Rabu, 1 Januari 2014

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Syabas Kesas dan kerajaan Selangor

Posted: 31 Dec 2013 06:47 PM PST

January 01, 2014

Haji Subky Abdul Latif seorang penulis bebas dan tinggal di Kuala Lumpur. Seorang pendiam, dia gemar meneliti perangai manusia dan berita politik di Malaysia.

Syabas! Beribu-ribu syabas buat Kesas Sdn Bhd kerana berani mengumumkan tidak akan menaikkan caj Lebuh Raya Shah Alam (SLA) tahun depan.

Syabas juga buat PKNS kerana mematuhi dasar kerajaan Negeri Selangor untuk melakukan apa yang terdaya bagi menghalang kenaikan tol di mana-mana lebuh raya yang ia mempunyai saham konsesi.

Terdaya atau tidak PKNS menghalang syarikat yang punya saham majoriti untuk menaikkan tol tidak diketahui tetapi ia sudah ada dasar sekarang iaitu membangkang kenaikan itu.

Tidak perlu dengar cakap Noh Omar yang seolah-olah bebal itu agar kerajaan Selangor beli semua saham konsesi jalan bertol supaya tol tidak dinaikkan.

Pengguna Lebuh Raya Kesas sekarang boleh bersyukur kerana ancaman bala iaitu kenaikan tol tidak akan berlaku. Masing-masing boleh menunaikan sujud syukur kerana terlepas daripada ancaman bala itu. Walaupun penindasan atas tol itu masih ada, tetapi selagi Selangor diperintah oleh Pakatan Rakyat beban itu tidak bertambah.

Bolehlah mereka mengharapkan dalam PRU yang akan datang kiranya berubah kerajaan pusat, ada harapan tol boleh dijadikan sejarah dimansuhkan atau paling tidak, diturunkan mengikut kadar pertambahan kenderaan di jalan raya.

Jika Perdana Menteri Najib anak jantan betapa dasarnya disangka betul, maka dia dicabar, naikkan tol mulai seminggu dua ini sebagai yang diamarankan Menteri di Jabatan Perdana Menteri, Wahid Omar betapa kenaikan tol tidak dapat dielakkan.

Wahid Omar adalah menteri suruhan. Dia tidak pernah minta pengundi menyokongnya supaya dia jadi menteri. Dia jadi menteri kerana disuruh Najib. Maka dia sebagai menteri suruhan tidak ada kuasa untuk membuat dasar menindas pengguna jalan bertol bagi menaikkan tol, melainkan dia menyampaikan amaran tol tidak dapat dielakkan daripada naik setelah ia tidak naik sebelum PRU13.

Apakah langkah menindas rakyat dengan menaikkan tol itu popular atau tidak, kerajaan anak jantan mesti naikkan juga bagi mengelakkan beban kerajaan menanggung sabsidi tol kira-kira RM400 juta setahun syarikat konsesi.

Najib boleh tempelak orang ramai. Mereka mana tahu beban yang kerajaan tanggung. Asyik membantah langkah kerajaan saja. Apakah kerajaan hendak dibebankan saja yang akibatnya konon negara boleh muflis.

Jika Najib sangka dia betul. Langkahnya rasional dan ia bukan untuk menindas rakyat, laksanakan apa yang Wahid amaran itu.

Amaran itu adalah tambahan ancaman yang menindas rakyat selepas PRU13. Rakyat sudah ditindas dengan kenaikan harga minyak, gula, ancaman tambahan tarif eletrik mulai kokok ayam pertama tahun 2014. Dan sekarang tambahan caj tol.

Jika tol tidak jadi dinaikkan, bukan kerana dasar atas tol tidak menindas, tetapi justeru ancaman politik yang Najib dan Barisan Nasional hadapi atas reaksi rakyat bersama pembangkang atas ancaman kenaikan itu.

Reaksi Anwar Ibrahim dan Khalid Ibrahim ialah memanfaatkan kuasa politik yang ada pada mereka untuk menghalang tambahan penindasan ke atas pengguna lebuh raya yang kerajaan Selangor ada saham.

Pengguna lebuh raya SLA (Kesas) sudah bebas daripada ancaman itu. PKNS juga akan redakan kebimbangan orang-orang yang tertindas. Jika tidak ada tindakan sepadu Anwar dan Khalid, tiada cara bagi semua terlepas daripada ancaman bala. – 1 Januari, 2014.

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

You are as free as you want to be

Posted: 31 Dec 2013 02:40 PM PST

January 01, 2014

Abdar Rahman Koya is at the end of his thirties, and considers himself to have all the qualities of an ordinary Malaysian, a practising Muslim, and an incorrigible cynic.

The recent action against newsweekly The Heat has incensed a section of journalists in the country, especially those working in the "freer" Internet media.

I can't help observe that a big number of these angry journalists were once working for government broadsheets, and were in the thick of the action at the height of the Malaysian media's descent into press fascism in the eighties and especially in the late nineties, when all journalism ethics were suspended, nay discarded.

Some have even called for the formation of an alternative journalist union to fight for press freedom, frustrated that the majority of the existing members of the National Union of Journalists are not committed to press freedom and have failed to protect the plight of journalists.

I am not sure if the problem of press freedom in Malaysia is something that can be championed. The fact is we are as free as we want to be, and this applies not only to journalists. 

It is the journalists themselves who should decide to be free, without fighting for it from the authorities. As long as they are free to type their words and are not bothered about what happens later, they have honoured their profession.

Of course, some will say this is utopian. But this is the age of the touchpad, and one does not need a permit to be able to put one's thoughts across to the whole of humanity.

If one is arrested or charged, and jailed or fined, does it mean it is the end of press freedom? Similarly, just because a newspaper is closed, we should not think freedom is dead.

There is nothing to stop someone from speaking out, provided he is ready to pay the price and ready to face the consequences after speaking out.

Should a writer exercise his God-given freedom to speak out only when he feels safe knowing that there is a union of journalists ready to defend him? Does that mean he is truly free in speaking out?

As such, I really think our state of journalism, and not the various draconian laws limiting press freedom, is to be blamed.

Some ten years ago, I was asked to briefly pen my view about Malaysia's state of the media. This is what I wrote, and I still stand by it:

The problem with the media in the country is within: the journalists themselves. It is not so much the control of the press by the government but their lack of self-esteem. They consider their vocation just a job to earn a living and they are prepared to sell themselves for a pittance.

When they began writing they were idealistic and set out with some commitment to change the world, but gradually their belly takes over their brain and mind. Then they stop thinking and produce mediocre articles and reports that are acceptable to their political bosses. They begin to measure success by the figures in their pay cheque.

Journalists must remember that there will be no output without input. The quality of the output also depends on the quality of the input. For instance, if our input is mainly the mediocre speeches of our ministers, then our output must be trash marketable only with the mainstream newspapers.

Some of the best journalists in this country are financially very, very poor, but they can walk with their heads held high.

An analytical mind, clear thinking acquired from an early age and the moral courage to call a spade a spade – these are the qualities which make a journalist a journalist.

In a democratic system, journalists play a role similar to that of ulama (religious scholars) in an Islamic system: to speak for the people. In Islamic parlance, such ulama who support the government while distorting Islamic principles are called "ulama sultan" (court ulama). Similarly, journalists who disregard democratic principles are "court journalists". – January 1, 2014.

* 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

0 ulasan:

Catat Ulasan

 

Malaysia Insider Online

Copyright 2010 All Rights Reserved