Rabu, 9 Oktober 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


A Crodough with your tea? London eats up new baking craze

Posted: 09 Oct 2013 08:35 PM PDT

October 10, 2013

First there was the Cronut, now there's the Dosant and the Crodough (pic).

Londoners, it seems, just can't get enough of their doughnut-croissant crossovers.

From hip east London to tea rooms, high-street cafes and sky-rise restaurants, the high-calorie hybrids are flying off the shelves like the proverbial hot cakes.

The craze was dreamed up earlier this year by French chef Dominique Ansel at his bakery in New York, but across the Atlantic it has taken on a life of its own.

Jennifer Rinkoff, the fourth generation of her family working in their bakery in east London, claims to have been the first to import the doughnut-croissant into Britain.

She worked for three days with a 100-year-old family dough recipe to perfect what she calls a Crodough – the name Cronut already being under US trademark protection.

Made from laminated dough – flattened and folded into countless layers – it is deep fried and then filled with a choice of custard, raspberry coulis or toffee apple crumble.

"I saw on Twitter that people were asking where they could get a Cronut in London," she said, as a queue began to form in the small bakery. "So I played with the dough and by the third day it was exactly how I wanted it."

Among those eyeing up the fresh, warm Crodoughs lining the counter was student Abi, 19, who heard about the phenomenon online.

"We decided to hunt them out and they are just so tasty we had to have them. It's like a custard explosion, like donut and croissant together – what more could you want?" she said.

Rinkoff started off baking just a few Crodoughs as a trial, but now sells about 200 a day.

"I wanted to inject a new trend into the business. I think it's maybe more of a craze at the moment but I don't think it's a fad – I want it to be the next cupcake," she said.

High-rise mash-up

In London's fast moving culinary world, the moreish mash-up has already made its way from back-street bakery to high-rise dining.

At the Duck and Waffle restaurant, located on the 40th floor of the new Heron Tower sky scraper in the City of London, a Dosant has been added to the Sunday brunch menu.

More recognisably a croissant, the Dosant is deep fried, rolled in caster sugar then stuffed with Chantilly lemon custard and sprinkled with chocolate.

For those who can stomach its sickly sweetness, this heart-attack-inducing pastry has the lure of exclusivity.

"There were lots of friends and bloggers and people like that who really wanted to try it but weren't in New York," said executive chef Daniel Doherty.

"We do a limited number, first come first serve. It's through Twitter and Facebook and things like this – it makes people feel in the know and part of something."

Hybrid treats are also sold at Bea's of Bloomsbury alongside brightly-coloured cupcakes, another US import, made popular by the hit sitcom Sex in the City.

There is the Townie, a tart-slash-brownie, as well as a Duffin, a muffin-cum-doughnut filled with fresh jam, dipped in butter and coated in sugar.

"There are die-hard Duffin fans who come in for their fix every morning – and the Townie is more of an afternoon treat," said Courtney King, manager of the Bea's tea-room, near St Paul's Cathedral.

If final confirmation were needed that the hybrid is here to stay in Britain, Starbucks UK has introduced its own Duffin while Greggs, which has 1,600 bakeries across the country, sells a Cronut dubbed... the Greggsnut. – AFP Relaxnews, October 10, 2013.

Tax stars trump Michelin guide for cash-poor Philippines

Posted: 09 Oct 2013 04:13 PM PDT

October 10, 2013

The Philippines has put out a unique ratings guide for restaurants – ranking them by taxes they pay rather than their menu to shame those cheating the state out of revenues.

The gradings system, a unique twist on the world-famous Michelin guide, is part of a government drive to bolster its coffers and make it less reliant on debt to finance its operations.

"The goal of this campaign is to increase transparency on tax payments and to encourage the people to be conscientious in paying the right taxes," the presidential palace said in a statement.

It said the ratings guide would be updated every week and published in major newspapers and on the government finance department's website.

Yesterday's edition showed that local franchises of international fast food chains, as well as a leading Filipino fried chicken chain, Max's Restaurant, had paid the highest taxes among the country's restaurants.

President Benigno Aquino, who won the 2010 election on an anti-corruption platform, has vowed to put the finances of the perennially cash-strapped government in order.

The government has launched a highly publicised campaign against tax cheats, including celebrities and professionals.

Congress under Aquino's watch also passed laws sharply raising "sin taxes" on cigarettes and alcohol, in a bid to raise up to US$800 million (RM2.56 billion) dollars in revenues this year. – AFP, October 10, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Same race, different goals for 2 Malaysians at the MotoGP in Sepang

Posted: 09 Oct 2013 08:37 AM PDT

October 09, 2013

Two Malaysian racers will carry the hopes of a nation in the Moto2 category of the Malaysian Motorcycle Grand Prix 2013 with differing missions at the Sepang Circuit this weekend.

Senior rider, Azlan Shah Kamaruzaman, who qualified for the Moto2 category on merit after winning the 600cc Asia Road Racing Championship (ARRC), does not see himself completing the race.  

The 29-year-old racer is representing Honda Team Asia.

"Even though I have gone through two MotoGP series, I still need to learn more on handling Moto2 machines.

"I need to find my rhythm and familiarise myself with the motorcycle. It is a new thing and is very different from the 600cc machines I rode before," he told Bernama.

The Malaysian Motorcycle Grand Prix is the third outing for Azlan after having ridden in the San Marino Grand Prix and the Aragon Grand Prix.

"I have always wanted to be in MotoGP action and now, the opportunity is here, I need to really get used to my motorcycle," said Azlan Shah who was tested on wild cards in the last two races in Malaysia.

Meanwhile, Hafizh Syahrin Abdullah - who will soon be in action again on a wild card at the Malaysian Motorcycle GP - hopes to race on a wet track. 

"Everybody knows my edge in racing in the rain. If the track is wet, I am confident of achieving the same result as last year," he said.

The 19-year-old Petronas Raceline Malaysia team rider has set his target to be with the top 15 racers if the circuit is dry.

In the Malaysian Motorcycle GP last year, Hafizh Syahrin shocked the racing circle when he finished fourth.

The Kuala Lumpur rider made his maiden appearance in Moto2 after receiving a wild card with Zamri Baba in 2011.

"Personally, I am ready for the full season in this category as I have been winning the wild cards for my team, so far," he said.

If he was given the chance to race for a full season at the World Motorcycle Championship, Hafizh Syahrin will want to remain with the same team.

"My career develops with Petronas Raceline Malaysia team and I want to continue with the team," he said. - Bernama, October 9, 2013.

World Cup will not be staged in Qatar summer - FA chairman

Posted: 09 Oct 2013 08:22 AM PDT

October 09, 2013

Less than a week after FIFA set up a task force to look into when the 2022 World Cup finals in Qatar can be held, English FA chairman Greg Dyke said it will never take place in the searing heat of the Middle East summer.

Dyke has no jurisdiction on when the World Cup will be held as the FA do not have a seat on FIFA's executive committee.

But he told delegates at the Leaders in Football that "anyone who has ever been to Qatar in the summer knows you cannot hold a football tournament there then.

"Even if you have air-conditioned stadiums, what about the fans ? At big tournaments you can queue for an hour to get in. To queue for an hour in Qatar in the summer is very dangerous," he said.

"The one thing that is certain now, is that the tournament will not be held in Qatar in the summer. And we should all welcome that.

"Now the discussion starts about when it should be held assuming it stays in Qatar and I think we can probably assume it will."

Dyke also spoke of the FIFA report that analysed all the bids for both the 2018 and 2022 World Cups and concluded that it was not safe to host the finals in Qatar in the summer, where temperatures can reach 50C (125F).

Harold Mayne-Nicholls, the former chairman of the Chile FA who also chaired FIFA's Evaluation Group into the bids, ranked Qatar as fourth out of the five bids for the 2022 finals and said in an interview before the conference that in his opinion FIFA ignored his group's findings.

Report ignored

He was set to expand on that when he addressed delegates later, but Dyke said it was well known his report had been ignored by the FIFA executive committee.

"Qatar bid and they went through a proper process and they won. We today are saying, 'isn't it a bit odd that they won,' but they won...

"They knew," he told moderator Christian Purslow, the former chief executive of Liverpool. "They had a safety report which warned them.

"Qatar bid and they went through a proper process and they won. We today are saying, 'isn't it a bit odd that they won,' but they won and therefore if you are going to change it you have to have a reason to change it.

"The weather is not the reason to change it because they all knew about the weather. The report was there - they were warned about the heat but they made a football decision and chose not to meet it I think."

Mayne-Nicholls, speaking ahead of his address, told the Daily Telegraph: "We need to change the system of how we elect who will be hosting the World Cup. We cannot keep this system it has too many imperfections.

"When we made the report, they had a look at it, but the decision was made before."

As well as establishing a committee to look into the timing of the finals, Michael Garcia, FIFA's ethics chairman has started a global tour of the 11 countries involved in the nine bids for the two finals.

His remit is to speak to as many officials as possible to establish whether there are any grounds for re-running the votes.

Russia won the race for the 2018 finals ahead of joint bids from Spain/Portugal and Netherlands/Belgium and England. Qatar won the 2022 race from the United States, Australia, South Korea and Japan.

However, Garcia's task seemed to be pre-empted last week by FIFA president Sepp Blatter who said that the World Cup in 2022 would be staged in Qatar no matter what. Blatter also said he favoured the 2022 finals being moved to the winter months. - Reuters, October 10, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Sting to stop by The Michael J. Fox Show on NBC

Posted: 09 Oct 2013 12:01 AM PDT

October 09, 2013

Tvline.com reports that Sting (pic) will have a cameo in a forthcoming episode of the new Michael J. Fox sitcom, which premiered on NBC September 26.

Sting will play himself on The Michael J. Fox Show during a Christmas episode. Just how he comes to enter the life of Mike Henry, the TV presenter suffering from Parkinson's disease, remains a mystery for the time being.

The former Police frontman has already played himself on a number of TV shows, lending his voice to an animated version of himself on The Simpsons for an episode in the 1990s, and appearing in a cameo role on Ally McBeal in 2001.

Since its premiere two weeks ago, The Michael J. Fox Show has drawn around 7 million TV viewers. The sitcom is up against another hotly anticipated new comedy, The Crazy Ones starring Robin Williams. Aired in the same time slot on CBS, the latter series has attracted an average of 13.6 million American viewers per episode. - AFP Relaxnews, October 9, 2013.

Even Naomi Campbell is into gyms…

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 10:57 PM PDT

October 09, 2013

A report has emerged that the British supermodel (pic) is set to launch her chain of fitness centres.

According to British tabloid the Daily Star, the 43-year-old star is reportedly hunting for locations for a new collection of gyms in London.

The model is said to be working with her personal trainer, David Kirsch, who's already something of a fitness mogul, with his own health clubs and supplement lines.

Interestingly the new gyms are rumoured to be specifically targeted at elite fitness fanatics and professional sportsmen and women, meaning that budding members will have to pass tests before they're allowed to join.

Naomi Campbell became one of the world's biggest names with her work in the fashion industry during the late 1980s and early 90s and has recently seen a new surge in her career as one of the mentors (as well as producer) on TV modelling show The Face.

If the report proves true, Campbell will join Madonna among the ranks of gym-owning celebrities. Madonna's Hard Candy Fitness centres are now in Mexico City, Sydney, St. Petersburg, Moscow, Santiago, Rome, Toronto and Berlin. - AFP Relaxnews, October 9, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Triathletes may experience less pain than the rest of us, says study

Posted: 09 Oct 2013 12:34 AM PDT

October 09, 2013

Triathletes push themselves through gruelling endurance races in the water, by bike, and on foot. But are these superhumans different from the rest of us? A new study suggests so.

Israeli researchers have discovered that triathletes may experience pain differently from the casual gym-goer, which can help them go the distance.

"In our study, triathletes rated pain lower in intensity, tolerated it longer, and inhibited it better than individuals in a control group," said researcher Dr. Ruth Defrin at Tel Aviv University. "We think both physiological and psychological factors underlie these differences and help explain how triathletes are able to perform at such a high level."

In their study, the team recruited 19 triathletes and 17 casual exercisers, with findings announced October 7 and published in the journal Pain. Triathletes in the study trained for and competed in at least two triathlons per year, including the Ironman Triathlon, which consists of a 3.86 km swim, a 180.24 km bicycle ride, and a full marathon, 42.2 km.

All the participants were put through a battery of psychophysical pain tests, including applying heat to one arm or submersing the other arm in cold water. While the triathletes felt pain, they perceived it as less intense and could withstand it longer. Plus triathletes reported being less fearful or worried about experiencing pain, which could explain their higher tolerance for it, the researchers said. They also showed a better ability to inhibit pain than non-athletes.

The researchers add that their study suggests that both psychology and physiology help give triathletes their edge.

"It is very difficult to separate physiology and psychology," Defrin said. "But in general, experience is the sum of these factors." - AFP Relaxnews, October 9, 2013.

Asian filmmakers revisit classic Westerns

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 10:27 PM PDT

October 09, 2013

Two major Asian adaptations of classic Westerns have hit screens at the Busan International Film Festival, in a revival of a genre that drew some of its early inspiration from the cinema of the East.

Japanese-Korean director Lee Sang-Il's Unforgiven is a remake of the 1992 Clint Eastwood classic of the same name, starring the Oscar-nominated Ken Watanabe.

Once Upon a Time In Vietnam, directed by Vietnamese-American director Dustin Nguyen takes its inspiration from Sergio Leone's sprawling Spaghetti Western epic Once Upon a Time in the West from 1968.

Both films, which have been released in their domestic markets, played to packed cinemas this week at Busan. Lee said he believed it was the timeless nature and raw humanity explored in Westerns that continued to attract audiences.

"Every filmmaker loves them too," Lee said.

"They confront certain issues, the goodness and badness of people and that's what attracted me to this film."

Watanabe, who was Oscar-nominated for his role in The Last Samurai (2003), takes on the role of the ageing gun for hire played by Eastwood in the original. Director Lee has shifted the action from the Wild West to Hokkaido at the start of the Meiji period in Japan.

"It was the same time as Hollywood Westerns are set, around the late 1800s," said the director. "They were times of great change in both countries."

Lee said he had been inspired by the work of the Japanese director Akira Kurosawa, whose films such as Yojimbo (1961) had helped provide the source material for many Hollywood Westerns.

"That film was a huge influence on me, as was the way Kurosawa blended action with epic drama," said Lee.

Yojimbo was a key inspiration behind Leone's 1964 A Fistful of Dollars -- to the extent that the Italian director and his production company were eventually sued by Kurosawa's -- and starred Eastwood in the main role billed as Man with No Name.

Watanabe revealed that Eastwood had voiced his support for the Unforgiven project when he first heard about the remake, and had sent a letter of praise for the production once he had seen it for himself.

"He said he liked what we had done," said the actor. "He said we had captured the mood he had set in the original. It is a Western but with Japanese style."

Actor-turned-director Nguyen grew up in the United States before moving back to Vietnam five years ago to start a production company. When it came to directing his first film there, he said he immediately turned to Leone.

"The Spaghetti Westerns had a big influence on me," he said. "So I had just been waiting for an opportunity to do something like that. It's nothing new but it is new for Vietnam."

The director echoed Watanabe in saying that the Western genre was primarily concerned with the issue of what it means to be a "real" man.

"I wanted to explore that, but I didn't want to make a drama that 10 people would come and see," said Nguyen, the one-time star of 1980s US television series "21 Jump Street".

"Once Upon a Time in Vietnam" takes the time-honoured Western tradition of a lone gun coming to the aid of a town under siege, updating the action with twists designed to appeal more to a modern audience.

"I've always liked the idea of a stranger coming to town," said Nguyen.

"There's just something romantic about it and fantastical about it. With Sergio Leone there was a very haunting quality he put on top of the classic American Western, a sense of longing."

To that end, Nguyen provides the audience with a hero riding off into the sunset but the director said he was looking to the Asian marketplace by including some martial arts and technical CGI wizardry.

"I'd like to see a few more of these films [from Asia]," he said. "As the film market grows I'd like to think more filmmakers can enter this genre.

"These films give us a chance to look at the struggles of humanity," he said.

"The characters help us question what is good and what is bad."

The Busan festival continues until Saturday. - AFP, October 9, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books


Pulitzer prize winner tells of “warriors’ wounds” in new book

Posted: 09 Oct 2013 12:14 AM PDT

October 09, 2013

To his 2006 Pulitzer Prize, Washington Post writer David Finkel last year added a MacArthur Foundation "genius" grant. In between he reported and wrote a brilliant book about the Iraq War called "The Good Soldiers".

A sad, bitter, eloquent chronicle of 12 months embedded with soldiers in "a sorry, bomb-filled" Baghdad neighborhood called Kamaliyah, it now has an equally fine sequel in "Thank You for Your Service".

Finkel follows some of the troops from the 2-16 Infantry Battalion home to the US, where relatives, therapists and Washington can barely cope with these warriors' wounds, many of them psychological. Their deployment, part of George Bush's surge, exposed them to frequent explosive devices designed to cruelly maim and kill or leave the brain damaged by shock waves and terror.

"And yet day after day they would go out anyway, which eventually came to be what the war was about," Finkel writes. "Not winning. Not losing. Nothing so grand. Just trying until it was time to go home and discovering that life after the war turned on trying again."

Cases of PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) and TBI (traumatic brain injury) went to the WTU (Warrior Transition Unit) until the large numbers forced a label change to WTB (B for battalion). There's no abbreviation for suicide. - Bloomberg, October 9, 2013.

Publishing start-ups crowd world’s biggest book fair

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 11:26 PM PDT

October 09, 2013

A rush of publishing start-ups and ever new ways to lure readers in an industry with Amazon breathing down its neck will be a central theme at the world's biggest book fair, opening in Germany on Wednesday.

Faced with competition from the online giant, publishers face an "imperative to be big", organisers of the Frankfurt Book Fair say, pointing to this year's merger to create Penguin Random House.

But the flipside is that start-ups are springing up as continental Europe now follows in the footsteps of Britain and the US, with all eyes on the newcomers shaping the future and hunting for a viable business model.

"The dividing line is no longer between old and new, print and e-books, analogue and digital," the fair's director Juergen Boos said.

"Instead it runs between those who have a passion for content and who want to provide access to it, and those who don't really care what they're selling."

In Germany, the pioneering spirit is seen in innovations such as Tolino, an e-reader produced by bookshop chains and Deutsche Telekom, and Flipintu, an online reader community sharing tips and recommendations, hoping to do for books what Spotify did for music.

Katja Boehne, the fair's spokeswoman, said the mushrooming of start-ups in digital publishing mirrored the switch to smartphones in mobile communications.

From initially offering books in digital format, the range of services around books and content now encompasses self-publishing, 3D educational products with interactive graphics, platforms for interactive reading and new ways of Internet shopping, she said.

"The possibilities of buying books in the classic ways of bookselling are becoming constantly smaller," she said.

"Accordingly, new solutions for the distribution of books on the Internet are being worked on everywhere," Boehne added.

More than 7,000 exhibitors will descend on the western German city which annually hosts the five-day showcase of international publishing and its cross-over into film, video games and merchandising.

Brazil's literature, arts and culture will take pride of place, represented by around 90 writers, and backed by a $1.2-million government programme for 2011-13 for the translation of Brazilian works.

The publishing sector is in "relatively good" shape compared to other industries, with children and youth literature a driving force, and school books also doing well, Boos told reporters.

"Parents are investing in their children," he said.

But the environment is changing with the scale of runaway successes such as Fifty Shades of Grey, the 2011 erotic blockbuster by E L James. It was the first part of a trilogy that has been translated into 50 languages and sold over 70 million copies worldwide.

Not only does it pose questions about the diversity of what people read but also drives up the price of translation rights, Boos said.

"Everyone wants a certain bestseller, they all want the next Harry Potter, or the next Fifty Shades of Grey or Dan Brown... everyone's lusting after it," he said.

Blurring the lines between reality and fiction in today's storytelling is another topic for discussion at the fair, where US-Lebanese director, cameraman and author Ziad Doueiri will reveal how he shifts between Hollywood and Lebanon.

Doueiri has worked with director Quentin Tarantino and will receive the fair's 10,000-euro prize for the Best International Literary Adaptation for his film "The Attack", based on Yasmina Khadra's novel about a suicide bombing in Tel Aviv.

Doueiri said in April that the Lebanese authorities had banned his award-winning film from cinemas in his home country because it was partly shot in Tel Aviv using Israeli actors.

The debate about e-books and whether they sound the death knell for print books seems to have been laid to rest, with both finding their place and acceptance in parallel.

Bookstores nevertheless face the need to be inventive.

For hints on how bookshops may look in the future, fair organisers point to initiatives in Britain, such as The Bookshop Band which writes literature-inspired songs and plays them in stores.

Meanwhile the blog Bookshelf Porn has been aiming to give "people a sudden urge to read" since 2009 by showing the best bookshelf photos from around the world.

"Let's be reasonable and add an eighth day to the week that is devoted exclusively to reading," said one tweet by a fan. - AFP Relaxnews, October 9, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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Anak tunggal Hussain Najadi peroleh harta RM1.8 juta

Posted: 09 Oct 2013 03:13 AM PDT

October 09, 2013
Latest Update: October 09, 2013 06:22 pm

Anak lelaki tunggal kepada pengasas Kumpulan Perbankan Arab Malaysia, Hussain Ahmad Najadi (gambar) yang meninggal dunia dalam kejadian tembak Julai lalu, hari ini berjaya memperoleh harta milik bapanya bernilai RM1.8 juta.

Ini berikutan Mahkamah Tinggi Syariah di sini membenarkan permohonan tuntutan faraid yang difailkan Pascal Ahmad Najadi, 46, terhadap harta itu.

Hakim Syarie Nassir Abdul Aziz membuat keputusan itu selepas meneliti permohonan Pascal mengikut Seksyen 50 Akta Pentadbiran Undang-undang Keluarga Islam Wilayah-Wilayah Persekutuan 1998.

Jumlah harta RM1.8 juta yang diperoleh Pascal itu termasuk wang tunai RM321,195.70 dalam satu akaun bank serta harta dan saham di sebuah syarikat di Labuan sebanyak 540,000 unit yang berjumlah RM1.5 juta.

Bagaimanapun, Hakim Nassir memerintahkan hutang piutang bapanya seperti kad kredit berjumlah RM32,208.70 hendaklah terlebih dulu dibayar sebelum harta lain diagihkan kepada waris.

Mahkamah memerintahkan perintah itu berkuat kuasa dalam masa tujuh hari.

Pascal, pengerusi dan juga ketua pegawai eksekutif di sebuah syarikat penasihat kewangan, merupakan anak tunggal kepada Hussain.

Hussain meninggal dunia dalam kejadian tembak 29 Julai di tempat letak kereta berhampiran Tokong Kuan Yin di Lorong Ceylon.

Dalam keputusannya, Hakim Nassir berkata berdasarkan dokumen yang dikemukakan, mahkamah mendapati tiada waris lain selain Pascal.

"Berdasarkan fakta itu, mahkamah mensabitkan bahawa Hussain meninggalkan seorang waris dengan nisbah pembahagian 1:1," katanya.

Dalam afidavit bagi menyokong permohonannya yang dikemukakan menerusi peguamnya Akberdin Abdul Kadir, Pascal menyatakan dia dilahirkan pada 20 Ogos 1967 di Switzerland dan mempunyai dua kerakyatan iaitu United Kingdom dan Switzerland.

Beliau berkata, datuknya iaitu Ahmad Najadi dan neneknya Balkis Najadi telah meninggal dunia pada 1998 dan 2008, masing-masing di Bahrain dan Iran. – Bernama, Oktober 9, 2013.

DAP gesa Zahid, Shabery mohon maaf kerana tipu rakyat

Posted: 09 Oct 2013 02:18 AM PDT

OLEH MOHD FARHAN DARWIS
October 09, 2013

DAP menggesa agar Menteri Dalam Negeri Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi dan Menteri Komunikasi dan Multimedia Datuk Seri Ahmad Shabery Cheek memohon maaf kepada rakyat Malaysia kerana didakwa berbohong berhubung pendedahan Laporan Ketua Audit Negara 2012.

Setiausaha Agung DAP Lim Guan Eng (gambar) berkata kenyataan kedua-dua pemimpin berkenaan bercanggah dengan kenyataan Ketua Audit Negara Tan Sri Ambrin Buang berhubung pembayaran artis-artis K-Pop dan juga isu kehilangan aset polis bernilai RM1.3 juta.

"Kedua-dua menteri mesti segera meminta maaf, jika tidak Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak mestilah bertindak sekiranya beliau mahu mengekalkan sebarang sisa keyakinan awam terhadap kejujuran, kemahiran dan profesionalisme menteri-menterinya," kata Lim dalam satu kenyataan hari ini.

Menurut Lim, Ahmad Zahid yang juga Naib Presiden Umno berbohong apabila mengatakan pihak polis telah memberi penjelasan kepada Jabatan Audit tentang kehilangan alatan termasuk senjata api bernilai RM1.3 juta.

Manakala Shabery pula katanya berbohong apabila berkata bayaran RM1.6 juta untuk membawa masuk artis-artis K-Pop telah dibiaya penuh oleh penaja.

"Ketua Audit Negara Tan Sri Ambrin Buang mendedahkan pembohongan mereka," kata Ketua Menteri Pulau Pinang itu lagi.

Kegagalan dan salahlaku kewangan dalam urusan kerajaan tegas Lim adalah amat kritikal terhadap ekonomi negara kerana perolehan dari segi barangan, kerja dan perkhidmatan setiap tahun membentuk 25% daripada kadar nominal KDNK berbanding ekonomi negara maju lain di mana perolehan tahunannya hanyalah 12% daripada KDNK.

"Dengan kata lain, Malaysia rugi dua kali ganda berbanding negara maju dalam hal rasuah atau pembaziran dana awam," tambahnya lagi.

Laporan Ketua Audit Negara 2012 telah mendedahkan pasukan keselamatan berkenaan merekodkan kehilangan aset termasuk senjata api, gari dan juga kenderaan yang berkemungkinan berlaku semasa operasi.

"Setakat ini orang awam dimaklumkan oleh Ketua Polis Negara dan Menteri Dalam Negeri bahawa senjata api yang hilang itu berkemungkinan jatuh ke dalam laut, walaupun tidak ada laporan polis yang dibuat lantaran kehilangan tersebut.

"Adakah 29 buah kenderaan polis itu juga turut ke laut perginya?" soal Lim.

Ketirisan, pembaziran dan salah laku kewangan ini kata Lim memberi kesan buruk terhadap kadar pertumbuhan ekonomi.

"Pemimpin BN tidak patut menafikan hakikat ini tetapi mengambil langkah-langkah untuk menangani kelemahan-kelemahan yang disebutkan dalam Laporan Ketua Audit Negara," katanya. – 9 Oktober, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


PAS dekati golongan yang mahu jadikan hidup lebih indah

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 04:33 PM PDT

October 09, 2013

Shukur mempunyai lebih 30 tahun pengalaman sebagai wartawan dan bekerja dengan pelbagai media. Beliau kini pencen tetapi menjadi pemerhati politik yang tegar.

PAS melangkah lebih jauh, berinteraksi di tengah pelbagai golongan masyarakat dan kali ini mengadakan pertemuan dan dialog antara pemimpinnya dengan artis dan penulis pada 20 Oktober ini di Hotel D'Palma, Shah Alam.

Majlis pertemuan dan dialog tersebut anjuran Lajnah Seni Budaya, PAS Pusat pimpinan Dr Muhaimin Sulam, yang juga seorang penulis terkenal.

Ini kali kedua tahun ini PAS mengadakan majlis pertemuan dan dialog dengan artis. Dua minggu lalu berlansung Majlis Ramah Mesra Kerajaan Kelantan Bersama Selebriti di sebuah hotel di Kuala Lumpur yang dihadiri sama oleh Mursyidul Am PAS, Datuk Nik Abd Aziz Nik Mat dan Menteri Besar Kelantan, Datuk Ahmad Yakob.

Di majlis itu Ahmad  mengumumkan bahawa kerajaan negeri Kelantan bercadang menubuhkan Akademi Seni Islam bagi membantu rakan selebriti mengembangkan bakat masing-masing menurut landasan Islam.

Hasrat itu, katanya, sebagai suatu penghormatan untuk golongan selebriti dan artis bagi membantu mereka menjadi ikon masyarakat yang bersyariat.

Ahmad berkata, penubuhan akademi itu secara langsung akan memberi peluang kepada mereka menggunakan medium hiburan sebagai aktiviti berdakwah dalam seni. Katanya, hasrat itu juga turut membuktikan kepada umum bahawa Kelantan tidak pernah meminggirkan seni hiburan termasuk golongan artis, sebaliknya akan terus memandu mereka agar sentiasa menjadi ikon yang disayangi masyarakat.

Hadir sama ialah Timbalan Menteri Besar Kelantan, Datuk Mohd Amar Abdullah serta artis Malaysia dan Indonesia, Kholidi Masadil Alam atau Mas Azam serta beberapa exco Kelantan.

Dengan majlis pertemuan selanjutnya antara pemimpin PAS dengan artis dan penulis pada 20 Oktober ini bermakna PAS mengorak langkah jauh ke depan, membina hubungan dengan golongan tersebut yang dilihat selama ini sangat berjauhan dengan PAS.

Oleh itu, usaha terbarunya ini mempunyai makna yang sungguh besar, mengiktiraf sumbangan golongan artis kepada masyarakat dan meruntuhkan tembok pemisah antara PAS dengan golongan tersebut.

Di sini, saya memetik kembali kata-kata Sasterawan Negara, A Samad Said mengenai manusia seniman, termasuk penulis, dalam bukunya 'Dari Salina Ke Langit Petang' bahawa "tidak ramai manusia yang sempat memikirkan apa ertinya kehidupan mereka. Maka dengan caranya sendiri, dengan kehalusan seninya dan kekayaan imaginasi dan fikirannya, penulis sebagai seniman berupaya menyingkapkan pengalaman baru kepada sesiapa  saja yang meresapi atau menghayati karyanya."

Pada pendapat saya, di sinilah seniman dan pengaruhnya tidak boleh sama sekali dikesampingkan peranannya kerana ia adalah cerminan masyarakat yang krearif yang hidup dan memberi makna kepada kehidupan.

Orang politik bergelut di medan politik dengan janji dan harapan untuk memberikan kemakmuran dan kebebasan kepada rakyat, sementara seniman melalui pena, suara dan lakonannya, merakamkan renungan erti kehidupan dan kemanusiaan melalui kegiatan mereka.

Menurut Prof Dr Fahmi Amhar bahwa pada zaman keemasannya, negara Islam bukanlah sebuah negeri yang dingin dan kaku.  Di sana, selain terdapat banyak ulama mujtahid yang membuat hidup jadi terarah, lalu para ilmuwan dan ahli sains, juga bertebaran para seniman yang membuat hidup lebih indah.  Menurutnya, sangat elok lagi jik seniman ini adalah orang beriman, menjadikan iman sebagai panduan hidupnya, bukan sebaliknya.

Menurutnya lagi, ketika aliran naturalis yang menggambar atau membuat patung haiwan atau bentuk manusia diharamkan, pengukir Muslim dapat tetap menuangkan kreativitinya dalam bentuk abstrak yang memerlukan jiwa seni dan kemampuan perkiraan lebih tinggi. Misalnya dalam bentuk kaligrafi rumit yang juga diterapkan pada karpet atau seramik, seni bina masjid yang canggih, atau taman kota indah. 

Karya sastera juga sering dirangkai untuk memberikan pelajaran.  Ibnu Malik membuat puisi 1000 bait yang dikenal dengan 'Alfiah Ibnu Malik' untuk memberikan pelajaran bahasa Arab secara komprehensif.  Sesiapa hafal 1000 bait tersebut, dia belajar dan menguasai nahwu, soraf dan balaghah sekali gus.

Seni suara dapat digunakan untuk terapi mental.  Bacaan al-Quran dapat dilantunkan dengan suara yang indah untuk suasana apa pun, sedih ataupun gembira.  Rasulullah membolehkan lagu dan muzik dimainkan untuk mengiring acara gembira seperti perkahwinan, tetapi tidak berlebihan dan mengganggu.

Begitu juga seni muzik di Malaysia, umpamanya, kumpulan muzik berunsur puisi – Kumpulan Harmoni - pimpinan Almarhum Zubir Ali, lagu ketuhanan oleh penyanyi Ito, Akhil Hay, Muaz, lagu-lagu dari Sani Sudin dan lain-lain. Demikian juga dramatis, Dinsman dengan dramanya 'Menunggu Kata Dari Tuhan' sebuah drama yang dipadankan daripada Sirah Nabawiyah.

Demikian juga lagu 'Syurga Di bawah Telapak Kaki Ibu' dan 'Camar Yang Pulang' oleh Wan Aishah, lagu Zaharah Agus 'Rukun Islam Lima Perkara'. Juga lagu 'Tuhanku' oleh Salamiah Hasan, lagu 'Doa' oleh Rahimah Rahim dan banyak lagi yang semuanya bernuasa Islam.

Sesungguhnya al-Quran al-Karim, memang tampil sebagai sajian agung (ma'dubatur rahman) yang mengandungi semua nilai keagungan. Jika ada sesuatu yang boleh dikatakan sebagai seni, maka al-Quran adalah mahaseni. Dan jika fikiran Muslim dipengaruhi oleh sesuatu yang murni maka sesuatu itu adalah dari al-Quran.

Jika pengaruh tersebut sangat mendalam sehingga bersifat melindungi dalam setiap segi, maka demikian pula dalam segi estetika. Tidak ada seorang Muslim yang tidak tersentuh di lubuk hatinya, citrarasa dan kesedarannya oleh irama, puisi dan segi-segi kefasihan (mahjul balaghoh) al-Quran. Tidak ada Muslim yang memiliki norma dan rasa keindahannya yang tidak dibentuk kembali oleh al-Quran dan citranya sendiri. Demikianlah agungnya al-Quran.

Kegiatan seni yang berfaedah ini tentu saja mampu menghantar mesej dakwah, pesan ketuhanan, pembinaan akhlak, kasih sayang keluarga dan sebagainya.

Di sinilah sewajarnya kerajaan Pakatan Rakyat yang kini memerintah tiga negeri bukan saja menggalakkan kegiatan seni budaya bermoral tinggi, tetapi juga memberi sokongan bantuan, naungan dan sebagainya kepada penggiat seni alternatif ini.

Sudah sampai masanya kerajaan negeri Pakatan Rakyat memberi perhatian serius kepada perkembangan seni ini, justeru ia adalah suara batin seniman rakyat Malaysia. Pada malam 20 Oktober ini kita ingin mendengar komitmen pemimpin PAS/Pakatan Rakyat mengenai hal ini. – 9 Oktober, 2013.

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

The sickness of our private healthcare services

Posted: 08 Oct 2013 04:29 PM PDT

October 09, 2013

Lim Ka Ea is a traveller who sees travel as the answer to all the world's woes. Writing is a grand love. Ka Ea has had NGO and legal experience.

"If I keep this oath faithfully, may I enjoy my life and practise my art, respected by all humanity and in all times; but if I swerve from it or violate it, may the reverse be my life."
– The Hippocratic Oath

Mary was entering her mid-thirties when it finally dawned on her that she is reproductively challenged. The thought of her own infertility did play in her mind when she was much younger but her suspicion was only confirmed recently when she was diagnosed for polycystic ovarian syndrome (POS). The strange thing was, the diagnosis did not come from her fertility doctor, who had then been too eager to start her and her husband on the notoriously expensive and invasive in vitro treatment, without first examining their health.

The diagnosis for POS had come up through her own initiative. Once she and her husband decided that they would try to conceive through artificial insemination, Mary thought it would be prudent to go through a full medical check-up, "just to make sure my body is ready for the baby, you know. We've read that in vitro is very stressful and we want to make sure that we've tried everything possible to make sure that the conditions are conducive," she said. 

When her blood work came back, her thyroid function tests were elevated. Later, it was her endocrinologist who told her that in addition to hypothyroidism, she might be suffering from POS too. He told her that the sudden and continuous weight gain, increased cholesterol level, development of fatty liver, irregular menstruation, and acne are some of the symptoms of POS.

Mary had initially thought that these symptoms were attributed to her bad eating habits and sedentary lifestyle but it now explains why these unflattering conditions remain unchanged even after her vigorous attempts to eat and exercise better.

"The funny thing is, no one told me about it. The GP (General Practitioner) at the hospital where I did the full medical check-up did not alert me to anything after he examined my test results. All he did was to make me feel bad about my weight and asked me to take another test in three months' time to see whether there are any changes to my thyroid functions. All this while, I had been wondering why I've been battling bad skin and weight gain. If only I had known earlier, I would have been less depressed and feeling hopeless all the time," Mary said.

"You have most of the POS symptoms. Go home and do a search online. Read up and learn as much as possible about POS and then go see a gynaecologist to seek treatment. You need to solve all this hormonal issue first before you even try to get pregnant. There are other options before you start considering in vitro. Let's get you fixed up first, ok?"

That was the most honest and reassuring conversation Mary have had with a doctor so far.

After reading up on hypothyroidism and POS on the Internet, Mary discovered that the chances of having a problematic pregnancy would have been high if she had become pregnant either through natural or artificial means. She confessed that much to her disappointment and great horror, she felt that the renowned fertility specialist she saw at a highly recommended infertility clinic in Kuala Lumpur should have informed her of this vital piece of information.

Mary and her husband initially reasoned that the specialist would have alerted them to her condition if only he had bothered to look at their medical records, which they had brought along with them during their first consultation, having thought pre-emptively that the doctor would have asked for it.

"It was going to cost us about seventeen thousand ringgit for the whole procedure and that doesn't even cover the cost of a second treatment if the first one doesn't work. With hypothyroidism and POS, the chances of having a miscarriage would have been great.

"Can you imagine how devastating it would have been if we hadn't known?" Mary asked and added dejectedly, "The thing is, the doctor didn't even bother looking at our medical records, you know. They just wanted to make money out of us."

Mary said that on hindsight now, she is not even sure whether the doctor would have warned them of the potential complications if he had known of her conditions. Mary insisted that her endocrinologist is the minority.

"There are definitely good doctors out there, but they are extremely rare," she said.  She revealed that she no longer trusts the medical service and would turn to her trusted online sites for all her medical diagnosis and query.

"You wonder why we should pay these useless doctors so much when we can find reliable answers online!" She laughed scornfully.

Mary is not alone when it comes to being at the receiving end of bad medical services and not trusting our medical practitioners. It would appear that more and more private hospitals are abandoning the Hippocratic Oath for personal gain.

A medical practitioner revealed that the price of medicine at a private hospital costs a lot more than an external pharmacy. He often advises his patients to buy their medicine from external pharmacies because it makes no sense for them to pay "cut-throat" prices for the same medicine. However, when Kelly tried to do precisely that, the doctor treating her apparently did not take it too well.

"Instead of giving me a prescription for six months as he had recommended, the bastard only prescribed me a month's worth of medication. In other words, he was 'forcing' me to go back to him for a follow-up prescription and that would have meant paying him ninety ringgit for just a bloody piece of paper. Can you imagine that?!"

The Department of Pharmaceutical Services at the Ministry of Health informed that there is currently no law to control the prices of medication at private hospitals. However, it is encouraging when the Head of the Medicine Pricing Unit wrote, "As a patient, you have the right to obtain a prescription from your doctor to buy your medicine from any pharmacy even though it displeases the doctor. I believe that empowered patients can change the current bad habits practised by medical professions so that we can all guarantee affordable medication for the people."

Vikram, another unhappy patient, shared the experience he had with his doctor when he was undergoing treatment for Hepatitis C. He said that he was mortified when the nurse asked about his treatment in front of other patients while he was waiting for his doctor in a clinic. He understood that the nurse probably asked out of customary politeness but he did not appreciate the fact that in the course of her doing so, other people had learned about his medical condition.

He said that patient information management is lacking in many healthcare facilities and was shocked that this clinic is part of a hospital that has received an accreditation from the Malaysian Society for Quality in Health (MSQH), the national accrediting body for healthcare facilities and services. 

"On top of that, my doctor failed to inform me of all the side effects of the antiviral medication I was taking. There was no counselling or support for me and my spouse. The repercussions of the medication was so great that I felt as if the treatment had ruined an important part of our lives. 

"For each visit, I paid ninety ringgit for a five-minute consultation where the doctor did practically nothing. Thankfully I had a good insurance coverage because the medication cost an arm and a leg. To be honest, I wish I had not undergone this treatment if only I had known of the repercussions. I wasn't informed properly," Vikram said regretfully.

As of June this year, 75 percent of public hospitals have received the MSQH accreditation while only 25 percent of private hospitals have. At the international level, only eight hospitals have received the Joint Commission International (JCI)'s accreditation.

The JCI is created by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organisations, a US government agency, aimed to improve the safety and quality of care in the international community through the provision of education and advisory services, and international accreditation and certification. 

The assessment criteria used by the MSQH is quite similar to the one used by the JCI, except the latter provides additional components such as patient and family education, staff qualifications and education, medication management and use, and the assessment and care of patients; elements which seem to be sorely lacking in our own private healthcare services.

Previously, the government has made several attempts to make it mandatory for all public and private hospitals to obtain MSQH accreditation but these attempts have been put on hold thus far. Although having some sort of national or international accreditation by a recognised and credible agency does boost public confidence, alongside minimising and mitigating clinical and safety related risks, these accreditations do not take into account public rating. The application submission for accreditation is done by the hospital in question and the assessment is then carried out by a panel of surveyors appointed by the accreditation agency. 

There is no consideration for public opinion on how the hospital has fared.

"As a patient, I would like us to have some sort of a scorecard for all the hospital in Malaysia. Something simple for a start and it can be done by civil society, someone independent and done from the patient's perspectives. 

"What we need is someone who will disguise as a patient to test out the hospitals. So you have this person who goes to several hospitals and says he's got liver problem, for instance, and then he assesses how the hospitals handle him based on selected key criteria. The problem has to be the same though, so you can compare apple for apple," Vikram suggested thoughtfully.

Kelly said the hospital's ability to deal with complaints is something left to be desired.

"No point. I've written to a hospital before to express my dissatisfaction over their service. I haven't received any response from them. This was last year. It's like as if the hospital doesn't really care if you're unhappy with them. They have patients lined up anyway. So why should they care?"

Sumitra, who is married to a doctor, revealed that medical practitioners often tend to close an eye when their colleagues commit a medical error. This culture is deeply rooted on the notion of solidarity akin to "I have your back now so that when I need you, you'll have mine." 

This makes it virtually impossible to have a doctor testifies against the other, even when a grave error occurs at the expense of a patient's life.

Perhaps what Malaysia needs is a patients association such as the one in the United Kingdom. The UK's Patients Association provides a platform for the people to rate their National Health Service (NHS). The association also runs educational campaigns such as the Speaking Up Complaints Project which encourages patients to speak up against poor medical services and the NHS to improve the way it deals with patients' complaints. The NHS is ranked as one of the top 20 best healthcare services in the world by the World Health Organisation.

Not all is lost. Malaysia seems to be doing remarkably well in the area of medical tourism. A private hospital in Kuala Lumpur is recently recognised by the Medical Travel Quality Alliance as one of the world's top ten best hospitals for medical tourists. By taking advantage of the weaker Malaysian currency, foreigners from the Middle East, Europe and Japan are flocking to Malaysia to enjoy better medical treatment.

It would have cost the local patients an arm and a leg to receive treatment in these hospitals but Mary said, "If the service is compatible with the amount I pay for, why not? The problem with the private hospitals here is that I'm not even getting the value for my money."

While our private hospitals continue to nurse tourists with top notch care, in order to stay competitive alongside South Korea, Thailand and Turkey, have they forgot about our own illnesses along the way? - October 9, 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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