Jumaat, 23 Ogos 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Do not question credibility of Teong Kim’s appointment, says Zolkples - Bernama

Posted: 23 Aug 2013 08:52 AM PDT

August 23, 2013
Latest Update: August 24, 2013 07:52 am

No one should question the credibility or appointment of former international Lim Teong Kim as the National Football Development Programme director, effective November.

National Sports Council (NSC) director-general Datuk Seri Zolkples Embong said the appointment of Teong Kim, to incidentally replace his elder brother Lim Kim Chon, was given the green light by Youth and Sports Minister Khairy Jamaluddin.

"The selection of Teong Kim was done through a tedious process which also involved the ministry of youth and sports. So, there should not be any reason to question his appointment.

"We are not in any position to question Teong Kim's credibility because he has not only played in Germany, he has produced a number of quality players as a junior coach in FC Bayern Munchen," he told reporters when commenting on T-Team coach Peter James Butler's tweet about the appointment.

Butler in his Twitter account on Wednesday had allegedly said "New Director or Youth Development! Don't know him, however give him a chance - obviously cheap option but what do you expect here #belucky".

Zolkples said it was Butler's right to question the appointment but hoped the Englishman would stop issuing statements that may tarnish the image of the country and the credibility of the authorities.

He said there was a need to look at whether Butler's services were still relevant or whether he should be allowed to remain in the country.

"I am not aware of Butler's ability or track record. If he is a good coach, he would be coaching some of the top clubs in the world.

"But what I know about him thus far is that he always has problems with teams that employ him. And if he was really good, we too would have considered him for the post that Teong Kim was appointed to," he said. - Bernama, August 23, 2013.

Anelka considering retirement following agent’s death

Posted: 23 Aug 2013 08:19 AM PDT

August 23, 2013
Latest Update: August 24, 2013 07:19 am

West Bromwich Albion manager Steve Clarke said striker Nicolas Anelka has told him that he is considering retiring following the death of his agent.

The Frenchman had already been excused from his team's Premier League game against Everton tomorrow on compassionate grounds after learning that Eric Manasse had died.

British media reported the well-travelled forward had already cleared his locker at the club's training base.

"There was no big bust up, he didn't storm out," Clarke was quoted as saying by the BBC.

"Retirement? When you're not in a good place those thoughts can come into your mind.

"I'm not going to deny he mentioned (retirement). He hasn't trained this week (because of a knock). I was preparing the team for Everton without him."

The player's current agent, Doug Pingisi, however told French daily Le Parisien that Anelka "has not retired from football".

Anelka wrote on his Facebook page yesterday: "I've just learned with deep sadness the death of mister Eric Manasse. I can't find the words to express my huge grief and I wanted to pay condolences to the Manasse family after this tragic death."

The 34-year-old Anelka joined West Brom, his sixth Premier League club, on a free transfer last month and featured in their opening game defeat at the hands of Southampton last Saturday.

He moved to Chinese club Shanghai Shenhua from Chelsea in January 2012 but did not settle and went out on loan at Juventus. - Reuters, August 23, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Twelve years after 9/11, retiring FBI chief still sees threat

Posted: 22 Aug 2013 04:59 PM PDT

August 23, 2013
Latest Update: August 23, 2013 03:59 pm

He took the reins of the FBI a week before the attacks of September 11, 2001. Twelve years later, Robert Mueller is retiring, convinced that "the threat is still here."

Shortly before passing the baton to his successor James Comey on September 4 - a dozen years to the day since becoming director - Mueller spoke to several media outlets, including AFP.

Under his leadership, the US Federal Bureau of Investigation has evolved considerably, from an agency probing past attacks to one whose "number one priority" was to prevent them.

"When I came on board, I had been a prosecutor for a number of years, spending time on those kinds of cases - organized crime, narcotics cases, white-collar cases and the like," recalled the lanky 69-year-old.

"I had in my own mind some ideas where the Bureau needed to go - and a week later we had September 11."

"I did not expect that I'd be spending my time preventing terrorist attacks," he added.

During the upheaval of the US security apparatus that followed, the FBI saw its prime focus turn to anti-terrorism.

At the time, 2,000 out of 11,000 special agents were immediately transferred from fighting crime to combatting Al-Qaeda. Since then, the number of intelligence analysts at the FBI has more than tripled.

Over time, the danger posed by Al-Qaeda and its affiliates has evolved but, together with cyber threats, will remain "our number one priority for the foreseeable future."

While Al-Qaeda "was badly diminished, decimated," there was growth in other satellites after 2001 - including the Somali Islamist group Shebab and Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) in Yemen, Mueller said.

One of Mueller's many accomplishments was the foiling of an attack - planned by AQAP - on a commercial airliner bound for Detroit on Christmas Day 2009.

Mueller expressed concern about the "shifting landscape in terms of the countries involved in the Arab Spring - Tunisia, Libya, Mali, to a lesser extent Algeria, Syria and, quite obviously in the last two months, Egypt."

"Every one of these countries has individuals who you would put in the category of violent extremists that present threats down the road, not just to the US but to Americans overseas," he said.

Mueller also expressed concern about the threat posed by so-called "lone wolf" attackers who often become radicalized and learn how to make bombs online.

"Lone wolf or solo terrorists are much more difficult for us to identify and to disrupt for an attack to take place," he said.

"It's hard to quantify (the threat) because you have one metric and that is preventing all attacks. If there's one attack, you're unsuccessful."

In reference to the fatal shooting at the Fort Hood army base in 2009 and the Boston Marathon bombings on April 15, Mueller said: "It's part of a pattern we've seen recently but a pattern that probably will be replicated in the future."

Major Nidal Hasan, a US army psychiatrist, is on trial for the Fort Hood rampage and has confessed to shooting dead 13 people. The marathon bombing, meanwhile, is believed to have been carried out by two brothers of Chechen origin, Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev.

The existence of "lone wolves" is why telephone and Internet surveillance programs are "tremendously important," Mueller explained.

The National Security Agency charged with collecting such data has come under scrutiny in the wake of recent revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden about the scope of collection programs.

"There have been occasions - very few, I might say - when there have had to be some adjustments," Mueller said.

"But I am fairly confident we are doing things the way the American people wants us to, with an appreciation on the potential impact on privacy and civil liberties."

In 2004, Mueller threatened to resign over a warrantless wiretapping program under the administration of George W. Bush.

In the end, he was in the top FBI post for the second longest period after J. Edgar Hoover, who held it for 48 years until his death. -  AFP, August 23, 2013.

Ex-Soviet hackers play outsized role in cyber crime world

Posted: 22 Aug 2013 03:52 PM PDT

August 23, 2013
Latest Update: August 23, 2013 07:51 am

the virus lab at the headquarters of Russian cyber security company Kaspersky Labs in Moscow. Reuters pic, August 22, 2013.the virus lab at the headquarters of Russian cyber security company Kaspersky Labs in Moscow. Reuters pic, August 22, 2013.If you want to hack a phone, order a cyber attack on a competitor's website or buy a Trojan programme to steal banking information, look no further than the former Soviet Union.

The breadth and sophistication of services sold on Russian-language websites such as Forum.zloy.bz or Forum.evil offer a small window onto a Russian criminal underground that is costing Western firms billions of dollars in credit card and online banking fraud as well as "phishing" attempts to lure people into downloading malware or disclosing passwords.

"If you look at the quantity of malware attacks, the leaders are China, Latin America and then Eastern Europe, but in terms of quality then Russia is probably the leader," said Vitaly Kamluk, a cyber security researcher in Moscow.

Two of the five most wanted men in the United States for cyber crime are Russian, and one is from Latvia, which used to be part of the Soviet Union.

Russians were also behind the biggest cyber crime case in US history. Federal prosecutors named four Russians and a Ukrainian in a banking card fraud spree that cost companies including J.C. Penney Co, JetBlue Airways Corp and French retailer Carrefour SA more than $300 million.

The risk of being prosecuted is so low it does little to dissuade highly educated and skilful but under-employed programmers from turning to illicit hacking for profit or fun.

In a country where wages are lower than in the West and life is expensive, and which has long produced some of the world's best mathematicians, the temptation to turn to crime is great, and the hackers are in general ahead of the people trying to catch them.

"People think: 'I've got no money, a strong education and law enforcement's weak. Why not earn a bit on the side?'" said Alexei Borodin, a 21-year-old hacker.

As long as these hackers target victims abroad, experts say, the Russian authorities are willing to sit back and let them develop tools to burrow into computer vulnerabilities, which they can in turn use for their own cyber espionage.

Two of the Russian suspects in the banking card fraud case were arrested while in the Netherlands, but two others – Alexander Kalinin, 26, and Roman Kotov, 32 - are still at large and thought to be in Russia, where experts doubt they will be caught.

Moscow's decision to harbour Edward Snowden, wanted in the United States for leaking details of government surveillance programmes on the phone and Internet, is likely to freeze already slow-moving cross-border police cooperation with Washington, they said.

"They have been doing this in Russia for many years now," said Misha Glenny, an expert and author on cyber crime.

"Russian law enforcement and the FSB (Federal Security Service) in particular have a very good idea of what is going on and they are monitoring it but as long as the fraud is restricted to other parts of the world they don't care."

Several email requests for comment and calls over three weeks to the special Interior Ministry unit tasked with policing the web – Department K – went unanswered.

The pool of talent churned out by top-tier institutes excelling in hard sciences across the former Soviet Union is indisputable.

A trio of students from the St Petersburg National Research University, for instance, won the oldest and most prestigious world programming competition, the ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest, four times in the last six years.

Three Russian teams, one from Belarus and one from Ukraine, were also among the top ten finalists this year in the contest, which featured teams from 2,322 universities in 91 countries.

But in a 2013 survey, only 51 percent of IT specialists in Russia polled by HeadHunter, a recruiting website, found jobs in the country's burgeoning IT sector. It said average salaries in Moscow for work in information security was 65,000 roubles ($2,000) a month, far less than Western counterparts would earn.

Hacking is not a crime in and of itself. So-called white-hat hackers, who access computers to bolster security defences, face off at the front lines of a virtual battleground with criminals, known as crackers or black-hat hackers, who break in with ill intent.

Hackers on both sides of that divide are mostly aged 22 to 30 and, in Russia, many may have been university classmates.

Borodin, who works on start-ups involved in Bitcoin, the virtual currency, describes web security as his hobby. Known as ZonD80, he began exploring computer vulnerabilities at the age of 12, and made waves last year by publishing a hack allowing iPhone users to avoid paying for in-App upgrades – a system loophole it took him about a week to find.

He says he has never broken the law.

"I hacked Apple and Google systems, but I've been working on the other side for ages... Now it's fun to design defences against all the hacks I used to do myself," he said in an interview via instant messenger.

"There aren't really any boundaries. Someone can go over to the bad side or suddenly become a protector. In any event, if you're caught, then you were in the wrong place at the wrong time."

At the Moscow headquarters of the Kaspersky Lab, a Russian rival to US security firms Symantec or McAfee, sweatshirt-clad youths sit silently tapping away in an ultra-sleek workspace.

"Stealing money from behind a screen is incomparably easier psychologically than attacking someone in the street," Kamluk, 29, said in a round, glass room known as the Virus Lab. Here client data on millions of suspicious programs is parsed by analysts sitting at a circle of screens that looks like a spaceship control room.

"Using technical means, you can fight cyber crime endlessly, but it is a non-stop weapons race: We make security systems and they find ways around it."

The soft-spoken Belarusian, who sports a Mohawk and a T-shirt printed with green-on-black computer code, was hired in 2005 and is now part of an elite team chosen by CEO Eugene Kaspersky to investigate new or exotic cyber threats.

The Global Research and Expert Analysis Team, or GREAT for short, discovered the Stuxnet cyber weapon, which is believed to have been used by the United States and Israel to attack Iran's nuclear programme a few years ago.

This year Kamluk and other GREAT prodigies uncovered a Russian-speaking cyber espionage gang, Red October, operating a complex data-hijacking system used to steal intelligence from government, military and diplomatic targets worldwide.

GREAT was not able to identify who was behind the gang. But the manpower and expense needed to wield such a network is believed by some experts to point to the involvement of a state intelligence agency, possibly Russian.

On the Blackhacker.ru forum, threads offer advice on what countries have the most crime-friendly laws and sell cyber tools such as bullet-proof hosting from which to launch attacks.

In a feeble nod to the law, some sellers post disclaimers, denying responsibility if their service is put to criminal use.

Such forums played a crucial role in the criminal baptism of a generation of programmers who emerged onto the job market in the 1990s when the Soviet Union was unravelling, and have served as hacker incubators popularising cyber crime in Russia.

"In 2008, you needed to buy a Botnet (network of infected computers) and set it up, it was quite sophisticated. Nowadays, every schoolboy can do this by... using forums and reading," said Maxim Goncharov, a researcher at security firm Trend Micro.

The amount of cash flowing to this underground industry is hard to quantify as many companies do not report losses. Moscow-based cyber forensics firm Group-IB estimated the Russian cyber crime market was worth $2.3 billion in 2011 and far more today.

Some of the cash, it says, goes to pay off corrupt police, who then tip off the criminals.

Andrey Komarov, head of international projects at Group-IB, said cyber criminals are winning in the war against the world's law enforcement agencies.

"It is like the battle between a fly and an elephant," said Komarov said. "Some cyber criminals have very close contacts with corrupted law enforcement agencies, and during our investigations some disappeared and were not arrested." - Reuters, August 22, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books


Egmont and Jurys Inn hotels create children’s Little Library

Posted: 22 Aug 2013 04:21 PM PDT

August 23, 2013
Latest Update: August 23, 2013 07:29 am

Publisher Egmont and hotelier Jurys Inn are joining forces to install lending libraries across the UK chain's sites, with a selection of 10 bedtime stories to start with.

Sleepyheads can snuggle up to tales from "You're a Bad Man, Mr Gum" by Andy Stanton, "Ellie May Would Like to Be Taken Seriously For A Change" by Marianne Levy, and the textured pages of "Collette the Cow" by Nina Govan.

Branches in Aberdeen, Belfast, Birmingham, Derby, Exeter, Manchester, Plymouth, Southampton and Watford will be taking part in the scheme, which encompasses ten Egmont books in all.

The move mirrors US trends, after Country Inns & Suites partnered with Penguin and several Sunstone hotels have installed reading rooms; Penguin owner Random House has also supplied reading material for residents of the Trump SoHo in New York. – AFP/Relaxnews. August 23, 2013.

Egmont and Jurys Inn hotels create children’s Little Library

Posted: 22 Aug 2013 04:21 PM PDT

August 23, 2013
Latest Update: August 23, 2013 07:29 am

Publisher Egmont and hotelier Jurys Inn are joining forces to install lending libraries across the UK chain's sites, with a selection of 10 bedtime stories to start with.

Sleepyheads can snuggle up to tales from "You're a Bad Man, Mr Gum" by Andy Stanton, "Ellie May Would Like to Be Taken Seriously For A Change" by Marianne Levy, and the textured pages of "Collette the Cow" by Nina Govan.

Branches in Aberdeen, Belfast, Birmingham, Derby, Exeter, Manchester, Plymouth, Southampton and Watford will be taking part in the scheme, which encompasses ten Egmont books in all.

The move mirrors US trends, after Country Inns & Suites partnered with Penguin and several Sunstone hotels have installed reading rooms; Penguin owner Random House has also supplied reading material for residents of the Trump SoHo in New York. – AFP/Relaxnews. August 23, 2013.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


What is Najib’s response to arrest impending ringgit, equity and bond meltdown?

Posted: 22 Aug 2013 06:49 PM PDT

August 23, 2013
Latest Update: August 23, 2013 05:49 pm

Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad is a member of the PAS central working committee and ex-MP of Kuala Selangor.

Granted, the Asian currencies which have been weakening since May 2013 have been duly noted. The Malaysian ringgit's recent fall, in that sense, is in tandem with the regional currencies.

Many took comfort in observing that the depreciation is not a reflection of economic weaknesses but more as a result of strengthening of the US dollar, i.e. as a result of US bond purchase or tapering of the quantitative easing (QE).

Some economists went further as treating it as a blessing in disguise as to find our "natural economic equilibrium". While that may be arguably so, it is not entirely true or at best, only half-truth? We couldn't resist noting that it is too much of an apologia.

Already the Fitch Rating has mooted and alluded to the possibility of credit rating downgrading both the Indian rupee and the Indonesian rupiah if their governments fail to halt the slump in investors' confidence and maintain financial stability.

The far-reaching implication on the cost of funding and the impact quality of life, i.e. inflation and burden on debt repayment must be fully appreciated. This is especially so if income and wealth divides have been widening, hence affecting the lower income group more severely and creating social tension of sort.

While not forcing a similarity with the earlier crisis, wouldn't it better for the emerging economies to be more on the alert so as to avoid the recurrence of a catastrophic currency crisis and, subsequently, a full-blown Asian financial melt-down as seen in the late 1990s?

Which countries are at greater risk in these currencies free-fall and why? More importantly is to ask what could and should be done in order to halt the slump in confidence.

For the record, the Indian rupee fell to 64.13 per US dollar (a -13.67% move) and the Indonesian rupiah fell to trade at 10,700 to the greenback (a -10% move), its lowest since April 30, 2012.

After these two countries the next to be "contagiously infected" would be those that have a combination of these factors: "high fiscal deficits, high subsidies bill, slowing economies and high foreign ownership of government bonds". Malaysia and Thailand fit into these profiles.

The Thai economy incidentally shrank in the second quarter of this year and in fact went into a mild recession. Thailand's baht touched a 13-month low of 31.72 per US dollar(a -3.22% move), its weakest since July 2012.

Let us now consider a closer snapshot of the Malaysian case. The following are our takes that have caused foreign investors to re-evaluate their exposure to Malaysian assets:

  1. Economic growth is expected to slow to five years low in 2014,
  2. The ringgit currency has already been driven to three-year lows around 3.3 to the dollar, down more than 7% this year. Traders estimate the central bank has spent close to US$1.3 billion (RM4.3 billion) to defend the currency in recent days.
  3. Selling spread on Tuesday to the Kuala Lumpur's stock market – usually seen as a regional safe haven – dragging the main index down 1.85%.
  4. While most economists expect the current account to remain in surplus, its sharp fall to RM8.7 billion in the first quarter from RM22.8 billion in the previous period removed much of Malaysia's perceived protection from heavy fund outflows.
  5. Export plunges in recent months could push the current account into a quarterly deficit for the first time in 16 years. People weren't expecting the deficit to get anywhere close to zero six months ago. Five years of low trade surplus (due to plunging prices of Malaysia' palm oil exports and rising copper imports). Current-account surplus probably decreased to RM900 million (US$274 million) in the second quarter from RM8.7 billion in the previous three months. There are some in the market who think Malaysia could post a current-account deficit in the quarter.
  6. The government is silent on the much-needed reforms to fix a large fiscal deficit. The fact that the government remains relatively silent (the new government's first 100 days just slipped by quietly without an economic master plan) may add more to investors' uncertainty and ringgit weakness.
  7.  Despite the proposed set up of a "Fiscal Committee", the government must deal more with the roots of ringgit weakness which is ratings downgrade due to public finance disorders with lack of reforms to control Malaysia's household debt 83% debt-to-GDP ratio, government debt plus guarantees at 70% of GDP and corporate debt at an alarming 95.8% of GDP. There is high evidence that debt growth has been growing faster than GDP growth over the last 10 years which can be the tipping point to send our economy to vicious market instability spiral.
  8. We note that the month-long selling has pushed 10-year Malaysian government bond yields to their highest in 2-1/2 years (Ten-year bond yields have crossed 4% for the first time since early 2011) which can pressure borrowing cost and affect local investors.
  9. Given that overseas investors held 33% of Malaysian government debt and 25% of Malaysian equities (among the highest proportion among Southeast Asia's biggest economies according to central bank data), we expect more capital outflows over next few weeks which could cause the ringgit to underperform and people to lose more of their quality of life. Foreigners have been selling Malaysian bonds, reducing their holdings to RM138 billion in June from RM145 billion in May, according to the latest data.
  10. Ironically, we observe the local GLIC fund, pension fund and even local banks are purchasing less of Malaysian equities and bonds with most now focusing on overseas assets and this can be a serious worry.

Hardly surprising that the Fitch ratings agency cut its outlook on Malaysia's sovereign debt last month, citing worsening prospects for fiscal reforms, such as proposed cuts in the country's steep subsidy bill and a new consumption tax to reduce its reliance on oil revenues.

We also notice there wasn't a strong counter ringgit policy response from the government which is very important to spur investors' morale while breathing a positive perception into the fledgling new administration.

We believe the absence could be Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak's strategy in response to the shrinking number of parliamentary seats won by BN and, of course, dwindling business electorate support (especially Chinese & urban middle class), which has dealt a certain blow to the PM.

Similarly, Najib faces a possible leadership challenge from within his ruling party in October, raising uncertainty over his pledge to cut one of emerging Asia's highest budget deficits of 4.5% of GDP.

Hence, we strongly advocate that the government to immediately release counter ringgit response and communicate with the business communities (investors, analyst and rating agencies) and come up with major manoeuvres within 48 hours to fix the country's economic problems so as to arrest the impending ringgit, equity and bond market meltdown.

* Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad is executive director PAS Research Centre (Corporate Finance Resource Group).

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insider.

Selamat berehat Tok Guru ku

Posted: 22 Aug 2013 04:19 PM PDT

August 23, 2013
Latest Update: August 23, 2013 03:19 pm

Zulkifli adalah bekas Ketua Pengarang Harakah, Harakahdaily dan Siasah. Selepas 26 tahun bersama kumpulan Harakah, beliau kini bersama pasukan The Malaysian Insider sebagai Pengarang Analisis dan Rencana.

"Mana Datuk Husam?" tanya Datuk Nik Aziz Nik Mat apabila terjaga dari tidurnya di atas katil Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia (HUSM), Kubang Kerian, Kota Bharu.

Ekoran itu, keluarganya menelefon Naib Presiden PAS itu dan bergegaslah Husam ke HUSM menemui Nik Aziz. Namun Nik Aziz tertidur lagi. Husam tidak sampai hati untuk mengejutkan Mursyidul Am PAS itu.

Apabila terkejut dari tidur, sekali lagi Nik Aziz bertanya, "Mana Husam?". Sekali lagi, Husam terpaksa berpatah balik ke HUSM ketika beliau dalam perjalanan ke lapangan terbang Pengkalan Chepa untuk seterusnya ke luar negara.

Kali ini, Husam dapat mendengar apa yang hendak diperkatakan oleh Nik Aziz kepadanya. Namun ia hanya antara mereka berdua. Selepas tiga hari berlalu, sehingga kini ia tetap menjadi rahsia antara mereka.

Selain Husam, bekas Menteri Besar Kelantan itu turut menyebut nama Abang Ya (pegawai polis berpangkat Kopral, bekas pengawal peribadi beliau semasa menjadi MB), ketika beliau berehat di HUSM kali ini.

Sejak melepaskan jawatannya sebagai MB, kesihatan Nik Aziz merosot teruk. Beliau sering bersungut keletihan. Wad VVIP di tingkat 2 bangunan utama HUSM yang terletak kira-kira lima kilometer dari rumahnya di Pulau Melaka menjadi rumah kedua beliau.

Memang, dengan umurnya mencecah 82 tahun dan segenap tenaga diberikan untuk jamaah dan kerajaan selama ini, beliau wajar banyak berehat.

Namun beliau sering menyebut dua nama yang seangkatan dengan beliau apabila mengenangkan kesihatannya. Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad dan Lee Kuan Yew. Kedua-duanya lebih tua dari beliau namun masih aktif dan sihat sedangkan beliau terpaksa berulang alik ke hospital.

Saya membuat temujanji untuk mewawancara beliau pada jam 11.30 pagi 19 Ogos di JKR 10, Kota Bharu. Ketika itu, pihak yang menjaga beliau penuh yakin, ia boleh diadakan.

Di Kuala Lumpur, saya telah memberitahu pihak pengurusan The Malaysian Insider, ia bukan satu yang pasti memandangkan status kesihatan Tok Guru yang sangat disayangi ramai itu.

Selepas tidak boleh bertemu di JKR 10, saya ke HUSM petang itu juga untuk melihat sendiri keadaan beliau. Ketika itu anaknya, Nik Abduh Nik Abdul Aziz, anggota Parlimen Pasir Mas baru sampai dari Kuala Lumpur. Seorang doktor pakar ketika itu sedang memeriksa beliau.

"Ayah ok. Cuma dia perlu rehat," kata Nik Abduh."Tadi ayah bercakap dengan saya dan meminta membuat kenyataan mengenai Mesir," tambah Nik Abduh sambil membaca catatan kenyataan dari Nik Aziz itu yang sangat tidak berpuashati dengan regim tentera yang merampas kuasa dan seterusnya membunuh ribuan rakyatnya sendiri. Beliau juga tidak berpuashati dengan pemerintah Arab Saudi yang menyokong tindakan itu.

Doktor yang merawat beliau juga berkata, "Tok Guru ok. Insya Allah esok boleh kalau dia nak balik. Tetapi lebih baik dia rehat di sini."

Menurut Nik Abduh, di rumah mereka dekat Pulau Melaka orang ramai sentiasa datang untuk bertemu ayahnya walaupun sudah tidak menjadi MB lagi.

"Kami telah memberitahu mereka supaya datang waktu solat lima waktu. Kalau ayah turun solat, bermakna dia sihatlah," beritahu Nik Abduh. Sebab itu, orang ramai memenuhi masjid itu setiap kali solat waktu terutama waktu Subuh.

Di wad HUSM, Datin Tuan Sabariah, isteri Nik Aziz sentiasa berada di sisi beliau. Ibu yang melahirkan 10 orang anak yang hebat ini seorang pendiam dan tidak berminat langsung untuk ditemubual oleh media.

Menurut salah seorang anak beliau, Nik Aziz akan bangun secara automatik apabila terdengar bunyi azan.

"Bila Tok Guru boleh bangun bila dengar bunyi azan itu melambangkan minda dia sihat dan cergas," kata doktor yang merawatnya.

"Satu lagi saya nampak beliau akan bersemangat dan matanya terbuka luas kalau bercakap hal semasa dan politik," kata beliau sambil tersenyum.

Sebelum pulang ke Kuala Lumpur, sekali lagi kami datang ke HUSM untuk mengintai peluang untuk bertemu dan berbual dengan tokoh politik yang telah meletakkan kedudukan yang tinggi dalam bechmark politik Malaysia ini.

Wartawan Elizabeth Zachariah dan jurugambar Afif Abd. Halim tidak berpuashati selagi tidak dapat bertemu Nik Aziz kerana itulah tugasan mereka ke Kota Bharu.

Dengan ditemani seorang rakan dari Kota Bharu, kami memasuki wad VVIP di tingkat 2 bangunan utama HUSM itu. Kali ini, anak dan menantu serta cucu beliau dari Kuala Lumpur juga ada di dalam wad.

Nik Aziz sedang lena tidur. Abang Ya (bekas pengawal peribadinya yang disebut Nik Aziz) turut berada di wad.

Kami masuk ke dalam wad dan melihat beliau tidur lena. Saya mengusap lengannya (sebagaimana diajar Abang Ya) namun beliau terus lena. Elizabeth dan Afif melihat. Namun Afif tidak sampai hati untuk mengambil gambar insan hebat yang sedang tidur ini.

Selepas kira-kira 10 minit merenung Tok Guru yang sedang tidur ini, kami beredar dari wad itu sambil bersalam dengan anak menantunya.

Tok Guru, berehatlah.

Anda telah menyumbang lebih 60 tahun hayat mu untuk agama, bangsa dan negara mu. Anda telah meletakkan satu mercu tanda tersendiri untuk ahli politik di negara ini.

Kami yakin, tidak ada yang dapat memecahkan rekod kehebatan mu. Pengganti mu, Datuk Ahmad Yakub telah membuat sesuatu yang betul apabila menubuhkan 'Institut Pemikiran Tok Guru' untuk menghayati ilmu yang kamu berikan.

Benar kata beliau, ulama ramai di dunia ini. Tetapi ulama yang bersama jamaah dan membuktikan mereka layak untuk mentadbir negara tidak ramai. Ulama yang membuktikan mereka juga layak membuat tadbir urus yang baik untuk sebuah kerajaan.

Selamat berehat Tok Guru ku sayang. - 22 Ogos 2013.

* Ini adalah pendapat peribadi penulis dan tidak semestinya mewakili pandangan The Malaysian Insider.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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PAS: Siapakah yang membunuh Altantuya?

Posted: 23 Aug 2013 02:44 AM PDT

OLEH DIYANA IBRAHIM
August 23, 2013
Latest Update: August 24, 2013 01:44 am

Persoalan berhubung siapakah pembunuh warga Mongolia Altantuya Shaariibu timbul kembali berikutan dengan keputusan mahkamah hari ini.

Mohamad Sabu (gambar) menyatakan rasa terkejut beliau berhubung pembebasan bekas anggota Unit Tindakan Khas (UTK) Cif Inspektor Azilah Hadri dan Koperal Sirul Azhar Umar, daripada pertuduhan membunuh warga Mongolia itu oleh Mahkamah Rayuan hari ini.

Menurut Timbalan Presiden PAS itu, perkara seperti tu tidak seharusnya berlaku kerana pembebasan tersebut menambah lebih banyak persoalan yang belum terjawab.

"Saya amat terkejut dan tidak menyangka mahkamah akan membuat keputusan begini, jadi sekarang ini semua rakyat Malaysia tertanya-tanya apakah yang berlaku sekarang ini? Siapakah yang membunuh Altantuya? bagaimanakah Altantuya ini boleh terbunuh, adakah dia meletupkan dirinya sendiri atau bagaimana" kata Mohamad yang dikenali sebagai Mat Sabu itu apabila dihubungi The Malaysian Insider.

"Seperti ada sesuatu yang tidak kena namun bila kita cuba nak suarakan keraguan nanti pihak kerajaan kata kita cuba menghina keputusan mahkamah, saya pula akan didakwa maka inilah yang rakyat kena terima maka kes ini akan dibiarkan tidak berkesudahan seperti kes lain yang melibatkan kalangan pemimpin tertinggi," tambah beliau lagi.

Mohamad mengulas pembebasan dua bekas komando polis hari ini selepas Mahkamah Rayuan membenarkan rayuan mereka dan mengubah sabitan terhadap tuduhan membunuh warga Mongolia itu pada 2006.

Panel tiga hakim iaitu Datuk Seri Mohamed Apandi Ali, Datuk Linton Albert dan Datuk Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat membuat keputusan sebulat suara membenarkan permohonan rayuan Azilah dan Sirul.

Kedua-duanya sebelum ini disabitkan bersalah di Mahkamah Tinggi Shah Alam atas tuduhan membunuh Altantuya, 28, di hutan simpan, Shah Alam pada 2006.

Mereka pada ketika itu bertugas di UTK Bukit Aman dan berada dalam pasukan keselamatan Datuk Seri Najib Razak.

Najib pada ketika itu merupakan timbalan perdana menteri dan menteri pertahanan.

Keputusan mahkamah hari ini turut mendapat perhatian dan menjadi topik bagi warga siber di Internet apabila rata-ratanya meluahkan kecurigaan.

Antara persoalan paling kerap diutarakan ialah bagaimana rupa bekas polis Azilah Hadri dan Siru Azhar Umar? Mengapa DSP Musa Safri tidak dipanggil memberi keterangan?

Dan soalan yang terus berada di ruang siber, siapa bunuh Altantuya?

Kebanyakan ulasan yang dibuat di talian bernada sinis dengan salah seorang pengguna Internet, Isana berkata: "Wow! Kalau begitu, Altantuya pasti masih hidup kerana tidak ada sesiapa membunuhnya. `Endless Possibilities' hanya berlaku dalam 1Malaysia." – 23 Ogos, 2013.

Azilah, Sirul secara rasmi keluar penjara - Bernama

Posted: 23 Aug 2013 01:33 AM PDT

August 23, 2013

Saudara mara Koperal Sirul menanti di luar Mahkamah Rayuan di Putrajaya pagi tadi. Gambar The Malaysian Insider oleh Nazir Sufari, 23 Ogos, 2013.Saudara mara Koperal Sirul menanti di luar Mahkamah Rayuan di Putrajaya pagi tadi. Gambar The Malaysian Insider oleh Nazir Sufari, 23 Ogos, 2013.Anggota polis Cif Inspektor Azilah Hadri dan Koperal Sirul Azhar Umar meninggalkan penjara masing-masing hari ini selepas dilepaskan dan dibebaskan daripada hukuman serta sabitan membunuh warga Mongolia Altantuya Shaariibuu.

Ketua Pengarah Penjara, Datuk Seri Zulkifli Omar mengesahkan Azilah meninggalkan Penjara Kajang pada jam 11.45 pagi selepas selesai proses dokumentasi.

Koperal Sirul Azhar pula dibebaskan dari Penjara Tapah.

"Azilah balik dari Mahkamah Rayuan Putrajaya untuk beberapa proses dokumentasi serta mengambil barang kepunyaannya sebelum meninggalkan penjara bersama keluarganya," kata Zulkifli ketika dihubungi di Kuala Lumpur.

Mahkamah Rayuan Putrajaya pada sebelah pagi, melepaskan dan membebaskan Azilah dan Sirul Azhar daripada tuduhan membunuh Altantuya tujuh tahun lalu.

Tiga anggota panel hakim Datuk Seri Mohamed Apandi Ali, Datuk Linton Albert dan Datuk Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat sebulat suara mengetepikan hukuman mati yang dikenakan Mahkamah Tinggi Shah Alam selepas membenarkan rayuan Azilah dan Sirul Azhar terhadap sabitan dan hukuman. - Bernama, 23 Ogos, 2013.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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