visitors walk past a sign on Sixth Street in Austin, Texas in this November 17, 2012, file photo. — Reuters picAUSTIN, March 13 — "Short Term 12," a drama set in a center for troubled teenagers, took top honours for narrative feature film yesterday at the South by Southwest (SXSW) festival.

Directed by Destin Daniel Cretton and based on an eponymous short he made in 2008 that won a Sundance jury prize, the film stars Brie Larson as a twenty-something foster home supervisor with a difficult past of her own.

Cretton is also the director "I Am Not a Hipster," a drama set in the indie music and art scene in San Diego, California where he lived for 10 years. It was released in January and also screened at the Sundance festival.

"Short Term 12" was among eight narrative features in competition at SXSW, where interactive technology events concluded yesterday leaving the indie film segment to continue unfolding as the new-music portion gets underway.

The prize for best documentary went to Brooklyn-based director Ben Nabors' "William and the Windmill," the tale of a young Malawian who builds a windmill from junk parts to lift his family out of poverty. — AFP/Relaxnews

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


Egypt does not allow screening of film on Egyptian Jews-producer

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 08:51 AM PDT

March 13, 2013

CAIRO, March 13 — Egyptian authorities have failed to issue a permit to screen a historical documentary about the country's Jewish community, the film's producer said today, one of a series of disputes over freedom of expression under the Islamist government.

Egypt already had restrictions on film makers under president Hosni Mubarak, requiring them to seek approval from the Censorship Bureau to screen their work. After his overthrow in 2011, film makers were hoping for more artistic freedom, but critics of the government say little has changed.

Producer Haitham al-Khamissi said Censorship Bureau officials had told him State Security had requested to view his film "The Jews of Egypt" before it could be cleared to be shown in cinemas.

But a security source denied State Security was blocking the film, saying permits were granted by the Censorship Bureau. Officials at the Censorship Bureau were however not immediately available to comment.

Khamissi said renewing the permit for the film, which was first shown with official permission at a film festival in Egypt in 2012, would normally take a matter of hours, but he said he had been waiting for a week.

The film depicts changes in Egyptian society's acceptance of its ancient Jewish minority in the first half of the 20th century. Most Jews fled the country due to attacks on their community, particularly after the 1956 war, when Israel invaded Egypt along with Britain and France, which were trying to regain control of the Suez Canal.

"The authorities had already approved my film ... I'm only asking for a renewal of the permission but until now I haven't received it," Khamissi said. "They are worried about us, the people who think ... The content is controversial, politically."

"After the creation of Israel in 1948, the world view of Jews changed," he said. "There were worries that any Jewish Egyptian could be an Israeli spy."

Last month Egyptian prosecutors questioned an award-winning novelist over accusations that he had insulted religion, in the latest of a string of cases to cause concern over freedom of expression.

Khamissi said the screening last year lasted only one day and was for a limited audience, whereas the permission he is seeking now is to show the film to the public for several days. — Reuters

Chelsea v Man Utd FA Cup replay to be played on April 1

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 08:40 AM PDT

March 13, 2013

Sports Chelsea fight back to cause more hurt for United March 11, 2013 Manchester United's Nani is challenged by Chelsea's Frank Lampard (left) for the ball. — Reuters picLONDON, March 13 — Holders Chelsea and Manchester United will replay their FA Cup quarter-final at Stamford Bridge on April 1, the Football Association said in a statement on Wednesday.

The match, on the Easter Monday holiday, will kick off at 12.30 local.

Chelsea came from two goals down to draw 2-2 with the Premier League leaders at Old Trafford last Sunday. The winners will play Manchester City in the semi-finals.

The replay has imposed a busy schedule on the West Londoners, who said a league match scheduled at Southampton on March 31 would now be played on March 30 instead.

The European champions are also still in the Europa League and have a last 16 second leg at home against Steaua Bucharest on Thursday that could lead to a quarter-final first leg on April 4. — 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


Food price rises put restive Egypt on edge

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 07:44 AM PDT

March 13, 2013

A worker puts dough into an oven to be baked in a bakery in Cairo. — Reuters picCAIRO, March 13 — With croissants, baguettes and bagels spilling off metal trolleys at the bakery where Mohammed Alif works in central Cairo, food is not scarce, but profits certainly are.

The Egyptian pound has lost more than 8 per cent of its value against the US dollar since the end of December as concern deepens about the state of the economy, which is being undermined by political instability and rioting.

This, along with a general rise in global food prices, has pushed up the amount which bakeries like Alif's have to pay for imported ingredients traded in dollars, which in turn risks feeding back into discontent with the new leadership.

The spectre of steep food price inflation driven by a weaker pound is of particular worry to President Mohamed Mursi as he grapples with spasms of unrest two years after the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak and was itself partly driven by a sense of mounting economic hardship in a country long steeped in poverty.

Flour and sugar are 50 per cent more expensive than they were a year ago, said Alif, and for now the bakery feels it has no choice but to absorb the increase rather than passing it on to customers:

"I can't make it more expensive because people cannot pay," he said, pausing between filling shelves with freshly baked rolls and serving a steady flow of shoppers on the pavement.

Higher prices would drive away customers, and there is a bigger underlying risk: if prices were to rise too quickly or if supply were to start thinning out, there could be even more unrest in a country with a history of bread riots.

That is one reason why, despite a heavy burden on the state budget, Mursi's government is maintaining supplies of heavily subsidised flat bread, which is sold for less than 1 US cent per piece and is aimed at the poor.

But there are no subsidies for products like those sold in Alif's bakery, which caters to relatively affluent customers, so his and other businesses bear the burden of price rises.

Some bakers have started shrinking the size of loaves and cakes in an apparent attempt to protect margins. As data released by the government this week showed, others have started passing on part of their higher costs to consumers.

Annual consumer price inflation in Egyptian cities leapt to 8.2 per cent in February from 6.3 per cent in January, reaching the highest level since May. Food and drink prices rose 9.3 per cent year-on-year last month.

Nancy Fahim, economist at Standard Chartered in Dubai, predicted the weakness of Egypt's economy may limit any rise in overall inflation, however; average national inflation in the current fiscal year to June may yet be lower than last fiscal year's average of 8.7 per cent, she said.

But Fahim added that inflation coupled with high unemployment, officially estimated at 13 per cent, was likely to pressure the government into maintaining subsidies, despite their increasing burden on state finances.

The government spends over US$5.5 billion a year on food subsidies, which also cover items such as rice, oil and sugar. Curbs on bread subsidies triggered severe riots in 1977, and as recently as 2008, Mubarak faced protests over shortages.

In 2003, a sharp decline in the value of the pound caused the price of non-subsidised bread to soar, leaving more Egyptians buying the cheaper, subsidised flat loaves and triggering supply shortages.

Sick economy

Despite the weakness of the currency, bread supplies appear ample. Still, wheat imports are down sharply this year as the economic crisis makes it harder for Egypt to arrange payments; between Jan. 1 and Feb. 20, the country bought around 235,000 tonnes, roughly a third of what it purchased in the same period a year ago.

Wheat traders in Cairo said Egypt appeared to be running down strategic stocks of nearly 2.3 million tonnes to avoid having to use foreign exchange for imports.

In the next Egyptian harvest, which is expected to start at the end next month, the government aims to raise the amount of local wheat which it obtains to 4 million tonnes by boosting its purchase price by 5 percent. In previous years, its targets ranged between 2.4 and 3.7 million tonnes.

But the success of this strategy will depend on weather, bureaucratic efficiency and other factors. As the world's biggest wheat buyer, Egypt relies heavily on imports to feed its 84 million people; half of the wheat they consume is imported.

In 2010/11, one Egyptian in four was living beneath the national poverty line of US$1.65 a day, according to UNICEF. Economists say many more live just above the poverty line.

For Cairo shopper Mohammed Ali, price rises in recent months have left only enough money for basic necessities. Standing at a bread stall on a busy street in the capital, he said he could not even think about spending cash on luxuries such as travel.

"Food prices are rising, the economy is sick and the politicians just sit on their chairs," he said, miming a man lounging back and stroking his chin.

"I have just enough money for food, but nothing else," he said, leaving with a small plastic bag stuffed with rolls to feed his family.

Bakers who normally receive government subsidies to cover low-cost loaves and higher fuel prices say they have not been paid as regularly as before. The government owes such bakeries payments dating back six months, the head of the bakers' association said in February, threatening strike action if the problem was not solved.

Prices at general stores have also gone up. Alfa Market, a supermarket chain catering to wealthier Egyptians, has been forced to raise prices several times over the past two months, owner Mohamad Zada said. The price of cooking oil has gone up on three occasions in that period.

"There is a 20- to 30-per cent increase in prices ... for everything," he told Reuters.

For now, Zada has not heard complaints from customers about the price rises, but Alfa has been careful to limit the price of its bread, even though this is eating into profits: "People say changing the price of the bread would be a crime," he said.

The fall of the Egyptian pound has also become a headache for Hatem Zidan, sales and marketing manager at milling company Flour Land, which produces flour, pasta and biscuits with imported wheat.

In two months the price he pays for a tonne of flour has risen 16 per cent to 3,250 pounds. The volatility of the exchange rate is making his work next to impossible, he said.

"I can make a deal and then I have the surprise that I lose money. Now I am working day by day," he said. "I cannot make contracts for three months with businesses like I used to."

Samir Radwan, an economist and former finance minister, says Egypt must learn from its troubled past. "The history of revolts in Egypt is the history of the price index," said Radwan, citing a pattern dating back to 1919. "I worry a lot about this.

"Poor people really have their back against the wall." — Reuters

Norway shows the way with electric cars, but at what cost?

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 06:56 AM PDT

March 13, 2013

A driver leaves a free car park reserved for electric vehicles in Oslo February 25, 2013. — Reuters picOSLO, March 13 — Norway's buzzing little market for pure electric cars has in its very success shown the severe drawbacks to a model that relies on public subsidies worth as much as US$8,200 (RM25,490) per car, every year.

Car makers like Nissan, Mitsubishi, Peugeot Citroen and Tesla Motors see Norway and its 10,000 battery-powered vehicles as a reason for optimism in otherwise gloomy terrain.

Pure electric cars made up 3.0 per cent of February car sales in Norway, with a population of 5 million, compared to fractions of one per cent in most nations. In the United States, for instance, they made up just 0.1 per cent of all car sales in 2012.

But the factors that have made the car sell in Norway show how hard it would be to make the proposition work anywhere else: the car can't go long distances and isn't economical unless the government kicks in hefty incentives like tax breaks, free road tolls and free parking.

Ironically, experts say, electric cars may not even be helping the environment.

"Norway's an oasis in a huge desert," said Peter Schmidt, editor of Automotive Industry Data Ltd. in England. "But it's an example can't be followed - it only works because Norway has a 'supertax' on normal cars."

State subsidies, intended to promote a less polluting form of travel and cut greenhouse gas emissions, help bring the price of buying the top-selling electric Nissan Leaf in Norway down to 240,690 crowns (RM748,185), competitive with the 1.3-litre Volkswagen Golf at 238,000 crowns.

But in Britain, for example, while the Leaf is cheaper at 23,490 pounds (RM109,199), including a 5,000-pound government subsidy, the same Golf sounds a bargain at 16,285 pounds.

Leading the way

Norway's centre-left government says small nations can lead the way for others like the United States, which is the world's largest market for electric cars with 14,687 sold in 2012 but which has backed away from a goal of putting a million electric cars on the roads by 2015.

But its example shows the huge cost involved - one that only a country like Norway, which has escaped the global economic slowdown thanks to vast revenues from oil and gas, can afford.

Norway's tax breaks on the purchase for electric cars are worth almost US$11,000, or US$1,400 a year over a car's lifetime, according to a study by Statistics Norway analyst Bjart Holtsmark.

Commuters driving into Oslo from the surrounding areas save an annual US$1,400 in road tolls, can get free parking worth US$5,000 and avoid other charges of US$400.

It all adds up to as much as US$8,200 per car, per year, before taking account of the benefit of driving in the bus lane rather than sitting in a queue with other cars.

The incentive scheme is due to run until 2017, when it will be reviewed.

"This is a good introductory offer," said Norwegian Environment Minister Baard Vegar Solhjell.

"It's a way to spread ideas and it also creates a lot of interest among the car companies," he said.

With three young children, Solhjell can't find an electric car big enough for his family and drives a 7-seat Ford Galaxy, however.

Even some Norwegian electric car owners have misgivings about the state's largesse.

"The benefits are ... too good. You can take bus lanes, get free parking and it costs very little to refuel," said Ole Marius Lauritzen, 44, who lives 25 km outside Oslo and used to commute to his work at a bank by bus.

Second car

Like 40 per cent of other Norwegian households with electric cars, Lauritzen's blue Think City car, made by a now-bankrupt Norwegian firm once owned by Ford, is his family's second car.

"It has to be the second car for the family, because it still has a limited range," especially in winter when the cold drains batteries, Lauritzen said as he recharged the vehicle for free in a snow-decked electric car park in central Oslo.

Oslo has 446 parking places with free recharging and the municipality plans to add 800 more at a cost of 59 million crowns over the next four years. Drivers can also recharge at home.

The range issue - many can only go about 100 miles or less without recharging - is a huge problem in countries like the United States, where long-distance driving is a way of life.

One US study said 70 per cent of drivers surveyed wanted driving ranges of 300 miles before they would consider buying an electric car despite federal tax breaks worth up to US$7,500, in addition to state incentives.

By encouraging people who can afford it to buy a second car instead of taking buses and trains, the electric car scheme may ironically be aggravating environmental problems and causing traffic jams, analyst Holtsmark said.

Tesla Motors says its Model S car, due on sale in June, will be able to reach such ranges if driven correctly.

"There is a huge opportunity here ... (for Norway) to set an example for the rest of the world," Tesla Motors' co-founder Elon Musk said in a speech in Oslo this month.

Hurting, or helping?

Experts say electrification with renewable energy is essential if rich nations are serious about goals of cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 80 per cent by 2050 - transport now accounts for about a fifth of all greenhouse gas emissions.

European Union member states, for example, are aiming for at least 9 million electric vehicles by 2020, against less than 100,000 now. The group also wants 10 per cent of transport in the EU to run on renewable fuels by 2020 - such as biofuels or 'green' electricity, up from 4.7 per cent in 2010.

On this issue, Norway again stands head and shoulders above the rest - almost 100 percent of electricity is generated from clean hydropower, so a shift from gasoline and diesel cuts pollution.

But Norway is not the norm. Elsewhere, electric cars may cut pollution locally by eliminating exhaust but are often charged from electricity generated by high-polluting coal-fired power plants elsewhere.

In fact, in places like China, the requirements for electric cars just add to environmental problems.

Many Chinese power plants use coal with few filters, spewing out particulate matter - chemicals, acids and metals - that causes more pollution per km for electric cars than gasoline-powered cars, said Chris Cherry, an electric vehicle analyst at the University of Tennessee.

"In China, electric vehicles may worsen health effects compared to normal cars," said Cherry, who was lead author of a study published in February in the journal Environmental Science and Technology.

The policy also does not stack up in the market established to put some value on curbing greenhouse gas emissions.

Holtsmark estimates that a Toyota Prius hybrid emits 0.6 tonne of carbon dioxide a year against zero for a Leaf. Scaling up the Leaf's subsidies means Norway is paying $13,600 to avoid a tonne of emissions, a stratospherically expensive policy since the right to emit a tonne of carbon dioxide costs about 4 euros on the EU's carbon market.

Big gamble

Norway's enthusiasm notwithstanding, many carmakers acknowledge the all-electric market has not become as mainstream as they hoped when they gambled billions of dollars on the technology.

Carmakers are shifting from all-electric towards hybrids like the Prius, which has a gasoline engine backed up by an electric motor that traps energy when the brakes are applied.

"Demand for electric cars isn't where we thought it would be," Francois Bancon, Nissan's upstream development chief, said at the Geneva car show last week. "We're in a very uncertain phase, and everyone's a bit lost."

Electric car owners in Norway are already starting to worry about the long-term future of their investment.

"If the bus lane is closed the economic aspect of the car will be terrible," said Are Paulsrud, who drives a Mitsubishi electric car.

"The car cost 250,000 crowns and if the bus lane is closed ... I won't be able to sell it." — 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


ABIM fail saman fitnah RM10 juta terhadap Utusan Melayu

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 04:08 AM PDT

March 13, 2013

KUALA LUMPUR, 13 Mac — Angkatan Belia Islam Malaysia (Abim) hari ini memfailkan saman fitnah berjumlah RM10 juta terhadap Utusan Melayu (M) Bhd berhubung penyiaran artikel oleh akhbar itu pada 8 Feb lepas.

Presiden Abim, Amidi Abdul Manan sebagai plaintif memfailkan writ saman itu melalui Tetuan Anwar Ismail & Associate di pejabat pendaftaran Mahkamah Tinggi Sivil di sini.

Amidi menamakan Utusan Melayu dan ketua pengarangnya Datuk Abdul Aziz Ishak sebagai defendan pertama dan kedua, diikuti wartawannya Lukman Ismail sebagai defendan ketiga.

Dalam pernyataan tuntutannya, Amidi mendakwa artikel berjudul 'Pas Benarkan Tarian Lucah, ABIM Hina Isteri Rasullulah' yang diterbitkan pada 8 Feb lalu adalah berniat  untuk mengaibkan, menjatuhkan maruah serta merendahkan martabat pertubuhan itu.

Beliau mendakwa artikel itu membawa maksud bahawa Abim merupakan pertubuhan Islam yang jahat, tidak berintegriti dan pertubuhan yang tidak boleh dipercayai dan tiada kredibiliti.

Dalam writ saman itu, Amidi menuntut gantirugi teruk, gantirugi teladan, injunksi untuk menghalang defendan-defendan daripada menerbitkan atau menyiarkan mana-mana perkataan fitnah serta kos yang difikirkan sesuai oleh mahkamah. — Bernama

“Kami bertempur dengan pengganas sebenar, bukan sandiwara — Jeneral Zulkifli

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 04:01 AM PDT

March 13, 2013

Seramai dua anggota tentera dan lapan anggota polis telah terbunuh setakat ini dalam menghadapi konflik di Lahad Datu, Sabah. — Gambar failPASIR MAS, 13 Mac —Panglima Tentera Darat Jeneral Tan Sri Zulkifli Zainal Abidin menegaskan pasukan keselamatan bertempur dengan pengganas sebenar dan bukan satu sandiwara sebagaimana yang dicanangkan segelintir pihak yang tidak bertanggungjawab.

"Saya tidak faham jika orang kata sandiwara. Nyawa dipertaruhkan... kami menghadapi musuh sebenar dan bukan lakonan.

"Dua anggota tentera dan lapan anggota polis terbunuh, adakah itu sandiwara? Tepuk dada tanya selera," katanya kepada pemberita selepas menghadiri pengkebumian Allahyarham Kpl Ahmad Hurairah Ismail di Kampung Bayu Lalang, di sini, hari ini.

Ahmad Hurairah terkorban dalam pertempuran dengan pengganas di Sungai Nyamuk, Kampung Tanjung Batu, Lahad Datu, Sabah.

Seorang lagi anggota tentera, Kpl Ahmad Farhan Ruslan pula terkorban dalam kemalangan jalan raya di Km 37 Lahad Datu-Tungku ketika menghantar makanan untuk anggota keselamatan dalam operasi itu.

Terdahulu, lebih 3,000 hadir di Lapangan Terbang Sultan Ismail Petra bagi menyambut ketibaan jenazah dua pahlawan negara itu, yang diterbangkan melalui pesawat Charlie C-130, pada kira-kira 9.50 pagi.

Jenazah Ahmad Farhan dibawa ke rumah ibu bapanya di Perumahan Desa Darulnaim II, Pasir Tumboh. Jenazah Ahmad Farhan dikebumikan mengikut istiadat ketenteraan di Tanah Perkuburan Islam Madrasah Pohon Celagi, Pasir Hor.

Menyifatkan Allahyarham seorang anggota yang berani, Zulkifli berkata siasatan mendapati Ammad Hurairah sempat berbalas tembakan dengan beberapa pengganas sebelum gugur di medan perang.

"ATM akan membantu keluarga Allahyarham, apa saja yang kita mampu," katanya.

Zulkifli turut menyampaikan sumbangan daripada Angkatan Tentera Malaysia (ATM) kepada Ismail Husin, 55, iaitu ayah kepada Ahmad Hurairah selepas  pengkebumian tersebut.

Sementara itu Menteri Perdagangan Antarabangsa dan Industri Datuk Seri

Mustapa Mohamed yang turut hadir pada pengebumian itu meminta rakyat Malaysia bersatu dan menghentikan spekulasi berhubung soal keselamatan negara memandangkan ramai anggota keselamatan gugur ketika berjuang di perbatasan.

"Hentikan sagala tohmahan dan fitnah ini yang akhirnya akan meruntuhkan kita dan kita bertanggungjawab sebagai warganegara yang setia pada negara. Kita tak mahu satu pun suara sumbang yang memberi kata-kata yang menunjukkan kita tidak peka dengan kehibaan (yang dialami keluarga mangsa).

"Kita semua rakyat Malaysia amat terhutang budi dan kita berdoa semoga barisan hadapan akan teruskan perjuangan mereka untuk pastikan negara kita selamat sampai bila-bila," katanya.

Bekas Panglima Tentera Darat Tan Sri Mohd Sharom Nordin berkata pengorbanan yang dilakukan oleh Allahyarham mencerminkan sikap taat dan setia kepada negara walaupun nyawa yang menjadi pertaruhannya.

"Kalau ada lagi orang mengatakan ini semua sandiwara, saya tak tahu nak cakap apa... rakyat kita, tentera kita sendiri... hari ini anak Kelantan telah mempertaruhakan nyawa untuk kedaulatan negara.

"Hilangkan syak wasangka, ini satu pengorbanan yang diterima Allah S.W.T.," katanya. — Bernama

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Two days in KT

Posted: 12 Mar 2013 05:07 PM PDT

March 13, 2013

Dina Zaman writes to find answers. Sometimes she doesn't. If she's not spending too much money on books, it's household items. She would like everyone to be happy.

MARCH 13 ― A quick trip back to Terengganu is always welcome, even if it's for work. Kuala Terengganu was preparing for the prime minister's visit. Barisan Nasional flags were everywhere we turned, and they'll stay there until the general election.

My cab driver was the regular old pakcik, who drove as slowly as his age, and kept up a very speedy commentary on local politics. "You know, Terengganu has the best oil in the whole world! No other oil can beat it. But kita dok mampu nok beli minyok tu… it's for export purposes."

Of course the conversation veered to who would win. He echoed the sentiments of many: life would be the same. The poor would remain poor, and there were too many of them in the state. "But I have to say this. Oghang Umno ne, they're quite active. Oghang Pah (PAS)… they're quiet! And I'm with PAS!"

"Eh, why are you jotting down what I said? Are you a reporter? You better not write down my taxi number."

***

I was in Terengganu to meet with the AJK of Umno branches. My instructions were to waltz into the office and meet with the head or representatives of Umno to see how they were campaigning for the upcoming elections.

A relative who helped me with the contacts shook her head. "You know Kak Dina. That Kalimah Allah issue drove many PAS members and non-partisan locals to join Umno. How can you say that Allah can be used by non-Muslims. Gila ke? Nak gadai bangsa satu, ni nak gadai ugama."

I also met with a friend, who can be considered one of the local "hard guys." Before, he was bald and smartly dressed. This time, he wore a woollen beanie, had grown his hair out and sported a faux leather jacket.

"Aren't you hot?" I asked.

"No. I'm always cold. I think I have angin."

He drove me around, and when I visited the Umno offices, he hid. He confessed to me later, he was with PKR.

"You're with PKR?" This man hung out with ultras before. We're talking Pekida.

"Yes."

I tightened my scarf around my head. This was interesting to say the least.

We visited PKR's office, which was housed in an old bungalow a few metres behind my late grandfather's house. It was empty.

Most of the local members lived and worked in KL, he said. There was only him.

"Okay. So what do you want?"

"Perubahan."

"Yes… but what kind of change? What exactly?"

He smiled. "Perubahan."

This conversation was not going anywhere.

The common denominator that the two parties shared was that grassroots issues were neglected by the higher-ups of their parties. Nobody listened. It's only during elections, by-elections, or when everything had happened that they would trumpet the causes. Story of our lives.

***

Terengganu does have her political personalities who may not be as prominent to the rest of those in Malaysia. One is YB Toh Chin Yaw, Terengganu State executive councillor, the straight talking, always in Kampung China MP.

He has his fair share of detractors for his "heritage conservation" work in Kampung China, but one cannot deny that he is passionate about Terengganu and his community.

Kampung China at one point looked tired. While heritage lovers have pointed out that the area was beginning to look more and more like the garish Jonker Street of Melaka, there is business, the shophouses are painted and clean, and the people living in the surroundings are happy.

Flanked by two of his friends, YB Toh is an example of the small town politician who is found everywhere in the country. He's energetic and passionate about Terengganu. As he enjoyed his sumptuous breakfast (Terengganu breakfasts are huge. Maybe this is why we're not so progressive. All that nasi dagang and laksam will induce a coma), locals came up to him, to say hello, to complain, to whisper something so secret that Toh had to tell them to speak out aloud.

Of course BN will win, he crowed. In Terengganu, they will win hands down. It's the only party that had provided for the locals. "Things are moving," he said, but the one issue that rankled him was "… kerja cari orang…". It was difficult to get human resource to apply for work in the state. Would-be employees were fussy.

He admitted that politics in Terengganu was less race-based, which helped with community relations. "Our population is one-million-plus." He has pushed for education, and students receive financial aid. Even before Federal began its programme, Terengganu had already brought in foreign teacher aides to teach English.

He groaned. There were so many campaigns going on and Malaysians were educated, but their ethical values were low. There were too many external influences impacting locals, "Malaysians are not mature." For the people of Terengganu, it was about eking out a living. They were not that ambitious. But more needs to be done.

Terengganu is also not an obvious choice for foreign investment. Investors want dynamic places, and the state is laid-back. "An example is our villages. Not just out of town but in the town itself. They're swampy, lack hygienic facilities… the houses are not meant for living beings! Mind you, those areas are not villages. They're squatter homes." Sooner or later, locals will have to change their lifestyle.

On the other extreme, we have politically active royals, who are with the opposition. The architect Datuk Raja Kamarul Bahrin Shah Raja Ahmad had just joined PAS when I arrived, and he had already started the ceramah tour around town. Hot topic: Kampung Ladang.

Kampung Ladang deserves a feature on its own. Locals are divided. As far as they are concerned, living in a shoebox flat is a step up the social ladder. They miss their former village, but the problems they had, and had to live with (sanitation, poverty, et al), were challenging.

They were bemused by the controversy. If the flats they live in are driving the opposition crazy, why didn't they help them when they were living in the village? Kampung Ladang is a very touchy subject.

These sentiments were echoed by another royal. YAM Tengku Sri Paduka Raja Tengku Ibrahim Sultan Ismail Nasiruddin is known for his oppositionist ways; at one point, he was a member of Semangat 46, and is a staunch supporter of Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah.

The heat was clearly getting to Tengku Paduka, in spite of the interview being held in his palatial beachfront home. Terengganu sweltered and heaved. It's like being in the Sahara with the sea next door.

But he was enthusiastic. He was an accidental politician, he explained. It was on a visit with a politician friend that he saw how people lived. He was shocked, that little had been done for the poor. "How can the Malays live like that? We're supposed to be this… majority race, and we were living in horrible conditions. That's how I got involved. I wanted to help."

It's not just Kampung Ladang that had him riled up. Corruption, illogical state projects (Cactus farm in Kenyir, anyone?) and haphazard town planning were some of the few.

"Do you know that they are planning to build low cost flats on Redang? On the islands!"

And did I know that Terengganu had a zoo? There had been no proper study or planning, he said. The zoo was not even in Kuala Terengganu but in Kemaman. It was not tourist friendly and the Kemaman heat would be unbearable for the animals. "I admit, the zoo was done very well. It's pretty but… logistically…"

Tengku Paduka opened an exercise book, his notes neatly written in it. They looked like handwritten minutes. "I have a lot of friends in Umno, even now," he smiled.

The issue was simple: PAS or the Opposition must control Putrajaya. When they come into power, they can focus on the big issues. He could only comment on his state.

"Umno has been in power for so long, but tengok rakyat orang Terengganu. They have not progressed. What does this say then about the ruling party?"

Not everything completed by Umno was bad, but the current mentri besar had strange ideas for development. A duty free zone in the middle of the Kenyir jungle? To sell what, he asked. Kenyir is best as a national park. He shook his head.

"I love Terengganu. I want to help," he said, before he left to greet another visitor.

 ***

A two-day trip did not suffice.  My last appointment was with the richest bomoh I had ever met. He laughed when I told him about my assignment.

"You balik masa pilihanraya nanti. Then you will see. PAS ke Umno ke, they'll be coming in droves. All want to win. Rakyat?" He laughed harshly.

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist

Shooting the carrier pigeons

Posted: 12 Mar 2013 04:31 PM PDT

March 13, 2013

Native Sabahan Erna is (not) Malay but loves Malay literature. Her hobbies: cats/gaming/blogging at ernamerin.com/Tweeting at @ernamh.

MARCH 13 — Malaysians seem to have a knack for self-censorship. The last couple of weeks have seen plenty of that in both the mainstream news and social media.

A chorus of self-appointed Twitter watchdogs have been saying things like the following:

"You do not know anything about (insert subject here) so you should just shut up!"

"Why are you criticising the government now? You are disrespecting our troops!"

The current Sabah situation is certainly drawing both the armchair activists and the anti-armchair activists, resulting in a whole lot of noise.

Here is the thing about Twitter noise: You can choose to ignore most of it.

At the same time, just because someone is saying something, you can choose whether or not to believe it.

You do not get to gag people just because you do not agree with nor want to listen to them.

I admit I got really annoyed when people made the silliest statements about our defence tactics, saying things like we should send our submarines to engage the Sulu militants.

That is like saying we should use BB guns to ward off mosquitoes.

Here is the thing, though. I respect your right to an opinion. But you also need to respect other people's rights to tell you when you get your facts wrong or offer a counter-opinion. But you are also within your rights to stick your fingers in your ears and yodel very loudly in response.

Some things like hate speech have no place in the public sphere. Yet trying to clamp down on social media, as suggested by a deputy minister, is a violation of freedom of expression.

My own approach is that I support your right to say whatever you want so long as it does not harm others. "Others", of course, does not apply to the government.

Too many Malaysians still cling to the feudal mentality that we should meekly obey and never question or criticise our leaders.

We are citizens. It is right to call our politicians out for their mistakes or lack of judgement.

They are servants, not our masters. Though you would not know that from the way people bow and scrape in front of our politicians.

So when those same politicians try to muzzle us "for our own good", I do not call them leaders.

I call them tyrants.

Tyranny comes in many forms but it is a tragic thing when we defend it by defending its perpetrators... or show ourselves to be tyrants at heart as well.

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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

The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Tesco finds horsemeat in frozen meatloaf, pulls product

Posted: 12 Mar 2013 06:25 PM PDT

Two for tea

By Lydia Koh

KUALA LUMPUR, March 10 ― When asked to suggest a place in KL for high tea outside of hotels, a friend was stumped. Sure, many places serve tea and cakes but a dedicated high tea is something else. If ... Read More

Mushroom omelette for brekkie

By Elaine Ho

KUALA LUMPUR, March 10 ― I cannot stress the importance of having a good nutritious breakfast before starting off your day. Eggs are a good source of natural, high quality protein so it helps keep you ... Read More

Burger trippin'

PETALING JAYA, March 9 — For weeks, Melody has heard her friends wax lyrical about this burger joint. Feeling a sort of burger fatigue, we put off investigating this place until one rainy weekend. It ... Read More

Chow Yhang: Serving up good 'dai chow'

By Eu Hooi Khaw

PETALING JAYA, March 9 — For some good, honest Chinese food that doesn't cost you an arm and a leg, Chow Yhang in the older part of SS2, Petaling Jaya, is the place to be.We had the Dry Fried Teochew ... Read More

Plain food to focus cardinals’ mind on new pope

Posted: 12 Mar 2013 05:20 PM PDT

Two for tea

By Lydia Koh

KUALA LUMPUR, March 10 ― When asked to suggest a place in KL for high tea outside of hotels, a friend was stumped. Sure, many places serve tea and cakes but a dedicated high tea is something else. If ... Read More

Mushroom omelette for brekkie

By Elaine Ho

KUALA LUMPUR, March 10 ― I cannot stress the importance of having a good nutritious breakfast before starting off your day. Eggs are a good source of natural, high quality protein so it helps keep you ... Read More

Burger trippin'

PETALING JAYA, March 9 — For weeks, Melody has heard her friends wax lyrical about this burger joint. Feeling a sort of burger fatigue, we put off investigating this place until one rainy weekend. It ... Read More

Chow Yhang: Serving up good 'dai chow'

By Eu Hooi Khaw

PETALING JAYA, March 9 — For some good, honest Chinese food that doesn't cost you an arm and a leg, Chow Yhang in the older part of SS2, Petaling Jaya, is the place to be.We had the Dry Fried Teochew ... Read More

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

Malaysia Insider Online

Copyright 2010 All Rights Reserved