Jumaat, 15 Mac 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Drink and ride with MyTeksi

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 07:19 PM PDT

Fritter frenzy

By Alan Wong

KUALA LUMPUR, March 14 — Several times I've heard Melody moan about her failed search for this banana fritter stall in Brickfields. Like it has the best in KL.So when she finally got her hands on some ... Read More

Colonial Cafe: Serving up a side of nostalgia with every dish

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 06:23 PM PDT

Fritter frenzy

By Alan Wong

KUALA LUMPUR, March 14 — Several times I've heard Melody moan about her failed search for this banana fritter stall in Brickfields. Like it has the best in KL.So when she finally got her hands on some ... Read More

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Fixtures pile-up is no concern for hungry Chelsea

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 08:10 AM PDT

March 15, 2013

Benitez marshalling his forces in training. — Reuters file picLONDON, March 15 — Chelsea's congested fixture list, now that they have qualified for the quarter-finals of the Europa League, will not derail their bid to defend the FA Cup and finish in the Premier League's top four, according to interim manager Rafa Benitez.

The European champions survived a small scare against Steaua Bucharest on Thursday to progress to the last eight of the continent's second-tier competition, again showing their fighting spirit after Sunday's FA Cup comeback against Manchester United.

Chelsea won the FA Cup last season and finished sixth in the top flight. They qualified for the Champions League at the expense of Tottenham Hotspur by winning the trophy.

They sit fourth in the Premier League, two points behind Spurs but with a game in hand while Arsenal are five points back. Chelsea play West Ham United on Sunday.

"Since I came here we have been playing around nine games each month and we knew that could be difficult and we know that can still be difficult," Benitez said on the club's website.

"I prefer to have this problem because it means we are carrying on competing. A top side always wants to be in all the competitions until the end," added the Spaniard, who will leave at the end of the season.

Chelsea's progress in the Europa League alongside Tottenham and Newcastle United is in stark contrast to last season when Manchester United and Manchester City exited before the quarters.

The draw for the last eight was being made later today and midfielder Eden Hazard was upbeat about Chelsea's prospects.

"Chelsea are a big club — we have to win titles and to qualify for the Champions League," the Belgian said on UEFA's website. "There's a lot to do but we'll try to do it all."

Hazard's midfield colleague Ramires said the Chelsea players were fully behind Benitez despite the discontent of the supporters, a section of whom have routinely jeered the former Liverpool manager.

"There isn't anyone better than him to tell us what is best," said the Brazilian. "The players try not to get involved in this issue. As long as he's here the players will seek to support him because he's our manager and we want to win." — Reuters

Chapchai, Liang share halfway lead in India

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 07:53 AM PDT

March 15, 2013

NEW DELHI, March 15 — Chapchai Nirat of Thailand and China's Liang Wenchong both carded second successive rounds of six-under-par to share a two-shot lead after the second round of the Avantha Masters today.

Chapchai and Liang, both chasing their first wins since 2007 that came a week apart, were level at 12-under 132 ahead of four players on 10-under.

"This is a very long course and I managed to hit the balls long the last two days," a satisfied Chapchai said after a sparkling round that included seven birdies and a single bogey.

"I also managed to hole several long putts as well and luck did play a part in getting me to my position today," said the three-times Asian Tour winner.

Former Asia number one Liang's putting was no less impressive as he sank a 25-foot birdie putt at the 17th, one of his eight.

"I have played some of my best golf this week and I managed to hole several long putts," said the world number 201.

"I've learnt to be patient and my playing experience from all over the world has taught me well. There are two more rounds to go and, hopefully, I can be atop the leaderboard like today."

Chinnarat Phadungsil, who reeled off eight birdies in nine holes for an inward 28 and a five-shot first round lead, took 40 on the back nine on Friday before joining five others at nine-under.

The 2010 Ryder Cup-winning captain and eight-times European Tour number one Colin Montgomerie made a forgettable India debut, missing the cut after a second successive 76.

Defending champion Jbe Krugar of South Africa was another one to miss the weekend while former Ryder Cup player Edoardo Molinari and twice PGA Tour winner Daniel Chopra also had early exits. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views

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IMF tells EU to act boldly and fix the banks

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 10:11 AM PDT

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IMF tells EU to act boldly and fix the banks

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 10:00 AM PDT

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Jay-Z to put modern jazz twist on Gatsby soundtrack

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 07:36 AM PDT

March 15, 2013

Jay-Z: Classic American story ripe for a modern twist. — Reuters file picLONDON, March 15 — US rapper Jay-Z has teamed up with Australian director Baz Luhrmann to produce and perform on the soundtrack for "The Great Gatsby", which will open the 2013 Cannes film festival in May.

Jay-Z said he would join some of the world's top musical artists on the soundtrack, which would bring modern "jazz age" energy to the latest film version of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel of 1920s America.

The hip-hop entrepreneur said he was introduced to Luhrmann by Leonardo DiCaprio, who plays the lead role of the mysterious millionaire Jay Gatsby in the movie, and this led to a two-year collaboration.

"As soon as I spoke with Baz and Leonardo, I knew this was the right project," Jay-Z said in a statement.

" 'The Great Gatsby' is that classic American story of one's introduction to extravagance, decadence and illusion. It's ripe for experimentation and ready to be interpreted with a modern twist."

Jay-Z will be executive producer of the soundtrack and contribute some newly written songs to the score by composer Craig Armstrong, who worked with Luhrmann on his previous films "Moulin Rouge!" and "Romeo + Juliet".

The soundtrack of the film, which opens on May 10, will be released by Interscope Records.

Luhrmann's adaptation of Fitzgerald's account of "Roaring Twenties" America will open the Cannes film festival, the world's most important cinema showcase, with DiCaprio appearing at the event for the first time since 2007.

Organisers this week said the opening gala, preceded by a glitzy red carpet fashion parade and followed by parties along the palm-lined Riviera, will also be attended by Bollywood star Amitabh Bachchan and Jay-Z.

Luhrmann's first film "Strictly Ballroom" was screened at Cannes 21 years ago.

DiCaprio plays Jay Gatsby in the 3D movie, Carey Mulligan takes the role of Daisy Buchanan, and Tobey Maguire is Nick Carraway, the narrator.

The festival runs from May 15 to 26 and US director Steven Spielberg is head of this year's jury. — Reuters

Miyazaki father and son team up for ‘From Up on Poppy Hill’ film

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 07:01 AM PDT

March 15, 2013

LOS ANGELES, March 15 — Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki and his Studio Ghibli have, under their belt, some of Japan's biggest global anime movie successes, including "Princess Mononoke" and "Spirited Away", which won an Academy Award in 2003.

Far less known, until now, was Miyazaki's son Goro, who worked as a landscaper for years so as not to compete with his famous father, but later designed the Ghibli Museum in Tokyo and debuted as a director in 2006 with "Tales from Earthsea".

Now, for the first time, the pair has teamed up on a film, with Hayao, 72, as co-writer and 46-year-old Goro as director, overcoming a contentious relationship stretching back years.

"From Up on Poppy Hill", opening in US cinemas today, is set in Japan in 1963 and focuses on a high school romance threatened by a secret.

Goro Miyazaki talked to Reuters recently, via a translator, about working with his father, a man he was once estranged from.

Q: Umi, the female protagonist in "Poppy Hill", has been raising flags for a decade for her deceased father. While yours is very much alive and well, did Umi's longing for her dad stir up anything for you when it comes to your own famous father?

A: The common thread between myself and the character is that the dad was always out working and was never really around. I'd be lying to you if I didn't say that there were times when I thought that maybe my dad should have died a little earlier, just as the character did. I feel like I can really empathise with a child's longing for an absent father.

Q: Now that you're working together, how closely was your father involved in the making of "Poppy Hill"?

A: He said, "I will take care of the planning and the screenplay and everything else is your responsibility". That was the agreement on the roles. But once we began work, he would come around, wander into the room and instead of talking to me directly, he would start looking at the artwork on the walls and mutter suggestions on how to do things a little bit this way, a little bit that way. He never came and talked to me directly.

Goro Miyazaki in his Studio Ghibli in Tokyo speaks about working with a famous father to which he was once estranged. — Reuters file picQ: Did you have to accept his suggestions?

A: More often than not, his advice really hit the mark. So begrudgingly, I often had to take it.

Q: You seem like reluctant working partners. How long does this date back to?

A: Shortly after I started making my first film, I had a huge fight with my father. For a long time we didn't talk. He was opposed to the idea of me directing a film. He felt that it would be ridiculous for somebody with no experience to, all of a sudden, go into directing. He would tell me about how much he had to struggle in his days to get to that place where he could have the opportunity.

Q: What helped you reconcile?

A: Having my (now four-year-old) son — his grandson — allowed us to start talking again.

Q: Has your last name been a help or hindrance in your career?

A: Both. The opportunity I received to make this film obviously had something to do with the family name. But once you make the film and it goes out into the world, that name becomes a heavy burden.

Q: Because you're judged by the standards set by your father's work?

A: I think that is true. But it all comes down to how I deal with it. Until recently, I was very jaded about that whole thing, but now (I've turned the corner) and the reason for that actually ties in to my next project, which unfortunately I can't disclose at the moment.

Q: How similar are you and your father?

A: We're both short-tempered and also a little bit dark when it comes down to it, way down deep.

Q: How are you not alike?

A: This may be partly due to the different worlds that we were born into and the different generations, but Hayao Miyazaki is an idealist. He thinks in terms of how people should be, how the world should be.

Q: Where does that stem from?

A: That comes from the fact that he grew up in this post-war period where things were changing and people had this strong ideal about how society should behave. Those of us who were born during a time when that society was much more structured already, we can't share that same sentiment.

Q: This post-war period is exactly the time period "Poppy Hill" is set in. Why do you think he wrote it for you to direct?

A: It was a time that most Japanese look fondly upon as the one time things were just right. It's after the war and the ravages. It's that point in history where Japan was able to enjoy a brief moment of peace. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Rapid HIV treatment points to ‘functional cure’ for AIDS

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 08:58 AM PDT

March 15, 2013

LONDON, March 15 — Treating people with HIV rapidly after they have become infected with the virus that causes AIDS may be enough to achieve a "functional cure" in a small proportion of patients diagnosed early, according to new research.

Most of the some 34 million people with HIV across the world will have to take anti-AIDS drugs known as antiretroviral therapy for the whole of their lives. — AFP picScientists in France who followed 14 patients who were treated very swiftly with HIV drugs but then stopped treatment found that even when they had been off therapy for more than seven years, they still showed no signs of the virus rebounding.

The research, published in the journal PLoS Pathogens, follows news earlier this month about a baby girl in Mississippi in the United States being effectively cured of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) after receiving very early treatment.

Christine Rouzioux, a professor at Necker Hospital and University Paris Descartes and a member of the initial team who identified HIV 30 years ago, said the new results showed the number of infected cells circulating in the blood of these patients, known as "post-treatment controllers", kept falling even without treatment for many years.

"Early treatment in these patients may have limited the establishment of viral reservoirs, the extent of viral mutations, and preserved immune responses. A combination of those may contribute to control infection in post-treatment controllers," she said.

"The shrinking of viral reservoirs ... closely matches the definition of 'functional' cure," she said.

A functional cure describes when the virus is reduced to such low levels that it is kept at bay even without continuing treatment. The virus, however, is still detectable in the body.

Most of the some 34 million people with HIV across the world will have to take anti-AIDS drugs known as antiretroviral therapy for the whole of their lives. These drugs generally keep the disease in check but also have side effects and a high cost impact on health systems.

Worldwide, the number of people newly infected with HIV, which can be transmitted via blood and by semen during sex, is falling. At 2.5 million, the number of new infections in 2011 was 20 per cent lower than in 2001, according to the United National AIDS programme (UNAIDS). And deaths from AIDS fell to 1.7 million in 2011, down from a peak of 2.3 million in 2005.

Asier Saez-Cirion, a senior HIV researcher at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, said that although most patients will not be able to control HIV, these results suggest that at least some may be able to if they get treatment early enough.

"(This data) and the Mississippi study strongly support early treatment initiation and may hold important clues for the development of a strategy to cure HIV or at least induce a long-term control without the need of antiretroviral treatment," he said. — Reuters

Aspirin tied to lower risk of most dangerous skin cancer

Posted: 14 Mar 2013 07:47 PM PDT

March 15, 2013

Regular aspirin consumption reduced the risk of skin cancer in women by up to 30 per cent, the research showed. — WikiMedia CommonsNEW YORK, March 15 — Older women who regularly took aspirin, but not similar anti-inflammatory drugs, had a lower-than-average risk of developing melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, according to a US study.

Melanoma cases have been on the rise in recent decades. The American Cancer Society estimates that about 77,000 new melanomas will be diagnosed in 2013 and just over 9,000 people will die of the disease.

The findings, published in the journal Cancer, are based on 12 years of data from the large, long-term Women's Health Initiative study and account for how much time study participants spent in the sun and whether they typically used sunscreen.

But lead author Jean Tang, from the Stanford University School of Medicine in California, said that this does not mean all women should start taking aspirin to ward off skin cancer.

"This study ... correlates use of aspirin with lower melanoma risk but doesn't prove it," Tang told Reuters Health.

For their study, Tang and her colleagues tracked almost 60,000 white women, ages 50 to 79, who reported their medication use and any new diagnoses on annual questionnaires.

During the research period, 548 women — less than 1 per cent — were diagnosed with melanoma.

Women who said they were regularly taking aspirin, meaning at least twice a week, at the start of the study were 21 per cent less likely to develop melanoma than those not on anti-inflammatory medicines. Use of aspirin for five years or longer was tied to a 30 per cent reduction in skin cancer risk.

However, women who took other non-steroidal anti-inflammatories (NSAIDS) — such as ibuprofen and naproxen — weren't any less likely to develop melanoma. Neither were users of acetaminophen.

Aspirin and other NSAIDS inhibit certain proteins that are known to play a role in tumour growth, so it's not clear why aspirin alone might lower the risk of melanoma.

According to Tang, it is possible there just were not enough women taking non-aspirin NSAIDS in the study to see a clear effect.

But Randall Harris, a cancer researcher from The Ohio State University Medical Center in Columbus, Ohio, said the evidence has been piling up that aspirin and other NSAIDS are tied to a lower risk of a range of cancers, including breast, colon and lung cancer.

"In my opinion, it's certainly worth considering taking one of these compounds on a regular basis at a relatively low dose ... two or three times per week, especially if you are at risk for developing any one of these malignancies," he said.

But Tang does not think the evidence currently supports most people using these drugs to ward off cancer, including melanoma.

"For women who are at high risk (such as) somebody who's already had skin cancer, talk to your doctor about taking aspirin, because aspirin is still a drug," she said. "The benefit needs to be weighed against some of the possible side effects." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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The tale of an arranged marriage in Pakistan

Posted: 14 Mar 2013 04:29 PM PDT

Mindy Kaling reveals second book project

LOS ANGELES, March 14 — The star of "The Mindy Project," Mindy Kaling, has another book on the way after the success of Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns) and it'll be written before ... Read More

A reminder to listen

By Michelle Yoon

MARCH 12 — "Reason not the need, the man says. Need not the reason. We don't know. We simply don't know." – There but for the, Ali SmithSometimes I wonder if we actually know what we're thinking when ... Read More

Claire Vaye Watkins wins US Story Prize for fiction

Posted: 14 Mar 2013 04:24 PM PDT

Mindy Kaling reveals second book project

LOS ANGELES, March 14 — The star of "The Mindy Project," Mindy Kaling, has another book on the way after the success of Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns) and it'll be written before ... Read More

A reminder to listen

By Michelle Yoon

MARCH 12 — "Reason not the need, the man says. Need not the reason. We don't know. We simply don't know." – There but for the, Ali SmithSometimes I wonder if we actually know what we're thinking when ... Read More

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa


Keluarga sedang uruskan bedah siasat PI Bala, tiada keraguan setakat ini

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 02:25 AM PDT

Oleh Syed Jaymal Zahiid
March 15, 2013

Bekas penyiasat persendirian, P Balasubramaniam semasa di sidang media di London tahun 2010. – Gambar failSUNGAI BULOH, 15 Mac – Keluarga P Balasubramaniam sedang menguruskan untuk bedah siasat dilakukan walaupun tiada kecurigaan terhadap berlakunya kecurigaan dalam kematian penyiasat persendirian yang memainkan peranan penting dalam misteri pembunuhan warga Mongolia Altantuya Shariibuu

Pada waktu ini, ahli keluarga sedang menguruskan mayat untuk dihantar dari rumah keluarga di Rawang ke hospital Sungai Buloh di sini dimana peguam R Sivarasa sedang menguruskan autopsi untuk dijalankan.

Bercakap kepada pemberita, pemimpin PKR itu mendedahkan Balasubramiam mempunyai beberapa masalah jantung pada masa lalu dan mengatakan walaupun keluarga akan menunggu sehingga keputusan bedah siasat keluar, mereka percaya beliau meninggal dunia akibat daripada sakit jantung.

"Kelihatan seperti serangan jantung," katanya.

Peguam tersebut menambah, Balasubramaniam telah mengadu sakit dada pada waktu pagi dan ahli keluarga telah membawanya ke klinik berhampiran rumah mereka di Rawang.

Bekas penyiasat persendirian itu diumumkan mati di klinik lebih kurang pukul 1.30 petang.

MENYUSUL LAGI

Baha Zain diumum Sasterawan Negara ke-12

Posted: 15 Mar 2013 02:12 AM PDT

March 15, 2013

Yang di-Pertuan Agong Tuanku Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah telah berkenan menyampaikan anugerah Sasterawan Negara ke-12 kepada sasterawan ulung tanah air Datuk Baharuddin Zainal, lebih dikenal dengan nama pena Baha Zain, pada tarikh yang akan ditetapkan kemudian. — Gambar AFPPUTRAJAYA, 15 Mac — Sasterawan ulung tanah air Datuk Baharuddin Zainal, lebih dikenal dengan nama pena Baha Zain, hari ini diumumkan sebagai Sasterawan Negara ke-12.

Timbalan Perdana Menteri Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, yang juga Menteri Pelajaran, ketika mengumumkannya, berkata Yang di-Pertuan Agong Tuanku Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah berkenan menyampaikan anugerah itu pada tarikh yang akan ditetapkan kemudian.

"Pemilihan tokoh ini adalah berdasarkan sumbangan cemerlang dalam perkembangan kesusasteraan tanah air melalui ciptaan karya kreatif, pemikiran dan kegiatan sastera bermutu tinggi pada peringkat kebangsaan dan antarabangsa," katanya pada sidang media di pejabatnya di Bangunan Perdana Putra di sini.

Anugerah kerajaan persekutuan itu melayakkan Baha Zain menerima wang tunai sebanyak RM60,000, Watikah Penghormatan Negara dan mendapat tajaan RM500,000 bagi menerbitkan 50,000 naskah karya beliau untuk diedarkan ke sekolah, jabatan dan agensi kerajaan.

Selain itu, Baha Zain juga akan menerima kemudahan perubatan percuma wad kelas satu di mana-mana hospital kerajaan, kemudahan dan keselesanan untuk mencipta karya sastera, menerbitkan karya serta penterjemahaan karya yang sesuai ke dalam bahasa asing.

Baha Zain, anak kelahiran Hutan Melintang, Perak, berusia 73 tahun itu, berkarya sejak di sekolah menengah dan mula dikenali menerusi karyanya yang berjudul 'Perempuan dan Bayang-Bayang' yang dihasilkan pada 1974.

Antara kejayaan peribadi beliau dalam dunia sastera adalah menerima Anugerah Tokoh Persatuan Penulis Nasional Malaysia (Pena) 2011, Anugerah Penulis Asia Tenggara (SEA Write Award) 1980 selain Anugerah Tokoh Pejuang Bahasa (Persatuan Linguistik Malaysia) 2004 dan Anugerah Budaya Gapena pada 2008.

Pada Mac tahun lepas, penyair Datuk Dr Ahmad Kamal Abdullah atau lebih dikenali dengan nama penanya Kemala, 72, dipilih sebagai Sasterawan Negara ke-11. — Bernama

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Ops Daulat is taking too long!

Posted: 14 Mar 2013 05:22 PM PDT

March 15, 2013

Zan Azlee is a documentary filmmaker, journalist, writer, New Media practitioner and lecturer. He runs Fat Bidin Media www.fatbidin.com

MARCH 15 — I'm in full support of Malaysia's security forces who are defending our sovereignty and protecting our people in Sabah from armed criminals.

Sabah and its people have collectively decided and claimed self-determination to be a part of Malaysia and its people to be Malaysians. This is not an issue anymore.

The issue that I would like to highlight this time is the slowness of the operations that is going on on the ground.

It has been about a month now since the armed criminals made their way into Sabah from the Philippines via the sea.

About 200 of them came over and parked themselves in Lahad Datu. I wonder how difficult is it for our security forces to clear out 200 people from a village?

At the time of my writing of this article, the news has reported that 56 armed criminals have been either caught or killed. That would mean that fewer than 150 are left.

It's been over a month. The government's Ops Daulat has deployed seven battalions to flush out the armed criminals.

One battalion can consist anywhere between several hundred to a thousand troops or individuals. So you can imagine seven battalions.

Our leaders need to step it up. The operation is taking too long and is putting our security forces at a larger risk because of this.

Malaysians are also feeling anxious, nervous and insecure. That is not something Malaysians are used to. The government needs to reassure the people.

It really doesn't help if you think that even the defence and home ministers were only seen at ground zero two weeks after the first day of the incident.

And what about the prime minister? He was only seen in Sabah last week trying to boost the morale of our security forces.

To make things worse, the armed criminals have now spread themselves out throughout the east coast of Sabah.

It also doesn't help that their genetic stock and our genetic stock is similar. And now there is concern that locals (whether Malaysians or not) are sympathising with them

I do admit that progress is being made. However, the progress is quite slow. We need to think of our safety and, like it or not, our country's reputation.

Don't get me wrong. I'm not criticising our security forces' efforts in fighting the armed criminals. I respect and am thankful for their sacrifice and heroism.

I am only playing the role of a responsible journalist and media man by being the check and balance that the people, and even the government, need.

Politics aside, I want Malaysia's sovereignty to be protected and I want Malaysians (including myself) to feel safe. But, more importantly, to actually be safe.

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist.

There is no easy cure for cancer

Posted: 14 Mar 2013 05:00 PM PDT

March 15, 2013

Zurairi AR describes himself as a humanist & sceptic who does good for goodness's sake. He runs Unscientific Malaysia which promotes science & freethought @ http://unmsia.com.

MARCH 15 — A friend's mother was diagnosed with Stage III cancer recently, and together with the commiserations came introductions to "Islamic treatments" and various types of snake oil quackery.

I did not say anything at that time, because if I did I was sure I'd be the one whom people call an asshole, and not the scam peddlers.

I admit I was frustrated. But not because I was confused about whether snake oil and the like can cure cancer. I am quite convinced that they are pretty useless in curing cancer.

I am convinced that even if it has not been proven yet that alternative treatments cannot cure cancer, there is absolutely no proof at all that they can.

Steve Jobs comes to mind. He is probably the most famous case of a bafflingly intelligent man who ultimately lost his life to cancer because he put his hopes in alternative medicine.

Jobs was diagnosed with a mild case of pancreatic cancer, and spent nine months wasting his time trying to treat his cancer using alternative treatments: Buddhist vegetarian diet, special fruit juices, acupuncture, visiting "spiritualists."

He died in October 2011, regretting his unwise choices a tad too late.

I was frustrated because I have yet to learn how to put forward this simple straightforward message that there is no easy cure for cancer — if any — without fear of being ostracised by my peers, and without being seen as a heartless monster who wishes for a patient to die.

How can I go toe-to-toe, one versus many, against those who offer hope?

Prayers can at least comfort one during times of trouble, if not cure ailments. Alternative medicine offers none of that, save perhaps the satisfaction of doing something noble.

I interviewed a consultant oncologist for a health feature once. He told us that one of the dreaded situations faced by oncologists is when well-meaning — but misguided nonetheless — relatives and friends offer patients snake oil, charms, alternative medicine, Islamic treatments and the such, just because conventional medicine is "less optimistic."

It is during these vulnerable times that so-called friends and family suddenly come out of nowhere to hawk hope. In the end, it is the desperate patients and their loved ones who end up getting swindled — broke, and still dying.

People need hope, and taking it away usually invites backlash. This is why sometimes the religious slam those who do not share their beliefs.

Because if the non-believers are right, then there is no hope and salvation at the end of the tunnel. Just death.

I am still frustrated. But I was told by someone to tell it as it is, if only to assuage my conscience. "Cancer is cancer, not to be treated by faith, mumbo-jumbo," he said.

So here it is, my friend. I'm writing this to tell you that I have the utmost concern for you and your family in this difficult time. As a friend, I do not wish to see you throw your money away all for a faint glimpse of fake hope.

Life is not easy. Unlike John Constantine in "Hellblazer", Lucifer will not just wrest your lung cancer away just because he made a shoddy deal with you. Even Walter White's Stage III lung cancer in "Breaking Bad" went into remission after intense chemotherapy sessions.

In reality, no surgery, chemotherapy or radiation therapy can guarantee 100 per cent survival from cancer.

What they can do, however, together with palliative care, is to make one's end days relatively more bearable. They extend the end days a bit longer, so there will be more time to say goodbye. But ultimately one would still have to say goodbye.

Maybe one day I will find a way to say this in a manner that does not make me seem like a monster. Maybe my readers will feel that I am only able to say this easily because it is not me, nor my loved ones, who are afflicted by cancer.

I do hope that if I ever get into the same situation, I will have the courage to say the same right thing: that alternative and faith-based healing is no cure for cancer. May my conscience be clear.

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist.

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