Sabtu, 4 Januari 2014

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Berlin ‘doggy deli’ sparks howls of ‘decadence’

Posted: 04 Jan 2014 06:42 PM PST

January 05, 2014

A dog named Pivo looks at the Pets Deli food shop for dogs and cats in Berlin's Gruenewald district. A dog named Pivo looks at the Pets Deli food shop for dogs and cats in Berlin's Gruenewald district. Germany's first restaurant for dogs and cats opened in Berlin over the festive holidays, drawing charges the luxury eatery for furry friends is 'decadent'.

"Does Berlin really need a gourmet restaurant for dogs?" asked the top-selling Bild daily.

Pets Deli offers its tasty treats for domestic animals in the upscale neighbourhood of Grunewald, with meals priced from three to six euros (RM13 - 27), and treats like cupcakes for four euros (RM18).

They are sold to go in plastic trays or can be consumed on-site, in metal bowls set before homey wooden logs, while their owners have a coffee.

"A store this decadent gives the impression that we do more for animals than for children," charged Wolfgang Buescher, of the 'Ark' charity, which works with disadvantaged minors.

Business owner David Spanier, 31, had the idea for the doggy deli after finding his own canine friend could not digest pet food from supermarkets.

"Junk food is bad for animals. It's as if I ate fast food every day. I may like it, but it's very bad for your health."

The store manager, Katharina Warkalla, is an animal nutrition expert and serves up portions of beef, turkey or kangaroo meat with broccoli or berries, and "carbs" such as rice, pasta or potatoes.

"The meat is of such quality that it could be safely consumed by humans", said Spanier. – AFP Relaxnews, January 5, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Manchester City down to 10 men, but hang on for replay

Posted: 04 Jan 2014 07:05 AM PST

January 04, 2014

Blackburn Rovers's Grant Hanley (left) jumps on a teammate's back as they celebrate Scott Dann's goal during their FA Cup third round soccer match against Manchester City at Ewood Park in Blackburn, northwest England today. - Reuters pic, January 4, 2014.Blackburn Rovers's Grant Hanley (left) jumps on a teammate's back as they celebrate Scott Dann's goal during their FA Cup third round soccer match against Manchester City at Ewood Park in Blackburn, northwest England today. - Reuters pic, January 4, 2014.Premier League title favourites Manchester City were reduced to 10 men on Saturday as they survived a torrid examination of their class by lower league Blackburn Rovers in a feisty 1-1 draw in the FA Cup third round.

City, unexpectedly beaten by Wigan Athletic in last season's FA Cup final, went ahead with a 45th minute goal by Spanish striker Alvaro Negredo, but Championship side Blackburn levelled 10 minutes later through a similar close-range effort by Scott Dann.

Manuel Pellegrini's much-changed team had further chances to score but also rode their luck and needed to bring on Ivorian midfielder Yaya Toure for Brazilian Fernandinho to retain control. Belgian defender Dedryck Boyata was dismissed in the 85th minute following two yellow card offences.

Blackburn pushed hard for a winner in the closing minutes, but City replaced Spanish winger David Silva with Argentine defender Pablo Zabaleta and hung on for a replay back at the Etihad Stadium. – Reuters, January 4, 2014.

Liverpool versus Oldham, a Rodgers family affair

Posted: 04 Jan 2014 06:52 AM PST

January 04, 2014

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers (pic) will come up against his own son, Anton, on Sunday when his side host third-tier Oldham Athletic in the FA Cup third round.

Anton Rodgers, a 20-year-old midfielder, joined Oldham from Brighton and Hove Albion last July and has made 13 appearances for the League One outfit this season.

However, with Oldham having stunned Liverpool 3-2 in the fourth round last season, Brendan Rodgers says he will not allow his players to go easy on his son.

"In all seriousness, that's the job – but it is also a situation that I will want my players to pay attention to, because the footballing gods sometimes come into it as well," he told several British newspapers.

"With the footballing gods, he could end up getting a goal. But not only that, I have to get the team to keep an eye on him because he's a good player.

"He's got quality, he has a great view of the game and he's a real footballer. So I can't skip over it because it's Anton. This is business." – AFP, January 4, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Phil Everly of the Everly Brothers dies at 74

Posted: 03 Jan 2014 09:55 PM PST

January 04, 2014

Singer Phil Everly (pic) of the famed Everly Brothers died yesterday, his widew told The Los Angeles. He was 74.

Everly passed away in the Californian city of Burbank due to complications from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, Patti Everly told the newspaper.

"We are absolutely heartbroken," she said, noting her husband's disease was caused by cigarette smoking. "He fought long and hard."

Together with his brother Don, who survives him, Everly rose to fame in the late 1950s and 1960s for smash hits such as "Wake Up Little Susie," "All I Have to Do is Dream" and "Bye Bye Love."

The duo, who influenced The Beatles as well as Simon and Garfunkel, were known for their close-harmony singing.

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, into which the Everly Brothers were inducted in 1986, described their harmonies as "one of the musical treasures of the 1950s and a major influence on the music of the 1960s."

In 1957, the Everly Brothers signed their first record deal and soon after produced hits that spawned the genres of pop, rock and country. They were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2001.

Tributes poured in soon after word of Everly's death surfaced.

"Rest in peace Phil Everly. You guys brought us a lot of pleasure back in the day," rock and country singer-songwriter Charlie Daniels tweeted.

Commenting as a winter snowstorm hit the northeast United States, actor and musician John Gallagher Jr. said: "This cold night just got colder. RIP Phil Everly. The Everly Brothers Greatest Hits was my first CD as a kid and will always be a favorite."

"They had that sibling sound," said Linda Ronstadt, who recorded one of the biggest hits of her career in 1975 with her interpretation of Everly's "When Will I Be Loved."

"The information of your DNA is carried in your voice, and you can get a sound (with family) that you never get with someone who's not blood-related to you," she told the Times.

"And they were both such good singers – they were one of the foundations, one of the cornerstones of the new rock 'n' roll sound."

According to a Rolling Stone biography of the legendary performers – hailed as "the most important vocal duo in rock" by the magazine – Phil and his younger brother Don were the children of Midwestern country stars Ike and Margaret Everly and performed on the family radio show while growing up.

As teenagers, they headed for Nashville, Tennessee, and began their stellar career.

In addition to his wife and brother, Everly is survived by their mother, Margaret, sons Jason and Chris, and two granddaughters.

The Times said funeral services would be private. – AFP, January 4, 2014.

K-pop icon Rain makes comeback with new album

Posted: 02 Jan 2014 05:11 PM PST

January 03, 2014

South Korean singer Rain (pic), known as the "King of K-Pop", on Thursday released his first album for four years as part of a long-awaited comeback after mandatory military service.

Rain, whose real name is Jung Ji-Hoon, released online his sixth album entitled "Rain Effect" as well as music videos for its double title numbers "30sexy" and "La Song".

The album is his first since he finished 21 months of military service – mandatory for all able-bodied South Korean men – in July last year.

The 31-year-old composed the songs and wrote the lyrics.

A video for "30 Sexy", posted on YouTube on Thursday, features Rain wearing high-waisted suits and high-heeled shoes performing to a melody led by a synthesiser and backed by a simple hip hop drumbeat.

"In the past, I used to present scenes of clothes being torn off and my torso exposed. I decided to come up with something different this time," he said.

A video for "La Song" shows Rain with newly permed hair performing with other dancers to a Latin melody mixed with hip hop, electronic music and rock.

"I made this song which football fans can sing along to cheer their favourite teams during the (Brazil) World Cup", Rain said.

Rain commands a huge following not only in South Korea but across much of Asia and beyond.

He also starred in several South Korean soap operas and Hollywood action pictures including "Ninja Assassin" and "Speed Racer" by the Wachowski Brothers.

He will be making a screen comeback when he stars alongside Jason Patric, John Cusack and Bruce Willis in the action movie "The Prince."

But his popularity at home was hit last year when he was accused of flouting military regulations – a highly sensitive topic in a country still technically at war with North Korea.

In January 2013 he was confined to barracks for a week after he sneaked out to meet his girlfriend, a top actress.

Rain was also questioned by the military, prosecutors and police over his unusually long leave periods and alleged breaches of service regulations. – AFP, January 3, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Hungary turns to black market for a smoke

Posted: 04 Jan 2014 02:12 AM PST

January 04, 2014

The Hungarian government shut almost 90% of the country's licensed cigarette vendors in effort to reduce smoking in the country.The Hungarian government shut almost 90% of the country's licensed cigarette vendors in effort to reduce smoking in the country.In a parking lot in Nyiregyhaza, a Hungarian town near the Ukrainian border, Imre describes his black-market cigarette operation, whose business is booming thanks to a controversial government tobacco crackdown.

"We sell several hundred cartons per day," says the young man, who is using a fake name.

His colleague 'Janos' explains how the contraband merchandise crosses the Tisza river in small rafts.

"We don't even have to climb on board. We just pull the rafts from one shore to the other with ropes. When they reach us, we sort them out and the cigarettes are sent to the four corners of the country."

Business has never been so good, he adds.

In July, the Hungarian government shut almost 90% of the country's licensed cigarette vendors, squeezing the number to 5,300 from a previous 42,000.

The authorities said their crackdown was an effort to stop sales to minors and reduce smoking in a country of 10 million people, where about 46% men and 34% women light up.

But critics say it is a ploy to favour close allies of Prime Minister Viktor Orban's government with lucrative tobacco concessions.

Nora Ritok, head of the charity group Igazgyongy in northeastern Hungary, said she doubted the truth of official estimates that the number of smokers in Hungary has dropped by at least 200,000 in one year.

"Almost everyone smokes here," she said.

"Before, you could buy cigarettes everywhere, in every shop, in pubs. Now it's banned and there are many smaller villages where you won't find an (official) cigarette shop.... That's why the black market is developing."

How much the black market has grown is unclear, but cigarette seizures increased to 85 million in the first 10 months of 2013, compared with 68 million for all of 2012, according to the tax and customs authority (NAV).

Smoking has been banned in public places in Hungary since 2009, but some see a more noticeable change in attitudes thanks to the government's newest efforts.

"I think there are a lot of people who are now smoking less," Janos Murci, a lung specialist and president of an anti-smoking association, recently told the weekly Kiskegyed.

"That's because the price of cigarettes has gone up – in two years, they've gone from Ft 600 (RM9) per pack to Ft 1,000 (RM15)  – but also because of the tobacco reform, as there are towns where there are absolutely no cigarettes for sale."

The government's tobacco policy has sometimes chalked up ironic successes. Some opponents of Orban's government refuse to patronise the so-called 'national cigarette shops' because of their alleged ties to the ruling centre-right Fidesz party.

"I've been smoking since I was 16, and I tried quitting several times, but to no avail," said Marianna Nemet, a 67-year-old retiree from Budapest. "Now I think I've found the necessary incentive to do it. I will not spend one cent in these national shops, these moneymakers for friends of the party."

An unintended effect of the law has been a significant drop in tax revenues from cigarette sales, down to Ft 24 million (RM358,396) in August, compared with Ft 36 million (RM537,594) a year earlier, according to the tax authority.

Still, the government wants to press ahead with its measures, with new restrictions planned on e-cigarettes as well as tobacco and papers for hand-rolled cigarettes.

The campaign has already paid off, at least for Orban. In October, the World Health Organization (WHO) awarded him a certificate of special recognition for his efforts to clamp down on smoking.

This was a rare international tribute for a man often criticised abroad for his tightening grip on power. – AFP, January 4, 2014.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Courting a national disaster

Posted: 03 Jan 2014 10:08 PM PST

January 04, 2014

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

There is a saying, "Without wise leadership, a nation falls, but with good counsellors, there is safety".

The recent spate of events that have engulfed the nation has amply illustrated that we have neither wise leaders nor good counsellors.

That this fact underscores the current state of affairs of this embattled nation is an understatement. With inept leaders encircled by more-than-happy-to-curry-favour advisers/consultants, we have a recipe for disaster. The nation is in a tail-spin of sort and courting a national tragedy.

That this is seriously now the case is underpinned by two major arguments.

First, from the way the troubling economy is further mismanaged, and second, the deepening crisis of the racial-religious divide that is almost at a boiling point.

Consequent to the misdirected policies of pursuing and ramping "growth without a socially-just development" end-state, on the back of a much abused "interventionist affirmative action of the New Economic Policy", the nation finds herself strapped in huge debt and 16 years of fiscal deficit which has now become very 'toxic'.

With the federal debt that has almost reached the statutory limit of 55% of the nation's GDP, (RM543.3 billion, to be exact, as of MOF report), even the prime minister-cum-finance minister talks of the imminent bankruptcy. Very unfortunately though, debts were conveniently attributed to the "colossal subsidies" (RM46.7 billion, according to MOF) said to have been spent on the rakyat.

Never were Prime Minister Najib and his ministers abled to admit that the debts were equally or more likely due to the government mega-spending on big ticket infrastructural items in a "pump-priming" mode in both bullish times and bearish times. The PM was either oblivious and remorseless, or worse still, totally inept and clueless.

Leakages due to stupidity bordering negligence, as annually reported by the auditor general, and endemic abuses bordering corruption, epitomised by the PKFZ, NFC and MITP fiascos, are never blamed to be the cause of billions of ringgit being drained or misallocated.

Failures to dismantle monopoly have severely distorted the market and continuing crony-capitalism resulted in a new rentier-class – the likes of Syed Mokhtar al-Bukhary et al, monopolising critical national assets and utilities, and a repeat of Mahathirnomics – of privatisation and a creation of a super-rich Bumiputera-Malay elite class.

It has made nonsense of the effort to achieve the high-income target of US$15,000 or RM48,000 per capita, arguably achievable through a hundred of the richest people in the country, when both income and wealth divide continues to yawn wider yearly.

Let it be known to the PM and his cahoots, lest they are still oblivious, that  statistically, welfare states like the Nordic countries, Austria and the Netherland devoted at least 20% of their national budget to social transfers or subsidy.  You were adamant about introducing the GST in 2015, while allowing leaks to go unchecked. The nation is still caught in a "middle-income trap", which is irresponsible.

More interestingly, higher social transfers (subsidy) of the welfare state have resulted in less poverty, less inequality and longer expectancy, with statistically no net cost in terms of GDP, economic growth or even budget deficits.

Whether we are looking at the social market economy or an Islamic economy, we shall no longer view at welfare as a "populist" public policy. Welfare spending, as Keynes argues, has its role in stimulating demand when private investment and expenditure dry up, a part of the package of policy instruments to prevent economic crises and keep the market economy on track.

So Mr PM, your arguments that the rationalisation of subsidy (aka withdrawal of subsidy) must be put in place or otherwise the nation is going to go bankrupt, are both pathetic and misguided. Your 11 austerity measures are too little to be of financial significance, though never too late.

Could you promptly revisit your economic measures and take heed of the copious critique, especially from among the economists who are not out there to curry favours?

Their honest assessment that your so-called 'rationalisation of subsidy' are triggering more than 'double-whammy' on the rakyat's well-being  particularly on the bottom 40%, and more so on their purchasing power to drive domestic demand, are surely noteworthy.

Let us now turn to another critical dimension of your ineptness to run this ailing nation.

As early as the first week of 2014, your deputy's non-committal statement on Selangor Umno division's intention, together with Muslim NGOs, that they are free to decide on staging a demonstration tomorrow in front of churches, is extremely regrettable.

Rather than dispensing advice and calling for restraint and respect for each other's religious beliefs and conviction, his response is interpreted as a callous endorsement for such actions that spells doom for this nation.

It heralds the beginning of a troubled year of a deepening religious divide in an already fractious society. The divisive debate and emotive legal issue over the word "Allah" has been raging unabated and no effective efforts, much less solutions, are in sight.

The unfortunate raid and seizure of copies of the Bible by the Selangor Islamic Department (Jais) at the Bible Society of Malaysia (BSM) has added salts to injury. The stage is now set for a legal wrangling on this issue, compounding and exacerbating further the "Allah" debate.

Arguably, in 2011 the cabinet has allowed the printing and importation of the Bible in any language and the seizure contravened this decision.

Whether Jais is rightly under the state government, the sultan or the federal government, has now come into the limelight.

Be that as it may, the high-handed actions of Jais have now come under severe condemnation from many quarters. Whether Jais has religious jurisdiction over non-Muslim scriptures, would finally underscore the imperative need to address the "Allah" issue.

While Article 11 (4) of the Federal Constitution (FC) allows for state and federal laws to control or restrict propagation of other religions among Muslims, this did not affect one's right to profess and manage one's religion under Articles 11 (1) and (3) which include the use of words, language, worship and other aspects of practising a religion.

Likewise, the unsolicited edict or fatwa by the Mufti of Perak, condemning the demonstrators of last Saturday's Turun campaign on price hike, young activists of the civil and students' societies, arguing carelessly, their blood "as halal" as they are "traitors of the nation" or bughah as known in Islamic legal terminology, is both bigoted and smacks of political partisanship.

But where were you again Mr PM?

This surely is not the way to run this already divided nation. You keep mum and your deafening silence are disquieting at best.

As we get from bad to worse, I must say in all earnestness that the time for a real national reconciliation has finally arrived.

It is not about forging "A Unity Government" as such, but about implementing critical institutional reforms and structural measures that must be put in place soonest.

Should you shirk your responsibility again, you do it at your own peril. – January 4, 2014.

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

Courting a national disaster

Posted: 03 Jan 2014 10:08 PM PST

January 04, 2014

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

There is a saying, "Without wise leadership, a nation falls, but with good counsellors, there is safety".

The recent spate of events that have engulfed the nation has amply illustrated that we have neither wise leaders nor good counsellors.

That this fact underscores the current state of affairs of this embattled nation is an understatement. With inept leaders encircled by more-than-happy-to-curry-favour advisers/consultants, we have a recipe for disaster. The nation is in a tail-spin of sort and courting a national tragedy.

That this is seriously now the case is underpinned by two major arguments.

First, from the way the troubling economy is further mismanaged, and second, the deepening crisis of the racial-religious divide that is almost at a boiling point.

Consequent to the misdirected policies of pursuing and ramping "growth without a socially-just development" end-state, on the back of a much abused "interventionist affirmative action of the New Economic Policy", the nation finds herself strapped in huge debt and 16 years of fiscal deficit which has now become very 'toxic'.

With the federal debt that has almost reached the statutory limit of 55% of the nation's GDP, (RM543.3 billion, to be exact, as of MOF report), even the prime minister-cum-finance minister talks of the imminent bankruptcy. Very unfortunately though, debts were conveniently attributed to the "colossal subsidies" (RM46.7 billion, according to MOF) said to have been spent on the rakyat.

Never were Prime Minister Najib and his ministers abled to admit that the debts were equally or more likely due to the government mega-spending on big ticket infrastructural items in a "pump-priming" mode in both bullish times and bearish times. The PM was either oblivious and remorseless, or worse still, totally inept and clueless.

Leakages due to stupidity bordering negligence, as annually reported by the auditor general, and endemic abuses bordering corruption, epitomised by the PKFZ, NFC and MITP fiascos, are never blamed to be the cause of billions of ringgit being drained or misallocated.

Failures to dismantle monopoly have severely distorted the market and continuing crony-capitalism resulted in a new rentier-class – the likes of Syed Mokhtar al-Bukhary et al, monopolising critical national assets and utilities, and a repeat of Mahathirnomics – of privatisation and a creation of a super-rich Bumiputera-Malay elite class.

It has made nonsense of the effort to achieve the high-income target of US$15,000 or RM48,000 per capita, arguably achievable through a hundred of the richest people in the country, when both income and wealth divide continues to yawn wider yearly.

Let it be known to the PM and his cahoots, lest they are still oblivious, that  statistically, welfare states like the Nordic countries, Austria and the Netherland devoted at least 20% of their national budget to social transfers or subsidy.  You were adamant about introducing the GST in 2015, while allowing leaks to go unchecked. The nation is still caught in a "middle-income trap", which is irresponsible.

More interestingly, higher social transfers (subsidy) of the welfare state have resulted in less poverty, less inequality and longer expectancy, with statistically no net cost in terms of GDP, economic growth or even budget deficits.

Whether we are looking at the social market economy or an Islamic economy, we shall no longer view at welfare as a "populist" public policy. Welfare spending, as Keynes argues, has its role in stimulating demand when private investment and expenditure dry up, a part of the package of policy instruments to prevent economic crises and keep the market economy on track.

So Mr PM, your arguments that the rationalisation of subsidy (aka withdrawal of subsidy) must be put in place or otherwise the nation is going to go bankrupt, are both pathetic and misguided. Your 11 austerity measures are too little to be of financial significance, though never too late.

Could you promptly revisit your economic measures and take heed of the copious critique, especially from among the economists who are not out there to curry favours?

Their honest assessment that your so-called 'rationalisation of subsidy' are triggering more than 'double-whammy' on the rakyat's well-being  particularly on the bottom 40%, and more so on their purchasing power to drive domestic demand, are surely noteworthy.

Let us now turn to another critical dimension of your ineptness to run this ailing nation.

As early as the first week of 2014, your deputy's non-committal statement on Selangor Umno division's intention, together with Muslim NGOs, that they are free to decide on staging a demonstration tomorrow in front of churches, is extremely regrettable.

Rather than dispensing advice and calling for restraint and respect for each other's religious beliefs and conviction, his response is interpreted as a callous endorsement for such actions that spells doom for this nation.

It heralds the beginning of a troubled year of a deepening religious divide in an already fractious society. The divisive debate and emotive legal issue over the word "Allah" has been raging unabated and no effective efforts, much less solutions, are in sight.

The unfortunate raid and seizure of copies of the Bible by the Selangor Islamic Department (Jais) at the Bible Society of Malaysia (BSM) has added salts to injury. The stage is now set for a legal wrangling on this issue, compounding and exacerbating further the "Allah" debate.

Arguably, in 2011 the cabinet has allowed the printing and importation of the Bible in any language and the seizure contravened this decision.

Whether Jais is rightly under the state government, the sultan or the federal government, has now come into the limelight.

Be that as it may, the high-handed actions of Jais have now come under severe condemnation from many quarters. Whether Jais has religious jurisdiction over non-Muslim scriptures, would finally underscore the imperative need to address the "Allah" issue.

While Article 11 (4) of the Federal Constitution (FC) allows for state and federal laws to control or restrict propagation of other religions among Muslims, this did not affect one's right to profess and manage one's religion under Articles 11 (1) and (3) which include the use of words, language, worship and other aspects of practising a religion.

Likewise, the unsolicited edict or fatwa by the Mufti of Perak, condemning the demonstrators of last Saturday's Turun campaign on price hike, young activists of the civil and students' societies, arguing carelessly, their blood "as halal" as they are "traitors of the nation" or bughah as known in Islamic legal terminology, is both bigoted and smacks of political partisanship.

But where were you again Mr PM?

This surely is not the way to run this already divided nation. You keep mum and your deafening silence are disquieting at best.

As we get from bad to worse, I must say in all earnestness that the time for a real national reconciliation has finally arrived.

It is not about forging "A Unity Government" as such, but about implementing critical institutional reforms and structural measures that must be put in place soonest.

Should you shirk your responsibility again, you do it at your own peril. – January 4, 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

The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

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The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa


Orang tengah antara punca barang makanan naik di Sabah, kata ketua menterinya

Posted: 04 Jan 2014 01:38 AM PST

January 04, 2014

Ketua Menteri Sabah Datuk Seri Musa Aman (gambar) menyifatkan peranan "orang tengah" turut menyumbang kepada kenaikan harga barang makanan di negeri ini.

Menurut beliau tindakan orang tengah tidak bertanggungjawab dan ingin mendapatkan keuntungan lebih sehingga membebankan pengguna.

"Kenaikan harga makanan pada masa sekarang bukan sahaja disebabkan harga minyak naik dan tarif elektrik, tetapi saya melihat ada unsur orang tengah ingin mengaut keuntungan lebih.

"Mereka menaikkan harga sesuka hati, sebagai contoh saya dimaklumkan harga udang harimau mencecah RM120 dan ia dinaikkan terlalu tinggi," katanya kepada pemberita selepas Majlis Perjumpaan dengan Ketua-ketua Cawangan Umno Bahagian Libaran di Sandakan hari ini.

Sehubungan itu, Musa berkata beliau akan membawa perkara itu dalam mesyuarat Jemaah Menteri Kabinet akan datang dan memaklumkan kepada Perdana Menteri.

Beliau juga mahu peranan orang tengah dipantau bagi memastikan mereka lebih bertanggungjawab dengan tidak menjual sesuatu barangan dengan harga tinggi.

Dalam pada itu, bagi menangani kenaikan harga barang, Musa menggalakkan penduduk negeri ini bercucuk tanam sayur-sayuran dan buah-buahan di kawasan rumah mereka.

Katanya ia merupakan antara cara untuk meringankan beban membeli barang makanan untuk jangka masa panjang.

Terdahulu dalam ucapannya, Musa berkata beliau telah mengarahkan Kementerian Pertanian dan Industri Makanan negeri mencari kaedah terbaharu membantu petani, nelayan dan peladang menambah pendapatan.

Katanya kaedah itu perlu memberi impak yang berkesan dan bermatlamat meningkatkan sumber makanan di negeri ini. – Bernama, 4 Januari, 2014.

Ketua Polis perlu beri penjelasan serbuan Jais, seru Kit Siang

Posted: 03 Jan 2014 11:41 PM PST

January 04, 2014

Ketua Polis Negara, Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar harus memberi penjelasan mengapa beliau membenarkan serbuan Jabatan Agama Islam Selangor (Jais) terhadap Persatuan Bible Malaysia (BSM), sedangkan tugas polis adalah untuk memelihara perlembagaan, kata Lim Kit Siang (gambar).

Pemimpin veteran DAP itu menggesa Khalid untuk menjelaskan sama ada 10 mata penyelesaian untuk kontroversi Bible adalah sah atau sekadar janji palsu.

"Daripada menjejaskan imej polis dengan 'kisah dongeng' seperti 'penggulingan kerajaan' pada ambang tahun baru di Dataran Merdeka, yang telah terbukti hanyalah tipu semata-mata, Khalid seharusnya melakukan sesuatu yang berguna untuk mengembalikan keyakinan rakyat terhadap kemerdekaan, kecekapan serta profesionalisma polis dengan meyakinkan rakyat bahawa mereka tidak terlibat dalam membantu serbuan Jais itu.

"Memang tanpa bantuan polis, serbuan Jais yang haram dan melanggar undang-undang itu serta rampasan lebih dari 300 kitab Bible Bahasa Malaysia dan Iban tidak akan berlaku." kata Ahli Parlimen Gelang Patah itu dalam kenyataan media hari ini.

Beliau turut menyoal polis sama ada mereka tahu bahawa rakyat Malaysia bebas mengamalkan agama masing-masing sebagai hak asas perlembagaan.

Kabinet telah mengumumkan 10 mata penyelesaian bagi menghentikan kontroversi Bible pada April 2011.

Antaranya, Bible dalam semua bahasa boleh diimport masuk, serta dicetak di dalam Malaysia, termasuk Bible Bahasa Malaysia dan Iban.

10 mata penyelesaian itu juga turut menegaskan bahawa kerajaan mahu bekerjasama dengan penganut Kristian dan badan agama lain bagi menuju perdamaian antara agama seperti yang termaktub dalam perlembagaan.

Pada 2 Januari, Jais telah menyerbu BSM dan merampas 300 Bible bahasa Malaysia dan Iban serta memanggil dua pemimpinnya ke balai polis untuk diambil kenyataan.

Serbuan itu dikecam ramai termasuk Majlis Peguam Malaysia yang menegaskan tindakan Jais menggunakan Enakmen No.1 Agama Bukan Islam (Kawalan Pengembangan di Kalangan Orang Islam) 1988 khususnya Seksyen 9 hingga 13, bertentangan dengan perlembagaan. – 4 Januari, 2014.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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