Jumaat, 5 April 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Courvoisier launches brandy ‘lab’ to attract more consumers

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 08:58 PM PDT

Italian named best female chef in the world

LONDON, April 3 — The first female chef in Italy to earn three Michelin stars has been named the best female chef in the world for 2013.Nadia Santini of Dal Pescatore in Mantova, Italy, joins Elena Arzak ... Read More

Another book about Julia Child in the works

LOS ANGELES, April 3 — Another book about Julia Child is set to be published by her great nephew, this time delving into a pivotal phase of her career when she found her footing with a more "American ... Read More

Chef Choi: Think global, add local

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 05:59 PM PDT

Italian named best female chef in the world

LONDON, April 3 — The first female chef in Italy to earn three Michelin stars has been named the best female chef in the world for 2013.Nadia Santini of Dal Pescatore in Mantova, Italy, joins Elena Arzak ... Read More

Another book about Julia Child in the works

LOS ANGELES, April 3 — Another book about Julia Child is set to be published by her great nephew, this time delving into a pivotal phase of her career when she found her footing with a more "American ... Read More

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Midfielder Katidis penalised further for Nazi salute

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 09:04 AM PDT

April 06, 2013

AEK Athens' Giorgos Katidis (C) celebrates a goal by appearing to give a Nazi salute to supporters during a Super League soccer match against Veria at the Olympic stadium in Athens March 16, 2013, causing an uproar. — Reuters picATHENS, April 5 — AEK Athens midfielder Giorgos Katidis has been banned for five-matches, fined 1,000 euros (US$1,300) and forbidden to enter any sports stadiums after his Nazi-salute goal celebration, the Greek Football Federation (EPO) announced today.

Since the 20-year-old has already been suspended by his club until the end of the Super League season, the five-game ban handed by the EPO today was only symbolic.

In an earlier hearing, Katidis was handed a lifetime international ban by the EPO for making the gesture after scoring the winning goal in a 2-1 Super League victory over Veria last month.

"AEK Athens footballer Giorgos Katidis is disqualified for five matches, banned from entering sports stadia for three months and is ordered to pay a fine of 1,000 euros due to the incidents in the Super League match AEK-Veria," the EPO said in a statement.

Katidis, who has apologised and called his actions "totally unacceptable", had already asked to be dropped from AEK's first team.

No concerns about Bahrain Grand Prix, says F1 boss Ecclestone

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 08:48 AM PDT

April 05, 2013

Formula One cars leave the pit lane during the Malaysian F1 Grand Prix at Sepang International Circuit outside Kuala Lumpur, March 24, 2013. — Reuters picLONDON, April 5 — Formula One has no concerns about this month's Bahrain Grand Prix becoming a target for anti-government protesters, commercial supremo Bernie Ecclestone said today.

The race at the Sakhir desert circuit was cancelled in 2011 when a Shi'ite-led pro-democracy uprising was crushed and at least 35 people — activists put the tally far higher — were killed.

Last year's grand prix, the biggest sporting event in the US-allied Gulf island kingdom and watched by hundreds of millions around the world, went ahead controversially amid tight security and against a backdrop of burning tyres and riot police firing teargas at petrol-bomb throwing protesters in Shi'ite villages.

Bahrain's opposition and government resumed reconciliation talks in February for the first time since July 2011 and, even if little progress has been reported, Ecclestone felt the situation had improved.

"I haven't had any negative reports from anybody there," the 82-year-old British billionaire told Reuters as he prepared for a double header with the Chinese Grand Prix on April 14 and Bahrain on the 21st.

"Somebody who actually lives there came to see me yesterday and said everything's very normal.

"I think they (both sides) are talking now anyway... so I don't think they'll upset the talks by making protests," added Ecclestone. "It didn't help them last year, so if they had any brains they'd just get on with their talks."

Demonstrators have continued small protests on an almost daily basis to demand equality and a constitutional monarchy in the tiny kingdom ruled by the Sunni al-Khalifa family and home to the US Fifth Fleet.

At least 10 civilians and several policemen were injured last month during protests to mark the second anniversary of the arrival of forces from neighbouring Saudi Arabia, which helped crush the uprising.

Police said the demonstrators had barricaded roads and torched vehicles. Pictures published in the foreign media have shown slogans daubed on walls calling for a boycott of the race.

Asked whether there was a risk of the race being targeted more directly after the protests and international pressure failed to stop it going ahead last year, Ecclestone said: "No, I think quite the opposite.

"No concerns, none at all," he added.

Ecclestone said he would again be in Bahrain for the grand prix, fourth round of the 19-race season, and praised local organisers for their efforts.

He assured them that Bahrain, the first country to host a grand prix in the Middle East and on the calendar since 2004, had a long-term future in F1 despite Abu Dhabi's glittering floodlit race now being a much more popular fixture with both teams and sponsors.

"Yes, yes, absolutely," he said. "Everything that is there is as far as we are concerned good. They do a very, very good job of the race; the whole support from the top is good. No problems." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Brad Pitt in talks for war film ‘Fury’

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 01:23 AM PDT

April 05, 2013

Brad Pitt. - AFP-Relaxnews picLOS ANGELES, April 5 — Deadline.com has revealed that Brad Pitt is in talks for the lead part in an independent movie from David Ayer ("End of Watch").

Four years after "Inglourious Basterds," Brad Pitt is interested in returning to the World War II era in "Fury." The film will focus on the struggle of five crew members in an American tank, the Fury, towards the end of the War in 1945.

No date has yet been set for filming. David Ayer is currently finishing postproduction on "Ten," an adaptation of Agatha Christie's "And Then There Were None" starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sam Worthington and Terrence Howard. — AFP-Relaxnews

Actress Jessica Pare finds fame with TV’s ‘Mad Men’

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 12:26 AM PDT

April 05, 2013

Actors Jessica Pare and Jon Hamm, stars of the AMC drama television series "Mad Men", in an undated publicity picture. — Reuters picLOS ANGELES, April 5 — With her coquettish French song "Zou Bisou Bisou" and her sex scenes with new screen husband Don Draper, little-known French-Canadian actress Jessica Pare was the breakout star of TV advertising drama "Mad Men" last season.

Pare, 30, returns on Sunday as Megan Draper, the most vibrant of Don Draper's mysterious assets, while her character forges ahead with her new career as an actress in late 1960s New York.

Reuters spoke with Pare about playing Megan, how she deals with her newfound fame, and the hardest thing about being part of "Mad Men."

Q: You were the delightful surprise of last season and your character is now becoming a star in her own right. What's it like being back again?

A: Last season was nerve wracking for me because I felt like the stakes were a lot higher, whereas before I had nothing to lose ... I was nervous to do really well and that people would like me. (After a while) because I was on set almost every day of the week I was too busy to be thinking about those things and what the audience might think. That's not my job. I am there to tell Megan's story.

Q: How would you describe Megan as a person?

A: She is very optimistic. She is very joyful, vibrant and passionate about life. I think that last season we saw her make a really interesting choice to pursue her passion for performing, despite the fact that she had a very comfortable, very interesting job and she was good at it.

(In the new season) she has the acting job, she is finally working. She has the career of her dreams and the man of her dreams. She sees a Don that nobody else sees. She sees this amazing, romantic, handsome, dynamic, fun, interesting person and somebody warm and loving, and nobody else sees him that way. But then she is not able to see that other side of him that everybody else sees.

Q: How much is Megan like you?

A: A lot (laughs) ... She is from Montreal and her brother is a professor and she is an actor! Aside from those things, I think I share her optimism and her joie de vivre.

Q: Last season you had a lot of racy scenes, often in your underwear. How hard are those to do, or is it fun pretending to make love to Jon Hamm?

A: It's part of the performance. I never had hang-ups about that kind of thing. I think sex is an important part of our relationships.

Q: Are we going to see any more of your singing?

A: I don't know ...(giggles)

Q: How much advance notice do you get of the script or plots or character development from creator Matt Weiner?

A: I think he would give a performer a heads-up if there was something we needed to work on. But normally we wouldn't find out until the script comes out a few days before the cast table reading.

Q: That must be nerve-wracking.

A: I like it. It was something I had to learn how to contend with. Before, I had worked more in film where you are handed your character arc before you even set foot on the set. The special challenge is to not anticipate anything in your performance.

Q: What's the hardest thing about doing "Mad Men" for you?

A: That it doesn't last all year?! (laughs) I love this job, the writing is so incredible and the stories we get to tell ... It's really important to all of us and we all believe in what we are doing. The hardest thing? Sometimes it's really hard not to eat the chocolate!

Q: I was thinking of all the herbal cigarettes and the iced tea or whatever it is they use for all the whisky.

A: I now love the taste of the non-alcoholic wine, the herbal cigarettes smell like heaven to me. The smell of hairspray always makes me feel good, because it makes me feel like I am working.

Q: Do you get recognised in the street now? How are you dealing with fame?

A: It's good, it's fun. I do (get recognised). No one is more excited than I am. I get into elevators sometimes and people just stop talking, and I am fighting so hard ... Part of me is like 'Do it! You'll make their day.' And the other half of me is like 'Stop it! Don't be stupid, they don't know who you are. They just shut up because you have a giant piece of kale on your teeth.'

Q: I know you can't give away the plot but I do hope we are going to see Megan throughout this new season?

A: Ooooh. I wouldn't want to spoil it for you. — Reuters 

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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views

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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views


Midfielder Katidis penalised further for Nazi salute

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 09:04 AM PDT

April 06, 2013

AEK Athens' Giorgos Katidis (C) celebrates a goal by appearing to give a Nazi salute to supporters during a Super League soccer match against Veria at the Olympic stadium in Athens March 16, 2013, causing an uproar. — Reuters picATHENS, April 5 — AEK Athens midfielder Giorgos Katidis has been banned for five-matches, fined 1,000 euros (US$1,300) and forbidden to enter any sports stadiums after his Nazi-salute goal celebration, the Greek Football Federation (EPO) announced today.

Since the 20-year-old has already been suspended by his club until the end of the Super League season, the five-game ban handed by the EPO today was only symbolic.

In an earlier hearing, Katidis was handed a lifetime international ban by the EPO for making the gesture after scoring the winning goal in a 2-1 Super League victory over Veria last month.

"AEK Athens footballer Giorgos Katidis is disqualified for five matches, banned from entering sports stadia for three months and is ordered to pay a fine of 1,000 euros due to the incidents in the Super League match AEK-Veria," the EPO said in a statement.

Katidis, who has apologised and called his actions "totally unacceptable", had already asked to be dropped from AEK's first team.

No concerns about Bahrain Grand Prix, says F1 boss Ecclestone

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 08:48 AM PDT

April 05, 2013

Formula One cars leave the pit lane during the Malaysian F1 Grand Prix at Sepang International Circuit outside Kuala Lumpur, March 24, 2013. — Reuters picLONDON, April 5 — Formula One has no concerns about this month's Bahrain Grand Prix becoming a target for anti-government protesters, commercial supremo Bernie Ecclestone said today.

The race at the Sakhir desert circuit was cancelled in 2011 when a Shi'ite-led pro-democracy uprising was crushed and at least 35 people — activists put the tally far higher — were killed.

Last year's grand prix, the biggest sporting event in the US-allied Gulf island kingdom and watched by hundreds of millions around the world, went ahead controversially amid tight security and against a backdrop of burning tyres and riot police firing teargas at petrol-bomb throwing protesters in Shi'ite villages.

Bahrain's opposition and government resumed reconciliation talks in February for the first time since July 2011 and, even if little progress has been reported, Ecclestone felt the situation had improved.

"I haven't had any negative reports from anybody there," the 82-year-old British billionaire told Reuters as he prepared for a double header with the Chinese Grand Prix on April 14 and Bahrain on the 21st.

"Somebody who actually lives there came to see me yesterday and said everything's very normal.

"I think they (both sides) are talking now anyway... so I don't think they'll upset the talks by making protests," added Ecclestone. "It didn't help them last year, so if they had any brains they'd just get on with their talks."

Demonstrators have continued small protests on an almost daily basis to demand equality and a constitutional monarchy in the tiny kingdom ruled by the Sunni al-Khalifa family and home to the US Fifth Fleet.

At least 10 civilians and several policemen were injured last month during protests to mark the second anniversary of the arrival of forces from neighbouring Saudi Arabia, which helped crush the uprising.

Police said the demonstrators had barricaded roads and torched vehicles. Pictures published in the foreign media have shown slogans daubed on walls calling for a boycott of the race.

Asked whether there was a risk of the race being targeted more directly after the protests and international pressure failed to stop it going ahead last year, Ecclestone said: "No, I think quite the opposite.

"No concerns, none at all," he added.

Ecclestone said he would again be in Bahrain for the grand prix, fourth round of the 19-race season, and praised local organisers for their efforts.

He assured them that Bahrain, the first country to host a grand prix in the Middle East and on the calendar since 2004, had a long-term future in F1 despite Abu Dhabi's glittering floodlit race now being a much more popular fixture with both teams and sponsors.

"Yes, yes, absolutely," he said. "Everything that is there is as far as we are concerned good. They do a very, very good job of the race; the whole support from the top is good. No problems." — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Cuban national ballet defectors in Miami seeking to advance careers

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 06:12 AM PDT

April 05, 2013

The Cuban dancers stretch during their audition at the Miami Hispanic Ballet in Miami. — Reuters picsMIAMI, April 5 — Six dancers who defected last month from the National Ballet of Cuba, one of the country's proudest and most prestigious institutions, auditioned at a Miami ballet group yesterday.

"They are so talented and we are thrilled to see them," said Pedro Pablo Pena, founder of the Cuban Classical Ballet of Miami, a nonprofit dance organisation.

After an intense two-hour workout, the dancers explained that they were looking to advance their careers outside communist-led Cuba, where dancers enjoy privileged lives but earn modest salaries of US$10 (RM31) to US$30 (RM92) a month plus bonuses for foreign tours.

"Our goal is to train hard to achieve our dream of dancing and helping our families economically in Cuba," said Annie Ruiz Diaz, 24, who began dancing in Cuba at age 6 and had been with the National Ballet for almost seven years.

The defectors are staying with friends and relatives in Miami until they can find work.

"We expect to put on some events with them for the community here, but I don't have the budget to employ them full-time, unfortunately," said Pena, the host of the audition.

"But they are talented and I imagine they will find spaces in companies here in the United States," said Pena, a former dancer who came to Miami from Cuba in 1980.

The National Ballet of Cuba confirmed on Wednesday that seven members of the group had abandoned the company while touring in Mexico last month.

Defector Josue Justiz (right) with an iPhone, during a break in audition with fellow defector Luis Victor Santana. An iPhone would have been out of the question on their previous monthly wages.The dancers said they made their way to the US border, where they were allowed entry under the Cuban Adjustment Act, which grants special immigration privileges to Cuban exiles as well as financial benefits to help them get on their feet.

One of the dancers stayed behind in Mexico with friends, they said.

Cuba criticises US law

There was no mention of the defections in the state-run media in Cuba, which has seen periodic defections of artists and athletes since Fidel Castro's revolution in 1959.

Speaking at an event in Washington, the chief of the Cuba Interests Section, Jose Cabanas, blamed the defections on the Cuban Adjustment Act because he said it made it easy for any Cuban to enter the United States.

"The press is going after the defections — but the real questions are related to those pieces of legislation that create those situations that are nice for the cameras and the microphones," he said.

The dancers — five men and two women between the ages of 20 and 24 — quit the company at the end of a nine-day tour performing "Giselle" in Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula.

After a night of emotional farewells with fellow dancers, they said they left their hotel before dawn on March 25 and headed by bus and car to the US border.

Annie Ruiz Diaz (left) helps Arianni Martin with her hair at the audition."There were a lot of tears. We loved dancing for the company and we have a lot of friends," said Arianni Martin, a 20-year-old soloist who had been with the company for two years and was earning US$10 a month.

She said she was paid US$225 for the Yucatan tour.

The Cuban national ballet, known for its classical style and for producing world-class dancers, regularly makes international tours.

Over the years, many of its dancers have defected and joined other companies abroad, often saying they want to explore contemporary dance forms and build more lucrative careers outside Cuba.

Others have been allowed to leave Cuba on contract to foreign ballet companies. They include Carlos Acosta with the Royal Ballet in London and Jose Manuel Carreno, who retired in 2011 as a principal dancer at the American Ballet Theatre in New York.

"Artistically I felt stagnant and economically I couldn't help my family," said Martin.

Josue Justiz (left) and Edward Gonzalez Morgado leap during their audition.Her parents have government jobs — her father drives a delivery truck and her mother looks after the elderly. But Martin said she was not worried about reprisals against her family.

"So many dancers leave, and I think the company understands that's part of the risk of our touring abroad," she said.

Alicia Alonso's ballet

Cuban ballet legend Alicia Alonso founded the National Ballet of Cuba in 1948 and, at the age of 91, despite being nearly blind, continues as its artistic director.

Cuba provides free training to thousands of young dancers around the country from the age of 9, with the elite graduating to the National Ballet.

The company has struggled financially in recent years and now accepts fee-paying dance students from abroad.

The school's Havana headquarters, located in a colonial-era former palace, is also undergoing expensive repairs after parts of the ceiling collapsed.

The 120-strong company was likely to overcome the loss of seven members, said Octavio Roca, a Cuban-American philosophy teacher and author of the book, Cuban Ballet.

"It hurts them of course, but they have a great farm system, so much young talent coming up. It's an incredible programme," he said. — Reuters

New-look Rijksmuseum puts Dutch masterpieces into context

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 03:16 AM PDT

April 05, 2013

The renovated exterior of the Rijksmuseum, to be reopened after nearly 10 years. — Reuters picsAMSTERDAM, April 5 — The Dutch national museum reopens this month after a decade-long overhaul in which nearly everything has been changed except for the setting of its most famous painting.

Rembrandt van Rijn's "The Night Watch" will be the only work still hanging in the same place when Queen Beatrix officially opens the Rijksmuseum on April 13 after a €375 million (RM1.5 billion) renovation to a treasure trove of Dutch art.

General director Wim Pijbes: Complete transformation."We've had a complete transformation, everything is new," general director Wim Pijbes said at a press preview yesterday. "The only thing that hasn't changed is the place of 'The Night Watch'."

Rembrandt's large masterpiece shows Amsterdam's civic guard setting off on a march and is approached along a "hall of fame" hung with works such as Johannes Vermeer's "Woman Reading a Letter", and "The Merry Drinker" by Frans Hals, as well as opulent displays of fruit and flowers.

The opening will be one of the queen's last official duties before she abdicates, showing off the country's art, its rich history as a naval power and society of merchants.

Many of the prize pieces in the collection of 8,000 works are now displayed in broader context, with related paintings, furniture, silver and ceramics arranged in close proximity to each other as part of the museum's new layout.

The media take in Rembrandt's "The Night Watch", the only work still hanging in its original place.Rembrandt's portraits of a wealthy lady in a delicate lace ruff and a man wearing an exotic turban hang close to a portrait of Rembrandt by his friend, the artist Jan Lievens, with whom he shared a studio.

Nearby are works by another friend the silversmith Johannes Lutma and an oak cupboard inlaid with ebony and mother-of-pearl by Herman Doomer, whose work Rembrandt admired and whose portrait he painted.

The brand new interior."The 10-year renovation project gave us the opportunity to entirely reinvent our collection," director of collections Taco Dibbits said.

"You create the world in which they lived and give a feeling of the times."

Likewise, a room devoted to the country's history as a naval power contains an enormous model of the Dutch warship "Willem Rex" and a trophy of war — the stern carving from King Charles II of England's flagship "Royal Charles" that was captured by Dutch forces in 1667.

"The Battle of Terheide", by Willem van de Velde, in the 17th century Gallery.The ship was towed to the Netherlands where it was scrapped apart from its carving of a lion and unicorn. Nearby is an ink on canvas picture of The Battle of Terheide by Willem van de Velde. The artist, an early war painter, even includes himself in the work, shown sketching aboard a ship in the foreground.

The building itself has also had an extensive renovation.

Designed by Dutch architect Pierre Cuypers, a Catholic, the museum opened to the public in 1885 but was deemed too showy by Protestant critics. So gradually, many of the interior decorations, from murals to mosaics, were covered up or removed. Those have now been restored.

"Cuypers's building was not well-received by the Protestants of Amsterdam because it looked like a cathedral, so they slowly covered up part of it," said Antonio Ortiz, one of the architects who worked on the renovation.

"It was dark, dim, sad, a labyrinth. We have brought the building as close as possible to its original splendour."

The museum hopes the overhaul will help catapult it up the rankings for visitors, and attract as many as two million visitors a year, up from about 1.2 million just before the renovation work started.

That's a far cry from the 10 million people who visit the Louvre in Paris each year. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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Celebrated author Ruth Prawer Jhabvala dies aged 85

Posted: 04 Apr 2013 08:44 PM PDT

Wise guys

Alan Wong

KUALA LUMPUR, March 29 — Seth Grahame-Smith's darker retelling of the Nativity took me by surprise. I actually liked it – though I knew from just the title and synopsis that I would.The story of the three ... Read More

Sex, murder, conspiracy shed new light on Edward VIII

Posted: 04 Apr 2013 08:39 PM PDT

Wise guys

Alan Wong

KUALA LUMPUR, March 29 — Seth Grahame-Smith's darker retelling of the Nativity took me by surprise. I actually liked it – though I knew from just the title and synopsis that I would.The story of the three ... Read More

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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Dr M berperanan penting sebagai ketua kempen de facto BN

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 02:54 AM PDT

TERKINI @ 06:25:54 PM 05-04-2013

Oleh Debra Chong
Penolong Pengarang Berita

April 05, 2013

Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad dilihat sebagai ketua kempen de facto BN menjelang PRU ke 13 ini. - Gambar fail.KUALA LUMPUR, 5 April — 10 tahun selepas bersara, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad dan beberapa teman Kabinet lamanya muncul semula kebelakangan ini sebagai wajah dalam kempen Barisan Nasional (BN) bertujuan untuk kekal berkuasa pada Pilihan Raya 2013.

Pemimpin veteran berusia 87 tahun tersebut dilihat sebagai ketua kempen de facto, lebih bersemangat berbanding mereka yang lebih muda dalam BN sekaligus menunjukkan cabaran kali ini daripada lawan mereka Pakatan Rakyat (PR) adalah yang paling sengit.

Menjelang pilihan raya yang semakin dekat, wajah Dr Mahathir dilihat lebih ketara daripada pemimpin lain dalam parti kerajaan - selain Datuk Seri Najib Razak dan Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin - yang merentasi seluruh negara memberikan penerangan tentang formula perkongsian kuasa bertujuan menghidupkan sokongan kepada Najib khususnya.

Bekas perdana menteri tersebut telah bekerja keras sejak beberapa minggu ini terutamanya dalam memberikan sokongan kepada Najib, anak kepada bekas mentornya Tun Razak Hussein, kaedah yang berbeza sama sekali semasa yang tidak pernah dilakukannya semasa dibawah pentadbiran Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi yang menggantikannya pada Oktober 2003.

Beliau juga menggesa orang ramai untuk mengundi BN jika mahukan kestabilan dan kemakmuran yang berterusan.

"Rakyat Malaysia yang cintakan negara ini harus memegang konsep mereka boleh bekerja dalam negara yang berbilang kaum ini - konsep kongsi," kata Dr Mahathir dalam ruangan kolumnya di akhbar New Straits Times hari ini.

"Hanya BN boleh memberikan kongsi ini. 

Pembangkang semata-mata tidak boleh kongsi. Memberi mandat untuk pembangkang adalah bencana kepada Malaysia," katanya, dengan menggunakan kata Melayu "perkongsian" dalam akhbar bahasa Inggeris tersebut untuk merujuk kepada fomula 13 gabungan yang memegang tampuk kuasa diperingkat persekutuan sejak negara merdeka pada tahun 1957.

Menurut Dr Mahathir, ketiga-tiga parti pembangkang yang membentuk PR cuba untuk meniru konsep perkongsian kuasa BN yang berjaya mengekalkan kestabilan politik dan ekonomi Malaysia serta memastikan masyarakat yang pelbagai kaum dan agama di negara ini dapat merasai sama rata.

"Tetapi mereka bukan berkongsi. Mereka adalah 'pakatan'," kata beliau dengan menggunakan perkataan Melayu "pakatan" untuk merujuk kepada perkongsian antara PKR-DAP-PAS, serta menunjukkan perbezaan antara kedua-dua blok parti politik tersebut.

Ketiga-tiga parti pembangkang tidak mendaftarkan diri untuk bertanding sebagai satu gabungan, oleh sebab itu calon-calon daripada PR yang akan bertanding dalam pilihan raya menggunakan bendera parti berbeza dalam pilihan raya kali ini. 

Ia berbeza sama sekali dengan BN yang akan menggunakan satu bendera sama, warna biru dan dacing putih, logo yang digunakan mereka sejak tahun 1973 bagi menggantikan Perikatan yang menjadi orang tengah dalam kemerdekaan negara daripada penjajah British.

"Kongsi adalah tentang perkongsian. 

"Pakat adalah kerjasama sementara untuk tujuan tertentu. Tidak memberi dan menerima. Tiada perkongsian," kata pemimpin veteran Umno itu. 

Beliau berkata perjanjian itu adalah sama dengan "konspirasi" dan mencadangkan jika PR memenangi Pilihan Raya 2013, ketiga-tiga parti tidak akan dapat mengekalkan kerjasama dan bekerja sebagai sebuah kerajaan campuran yang mampu membawa negara ke hadapan. 

"Setiap mereka akan membawa haluan masing-masing," katanya.

Walaupun sudah berusia, jadual Dr Mahathir amat ketat dan menjelajah setiap sudut negara, termasuk di Laut China Selatan di kampung-kampung terpencil kedua-dua negeri Borneo iaitu Sabah dan Sarawak - dimana baru-baru ini digemparkan dengan pencerobohan bersenjata yang mengakui daripada Sulu telah mendarat di Lahad Datu, Sabah.

Perdana menteri keempat negara dilihat seolah-olah ketua kepada kempen pilihan raya Najib yang keluar memberi ceramah hampir setiap hari menerangkan tentang perkongsian kuasa untuk kestabilan memandangkan dunia terus dibuai oleh krisis politik dan ekonomi yang telah meningkat akibat penggangguran yang tinggi dan pergolakkan sosial di Eropah, Afrika dan Timur Tengah.

Beberapa ahli Kabinet senior Mahathir juga dilihat mula keluar daripada bersikap berada dibelakang tabir selepas bersara daripada kerajaan mula keluar secara umum untuk menyampaikan pesanan sama dan menyokong Najib.

Bekas Menteri Kewangan Tun Daim Zainuddin keluar daripada gua politiknya baru-baru ini dan menasihati Najib untuk membuang pemimpin yang sudah luput daripada kabinet sedia adanya.

Teugran pesaran kerajaan berusia 74 tahun itu dilihat sebagai kritikan tajam terhadap pentadbiran sekarang, namun Daim masih mempertahankan Najib telah menjalankan "tugasnya dengan agak baik" sebagai perdana menteri keenam dan yakin BN akan menang pada pilihan raya nanti.

Baru-baru ini juga, bekas Menteri Kerja Raya Datuk Seri Samy Vellu dilaporkan mengumumkan dirinya sebagai "calon boleh menang" jika bertanding dalam pilihan raya walaupun tewas kerusi Parlimen Sungai Siput dengan majoriti agak besar 1,821 kepada pemimpin Parti Sosialis Malaysia (PSM) Dr Michael Jeyakumar Devaraj pada Pilihan Raya 2008.

DUN Pulau Pinang bubar hari ini

Posted: 05 Apr 2013 02:45 AM PDT

April 05, 2013

GEORGE TOWN, 5 April — Dewan Undangan Negeri Pulau Pinang dibubar secara rasmi hari ini bagi membolehkan pilihan raya umum Dewan Undangan Negeri (DUN) ke-13 berlangsung serentak dengan pilihan raya peringkat Parlimen.

Ketua Menteri Lim Guan Eng berkata beliau berjumpa dengan Yang Dipertua Negeri Tun Abdul Rahman Abbas pagi ini bagi mendapat perkenan pembubaran DUN negeri itu.

Berucap pada majlis perjumpaan dengan Anggota Exco dan pegawai-pwgawai kanan kerajaan negeri di sini, Lim berkata Speaker DUN Datuk Abdul Halim Hussin telah menyerahkan notis pengisytiharan pembubaran berkenaan kepada SPR negeri pada pukul 11 pagi.

Pulau Pinang mempunyai 40 kawasan DUN dengan 19 kerusi terletak di pulau, dan selebihnya di tanah besar.

Pada pilihan raya umum lepas, pakatan pembangkang membentuk kerajaan negeri apabila DAP memenangi 19 kerusi DUN, PKR memenangi sembilan kerusi dan PAS memenangi satu kerusi DUN iaitu di Permatang Pasir.

BN pula hanya memenangi 11 kerusi DUN dan kesemuanya diwakili Umno.

Bagi 13 kerusi Parlimen, pada pilihan raya umum 2008 DAP miliki tujuh, PKR empat dan Umno dua.

Bagaimanapun, dua daripada anggota parlimen PKR iaitu Datuk Seri Zahrain Hashim (Bayan Baru) dan Tan Tee Beng (Nibong Tebal) kemudiannya meninggalkan parti berkenaan dan mengisytiharkan sebagai wakil rakyat bebas. — Bernama

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Islam says to obey your leaders

Posted: 04 Apr 2013 05:40 PM PDT

April 05, 2013

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

APRIL 5 — Linawati Kate Adnan is my colleague and she sits next to me at work. One Friday, as I was leaving the office for Friday prayers, she looked at me in shock.

"Zan! You actually pray?"

"What the hell is that supposed to mean?" 

"Hahahahaha!!"

True story! 

And since we're on the topic of Friday prayers, last week's sermon really woke me up from my regular afternoon slumber in the mosque.

The khatib called all the Muslims who were in the prayer hall to obey and be loyal to our country's leaders and that this is an Islamic obligation.

Apparently, based on Quranic verses and the Prophet's hadith this is an obligation for all Muslims and that rebelling against them is a huge sin.

The sermon went on to say that the act of rebelling includes disputing a legitimate decision made by leaders who were given the powers to govern a country.

Back up right there!

Although I do agree that, as citizens, we are obligated to be loyal to the country and our leaders, I have to stress that we cannot do this blindly.

And if our leaders whom we have selected to lead us are making decisions that we, the people, are not happy with, we have a right to question it.

As citizens, the leaders have an obligation to us too, and in a democracy, they are actually subservient to the people they are governing.

When Prophet Muhammad passed away, he made it a point not to appoint a successor because he believed that the people had a right to choose.

Check your history books and you will discover that the first four Caliphs who governed the early Muslim world were chosen by the people.

Hence, I would say that democracy is a very Islamic concept and the religion has terms such as khilafat and shura that explain it all

(Yes, I have written about this before and I can't help it but stress on this more, again and again, if no one wants to take heed!)

The concept of khilafat explains that in Islam, a state government needs to be ruled by the free choice of the people.

And the concept of shura explains that any decision taken in a society has to be based on consultation with the people who make up that society.

If last week's Friday sermon was based on Quranic verses and the Prophet's hadith, then my argument here is also based on verses and hadith.

Surah Al Shura states:

"Those who listen to their Lord, and establish regular prayer; who conduct their affairs by mutual consultation; who spend out what we bestow on them for sustenance, [are praised].

"The blame is only against those who oppress men with wrong doing and insolently transgress beyond bounds through the land, defying right and justice: for such there will be a penalty grievous."

Surah A Imran states:

"So by mercy from Allah, [O Muhammad], you were lenient with them. And if you had been rude [in speech] and harsh i heart, they would have disbanded from about you. So pardon them and ask forgiveness for them and consult them in the matter. And when you have decided, then rely upon Allah. Indeed, Allah loves those who rely [upon Him]."

The Abbasid Empire was the first to kill democracy and establish autocratic rule because they were afraid of losing power.

They went into a feudal hereditary style of rule where the leaders were succeeded by their children. And guess what? That was the cause of their downfall.

Happy 13th general election to all Malaysians!

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist.

The taxpayer’s deplorable options

Posted: 04 Apr 2013 05:10 PM PDT

April 05, 2013

Hafiz Noor Shams sometimes swears a little at maddruid.com .

APRIL 5 — I do consider the payment of income tax as a responsibility I must fulfil. As a member of society, I have some responsibilities toward its maintenance. The fact that I am a citizen makes that responsibility of paying taxes doubly important.

That responsibility arises from my enjoyment of multiple public goods that exist through public funding, never mind that its distribution may be less than ideal since only a minority of Malaysians pay income tax, and never mind that some public goods can be provided for through private means. 

The provision of these public goods makes the sum of the income tax that I pay more palatable to me than being robbed on the streets or being swindled by a snake oil salesman. At least, I get something out of the money that I pay out even as there are cases of mismanagement or abuse of public resources by the government of the day.

While I do rationalise the payment of income tax and other types of taxes as such, that does not mean I enjoy paying those taxes. I dislike paying taxes and I especially dislike paying income tax as opposed to consumption tax. Sometimes, I do wonder how far we have progressed since the days of old when the fruits of one's labour were expropriated by men — in the name of equality, as well as women — of power. Perhaps progress is the fact that tax rates today are lower than they were in times of feudalism. Perhaps, perhaps, perhaps… I tell myself perhaps.

What is certain is that I am sensitive to the income tax rates that I face.

The tax rates themselves are linked back to government expenditure. That makes me sensitive to plans which lead to government expenditure growth. 

Apart from my distrust in the government in guaranteeing my civil rights, taxation is one of the other few reasons for my scepticism of the expansion of the role of government in our society. It can hit my pockets, which is not as deep as those in power.

The upcoming general election provides me with an opportunity to assess the options that I have on the table. This election may be the first ever where Malaysians can choose which economic policies they prefer to see implemented. 

There have been manifestoes written and shared before of course but the 2013 general election makes it most realistic to imagine a change in federal government, without any political exchange in the style of the failed September 16, 2008 (and by the stars, let there not be any).

Yet, the choices so far have been disappointing.

On one hand there is Barisan Nasional where despite all the sleek public relations exercises suggestive of change, it is still business as usual in too many ways still. For one, abuse of public funds goes on as usual. 

Just the other day, the deputy prime minister declared that children of workers of Pos Malaysia — a private company after it was divested away by Khazanah Nasional Berhad to DRB Hicom which is ultimately controlled by Syed Mokhtar Al-Bukhary — would be given free netbooks by the Malaysian Communication and Multimedia Commission. 

This is the use of public resources to benefit private parties and this is only one example of abuse; Barisan Nasional has no qualms utilising public funds for its election campaign.

Those kinds of abuse adversely impact government expenditure in one way or another.

The government in its 2013 Budget plans to embark on fiscal consolidation, which is admirable. Yet, plans are plans and it looks all the more incredible as each day passes by. Each day of campaigning is another day the government of the day embarks on economic populism that is funded by public funds in an abusive way to blow the fiscal consolidation plan apart.

On the other hand we have Pakatan Rakyat.

Pakatan Rakyat does offer a vision to address the weaknesses of the incumbent government. Considerable portions of its manifesto try to address monopoly in the private sector that was actively created by the Barisan Nasional government which is something I can support. Pakatan Rakyat's proposal to increase competition in the automotive industry is also something that I and many have argued for.

Yet, Pakatan Rakyat's plans to reduce fuel prices, water tariff and others through greater subsidies will demand expansion of government expenditure. That is of significant worry to me. This is especially so when it is clear that the government will require a structural change in doing things in order to lower the fiscal deficit.

Pakatan Rakyat's plans appear to move the position of public finance to the opposite direction.

Apart from the plan for increased expenditure, the political coalition is averse to expanding the tax base in the form of introducing the goods and services tax to replace the pre-existing sales and services tax. What is all the more remarkable is that Pakatan Rakyat plans to reduce personal income tax.

With increased spending and reduced taxation, the deficit may increase especially if other sources of revenue do not increase fast enough. This raises more questions on the revenue side. Does Pakatan Rakyat plan to increase company taxes and other indirect taxes? Will a Pakatan Rakyat government look to Petronas — which is trying to invest in itself more — for more contribution?

Second Finance Minister Ahmad Husni Hanadzlah claimed that Pakatan Rakyat's plans would nearly triple the fiscal deficit when compared to 2012 level when compared to nominal GDP and increase government debt level by 10 percentage points to 62 per cent of GDP.

Now, it is election time and his claim should be taken with a pinch of salt. Nevertheless, the direction of change in those figures as suggested by the minister appears reasonable. It does not take a person with wild imagination to think that the fiscal deficit and the debt level under Pakatan Rakyat's plan will increase. 

Pakatan Rakyat itself has not sufficiently clarified how it plans to do all that it promises without increasing the deficit. Its 2013 national manifesto is quite silent on the combined impacts of greater expenditure and its revenue plan on public finance. Pakatan Rakyat supporters have at one time or another claimed the Pakatan Rakyat government will curb corruption and leakage so much that it will allow a scenario of greater spending and unchanged taxation. While I am impressed with Pakatan Rakyat's commitment to an open tender system for one, I am sceptical that those leakages and corruptions will be easy to tackle and if it is successful, it will release sufficient resources to plug any financial gap.

I ultimately do not believe heightened fiscal deficit and debt level will be sustainable to maintain a good standard of public finance. Economic forces are bigger than either Barisan Nasional or Pakatan Rakyat and I think when both parties are free from populist pressure and faced with the stark reality of public finance, they will tend to do what is responsible.

So if Pakatan Rakyat does get the opportunity to govern Malaysia and run its plans, sooner or later it will likely have to make room for realism with regards to its tax promises or its spending-related promises. Unfortunately, more often than not, raising taxes is far easier than cutting expenditure.

It is within this context that I consider Pakatan Rakyat's words on taxes to be as incredible as the Barisan Nasional-led federal government plans for fiscal consolidation in 2013.

As a taxpayer, I am staring at my deplorable options.

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist.

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