Selasa, 8 Oktober 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Former Spain sports boss fined over Paralympics scandal

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 03:57 AM PDT

October 08, 2013

A Spanish court slapped a former sports boss with a fine of €5,400 (RM23,400) for fielding athletes with no disabilities at the 2000 Paralympics in Sydney in order to win medals.

The Madrid court found the former head of the Spanish Federation for Mentally Handicapped Sports, Fernando Martin Vicente, guilty of fraud and ordered that he pay the fine and return €142,355 in government subsidies which the federation received for the athletes without disabilities.

The scandal broke in November 2000 when Carlos Ribagorda, a member of Spain's gold medal-winning intellectually handicapped basketball team in Sydney, claimed that he and other athletes in categories such as track and field, table tennis and swimming were not mentally deficient.

"Of the 200 Spanish athletes at Sydney at least 15 had no type of physical or mental handicap - they didn't even pass medical or psychological examinations," he wrote in the magazine Capital just days after the Paralympics ended.

Ribargorda said he had played for the Spanish Paralympic basketball team for over two years but had no mental handicap.

He said the only test he had been asked to complete at his first training session was six press-ups, after which his blood pressure was taken.

Spain had their most successful Paralympics in Sydney, winning 107 medals to finish third in the medals table after Australia and Britain.

Martin Vicente resigned as the head of the Spanish Federation for Mentally Handicapped Sports, which was responsible for screening some participants in the Paralympics in Sydney shortly after the Capital article was published, saying he accepted "total responsibility".

He had argued that psychological evaluations of mentally deficient athletes as difficult and that mistakes had been made.

"If someone wants to cheat, it's difficult to detect. It's easy to pretend you have little intelligence but the opposite is difficult," he said when he announced his resignation.

Eighteen other people, including members of the basketball team that went to Sydney and managers of the Spanish Federation for Mentally Handicapped Sports, were also charged over the affair but the court on Monday dropped the charges. - AFP, October 8, 2013.

Milan to play behind closed doors over abusive chants

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 03:20 AM PDT

October 08, 2013

Italy's football authorities have ordered AC Milan to play its next game behind closed doors and fined the club €50,000 (RM217,000) following abusive chants by supporters against southern club Napoli.

During Sunday's match against Juventus in Turin, hundreds of Milan supporters shouted "We are not Neapolitans", a chant the Naples daily Il Mattino said reflected long-standing contempt for the south by northern clubs.

In the fiercely territorial world of Italian football, abusive rivalry between supporters of clubs in the rich north and those in the poorer south is not uncommon and Milan officials reacted with shock to the verdict by Serie A sporting judges.

"To say I'm furious would be putting it mildly," Milan chief executive Adriano Galliani told reporters. "I understand that racism is a big problem, a problem everywhere in the world but territorial discrimination is another thing entirely."

The sentence means that Milan, in 12th place in the Serie A standings after a 3-2 loss to Juventus on Sunday, will play its next home game on October 19 against Udinese behind closed doors.

The Serie A sporting judges also banned Milan defender Philippe Mexes for four matches for violent conduct after video evidence showed him punching Juventus player Giorgio Chiellini as Juventus was taking a corner.

The punch was not seen by the referee but Mexes was sent off for a second yellow card. - Reuters, October 8, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Lucian Freud’s ghosts laid to rest with Vienna show

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 12:59 AM PDT

October 08, 2013

David Dawson, who worked with British painter Lucian Freud at Freud's studio and home for over 20 years, talks as he stands in front of his photographs of the artist during an interview with Reuters at the Sigmund Freud museum in Vienna yesterday. - Reuters pic, October 8, 2013. David Dawson, who worked with British painter Lucian Freud at Freud's studio and home for over 20 years, talks as he stands in front of his photographs of the artist during an interview with Reuters at the Sigmund Freud museum in Vienna yesterday. - Reuters pic, October 8, 2013. Lucian Freud did not live to see the first exhibition of his paintings in Vienna, the city his grandfather Sigmund fled in 1938, but he helped plan the retrospective that opens this week.

Freud, considered the greatest British painter of his generation, moved with his family from Berlin to London in 1933 to escape the rise of Nazism. Four of his great-aunts were killed in concentration camps during the Holocaust.

"Vienna was never home for him and it could never be home for him," curator Jasper Sharp said. "I don't want to go so far as to say it was a healing or the closing of a circle for him, but a ghost was somehow laid to rest."

After refusing numerous invitations from German and Austrian galleries for decades, the German-born British figurative artist agreed to the show and helped select the 43 works on display because of his love of the artistic company in which they would be seen.

"He has done this exhibition because of the collections of the Kunsthistorisches Museum first and foremost," said Sharp, a friend and neighbour from childhood of the Jewish artist who died in 2011 aged 88.

The museum houses the Habsburg royal family's extensive collections of artists including Titian, Velazquez and Rembrandt who inspired Freud, a keen museum-goer who said visiting art galleries was as curative for him as trips to the doctor.

The exhibition spans 70 years of work, from a 1943 wartime self-portrait to his last work, the unfinished "Portrait of the Hound", depicting his assistant David Dawson and his whippet Eli, on which Freud worked until two weeks before his death.

"The one thing you had to learn about sitting - do not look at your watch," said Dawson, who worked with Freud for more than 20 years and whose photographs taken in Freud's studio and home are being shown concurrently in Vienna's Sigmund Freud museum, where the founder of psychoanalysis lived and worked for years.

The only exception to Freud's intense working methods — subjects sometimes sat for thousands of hours as the painter worked seven days a week, 13 hours a day — was Britain's Queen Elizabeth, whose portrait he painted in 2001.

The monarch was allowed to pose for two hours at a time, "She said: 'Well, I do have other things to do,'" Dawson told Reuters in an interview.

The show contains some of the larger-than-life naked portraits for which Freud is renowned, painted with the thick brushstrokes, vivid flesh tones and emotional rawness that became his trademark, as well as smaller, earlier pieces.

Most of his portraits are of himself, family members and lovers, or of people he met by chance such as Susan Tilley, an overweight welfare benefits supervisor whom he painted naked.

Freud avoided calling them "nudes", saying that would evoke an idea of perfection to which he did not aspire. "I don't want to paint people how they look. I want to paint people how they are," Sharp recalled the artist as saying.

One of Freud's paintings of Tilley, the 1995 "Benefits Supervisor Sleeping", sold for $33.6 million (RM107 billion) in 2008, at the time a record for a work by a living artist.

The Vienna show, which opens on Tuesday and runs until January 6, is likely to be the last major show of Freud's work until the centenary of his birth in 2022, Sharp said, because owners of many of the paintings were tired of lending them out.

Dawson said he was one of the few people allowed to meet all of Freud's many wives, lovers and friends — Freud preferred to keep them apart and had them sit separately for paintings where they were depicted together if necessary.

Freud married twice and had 14 acknowledged children.

Dawson, who is also a painter, worked on his own paintings in the afternoons when Freud was resting, and never regretted his decision to devote large parts of his life to Freud after meeting through a part-time gallery job after art school.

"I was just knocked out the first time I walked into that studio. I thought it was the whole world in that room," he said. "I was heading to New York, but it was worth stopping for." - Reuters, October 8, 2013.

At Twitter, global growth tests free speech advocacy

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 12:55 AM PDT

October 08, 2013

When a Brazilian state prosecutor last year set out to silence anonymous Twitter messages that were revealing the location of drunk-driving checkpoints, he served the social media company's just-opened Sao Paolo office with a lawsuit.

Sharing sightings of police checkpoints does not violate any rules set by Twitter Inc, which has far fewer restrictions on content than social media rivals such as Facebook Inc. Nor would such Tweets be a crime in the United States. Twitter has traditionally resisted efforts to obtain the identity of users whose words might be regarded as a crime.

But in Brazil, Twitter quickly handed over the Internet protocol addresses of three accounts as a demonstration of its "good faith, respect and will to cooperate with the Brazilian judicial power," the company's lawyers said in a legal filing last October.

Even that wasn't enough: the lawsuit, which demands that the company bar any such accounts in the future, is ongoing.

The situation in Brazil is a microcosm of the public policy and business challenges facing Twitter as it seeks to translate global popularity into profits.

Since its inception, the 140-character messaging service's simplicity and mobile-friendly nature - it can be used by any cellphone with a text-messaging function - has helped speed its global adoption as a source of real-time information. Unlike many social media services, it can be used anonymously.

The company's laissez-faire approach to monitoring content, together with an aggressive posture in challenging government censorship requests and demands for customer information, have made it the darling of civil liberties advocates and political protesters from New York's Zuccotti Park to Cairo's Tahrir Square.

But now, as it prepares to become a public company with a valuation expected to exceed $10 billion (RM31.8 billion), Twitter must figure out how to make money outside the US International customers make up more than 75% of Twitter users, but only 25% of sales come from overseas.

That means opening offices and employing people on the ground: there are now seven overseas offices and counting. And that, in turn, means complying with local laws - even when they conflict with the company's oft-stated positioning as "the free-speech wing of the free-speech party."

These conflicts, paradoxically, arise not so much in countries with repressive governments - the service is banned outright in China, for instance - but rather in countries with Western-style democracies, including Brazil, Germany, France, Britain and India.

"There are a bunch of countries that you can't treat like China because they have democratic systems and they abide by the rule of law, but they have speech restrictions that we would find objectionable," said Andrew McLaughlin, a former director of global public policy at Google Inc and White House technology official who is now chief executive of news website Digg. "Those are the issues where the rubber hits the road on free speech."

In Twitter's initial public offering prospectus, which was made public last week, there was only an oblique mention of protecting speech. The company said its corporate mission was to facilitate the dissemination of "ideas and information instantly without barriers," and that "our business and revenue will always follow that mission in ways that improve - and do not detract from - a free and global conversation."

Alex Macgillivray, the former general counsel who coined the company's free speech slogan and was widely regarded as a staunch civil libertarian, left the company in September.

Twitter declined to comment about potential conflicts between its business goals and its free-speech advocacy in general, or any specific cases.

There's certainly no shortage of political chatter on Twitter, and world leaders ranging from Iranian President Hassan Rouhani to Pope Francis have taken to the service as a means of communicating directly with constituents.

Activists say they haven't seen Twitter backing away from its free-speech policies yet - but they're wary.

"Twitter has always been an ally," said Hisham Almiraat, a Moroccan blogger who manages the anti-censorship website Global Voices Advocacy. "As soon as Twitter becomes public, it needs to be accountable to its shareholders, and its strategy becomes more short-term. If Twitter, for reasons of greed, or because they are politically compelled, decides to change that core philosophy, then I'll worry."

A booming, social media-loving country of more than 80 million Internet users, Brazil perennially ranks among Twitter's most active markets. When the company set up operations in Sao Paolo in late 2012, the company's top sales executive, Adam Bain, described the opportunity in the country as "amazing from a business perspective".

As in many Latin American nations, the service is used by everyone from the president on down. And with Twitter proving to be a powerful companion medium for sports and other forms of televised entertainment, Brazil's role as host of the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympic Games make it an especially attractive target.

Yet the broad adoption of Twitter has not been accompanied by broad tolerance of the free-wheeling conversations that characterize social media in general and Twitter in particular. Brazilian government bodies regularly file more requests for user information or content removal than any country other than the US, according to transparency reports published periodically by companies including Twitter and Google.

Luis Fernando Canedo, the prosecutor in Brazil, described his case over the driving checkpoints as a landmark for the country - and also for Twitter, which had never before been sued by a government.

"Social networks are a relatively new reality and so is their impact," Canedo told Reuters. "There are future situations today we can't even imagine and in which the State will have to position itself in front of certain illegal, harmful practices being carried out over the Internet."

His case has not exactly gone smoothly. Even after obtaining Internet addresses from Twitter, the prosecutors misidentified the suspects behind the driving checkpoint Tweets.

They then dropped the case against the individuals, but still want Twitter to bar any such accounts in the future.

Twitter has long tried to hew to the position that users - not the company - are responsible for the content on the service. But last year it implemented a means of filtering Tweets by country, so that if it were forced to censor messages in one place it would still be able to show them in others.

That capability was used for the first time last October, when Twitter yielded to a request from German police to filter a neo-Nazi group's Twitter account so that users in Germany could not see it.

Earlier this year, just as Twitter's head of international strategy, Katie Jacobs Stanton, relocated to France to open Twitter's Paris office, Twitter's lawyers were fighting an order by a French court to reveal the email and IP addresses of users who had sent a spate of anti-Semitic tweets, which are prohibited under the country's hate-speech laws.

When Twitter exhausted its appeals in July, the company turned over the information.

In Britain, meanwhile, parliament in April passed a new defamation law that shifted liability to website operators for its users' posted content, which some observers said could hasten the end of online anonymity.

Like most global companies, Twitter has always acknowledged that it must obey the laws of the countries in which it operates. At the same time, though, it had little physical presence internationally and thus could take a hands-off approach.

Now, as Twitter grows its sales operation, absence is not a viable strategy.

"If you make the choice to operate in a country, you're subject to local laws," said Roy Gilbert, a former Google executive who set up the search giant's operations in India in 2004.

Twitter, moreover, may need local offices even more than some other Internet companies because its ad strategy depends on wooing large brand advertisers that need to be serviced by a direct sales presence, noted Clark Fredericksen, an analyst at eMarketer.

While Google can make money by allowing small businesses in a country to use its self-serve advertising platform, Twitter's self-serve ad product remains in its infancy and is only available in the US.

In countries such as Egypt and Turkey, Twitter has sought to avoid falling under local jurisdiction by selling ads through contractors, although it remains unclear whether the strategy will be tenable in the long run.

Amid massive anti-government protests fueled by organizers on Twitter this summer, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan threatened to shut down the service, which he called a "scourge".

His government called on Twitter to set up an office in the country so it would fall under Turkish law. Twitter rebuffed the request and weeks later posted a job for an executive in Dublin to manage ad resellers within Turkey.

Ozgur Uckan, a communication professor at Istanbul Bilgi University, said authorities may still be able to pressure the company by targeting its local partners. "The authorities may try to force Twitter to comply, using their regulation tools like tax issues," Uckan said.

In recent months, the ruling party backed away from its efforts to muzzle the service. Instead, it is adopting a tactic that has raised yet more questions about Twitter's future in the country.

The ruling AK Party recruited thousands of volunteers and paid workers to join Twitter, two party sources told Reuters. The pro-government volunteers have employed tactics such as reporting their political rivals as spammers, leading to their accounts' suspension.

"We decided to fight against them with their own tool and now we are more active on Twitter," said one party member, who asked not to be named.

The tactics proved so successful that Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo was pressed to make a statement in July denying that the company was cooperating with the Turkish government to suspend opposition accounts.

"You can't imagine the Internet without Twitter or Google. They are now considered the air you breathe," said Almiraat, the Moroccan blogger. "Now they're in a position of power, and they should be very careful with that power". - Reuters, October 8, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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Single again: Bridget Jones returns

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 08:07 AM PDT

October 08, 2013

Bridget Jones returns after a 14-year break on Thursday, in a new book which sees the famed British singleton widowed with two children but still grappling with modern life and unsuitable men.

Author Helen Fielding has already dropped the bombshell news about the death of Mark Darcy, the devastatingly handsome love interest who helped the two previous books sell 15 million copies across 40 countries.

Mad About The Boy is set five years after his death as Bridget launches herself back onto the dating scene as a single mum, negotiating the new-fangled technology of texts and Twitter and finding herself a boyfriend two decades younger.

Her compulsive list-making remains, but these days diets are foiled by eating her children's leftovers, she is now late for school rather than work and the desire to drink and smoke tests her hopes of being 'the perfect mother'.

And her fear from the first book of dying alone and being eaten by Alsatians is now replaced by a fear of dropping dead and being eaten by her starving, parentless children.

One entry reads: "Thursday 19 April 2012. 175lb, alcohol units 4 (nice), calories 2822 (but better eating real food in club than bits of old cheese and fish fingers at home), possibility of having or desire to have sex ever again 0."

Reviewers have complained that characteristics that were so endearing in a 30-something Bridget are a mismatch for the 51-year-old widow, the darkness of Darcy's death undermining the humour of the original books.

But fans will likely relish the return of one of modern fiction's most iconic characters, and pre-orders on Amazon have already made the book a bestseller.

"Clunking disappointment"

Fielding created Bridget in the mid 1990s for a newspaper column about the life of a 30-something singleton searching for love in London.

The first book, Bridget Jones' Diary in 1996, was a global success, spawning a whole new vocabulary - from smug marrieds to ****wits - a new, truncated style of writing and arguably kick-starting the entire "Chick Lit" genre.

The second book, Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, in 1999 was also a success and both were made into films starring Renee Zellweger as Bridget, Colin Firth as Darcy and Hugh Grant as Darcy's love rival Daniel Cleaver.

There are some real laughs and some poignant moments in the new book, but the first reviews were not kind.

"It isn't just the style that jars: the random capital letters, the subjectless sentences, the mannerisms that now seem awfully tired. It isn't just the rather hysterical tone," one critic wrote in the Sunday Times.

"It's the fact that I hardly believed a word of it. I didn't believe that a 51-year-old woman would tot up the number of minutes she'd spent on Twitter, and spend meetings about her own film script sending saucy texts."

Others have suggested that the reams of print that followed in the style of Bridget Jones, including most recently a spate of books about the comic trials of domestic life, have made it harder for the original to stand out.

The review in the Daily Telegraph called it a "clunking disappointment", where "the tone is all wrong" and "every line feels full of effort".

After the success of the books, Fielding moved to Los Angeles where she co-wrote the movie screenplays and met television executive Kevin Curran, with whom she had two children.

The couple have since separated and now, a 55-year-old single mother living back in London, the author finds herself in a similar position to Bridget.

She has always denied the books are autobiographical, but she told Vogue magazine that the new Bridget Jones reflects how "hard motherhood can feel sometimes".

"Nobody's life is perfect and today, more than ever, I think women are under a huge pressure to be something, achieve something, look like something," she said.

Mad About The Boy goes on sale in Britain and online on Thursday, before being rolled out across the world over the next six months. - AFP/Relaxnews, October 8, 2013.

Malala relives horror of Taliban shooting in autobiography

Posted: 07 Oct 2013 08:11 PM PDT

October 08, 2013

Pakistani schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai tells of the moment she was shot by the Taliban for campaigning for girls' education in her new autobiography out Tuesday, amid speculation that she may be about to become the youngest ever winner of the Nobel Peace Prize.

Co-written with British journalist Christina Lamb, I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and was Shot by the Taliban tells of the 16-year-old's terror as two gunmen boarded her schoolbus on October 9, 2012 and shot her in the head.

"My friends say he fired three shots, one after another," she writes.

"By the time we got to the hospital my long hair and Moniba's lap were full of blood."

The book describes Malala's life under the Taliban's brutal rule in northwest Pakistan's Swat valley in the mid-2000s, hints at her ambition to enter Pakistani politics, and even describes her father's brief flirtation with Islamic fundamentalism as a youngster.

Now living in Britain's second city Birmingham, where she was flown for specialist treatment after the shooting, it also tells of her homesickness and her struggle to adjust to life in England.

A competitive schoolgirl who loves to be top of the class, the book reveals she is a fan of Canadian pop sensation Justin Bieber and the Twilight series of vampire romance novels.

Malala had become well-known in Pakistan as a young campaigner for girls' right to attend school after the Taliban took control of Swat in 2007, speaking out against the militants' ban on female education and their bombing of local schools.

She describes how she received death threats in the months before the assassination. "At night I would wait until everyone was asleep," she writes. "Then I'd check every single door and window."

She adds: "I don't know why, but hearing I was being targeted did not worry me. It seemed to me that everyone knows they will die one day.

"So I should do whatever I want to do."

The book describes public floggings by the Taliban, their ban on television, dancing and music, and the family's decision to flee Swat along with nearly one million others in 2009 amid heavy fighting between the militants and Pakistani troops.

Later it details her surgeons' frantic battle to save her life and her panic at waking up in a hospital thousands of miles from home.

The book is full of praise for Malala's father Ziauddin Yousafzai, describing how he worked to set up his own school and risked his life by speaking out against the Taliban.

She angrily rejects criticism that he pushed her too hard to campaign alongside him — "like a tennis dad trying to create a champion" — or has used her as a mouthpiece "as if I don't have my own mind".

The book reveals that Malala's father briefly considered becoming a jihadist when he was a teenager and going to fight in neighbouring Afghanistan following the Soviet invasion in 1979.

She also acknowledges that she, like her father, has been the target of considerable criticism at home, with many regarding her as a stooge of the West.

Malala goes on to describe the family's homesickness and her views on life in England, including her horror when she first saw scantily-clad girls going out at night in Birmingham, and her amazement at seeing men and women socialising openly in coffee shops.

She has struggled to make friends at her English school, she reveals, and still spends hours talking to her friends in Swat using Skype.

However, she adds there is also much to like about life in England — "people follow the rules, they respect policemen and everything happens on time," she writes. "I see women having jobs we couldn't imagine in Swat."

She frequently namechecks the late former prime minister Benazir Bhutto as a heroine, and makes clear her ambition to one day return to her homeland and become a politician — despite continued threats from the Taliban that they will attack her again if given the chance.

"I was spared for a reason — to use my life for helping people," she writes.

Malala is among the favourites for this year's Nobel Peace Prize, which will be awarded on Friday. - AFP, October 8, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Kebahagiaan, kasih sayang dan penderitaan

Posted: 07 Oct 2013 08:15 PM PDT

October 08, 2013

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.

Saya cukup tertarik kepada sebuah filem yang saya tonton suatu ketika dulu, 'The Last Temptation of Christ' filem lakonan Willem Dafoe dan arahan Martin Scorsese keluaran tahun 1988. Filem ini berkisar tentang subjek penderitaan dan kasih sayang untuk sebuah kebahagiaan.

Menarik juga filem ini kerana muzik dan soundtrack digubah dan dikarang oleh pemuzik dan penyanyi hebat Peter Gabriel.

Saya tertarik pada babak di mana tatkala Isa menderita dipalang salib, datanglah satu makhluk sama ada malaikat mahu pun iblis yang menjelmakan dirinya sebagai seorang gadis umur belasan tahun memujuk Isa untuk keluar daripada penderitaan dan kesengsaraan untuk kembali manjadi manusia dan menterjemahkan makna kehidupan dalam dunia yang penuh warna ini.

Maka atas pujukan si gadis, Isa pun kembalilah hidup sebagaimana manusia biasa yang beranak-pinak dan berkehendak sehinggalah sampai hari tuanya tiba, apabila apa yang dilalui semuanya hanyalah sebuah ilusi semata.

Saya melihat filem ini penuh dengan makna, falsafah dan pengetahuan. Banyak yang boleh kita dapat dengan menonton filem ini sebenarnya.

Isa tidak berkahwin dan menjadi lilin untuk menerangi umatnya. Muhammad berkahwin dan beranak-pinak, pun menjadi contoh untuk umat manusia juga.

Di dalam hidup ini terdapat beberapa perkara yang kalau boleh saya mahu betulkan tapi itulah, takdir dan nasib bukan di tangan kita.

1 - Sewaktu tinggal di Ipoh tahun 2008 dulu saya pernah menerbitkan album yang berjudul Sakrat diterbitkan hasil kolobrasi bersama arwah Amirul Fakir (penulis dan penyair) dan Kamal Sabran. Impian saya agar album itu diterima ramai dan Amirul sempat merasai nikmat kejayaan sebagai seorang penulis. Saya mahu dia sekurang-kurangnya mendapat hasil yang berbaloi daripada segi ringgit dan pulangan.

Saya tidak tau sama ada saya ini lebih melihat daripada sudut materi atau apa, tapi saya akan tumpang gembira jika beliau berjaya daripada segi kebendaan dan boleh hidup sebagai seorang seniman walau saya faham syurga itu ada di hati orang yang beriman dan syurga ada di mana-mana walau di pondok buruk mahu pun di istana.

Tapi saya menghormati jiwa seorang seniman yang merasai nikmat kehidupan yang seadanya seperti yang beliau lalu dan tempuhi dan saya menghormatinya.

Amirul seorang seniman yang berbakat tetapi hasil karyanya melalui dua buah bukunya yang diterbitkan, koleksi sajak Fosil dan koleksi cerpen 'Mea Culpa' walaupun bijak dan berkualiti tapi tidak mendapat sambutan kerana kurang nilai komersial. Saya fikir waktu itu melalui album sajak-sajaknya yang dilagukan akan lebih diterima.

Tapi saya bukanlah seorang singer-songwriter yang sukses dari segi materi. Saya pun daripada segi karya lebih kurang Amirul juga, kurang nilai komersial. Hasilnya album Sakrat mendapat sambutan dalam kelompok yang minoriti kerana hanya dicetak sebanyak 100 unit secara independent. Itu tidak memadai sebenarnya.

Pun waktu itu kita punya perancangan untuk promosi album tersebut, namun segalanya terbantut atas faktor kesihatan Amirul yang mula kritikal sehingga beliau menghembuskan nafas akhir pada Jun 2011.

2 - Saya kenal seorang kawan yang berniaga buku sastera yang rugged secara independent. Umurnya masih muda, dalam lingkungan awal 30-an. Masalahnya beliau hanya berminat untuk menjual karya yang kurang dibaca atau yang tidak punya nilai komersial.

Beliau pula nyata bahagia dengan kehidupannya yang sangat sederhana dan marhaen. Saya pula lebih suka jika kawan saya ini ada cita-cita untuk memajukan taraf hidupnya dengan cara berubah ke arah yang lebih terbuka dan cuba merasai nikmat keberadaan lebih baik daripada apa yang dilaluinya sekarang.

Maknanya seimbangkan dengan menjual buku-buku yang lebih diminati ramai atau menjual suratkhabar. Dalam masa yang sama jual juga buku-buku yang tidak punya nilai komersial itu.

Tapi itulah, saya hanya tumpang bangga jika kawan saya itu akan berjaya sebagai seorang peniaga walau saya juga faham yang syurga itu letaknya di jiwa yang sederhana juga. Saya juga akan tumpang gembira jika suatu hari nanti kawan saya ini akan berjaya sebagai seorang peniaga yang penuh dengan wawasan dan cita-cita, beranak-pinak dan hidup bahagia suatu hari nanti.

3 - Saya kenal baik seorang kawan yang juga merupakan tempat saya belajar tentang banyak perkara terutamanya dalam aspek muzik dan lagu. Kawan saya ini pengetahuannya dalam ilmu muzik memang mengkagumkan. Beliau memang hamba seni yang sejati.

Tapi itulah, beliau lebih suka tinggal di dunianya yang tersendiri dan tidak mahu menggunakan kebolehan dan bakatnya di dalam bidang muzik mahu pun penulisan secara komersial. Beliau bagi saya terlalu merendah diri sehingga sukar untuknya keluar dari sarangnya dalam tempoh masa yang sangat lama.

Akhirnya beliau cuba menyesuaikan diri dalam dunia yang realistik sifatnya ini dan ia sesuatu yang menggembirakan saya sebenarnya. Sepatutnya beliau mampu hidup senang walau tidak mewah dalam bidang yang dicintainya tapi itulah juga seperti tajuk lagu kumpulan Queen, ' Too Much Love Will Kill You' dan kita kadang-kadang perlu mengakui akan kebenaran kata-kata itu.

Hari ini kawan saya itu masih bermain muzik demi meneruskan sisa-sisa waktu yang masih ada. Kita tidak tahu bila masanya akan tiba tapi bekerja untuk mencari rezeki itu adalah salah satu ibadah yang dituntut sebagaimana layaknya sifat kita yang bernama manusia ini.

Bagi saya tidak ada salahnya jika kita bersama-sama meraikan cerita dunia ini kerana syurga dan neraka itu untuk kita yang menilainya. Memang jika tinggal di pondok buruk itu juga merupakan syurga jika bahagia kita letaknya di situ. Dan syurga juga ada di istana yang indah daripada segi materinya jika kita letakkan bahagia itu di situ, di jiwa yang bahagia.

Jiwa tidak akan faham apa itu kebendaan. Yang faham hanya kehendak kita yang letaknya di nafsu kerana fitrah dan sifatnya kita yang bernama manusia. Syurga dan neraka itu jika kita gaulkan pengertiannya dalam kefahaman yang hakiki akan menghasilkan makna bahagia juga akhirnya. – 8 Oktober, 2013.

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

What Utusan doesn’t know about DAP

Posted: 07 Oct 2013 04:26 PM PDT

October 08, 2013

Liew Chin Tong is the DAP MP for Kluang.

Falsehoods and pseudo-logic are being fed to Utusan Malaysia readers and the TV3 audience just to prevent the Malays from truly understanding the DAP. Here are some of the things that Umno, Utusan and TV3 ought to know about DAP.

First, is Umno's electoral system superior to DAP's?

It is comical to see Utusan and TV3's recent tirade against DAP secretary-general Lim Guan Eng for not winning the top spot in the re-election of its central executive committee and why I, being the candidate who received the highest number of votes, should be handed the secretary-general's post immediately.

Underlying this is the notion that DAP's party electoral system is faulty and undemocratic. Systems that are dissimilar to Umno's are not necessarily faulty. Each type of electoral system comes with its own reasoning which requires deeper analysis.

Umno has a system that ostensibly allows for election of key office bearers. On paper it looks democratic. But only on two occasions have Umno presidents had to face a challenger: in 1978 Tun Hussein Onn had to fend off Sulaiman Palestine and in 1987 Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad survived a challenge by Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah by a mere 43 votes.

Malaysian history would have been very different had Tengku Razaleigh won the Umno election. Or had Umno made it much easier to contest against the president, some of Umno best leaders would have taken turns to serve as Malaysia's prime ministers. Tun Musa Hitam, Tengku Razaleigh and Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim are the prime ministers we never had, in part because Umno's electoral system is biased towards incumbent presidents.

In the end, Umno presidents could only be removed through party coups. Indeed, Dr Mahathir had a hand in undermining the premierships of Tunku Abdul Rahman, Tun Hussein Onn and Tun Abdullah Badawi. Tun Razak died prematurely in office. Next we wait to see Dr Mahathir's knife being pointed at Datuk Seri Najib Razak, especially if Mukhriz Mahathir fails to win his vice-president's post.

Since the formation of DAP in 1966, all top leaders have to go through election once every three years. Delegates elect 20 members to form the central committee, which in turn elects among its members the office bearers. The 20 elected leaders further appoint another 10 persons to join the central committee.

In all the years that Lim Kit Siang was secretary-general, he never topped the list of votes. It was only in 2008 and 2012, when he was no longer secretary-general, that he received the most number of votes.

Secretary-generals have to run the party and make decisions. Not every decision pleases every single member. Which is why there is a saying among DAP leaders that whoever appointed to chair the Disciplinary Committee – the unit that is supposed to crack the whip, including proposing to sack members – would expect a decline in votes.

The DAP is organised along the idea of collective leadership. The secretary-general does not acquire a presidential aura, but is just the "first among equals" of leaders elected at the same election. The chairman chairs meetings and watches over the secretary-general and other office bearers who execute the decisions of the central committee. The chairman is not the president.

Second, has Umno ever elected a non-Malay to its supreme council?

Of course this is just a rhetorical question, a reminder that non-Malays are barred from joining Umno.

Umno and its surrogates have  accused the DAP of not electing Malay members into the CEC, except for Zairil Khir Johari. In their mind, it's always the skin colour.

No political party operates from a vacuum. The DAP had to contend with an image problem among the Malays, in part thanks to years of poisoning by Umno and Utusan Malaysia, making it difficult for mass participation of Malays in DAP. Nonetheless, DAP members can still take pride in a party that strives to be "the most Malaysian party" in terms of leadership and candidatures.

Only Parti Keadilan Rakyat and DAP can claim to have all the key ethnic and geographical groups represented in the party structure and as well as among elected reps at the national level.

Diversity is DAP's strength. DAP has more Indian elected representatives than the Indian-only party, MIC. In this election, DAP won in some seats that have more than 50% ethnic Malay voters as well as seeing three ethnic Malay reps being elected, namely Dato' Ariff Sabri, Tengku Zulpuri Shah Raja Puji and Zairil Khir Johari.

Geographically, DAP is the first party to have branches in all states of Malaysia. Last May's general election also saw a Kadazan, Dr Edwin Bosi, being elected as state assemblyman in Sabah.

Admittedly, making diversity its creed and practising it is not an easy task, especially when the likes of Utusan and TV3 kept fanning racial sentiments and insecurity. But diversity is in our "article of faith".

Third, does Umno provide enough opportunities for young people to be in the party leadership?

I suspect there is something that Umno members are quietly amazed by DAP and felt let down by their own party and leaders: that the DAP has youth power.

40% of the 20 DAP elected CEC members were born after 1970. Chong Chieng Jen (MP for Bandar Kuching), Nga Kor Ming (Taiping), Tony Pua (Petaling Jaya Utara), Gobind Singh (Puchong), Loke Siew Fook (Seremban) and myself were born after 1970 while Teo Nie Ching (Kulai) and Zairil Khir Johari (Bukit Bendera) were born after 1980.

DAP has a strong pioneer generation cohort that are the moral pillars of the party; for instance, Karpal Singh and Lim Kit Siang evoke deep emotions. The middle-age generation leaders have at least 20 years of experience of electoral politics under their belt.

Lim Guan Eng, Chow Kon Yeow, Teresa Kok, Teng Chang Khim, Chong Eng and Ngeh Koo Ham as well as Dr Boo Cheng Hau have vast experience both in opposition and in state governments while Tan Kok Wai and M. Kula Segaran and Fong Kui Lun are the resilient veteran leaders.

Whereas people of my age in Umno are still competing at youth level (its leader Khairy Jamaluddin is a year my senior) and some friends in MCA Youth leadership already have children about to reach voting age!

Instead, DAP's young are given the opportunities to learn on the job in the central committee's executive positions, such as National Organising Secretary, National Publicity Secretary, National Political Education Director, Head of Legal Bureau and International Secretary.

By the next general election, there will be a strong and experienced third generation born after 1970, many of whom would have been elected for at least two terms in the federal parliament.

The young are able to rise in the ranks of the party and form a formidable cohort in part because the electoral system is relatively collegial.

These are the things about DAP that Umno and its surrogates fail to grasp. - October 8, 2013.

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

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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Pemandu: Jawatankuasa Bertindak dibentuk bagi setiap siri Laporan Ketua Audit Negara

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 02:06 AM PDT

OLEH MOHD FARHAN DARWIS
October 08, 2013

Setiap siri Laporan Ketua Audit Negara 2012 akan diteliti oleh Jawatankuasa Bertindak yang ditubuhkan bagi memastikan tindakan susulan dapat diambil terhadap isu yang dibangkitkan dalam laporan prestasi audit tersebut, kata Unit Pengurusan Prestasi dan Pelaksanaan (Pemandu).

Dalam satu kenyataan media hari ini, Pemandu mengatakan jawatankuasa itu akan dipengerusikan oleh Ketua Audit Negara dan meliputi Jabatan Peguam Negara, Suruhanjaya Pencegahan Rasuah Malaysia, pasukan Polis Diraja Malaysia, termasuk beberapa agensi yang relevan.

"Tujuan utama membentuk Jawatankuasa Bertindak ini adalah untuk memastikan keputusan terhadap sesuatu kes dapat dilakukan dengan cepat dan tegas serta memudahkan perkongsian maklumat yang lebih besar antara agensi untuk meningkatkan kecekapan proses siasatan, " kata Tan Sri Ambrin Buang (gambar).

The Malaysian Insider hari ini melaporkan Pengerusi Jawatankuasa Kira-Kira Wang Negara (PAC) Datuk Nur Jazlan Mohamed, berkata langkah Ketua Setiausaha Negara Tan Sri Dr Ali Hamsa menubuhkan jawatankuasa khas untuk menyiasat pendedahan dalam Laporan Ketua Audit Negara 2012 bertindih dengan fungsi jawatankuasa sedia ada yang dipengerusikannya.

Berbanding PAC yang turut dianggotai oleh wakil ahli Parlimen pembangkang daripada Pakatan Rakyat, Nur Jazlan berkata, masyarakat mempunyai persepsi jawatankuasa berkenaan mustahil dapat menyiasat secara bebas kerana mereka menyiasat anggota mereka sendiri.

Ambrin bagaimanapun dipetik kenyataan Pemandu itu berkata terdapat beberapa isu yang masih gagal diselesaikan untuk tempoh masa yang lama dan memerlukan campurtangan Putrajaya, yang mana dengan membentuk satu jawatankuasa khas dipengerusikan oleh Perdana Menteri bagi menutup berkenaan perkara-perkara cemerlang.

"Jawatankuasa ini akan menyiasat kes-kes terdahulu berkaitan rasuah bagi memberi dorongan yang diperlukan kepada pelbagai agensi untuk mempertimbangkan cadangan-cadangan yang serius dan mengambil tindakan yang perlu," kata Ambrin.

Laporan Ketua Audit bermula tahun ini akan dikeluarkan secara bersiri, dengan siri 1 dan 2 telah diedarkan di Parlimen pada minggu lalu.

Pemandu menjelaskan, ia adalah sebahagian daripada inisiatif Putrajaya untuk membolehkan setiap isu dikenalpasti dengan lebih mendalam.

Laporan Ketua Audit Negara Siri 3 dijangka akan dikeluarkan bulan hadapan.

Inisiatif berkenaan juga adalah termasuk dalam empat inisiatif transformasi kerajaan.

"Kelemahan melibatkan kelewatan dan tiada tindakan daripada Putrajaya menguruskan cadangan mencetuskan idea bagi pembaharuan berkenaan," kata Pemandu. – 8 Oktober, 2013.

Muhyiddin: BN pernah menang di DUN Sungai Limau

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 01:49 AM PDT

October 08, 2013

Barisan Nasional (BN) bersedia menghadapi Pilihan Raya Kecil Dewan Undangan Negeri (DUN) Sungai Limau kerana mahu menawarkan khidmat bakti kepada rakyat, kata Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin (gambar).

Timbalan Perdana Menteri berkata walaupun DUN Sungai Limau dianggap kubu kuat PAS, tetapi BN juga pernah menang di kawasan DUN itu.

"Prospek menang ada. Tak boleh andaikan hanya kerana sejarah kawasan ini dimenangi oleh PAS yang terakhir oleh Allahyarham Tan Sri Azizan Abdul Razak (pada pilihan raya umum ke-13).

"BN macam biasa nak tawarkan khidmat bakti dan perjuangan yang kita boleh lakukan untuk membela penduduk di Sungai Limau. Sebab itu kita bersedia bertanding, buat yang terbaik supaya DUN Sungai Limau akan terus dimajukan dan dibangunkan," katanya selepas mengadakan pertemuan dengan pimpinan BN dan Umno peringkat negeri Kedah dan Bahagian Jerai di Yan hari ini.

Katanya BN telah mempunyai profil pengundi di kawasan DUN Sungai Limau supaya ia dapat memenuhi aspirasi pengundi serta membantu mereka. – Bernama, 8 Oktober, 2013.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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