Khamis, 29 Ogos 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


France set for poor wine grape harvest

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 04:43 PM PDT

August 30, 2013
Latest Update: August 30, 2013 03:43 pm

France is facing one of its poorest wine grape harvests in four decades, forecasts showed on Wednesday, due to a cold and rainy spring and severe hail storms.

The 2013 harvest is expected to reach just 43.5 millions hectolitres -- well below the 10-year average of 45.4 million, according forecasts from the FranceAgriMer public agricultural service.

That would make the 2013 harvest one of the worst in 40 years and only a slight improvement on last year's record low harvest of 41.4 million, according to Jerome Despey, head of FranceAgriMer's viticulture section.

He said cool temperatures and excessive rains contributed to a particularly poor harvest, while some vineyard owners in famed wine regions like Bordeaux and Burgundy saw their harvests nearly wiped out by severe hail storms.

Despey added that early tests also showed low sugar content. "Sugar hasn't developed in the grapes and we'll have much lower (alcohol) levels than in previous years," he added.

Forecasts released by the agriculture ministry earlier this month, before devastating storms in Bordeaux, had already predicted France would experience one of the smallest harvests in 40 years in 2013. – AFP/Relaxnews, August 30, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Playoff losers to enter draw for Fenerbahce’s spot

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 09:01 AM PDT

August 30, 2013
Latest Update: August 30, 2013 08:01 am

Fenerbahce's replacements in the Europa League will be picked by a draw involving all the teams who lose in the playoff round this week, UEFA said today.

Turkish side Fenerbahce lost to Arsenal in their Champions League playoff this week, sending them into the Europa League.

But the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) rejected on Wednesday Fenerbahce's appeal against a two-year European ban, imposed by UEFA in June over a domestic match-fixing scandal in 2011.

UEFA said the draw would take place tomorrow, before the competition's main group-stage draw. - Reuters, August 29, 2013.

Malaysia, India in do-or-die mission in Asia Cup hockey semi-final

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 06:24 AM PDT

August 29, 2013
Latest Update: August 30, 2013 05:24 am

The national hockey squad are going into the pitch fully aware of their heavy responsibility when they meet a revitalised India in the semi-final of the 2013 Asia Cup in Ipoh tomorrow.

Both teams are on a do-or-die mission with Malaysia intent on creating history to march into the final for the first time since the competition was introduced in 1982.

India are also under pressure to book a ticket to the 2014 World Cup in The Hague, in the Netherlands and they have no choice except to emerge as champions here to qualify automatically for Holland.

On the other hand, Malaysia as the third reserve team, are almost certain of going to the 2014 World Cup and the Malaysian Hockey Confederation is putting the target of clinching the championship for the national squad under coach Paul Revington.

In the group matches, India topped the pack with 19 goals to one compared to Malaysia with 15 goals to eight in three matches.

Malaysia, ranked 13th in the world, are expected to face a tough fight against India's squad under their temporary coach Roelant Oltmans.

In their last meeting, Malaysia and India drew 2-2 in the Sultan Azlan Shah Cup Championship in March.

As the match concerns a berth in the 2014 World Cup, India are expected to go all out to keep alive their record of appearing in every World Cup since 1971. - Bernama, August 29, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Asylum seekers threaten to sink Australian govt in election

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 12:58 AM PDT

August 29, 2013
Latest Update: August 29, 2013 11:58 pm

A woman carries a placard during a protest against the Australian government's policy on asylum-seekers in central Sydney. - Reuters pic.A woman carries a placard during a protest against the Australian government's policy on asylum-seekers in central Sydney. - Reuters pic.Australian Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare crouches uncomfortably in a suit on the canvas of a youth boxing ring in Sydney's hardscrabble Western Suburbs, shaping up for the election fight of his life.

Clare, in charge of a border circling 12 million square kilometres of ocean, has the unenviable job of stopping thousands of asylum seekers arriving by boat in Australia, an issue threatening to bring down Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's Labor government at elections just two weeks away.

"People are drowning to get here. It opens up old scars. People say 'please stop more people drowning'," says the campaigning Clare, whose wife is from a Vietnamese family who risked their lives to reach Australia following the 1975 fall of Saigon.

Clare grew up in the Western Suburbs, far away from Sydney's glittering harbour and affluent eastern beachsides, in an area long thought to be a centre-left Labor heartland of blue-collar jobs and traditional manufacturing.

But his humanitarian reasoning does not go far in explaining why Rudd's minority government is struggling here to avert a Sept. 7 poll rout, with surveys tipping the loss of six election-turning seats, some held for 70 years.

In this traffic-choked home to two million, a crucible of Australian multiculturalism where many are new migrants, soaring living costs, groaning infrastructure and disappearing jobs have badly hurt Labor, along with crime and drive-by shootings helping to fuel feelings of insecurity.

And as voters lose faith in Rudd's pledge to improve lives through better transport, health and education, they have also grown resentful of new boat people seen as potential security threats, immigration queue jumpers and rivals for jobs.

"The issue plays out in every single possible way. Rumours go around about them getting $50,000 for a car, or welfare, or whatever. The refugees are an easy people to blame," says local Labor MP Julie Owens.

POLITICAL THORN

Immigration has been a political thorn in Australia since its colonial settlement, but more so since the post-World War Two arrival of more than 100,000 non-English speaking Europeans under a government strategy to "populate or perish".

In a nation then seeing itself as culturally nearer to Europe than Asia, a wave of Vietnamese and Cambodian immigrants fleeing conflict through the 1970s and 80s also stirred unease.

But when the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States brought increased border protection globally, asylum worries in Australia were shaped into a political spear, helping conservative prime minister John Howard return to power that year with a promise of uncompromising security.

Now, with instability in Afghanistan, Syria and Iran driving refugee numbers globally to near a 20-year high of 45.2 million, asylum boats are again colouring the election race, up with bread and butter issues like the economy and education.

Since Labor swept away Howard's conservatives six years ago, more than 50,000 asylum seekers have arrived in Australia, stoking a voter backlash so visceral that Rudd in July promised no one arriving by boat would be permanently settled, being instead sent to live in neighbouring Papua New Guinea or Nauru.

Canberra's approach contrasts with moves by key ally the United States to offer a pathway to citizenship for many of its 11 million illegal immigrants, although European countries have also hardened immigration rules amid global financial woes.

But while Australia's policy - matching opposition promises of tougher immigration rules - was criticised by the United Nations, political pundits say it could neutralise an issue threatening to send Labor into opposition for a generation.

AUSTRALIA FOR FREEDOM

In the My Hung fabric shop in Sydney's Cabramatta, an area dubbed "little Saigon" with its myriad noodle shops and migrant families from Vietnam and Cambodia, Thi Duc Diep underscores the problems facing Rudd on Labor's Sydney "Western Front".

Located in one of 10 marginal seats held by the government and at risk of loss, almost six in 10 people here were born overseas and average income of $1,030 a week is well short of the national figure, while 10 percent unemployment is roughly double the national average.

Greater Sydney, home to 4.6 million people, is not only one of the most expensive cities to buy property, with home prices soaring 6.1 percent this year to a median $640,000, but surveys put it near Zurich and Geneva as one of the least affordable places to live, a fifth more expensive than New York.

Diep fled Saigon by boat in 1978, and like many other overseas-born Australian voters now has a deep antipathy to asylum seekers, who she believes are fleeing for largely economic reasons and the promise of generous welfare.

"We came here for freedom. We worked hard to be honest," the bespectacled 53-year-old says. "I don't want people who don't want to go to work. They shouldn't just take the unemployment benefits."

Along with asylum, Diep blames the soaring cost of living and new carbon taxes championed by Rudd for undermining the $1.5 trillion economy, reflected now in gloomy business confidence and fears of the first recession for 22 years as a China-led resource export boom fades.

In an alley around the corner, cafe owner and swing voter Eddie Nguyen also wants Labor out, and says many of his customers are hoping to see conservative opposition leader Tony Abbott become prime minister.

"I think Australia's government should have strong rules, a strong commitment to protect Australians," says Nguyen, who spent three years in a refugee camp in Indonesia before being accepted as a refugee to Australia in 1987.

"I don't agree with people going direct to the country like this. It's like your family, someone knocks on your door and says I want to come into your house, and you have to accept them. That's just not right. You have to go somewhere and wait until somebody accepts you."

LAND OF GOLD AND HONEY

Pollster John Scales of JWS Research says much of the anger being directed against Labor has its roots in a kind of racist-tinged envy, with migrant voters worried that new boat arrivals from other countries will lessen their chances of bringing more family members to Australia.

Australia's population growth to near 23 million was driven mostly by a doubling in net migration in eight years, from around 120,000 to around 240,000, helping fill mining jobs but bringing fresh problems.

"Once you get here, it's not the land of gold and honey. Asylum seekers are where frustration gets vented," Scales says. "It's a different sort of racism to standard Australian Anglo-Saxon racism. But it's still racism."

Labor MP Michelle Rowland, whose Sydney seat of Greenway is one of the most precariously balanced, says Labor is in difficulty because Western Sydney has become increasingly frustrated and ambitious.

Not helping, she says, has been a frontpage campaign against Labor by billionaire media owner Rupert Murdoch's newspapers, which have been particularly critical of asylum policy switches under Labor.

"When you're sitting in a traffic jam on the motorway or waiting for a train that never comes, it's easy to think about the taxes you've paid and the benefits others might get," Rowland says. "Asylum is right up there."

Abbott, mindful of the simmering mood for change, has made Western Sydney a top priority, visiting often with a promise of tougher asylum seeker laws, which he says will reduce hundreds of boats arriving now to a trickle, and to reinvigorate economic confidence by scrapping carbon taxes and building new roads.

"We will build the roads of the 21st century and we will stop the boats," he told journalists on a recent swing through the area.

"The message that I give to the people of Australia and to the people of Western Sydney is that if you want a new way, you've got to choose a new government." - Reuters, August 29, 2013.

Scientists grow “mini human brains” from stem cells

Posted: 28 Aug 2013 04:15 PM PDT

August 29, 2013
Latest Update: August 29, 2013 03:15 pm

Scientists have grown the first mini human brains in a laboratory and say their success could lead to new levels of understanding about the way brains develop and what goes wrong in disorders like schizophrenia and autism.

Researchers based in Austria started with human stem cells and created a culture in the lab that allowed them to grow into so-called "cerebral organoids" - or mini brains - that consisted of several distinct brain regions.

It is the first time that scientists have managed to replicate the development of brain tissue in three dimensions.

Using the organoids, the scientists were then able to produce a biological model of how a rare brain condition called microcephaly develops - suggesting the same technique could in future be used to model disorders like autism or schizophrenia that affect millions of people around the world.

"This study offers the promise of a major new tool for understanding the causes of major developmental disorders of the brain ... as well as testing possible treatments," said Paul Matthews, a professor of clinical neuroscience at Imperial College London, who was not involved in the research but was impressed with its results.

Zameel Cader, a consultant neurologist at Britain's John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, described the work as "fascinating and exciting". He said it extended the possibility of stem cell technologies for understanding brain development and disease mechanisms - and for discovering new drugs.

Although it starts as relatively simple tissue, the human brain swiftly develops into the most complex known natural structure, and scientists are largely in the dark about how that happens.

This makes it extremely difficult for researchers to gain an understanding of what might be going wrong in - and therefore how to treat - many common disorders of the brain such as depression, schizophrenia and autism.

To create their brain tissue, Juergen Knoblich and Madeline Lancaster at Austria's Institute of Molecular Biotechnology and fellow researchers at Britain's Edinburgh University Human Genetics Unit began with human stem cells and grew them with a special combination of nutrients designed to capitalise on the cells' innate ability to organise into complex organ structures.

They grew tissue called neuroectoderm - the layer of cells in the embryo from which all components of the brain and nervous system develop.

Fragments of this tissue were then embedded in a scaffold and put into a spinning bioreactor - a system that circulates oxygen and nutrients to allow them to grow into cerebral organoids.

After a month, the fragments had organised themselves into primitive structures that could be recognised as developing brain regions such as retina, choroid plexus and cerebral cortex, the researchers explained in a telephone briefing.

At two months, the organoids reached a maximum size of around 4 millimetres (0.16 inches), they said. Although they were very small and still a long way from resembling anything like the detailed structure of a fully developed human brain, they did contain firing neurons and distinct types of neural tissue.

"This is one of the cases where size doesn't really matter," Knoblich told reporters.

"Our system is not optimised for generation of an entire brain and that was not at all our goal. Our major goal was to analyse the development of human brain (tissue) and generate a model system we can use to transfer knowledge from animal models to a human setting."

In an early sign of how such mini brains may be useful for studying disease in the future, Knoblich's team were able to use their organoids to model the development of microcephaly, a rare neurological condition in which patients develop an abnormally small head, and identify what causes it.

Both the research team and other experts acknowledged, however, that the work was a very long way from growing a fully-functioning human brain in a laboratory.

"The human brain is the most complex thing in the known universe and has a frighteningly elaborate number of connections and interactions, both between its numerous subdivisions and the body in general," said Dean Burnett, lecturer in psychiatry at Cardiff University.

"Saying you can replicate the workings of the brain with some tissue in a dish in the lab is like inventing the first abacus and saying you can use it to run the latest version of Microsoft Windows - there is a connection there, but we're a long way from that sort of application yet." – Reuters, August 29, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Travolta, Douglas line up for French seaside film fest

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 12:52 AM PDT

August 29, 2013
Latest Update: August 29, 2013 11:52 pm

John Travolta, Nicolas Cage, Cate Blanchett and Michael Douglas are among the stars who will tread the red carpet at France's 39th Deauville film festival, which kicks off Friday.

The northern seaside resort's annual celebration of American films will open with the screening of Steven Soderbergh's "Behind the Candelabra", which stars Douglas as flamboyant entertainer Liberace, who died of AIDS in 1987.

In all, 14 films are vying for the festival's Grand Prize, presided over by French actor Vincent Lindon, which will be announced on September 7.

The festival organisers say the films delve into "the roots of rural America looking for meaning to life."

Among the movies are "Fruitvale Station" by director Ryan Coogler, which competed in the Cannes film festival after having won the grand prize at Sundance.

"All is Lost" starring Robert Redford will also compete.

Travolta will talk about "Killing Season", which he stars in with Robert De Niro, while Blanchett will attend to promote "Blue Jasmine", Woody Allen's latest, in which she plays.

The festival will also screen a number of documentaries, such as "Dancing in Jaffa" about a project to bring Palestinian and Israeli children together to dance and overcome political and cultural differences.

"Inequality for All", meanwhile, follows former US president Bill Clinton's first labour secretary Robert Reich, who is convinced that a rising income gap in the United States is one of the most serious threats to the economy and democracy. - AFP/Relaxnews, August 29, 2013.

Stars land in Venice for fiendish film fest

Posted: 28 Aug 2013 04:06 PM PDT

August 29, 2013
Latest Update: August 29, 2013 07:35 am

The Venice film festival kicked off yesterday  with the arrival of movie stars on water taxis for a dark line-up flush with fiendish tales of abuse, betrayal and survival.

The world's oldest film festival opens with "Gravity", a 3-D sci-fi thriller starring George Clooney and Sandra Bullock as astronauts who are flung into deep space when a debris shower destroys their shuttle.

Other premieres are "Parkland", Peter Landesman's re-creation of John F. Kennedy's assassination and David Gordon Green's brutal "Joe" with Nicholas Cage as a violent ex-con who teams up with a homeless teen.

"This festival draws its strength from the risks it takes," this year's jury president, Oscar-winning Italian director Bernardo Bertolucci, said at a canalside cocktail party on the eve of the opening ceremony.

Gondoliers could be seen shipping silver screen stars to Venice's Lido island where the 70th edition of the festival will run to September 7, accompanied by a plethora of luxury yacht parties and beach soirees.

Paparazzi were doused in sea spray as speed boats whipped past the shore of the Lido and starlets lounged in the Italian sun.

Alongside Clooney, Bullock and Cage, red carpet stars will include Scarlett Johansson, Matt Damon, Zac Efron and South Korea's Kim Ki-duk whose grim morality tale "Pieta" won the Golden Lion prize last year.

Twenty films are up for the Lion this year. The jury is headed up by Bertolucci, best known for his raunchy 1972 "Last Tango in Paris", and includes British director Andrea Arnold ("Red Road") and German actress Martina Gedeck ("The Lives of Others").

British and American flicks dominate, with the return of the family as the vessel for social, political and economic crisis, from child abuse and abductions to absent fathers and marriage breakdowns.

The total 53 films screening reflect a "dark and violent reality" with filmmakers "not giving any signs of optimism", festival director Alberto Barbera said.

Among the most harrowing will be James Franco's "Child of God", an adaptation of a Cormac McCarthy novel about a cave dweller who rejects the social order and ends up slaughtering women to have sex with their corpses.

The squeamish will also be tested by Jonathan Glazer's "Under the Skin", in which Johansson stars as an alien who hunts down and devours unwitting hikers.

Monty Python star Terry Gilliam's drama "The Zero Theorem" is unlikely to lift the mood, with its bleak tale of solitude and madness centred around a race to decode a mathematical formula to discover whether life has any meaning.

For the first time, two documentaries will also be running for the top prize: American Errol Morris's "The Unknown Known: The Life and Times of Donald Rumsfeld" and Italian Gianfranco Rosi's "Sacro GRA" about Rome's ring road.

"We've learnt that the distinction between fiction and documentaries belongs to the past, modern cinema moves constantly between the two," Barbera said.

Japanese animation master Hayao Miyazaki is also in the running with "The Wind Rises", a World War II story adapted from Miyazaki's own manga.

Taipei-based director Tsai Ming-liang brings the only Chinese-language work to the competition with "Stray Dogs" about a family living on the margins.

Italian theatre-director Emma Dante is competing for the Lion with a debut, "A Street in Palermo". A tale about a female feud in Sicily, it is also one of nine films vying for the Queer Lion award. – AFP/Relaxnews, 29 August, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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Que Sera Sera, apa nak jadi akan terjadi

Posted: 28 Aug 2013 08:25 PM PDT

August 29, 2013
Latest Update: August 29, 2013 07:25 pm

Meor Yusof Aziddin adalah Malaysian folk singer/songwritter yang telah menghasilkan 10 album indipenden sejak tahun 2000 sehingga 2011. Juga penulis untuk buku tentang kehidupan, "Sembang Tepi Jalan" dan "Syurga Yang Hilang." Memblog di www.pestajiwa.net. Berkerjaya sebagai "professional busker" di KL Sentral di bawah pengurusan KTMB sejak tahun 2010 sehingga ke hari ini.

Tuhan tidak selalu menghadirkan yang terbaik untuk kita, makhluk Nya. Dimaujudkan kita sebagai makhluk yang bernama manusia ini sudah cukup baik sebenarnya. Pun kita dikurniakan akal pula yang membawa kita menjalani siri-siri yang berbagai untuk melengkapkan perjalanan cerita hidup kita.

Dikurniakan akal untuk membezakan darjat kita sebagai makhluk yang bernama manusia ini sesempurna kejadian. Pun akal kita jugalah yang menjadikan sifat kita ini lebih hina dari makhluk lain. Semuanya bergantung kepada pembawaan diri kita sendiri. kita nak hitam, hitamlah jadinya dan jika nak putih, putihlah jadinya.

Akal pun bukan semua kita dikurniakan IQ yang tinggi, ada yang cerdik, ada yang kurang cerdik. Begitulah percaturan hidup di dunia ini mengikut apa yang disukaiNya. Kalau IQ tinggi pun jika hidup suka membelit sana sini pun tak bagus guna.

Memang takdir lah jika kita dilahirkan ke dunia sebagai anak orang kaya atau pun anak seorang tukang sapu. Menjadi anak orang kaya walau sekolah tak pandai mana, masa depan tetap terjamin. Kalau kita dilahirkan dalam keadaan hidup yang miskin, sekolah tak pandai maka masa depan pun malaplah kecuali semangat kita saja yang mampu menolong untuk menentukan arah dan masa depan kita.

Menjadi anak orang miskin membuatkan kita perlu kerja dan usaha lebih kuat untuk maju membina masa depan.

Saya dulu waktu bersekolah darjah 3 sewaktu ditanya guru kelas tentang cita-cita dan masa depan, saya nak jadi askar sebenarnya. Sebab utama rumah saya terletak di tepi jalan, jadi ada masanya bila sederetan trak askar melintas di jalanraya kerana misi operasi atau latihan ketenteraan mereka, saya akan melambai tangan dan bagi saya mereka ini cukup hebat dan gagah dengan pakaian uniform yang menarik.

Apabila mereka para askar di dalam trak itu membaling bungkusan atau beberapa paket barang makanan, maka berebut-rebutlah saya dan kawan-kawan waktu itu mengambil barang makanan yang dicampak mereka di dalam trak itu.

Sudahnya apabila usia meningkat ke remaja saya mahu menjadi seorang pelukis pula, sebabnya salah seorang abang saya seorang pelukis dan kartunis yang hebat dan menjadi legenda dibidang yang diceburinya.

Apabila lepas tamat sekolah saya cuba menghantar lukisan dan kartun kepada abang saya itu, serta merta di'reject'nya hasil karya saya, maka hampa dan kecewalah saya waktu itu. Akhirnya saya padamkan niat untuk menjadi seorang pelukis.

Meningkat ke usia dewasa apabila beban semakin sarat dan otak makin berat mengenangkan nasib hidup di kota yang keras dan kejam ini juga percaturan nasib yang sering gagal dalam meniti jambatan nasib, saya selalu berfikir alangkah bagus jika saya dilahirkan ke dunia sebagai seekor semut. Menjadi semut memang menarik kerana kita lihat semut mereka sekadar perhiasan dan pelengkap cerita dunia sahaja.

Semut tidak perlu berpakaian dan tidak perlu berlakon seperti kita. Tidak kira semut itu dilahirkan di Malaysia mahu pun di Amerika sana, mereka tidak perlu berugama seperti kita. Kehidupan mereka memang sudah direncanakan dan tempoh hayat mereka juga singkat, tidak seperti kita.

Golongan semut juga tidak ada sebarang kepentingan melainkan hidup aman di bawah ketua mereka, dron dan ratu saja. Perlakuan mereka yang saling bertautan dan memerlukan antara satu sama lain jelas berbeza dengan sikap kita umat manusia yang jelas saling bercakaran antara sesama demi kepuasan nafsu dan tamak haloba semata.

Mereka juga tidak akan bergaduh sesama ugama pasal mazhab seperti kita manusia yang kecoh waktu ini dengan kemelut antara Syiah dan Sunni. Ugama menuntut umatnya membuat dan melakukan perkara yang baik yang terkandung di dalam ajarannya, tapi apa yang kita lihat hari ini sangat mendukacitakan. Negara Islam bergaduh sesama sendiri. walau satu ugama dan berlainan mazhab, pun tak boleh nak ngam, yang itu kata ini sesat, yang ini kata itu sesat.

Di sini Sunnah Wal Jamaah kata Syiah sesat, di Iran sana kebanyakan umat nya mengamalkan aliran Syiah dan Sunnah Wal Jamaah diketepikan. Itu belum lagi aliran kefahaman yang lain-lainnya yang semua pengamal akan mengatakan merekalah yang betul, yang lain dari mereka semuanya salah belaka?

Ia mengingatkan saya kepada buku yang saya baca Naskhah Jawi Sejarah Dan Teks Jilid 1 di dalamnya terkandung cerita tentang Acheh di abad ke-17 M dulu, tentang perbalahan antara pengamal aliran Wujudiah Hamzah Fansuri dan Syams al-Din al- Sumaterani dengan Ulama Sunni Nur al-Din al- Raniri.

Sultan Iskandar Muda yang menjadi pemerintah kerajaan Acheh waktu itu melantik Hamzah dan al-Sumaterani sebagai mufti kerajaan Acheh. Maknanya baginda menyokong aliran Wujudiah yang dibawa dan dikembangkan oleh Hamzah dan al-Sumaterani itu walau mendapat tentangan yang hebat dari al-Raniri.

Tapi bila baginda mangkat dan digantikan oleh Sultan Iskandar Thani yang menyokong aliran Sunni yang dibawa al-Raniri itu, maka Wujudiah tidak punya tempat lagi dan Hamzah juga al-Sumaterani dikecam hebat selain banyak kitab-kita tasawuf karangannya dibakar selepas itu.

Jadi kesimpulannya segala-galanya walau apa fahaman pun, bergantung kepada persetujuan dan sokongan pemerintah yang memerintah. Seperti negara kita yang mengamalkan ajaran dari Sunnah Wal Jamaah atau Sunni, jadi semua umat Islam tanpa mengira apa fahaman mereka, yang tinggal di negara ini perlulah menghormatinya.

Umur bila melepasi usia 60an adalah beban yang memerlukan kita sering berjaga-jaga terutamanya dalam hal yang melibatkan kesihatan. Sebabnya waktu itu banyak penyakit yang mahu dekat dengan kita. Kudrat dan tenaga pula semakin kurang, silap-silap kita mendapat penyakit nyanyuk pula. Menjadi masalah anak cucu pula untuk menjaga dan mengambil berat tentang kita.

Sejak usia akhil baligh kita cuba mengagak dan berangan tentang masa depan kita yang hebat-hebat saja dalam 10 tahun akan datang. Selepas melepasi waktu 10 tahun biasanya cita-cita itu hanyalah angan-angan kerana alam masa depan bukanlah dalam perencanaan kita, melainkan dari Dia belaka.

Pun yang terbaik apabila hari ini kita akan duduk di sini, menerima apa yang sedang kita miliki saat ini, menghargai nikmat kehidupan yang walau sederhana ini seadanya walau kita seorang tukang kebun sekalipun. Setiap manusia punya hak untuk mengecap nikmat bahagia.

Ada sebuah lagu lama yang dicipta pada tahun 1956 oleh Jay Livingston dan Ray Evans dan dinyanyikan oleh Doris Day, judulnya Que Sera Sera. Antara liriknya berbunyi, "Que Sera Sera, whatever will be, will be...the future's not ours to see...Que Sera Sera".

Jadi janganlah kita pening-pening kepala memikirkan masa depan dan apa kita nak jadi suatu hari nanti. Kita layan saja hidup ini seadanya. Apa yang datang samada baik atau tidak, kita belajar menerimanya. Adakah kita mempunyai banyak pilihan dalam hidup ini?

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

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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Selepas saman menyaman, identiti “Awang Selamat” Utusan akan didedahkan

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 02:19 AM PDT

OLEH THE MALAYSIAN INSIDER
August 29, 2013
Latest Update: August 30, 2013 01:19 am

Poster forum yang akan menelanjangkan Utusan Malaysia. Poster forum yang akan menelanjangkan Utusan Malaysia. Utusan Malaysia bukan sahaja berdepan dengan pelbagai saman dan serangan ke atasnya, akan tetapi lebih teruk lagi apabila orang di belakangnya akan menelanjangkan akhbar itu satu persatu.

Ia bakal dibuat dalam siri forum bertajuk "Siri kelangsungan perjuangan Said Zahari - Memahami Utusan, siapakah Awang Selamat?" yang bakal diadakan pada 2 September 2013, pukul 8 malam di Auditorium Dewan Perhimpunan Cina Kuala Lumpur dan Selangor (KLSCAH).

Forum ini dianjurkan oleh Angkatan Kewartawanan dan Ruang Awam Bebas (Akrab), sebuah badan bukan kerajaan (NGO) yang memperjuangkan kebebasan media di negara ini.

Said merupakan ikon kepada kebebasan media di Malaysia apabila pada tahun 1961, beliau memimpin mogok wartawan bagi membantah tindakan Umno menguasai Utusan.

Baginya Utusan Melayu mestilah kritikal dan tidak memihak kepada perjuangan Umno.

Akibatnya beliau dilarang masuk ke Semenanjung Tanah Melayu ataupun Malaya pada ketika itu oleh Tunku Abdul Rahman yang merupakan Perdana Menteri dan Menteri Dalam Negeri.

Sejak 1959, Umno ingin menguasai Utusan. Dua orang wakil telah berjumpa dengan Said yang merupakan ketua pengarang akhbar itu.

Apabila Said enggan bekerjasama, beliau ditukarkan serta-merta ke Singapura.

Bagaimanapun arahan itu tidak dipatuhi dan Said memulakan mogok seluruh pekerja Utusan.

Melalui siri pertama, forum ini akan membincangkan siapakah berada di sebalik pintu pagar dan bangunan baru Utusan,  siapakah perancang-perancang utama di dalam akhbar itu.

Selain itu, pendedahan juga akan dilakukan tentang sikap pengarang-pengarang dan wartawan-wartawan di Utusan.

Paling penting siapakan Awang Selamat yang bukan sahaja dilindungi oleh kerajaan untuk melemparkan fitnah kepada sesiapa sahaja yang disukai tetapi kebal dari tindakan undang-undang.

"Siri pertama ini akan menampilkan Hata Wahari bekas wartawan Utusan yang juga bekas Presiden Kesatuan Kebangsaan Wartawan Malaysia (NUJ) untuk membicarakan tajuk pertama tersebut dan bicara ini akan di ulas oleh Profesor Zaharom Nain," kata Liau Kok Fah, Ahli Jawatankuasa Hak Sivil, KLSCAH kepada The Malaysian Insider.

Hata akan membicarakan setiap fungsi, gerakan dan apa yang berlaku di dalam Utusan sejak beliau menjejakan kaki ke bangunan usang Utusan di 46 M Jalan Lima Off Jalan Chan Sow Lin, Kuala Lumpur 18 tahun lepas. - 29 Ogos, 2013.

PM: Keputusan tepat umum senarai kongsi gelap - Bernama

Posted: 29 Aug 2013 12:22 AM PDT

August 29, 2013

Datuk Seri Najib Razak (gambar) tidak menganggap keputusan Kementerian Dalam Negeri (KDN) mengumumkan nama 49 kongsi gelap hari ini sebagai tindakan terlalu cepat walaupun Ops Cantas baru dilancarkan 23 Ogos lalu.

Perdana menteri berkata, ini kerana rakyat mengharapkan tindakan tegas diambil selepas berlakunya peningkatan laporan jenayah kekerasan akhir-akhir ini.

"Rakyat mengharapkan tindakan yang tegas diambil dan berkesan. Jadi ini semua adalah ketetapan yang dibuat kerajaan supaya sesuatu dapat kita lakukan secara bersungguh-sungguh dan komprehensif melalui KDN dan Polis Diraja Malaysia," katanya.

Beliau berkata demikian pada sidang akhbar selepas mempengerusikan mesyuarat Majlis Tindakan Agenda Bumiputera di pejabatnya, hari ini.

Ketua Setiausaha KDN, Datuk Seri Abdul Rahim Mohamad Radzi hari ini mengumumkan senarai 49 kumpulan kongsi gelap itu yang dikategorikan haram mengikut Seksyen 5 (1) Akta Pertubuhan 1966 pada 28 Ogos 2013 melalui perwartaan P.U. (A) 272/2013.

Antara kumpulan kongsi gelap itu ialah Geng 04 yang dikenal pasti bergerak aktif di Kedah, Pulau Pinang, Johor dan Kuala Lumpur;  Geng 08 aktif di Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, Pulau Pinang, Perak, Johor, Negeri Sembilan dan Melaka;  dan Double 7 aktif di seluruh Semenanjung.

Najib berkata, tindakan PDRM dan KDN itu mendapat sokongan rakyat yang mahu hidup dalam negara aman.

"Rakyat mesti dapat hidup dalam sebuah negara yang mereka akan rasa selamat. Ini kita tidak akan kompromi, malah saya minta pihak PDRM supaya tindakan itu dilakukan secara berterusan.

"Perang terhadap jenayah ini hendaklah berterusan. Ini yang diharapkan rakyat. Kita mahu hidup dalam negara yang bebas daripada rasa takut. Oleh tu kita perlu memerangi jenayah terutama jenayah terancang," katanya. – 29 Ogos, 2013.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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